OPINION: Racism still prominent in America , page 3
SPORTS PAGE 6
Thuresson dreams of the next level
Since 1960 Volume 85, Issue 19
FEATURES: Students save on parking by riding the bus, page 4
Daily Titan
Tuesday October 2, 2007
The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton
DTSHORTHAND BY THE NUMBERS
64
Number of U.S. soldiers killed in Iraq in the month of September. This was the lowest toll in 14 months.
Rally Monday
Hunters kill rare wild gator in Wis.
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Anywhere in Europe, playing soccer day in day out, it’s honestly what I want to do.
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– Skyler Thuresson, CSUF men’s soccer
See Sports, page 6
YOUTUBE: TONY & PAUL TRILOGY: 2
In the second episode of the magnificent trilogy from Tony and Paul, another competitor is tuning up his game for the ultimate pingpong tournament that lies ahead. The challenger seeks help from a guru, who trains him through the use of eastern philosophy. He plays blindfolded pingpong while braving the wilds in order to prepare his mind and body for the tournament. But will his flaming paddle and Zen style be enough to win? Duration: 1:54
WEATHER
TODAY
TOMorrow
By Charlotte Cadenas For the Daily Titan
news@dailytitan.com
Fans rally a goodbye and a good luck to the Angels
By Urmi Rahman
Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com
Homemade rally monkey jackets, face paint, matching red shoes and toddlers sporting red Angels gear dominated the third Rally Monday event at Angel Stadium. The team officially placed itself in the American League West on Sunday and is in prime position to take a stab at baseball’s ultimate prize, the 2007 World Series. The players are in Boston now preparing for the first of five potential games against the Red Sox on Wednesday and will return to Anaheim on Sunday. Previous Dodgers-lovers and those devoted to the Angels since a young age credited their dedication to the team’s pitchers, management style and fan treatment. “I am a consumer [of the Angels],” former Dodger fan Michael Perez said. “I will go with the team that treats me better.” Perez, a fan since the age of 5, found the Angels new title as a Los Angeles team more inclusive. Mike Scioscia’s style of management was also another reason for his support. “I am the biggest fan this team
Halo 3 tournament held on campus to celebrate video game release By Janae Conway
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has,” Santa Ana resident Darren Wells said. He brought his two sons, Bryson, 9, and Brandon, 11, clad in Angels jerseys. “If they can pass Boston, they can win the series,” he said. The Angels initiated the festival with United States Army parachute team members gliding down to live music of the English Beat, a band out of England. The USC Trojan marching band played a few tunes, displaying quirky dance moves. A predominately white and His-
panic crowd checked out the PS3 game stations, food trucks, batting and pitching cages. The rally, crammed with die-hard Angels fans with “game rooms” back home filled with memorabilia, gave away autographed baseballs and playoff tickets at large. “I have red Angels drapes, signed balls, a big banner and 2002 championship pictures,” Wells said of his game room. The father of a 1 and a 1/2-year-old decked out his son in a baseball cap and red striped T-shirt while making
their weekly stadium visit. Frank Muro of Chino applauses the Angels’ family-oriented programs and comes to see the team three to four times a week with his son, Jacob Elisa. Muro’s youth baseball coach took him to his first Angels game at the age of 5. “Thank God my coach didn’t take me to a Dodgers game,” said Muro, who regularly camps out overnight at the parking lot to score hot tickets. Irvine resident Ilene Schneider came solo to the rally drenched head-to-toe in red since her husband does not care for sports. She gripped in one hand her swap meet Angels bag with a rally monkey and a banner. She wore red shoes, pants, shirt and hat. A previous Texas resident and avid fan moved to California to be with his new wife but loves being only 20 minutes from the stadium. One fan held an “All West Division Champion 2007” belt over his head while another created his own rally monkey trench coat. The crowd, who entered free of charge, was treated to a fireworks show at the end.
