O DailyTITAN
www.dailytitan.com
S Volume 84, Issue 49
Bad Boys, Bad Boys
Britney Spearsʼ Comeback
Campus troublemakers show up in Cop Blotter PAGE TWO
Review of the pop star’s risque reOPINION, p. 6 turn to the stage
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Monday May 7, 2007
T S V C S U, F
Thousands Attend Annual Fullerton Train Days Event marked the second time Disneyland released locomotive
morning and the number only grew as the day went on. There were more than 90 vendors to entertain and serve food to the event attendees. Families enjoyed different kinds of activiBY GRACE LEE ties like making bird feeders out Daily Titan Staff Writer of pinecones and peanut butter, news@dailytitan.com or getting to control toy trains with a lever. Their satisfaction Thousands gathered in down- filled the tents with laughter. town Fullerton for the ninth annual People came from everywhere Fullerton Railroad Days on Satur- with their families, students and day and Sunday. friends to enjoy the afternoon of The Fullerton Railway Plaza As- trains together. sociation hosts the event every year “My experience for Fullerton to raise money to build a future Railroad Days started five years museum. ago. I’m here today to take my “We draw somewhere between students around,” said Michael 30,000 to 40,000 people a year Kim, a visitor at the event. – it’s the largest function in the There were many booths where city of Fullerton,” said Harold Be- people presented their work nasn, who sits on trains on the associaintricately tion’s board of designed to directors and is match every This [event] is very chairman of the detail of an special because some Historical & actual train of the trains are very Modeling Comand landscape mittee. representing rare and hard to find There are different time 250 association periods. – M K members lookOne of the Train Days Attendant ing forward to highlights of building a futhe event was ture museum of when famitrains. lies got the “This is a fundraiser to help chance to take short tours on build a museum here in Fullerton. the trains. There was a long line We’d love to have that museum for this booth because everyone here showing the trains,” said Vern seemed to want to explore the Smith, a conductor for Disneyland. inside of a train. Children had the chance to stand For only a couple of dollars, atop a Disneyland train that was everything from pancakes in taken directly out of the amuse- the morning to freshly squeezed ment park for this specific event. lemonade in the afternoon was “This is only the second time in served. Hot dogs, pizza, kettle the history of Disneyland that we’ve corn and funnel cake were a few been allowed to take a locomotive examples of the great snacks for out of the park to a train show,” said families to enjoy. Royce Inglis, an engineer for Dis“This [event] is very special neyland. because some of these trains are The Fullerton Train Station filled very rare and hard to find,” Kim up with people starting early in the said.
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BY RAQUEL STRATTON/Daily Titan Staff Photographer
CHOOCHOO - Lucas, 2, with his brother Jonathan, 3, tug on the horn of the C. K. Holliday steam locomotive from the Disneyland Railroad. The
steam locomotive was on display this weekend at Fullerton Train Days at the Fullerton Train Station.
ROTC Dishes Out A Final Farewell Cadets gather together to formally honor program graduates BY JENNY HOUSER
Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com
Cal State Fullerton’s Army ROTC gathered at the Ayres Hotel in Costa Mesa on Friday for a candlelight, poolside dinner. The formal dining out event marked the end of the semester and preparation for a new year. Cadets arrived in uniform with their dates and prepared for an evening of socializing, reflection and motivation from guest speaker Rob Dibble, former Major League Baseball pitcher and co-host of “The Best Damn Sports Show Period.” “It’s our farewell to our seniors and a welcome to our [juniors] in new leadership positions,” Lt. Col. William Howard said. “It enhances camaraderie, esprit de corp and [they can] see the old military traditions.” Senior cadet Rory Patterson, who
manages a restaurant and served as the battalion commander for the semester, organized the event for his fellow cadets. During the fall semester, ROTC had a “dining-in” event where only members from the unit were invited. and where senior members eat last. The spring semester “dining out” allows the cadets and instructors to bring their dates and enjoy a formal event where the senior members are served first. “The event has gone really well so far,” Patterson said. “The food is really good and [the speaker] is on his way. Rob Dibble is an awesome baseball player.” Dibble, who won the World Series with the Cincinnati Reds in 1995, shared his experiences with traveling to Iraq and speaking with U.S. troops overseas. “It really is an honor to be in front of you today,” Dibble said to the cadets seated before him. “I think there is no greater gift that men and women can give their fellow man, especially in this great country, than to give themselves up to be a leader or a grunt in a foxhole and to defend this country.”
Writers Workshop Draws Hundreds Award-winning writers from around the country spoke at weekend event BY APRIL VALENCIA
Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com
BY JENNY HOUSER/Daily Titan Staff Photographer
WALKING TALL - Cadet Fenstermaker stands at attention during the
presentation of colors at CSUF’s ROTC dining out. Dibble, who has visited the troops in Iraq twice, spoke of his dreams as a kid to become a professional player and how he now looks
up to individuals who sacrifice their
TOMORROW Sports
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BASEBALL IN A SLUMP
MULTIMEDIA
TITAN BLUES Titans not performing as well as they have in recent seasons.
SEE ROTC - PAGE 4
FULL SPEED AHEAD Fullerton station hosts annual weekend Train Day event.
Several award-winning writers and editors held seminars and workshops at the 14th Annual Writers Workshop, an event held Saturday in the Titan Student Union for the conclusion of Communications Week. The Orange County Register, Cal State Fullerton’s College of Communications and the Poynter Institute presented the workshop, which emphasized writing improvement techniques, ways to become a better storyteller and how to find a niche within the world of online reporting. “We have speakers who will really inspire folks [to] feel better about journalism and the opportunities available to them,” said Rick Pullen, dean of the College of Communications and co-chair of the workshop’s planning committee. “This is
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a good opportunity for students to hear from the best in the business.” Over 200 people including college and high school students, reporters, editors and teachers attended the workshop, which began at 9 a.m. with opening statements by the planning committee, followed by presentations from Pulitzer Prize winner Jacqui Banaszynski, writing coach and bestselling author Bill Blundell and mystery author Denise Hamilton. Banaszynski addressed the crowd with a reminder that journalists need to honor the stories they tell by connecting with society through storytelling instead of standing on the sidelines detached from others. “In addition to being news and information gatherers, we’re storytellers,” she said. “The important work we do has a vital role in society, and we have an obligation [to serve it].” After the presentations audience members separated into a “breakout” session, where each was free to choose from a variety of seminars presented in different rooms of the SEE NWW - PAGE 4
TOMORROW Sunny High: 88 Low: 58
Sunny High: 84 Low: 60