2006 04 18

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C a l i f o r n i a S t a t e U n i v e r s i t y, F u l l e r t o n

THE DAILY TITAN T U E S D AY, A P R I L 1 8 , 2 0 0 6

w w w. d a i l y t i t a n . c o m

SPORTS

OPINION

Catcher walks out of bullpen and crouches behind the plate Page 8

Klima: Let smokers smoke; everyone else back off Page 5

Pollution Plagues Central Valley

HIV

By Jessica Horn

R

Songha Lee/Daily Titan

EDUCATING FROM EXPERIENCE: Anita Porcella, a community health educator and Positively Speaking Program coordinator, has been living with HIV for 18 years. Porcella works at the AIDS Services Foundation in Orange County, teaching others about health risks and sexually transmitted diseases. her test had come back positive for Center that doctors reached a diagBy Daralyn Schoenewald nosis. After being poked and prodHIV. For the Daily Titan She was then shuffled from ded numerous times, Porcella said office to office, treated more like doctors told her she had a rare form a case than a person, more like of muscular dystrophy. nita Porcella vividly she was contaminated than infected Kids at school teased Porcella remembers watching with HIV. because she looked different from a documentary at her “Oh my God. People are never them. She recalled being harassed motherʼs house about a going to look at me the same way,” one day because of her differencman afflicted by AIDS. she recalled thinking as she drove es. It was her last day of second grade. “He was no longer living with down her momʼs street. “I was on my way home from AIDS; he was dying from it,” That was 18 years ago. school, looking forward to sumPorcella said. A few days earlier, she had been oon after Porcella was mer vacation and these three bigger released from jail, where she had born in the 1950s, her [boys] surrounded me,” she said. taken a HIV/AIDS test. mother and father began “They teased me, pushed me, beat When doctors called to discuss to notice she wasnʼt devel- me up to the point that I couldnʼt oping normally. walk. My first week of summer was the results, she asked her mother Her parents took her from doctor to come along for moral support, but she ended up going into the to doctor, trying to figure out what doctorʼs office alone. A man came was wrong with her. It wasnʼt until SEE SURVIVAL = PAGE 4 into the office and blurted out that she ended up at UCLA Medical

A

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Fare Better Under the Weather Campus Health Center offers an array of services to students in need of medical attention By Angelic Rubalcava

For the Daily Titan

Stressed by the constant pressure of exams and deadlines, most students find themselves functioning on three hours of sleep, 50 ounces of coffee, fast food and cereal. Not to mention the unsteady and often emotional chaos of personal lives. However, taking three Advils with a pint of beer while talking with friends who are suffering from many of the same problems may not be the greatest solution. What many CSUF students donʼt know is that help is on campus. To many students, the Health Center at CSUF is a place to get the mandatory Hepatitis B shot before enrollment.

SEE SLANG = PAGE 3

7 Students to Screen Films at Newport Fest By Stacy Serna

The Friday deadline to submit applications for Cal State Fullertonʼs first Pollak Library Prize for Undergraduate Research Papers and Projects is fast approaching. The contest allows students to submit research papers or projects completed from summer 2005 to the present. Judges will look for good use of library resources and in-depth content in the papers submit-

SEE HEALTH = PAGE 3

SEE PRIZE = PAGE 4

SEE FESTIVAL = PAGE 2

BASEBALL

OUTSTANDING PROF

INSIDE

Teacher lectures on scientific, personal aspects of twins

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T

he only constant is change. While this holds true for the seasons, matters of the heart, fashion trends and undergraduate majors, it also holds true for slang. These informal words live out their lives tripping off the tips of tongues and then – sometimes for no apparent reason – are cast off, forgotten in a grave of dead words, becoming a faux pas to utter. Movies like the sometimes mocked but critically acclaimed Brokeback Mountain can trigger the phenomenon of words making their way into the American lexicon. Since its release last year, some people have picked up the movie title and have turned it into an adjective that is “used to describe anything of questionable masculinity,” according to urbandictionary.com. As one can imagine, the ever-creative youth culture has found many uses for the word brokeback, which can be used as a noun or adjective. Some have even traded “thatʼs so gay” for “thatʼs so brokeback.” But even though it is just one word, spoken in what some consider good humor, others say its use speaks volumes about American culture and its views on homosexuality. “In general I think both slang and metaphors that are used so often we donʼt think about them … reveal the concerns of the culture of the time,” CSUF English professor Atara Stein said in a written statement. “[H]omosexuality is definitely an issue in our culture -– we hear about states making laws against gay marriage and for gay marriage almost every day,” Stein said. “An issue that visible is likely to affect language as much as