Today Cal State Fullerton will host its fall Campus Technology Day in the Titan Student Union starting at 9 a.m. In honor of CSUF’s 50th anniversary, this event will include special guest Kenneth C. Green, the founding director of the Campus Computing Project, as the keynote speaker. Amir Dabirian, CSUF’s chief information technology officer, will also host some of the day’s activities, including a slideshow that will showcase the expansion of Information Technology systems in the CSUs and especially at CSUF. To this day, CSUF is one of the technological leaders in higher education. During the first week of school, the campus’ Blackboard network had over 34,000 users logging on, Dabirian said. When Patrick Wallis, a sociology major and transfer student, learned about some of the resources available to him here on campus, he said he felt out of the loop. “[Fullerton College] doesn’t have Blackboard, and I had to figure out Blackboard on my own,” Wallis said. Technology day will give students an inside look at all the campus’ technologies and the importance of technology in today’s society as well as in our future, Dabirian said. One of the newest technological advances on campus is located on the first floor of the Pollak Library, the Smart Group Study Rooms. These rooms are equipped with the latest forms of video technology. Students and professors can record, edit and preview, as well as make podcasts of their own material, Dabirian said. The Pollak Library houses many of the technological resources that are available to all students. Sophomore Lauren Fritz said she didn’t know too much about all the resources that are available to her on campus. One resource that Fritz does take advantage of is the listening and viewing rooms located on the fourth floor of the library. “What’s cool is that almost every video is available to you. You can play DVDs, vinyls and you can watch or See TECHNOLOGY, Page 2
Fragging fills halls of Computer Science Building For the Daily Titan
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Photos By Daniel Suzuki/For the Daily Titan
Rally monkies and red flags wave as Angels fans wait for the Monday Rally to begin.
Following the cliff-hanger ending of the Xbox game Halo 2, Halo 3 came out with a bang. To celebrate the release of the end of the trilogy, Cal State Fullerton students fought each other in a bloody, brutal battle. The tensions were high in the Halo 3 tournament at CSUF on Saturday, said Mike Martinez, a competitor in the tournament. The Video Game Design Club and Microsoft came
together to create the event. “You do get competitive,” Martinez said. “I would hate to say I feel anger but it is an intense feeling.” The tournament was filled with men and women alike, all there to experience the thrill of “capture the flag,” a multiplayer mode in Halo 3. “As a career I would like to work with a team of designers for video games,” said Jonah Montealegre, the secretary of the VGDC and one of the females participating. The sounds of harsh language when a teammate died and applause when a flag was captured echoed across the hallway. “This game is a big deal for us as developers because it is entering [a] new stage of mainstream video
game advertisement and it became a household name,” said Jason Jackson, a VGDC member. Microsoft products were awarded during a raffle, including Microsoft Office Ultimate, Home and Student and Zoo Tycoon. “Microsoft sponsored the Halo 3 launch event,” said Mehmet Akkurt, a Microsoft technical partner and VGDC officer. The tournament was split between two rooms in the Computer Science building with two screens in each room. The multi-player mode was four against four. Students were split up into teams of red, blue, green, pink and yellow, with the pink and red teams dominating halfway through. The teams took turns resting and visiting each
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You do get competitive. I would hate to say I feel anger but it is an intense feeling.
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FARMINGTON, Wis. (AP) – Ed Long thought he was shooting at a snapping turtle, but got a surprise when he pulled his trophy from the Milwaukee River: a 4-foot-long alligator. Long had been in the river Saturday hunting for ducks. “At first, I thought it was a turtle tail,” he said. “Then it turned and came back at me. I seen the eyes come out of the water, but my brain didn’t click. This is Wisconsin. There’s not supposed to be ‘gators in Wisconsin.” When the reptile submerged again, Long fired and stunned it. He called to his cousin, who prodded the 25-pound animal with a stick and then ran when it moved. “We both thought nobody is going to believe us,” Long said. “We made a decision to bring it back dead or alive, and more likely dead.” The animal appeared to have died from a shot to the head. The cousins dragged it to a field and then went to their uncle’s home for help bringing it in. “I’m still just absolutely 100 percent shocked,” said Long’s uncle, Herb Sagan. “You’ve got a better chance of shooting a 30point buck in Wisconsin than a gator.” Long, 31, of Greenfield, is calling taxidermy shops about preserving the alligator.
Celebrate technology at CSUF
– Mike Martinez Tournament competitor
other across the rooms. The winners of each match were determined by how many bodies the teams piled up, Jackson said. The pink and red teams went head-to-head. After a quick defeat, the pink team won. In the final round, the four pink teammates had to fight each other in a bloodthirsty
battle. The big winner, Shotaro Smith, took home a copy of Halo 3. “I already have [the game] so I want to give this copy to a friend,” Smith said. After the tournament, no one went home empty-handed. Everyone received a copy of XNA Game Studio Express. The VGDC used XNA Game Studio Express in the past to create a game of their own. It consisted of CSUF’s mascot, Tuffy, in a go-cart race across the campus. Rusty Scrivens, a club member, said the game is not finished and the club is planning to advance it. They plan to hook the game up in the Titan Student Union for students to play once it is completed.