Seven Cal State Fullerton students have been chosen to represent their short films at the Newport Beach Film Festival on April 22. The festival, in its seventh year, will show more than 350 films from all over the world, including documentaries, features and short films. The Oscar-winning film Crash was presented at the Newport Beach Film Festival in 2005. “We are really proud of our students and excited for them,” Ed Fink, chair for the RadioTV-Film Department said. “This is the second biggest film festival only to festivals such as the Cannes film festival.” The festival is always looking for new schools to participate, and CSUF was one of the many chosen. “We have worked with the students before, and we know that they are responsible,” said

NEWS

Slow-paced baseball lacks appeal among young athletes

Contest Entries Due

By Julie Anne Ines

Daily Titan Staff Writer

However, this common assumption understates the centerʼs benefits. Unlike the nurseʼs office at high school, the center offers an array of physical and mental services, not to mention health education in the form of workshops and presentations. “I knew I had to go there to turn in my immunization records, but I didnʼt really know what went on there,” American studies major Sara Gill said. Besides the basic physical exams and vaccinations, the Health Center offers optometrist, podiatrist, gynecologist, and pharmaceutical services. They conduct laboratory testing, X-rays and even physical therapy. “I hurt my arm, so they gave me X-rays, consultation and then referred me to physical therapy. They were very professional and informative,” said Russ Gilman, a business major.

SPORTS

PAGE 8

As gay culture becomes more visible, experts say words we choose can expose society’s prejudices

“Oh my God. People are never going to look at me the same way.”

Daily Titan Staff Writer

SEE POLLUTION = PAGE 3

‘Brokeback’ as Slang May Offend

living with

CSUF professors study air quality and its effects on people living in San Joaquin Valley

esidents of the San Joaquin Valley are subject to tremendous amounts of air pollution according to a study released in late March of this year. Cal State Fullerton economics professors Jane Hall and Victor Brajer and economist Fred Lurmann researched the study, titled “Health and Related Economic Benefits of Attaining Healthful Air in the San Joaquin Valley.” According to the study, which is based on the review and analysis of dozens of peer-reviewed economic and scientific studies, it will take approximately $3 billion to fight the rising pollution in the San Joaquin Valley. The study concludes that the San Joaquin Valley spends $1,000 per resident every year for medical problems and school and work days missed due to sickness from harmful air quality. Almost every resident of the San Joaquin Valley experiences harmful air pollution levels that increase health risks. For example, from 2002 to 2004, many were exposed to harmful levels of ozone approximately 70 days of the year. Even residents in the less-polluted areas are still exposed to harmful levels of ozone 10 days of the year. Ozone layers are typically elevated in the summer months, meaning that the air is unhealthy on most summer days. There is really no clean season in the region, which is east of San Luis Obispo and comprises Fresno and Bakersfield, the report said. Included in the reportʼs findings were the following facts: There were 188,000 days of school absences; 188,400 days of reduced activity in adults; 3,000 lost work days; 260 hospital admissions; more than 17,000 days of respiratory symptoms in children; 3,230 cases of acute bronchitis in children; 23,300 asthma attacks; and 460 premature deaths among persons 30 and older. “I havenʼt been there myself, but I have acquaintances close to the area,” said Erin Seale, a Fullerton resident. “Iʼve never known of the poor air quality. I canʼt believe how bad it is and how many it kills each year.” Some communities have been hit harder. “Our biggest concern is our air quality to our residents,” Brenda Turner, public information representative for San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District, said. “Itʼs something that has improved. We are showing significant improvements, but we have a long way to go to meet the state standards.” As San Joaquinʼs population grows by approximately 2 percent per year, the study estimates that by the year 2020, the population of people residing in the area, currently at 3 million, will have grown by one-third. “If not enough is done to at least meet the federal smog standards, which are not as protective as the state standards are, people will go on being ill, kids will miss

Vo l u m e 8 2 , I s s u e 3 5

By Jamie Quarles

Daily Titan Staff Writer

Daily Titan Staff Writer

WEATHER

TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY Sunny High: 80 Low: 55

Sunny High: 80 Low: 55

Mostly Sunny High: 77 Low: 56

FRIDAY Partly Cloudy High: 72 Low: 53


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2006 04 18 by Daily Titan - Issuu