2008 02 26

Page 1

SPORTS: Serrano prepares for first home game back at CSUF, page 6

INSIDE: FEATURES

Professor eases the pressure in SCUBA class, Page 3

Since 1960 Volume 87, Issue 15

OPINION: Academy Awards fail to nominate worthwhile films, page 4

Daily Titan

Tuesday February 26, 2008

The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton

DTSHORTHAND

Fitness

CSUF Idol Competiton RSA will be hosting a Fullerton Idol competition on Thursday March 6, 2008 at 8:00 p.m. in the Housing MPR Co-sponsored by Associated Students Inc. All CSUF students are able to compete, there will be prizes for the winners and free food for all. Students interested in competing must go to the RA Office in the Cypress house to pick up an information sheet.

comes first CSUF students joined in on National Intramural Recreation Sports Day By ERIKA CARMONA

Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com

Campus life Students interested in running for an elected position on the Associated Students Inc. Board of Directors can get an application in the ASI Executive Offices located in the Titan Student Union, room 207 or online at www.fullerton. edu/deanofstudents. All completed applications for candidacy must be returned to the ASI Executive Office by Friday, March 11, 2008 at 5 p.m. The CSUF Associated Students Inc. will hold elections for the ASI Board of Directors on Wednesday, March 26 and Thursday, March 27. Students will vote for representatives to be the voice for their academic college The ASI Board of Directors is responsible for setting policies for the ASI approves all funding allocations to programs and services. For more information, visit the Web site at http://asi.fullerton.edu or call the ASI Executive Office at (714) 278-3296.

Campus sports The baseball team has its first home game today against Loyola Marymout University. The game will take place at CSUF’s Goodwin field at 6:00 p.m.

Iowa is not Vegas DES MOINES, Iowa - A judge has denied an Iowa man's claim that he shouldn't have been fired for repeatedly requesting help to procure a prostitute. Neil Jorgensen, 62, of Kalona, worked at Riverside Casino and Golf Resort in Riverside After eating and drinking at a casino restaurant, he returned to his hotel room about midnight and later called hotel managers about hiring a prostitute. "The advertisement is that it's just like Las Vegas, so I thought I was in Las Vegas," Jorgensen testified at a hearing regarding his request for unemployment benefits. Hotel workers were sent to Jorgensen's room to ask him to stop demanding prostitutes. When they arrived at his room, Jorgensen answered the door in the nude. Jorgensen was fired the next day.

WEATHER Tuesday Sunny: High: 76, Low: 50

wednesday Partly Cloudy / High: 75, Low: 52

thursday Sunny/ High: 74, Low: 52

friday Mostly Sunny / High: 73, Low: 51

saturday

Partly Cloudy / High: 70, Low: 49

CONTACT US

Main line: (714) 278-3373 News desk: (714) 278-4415 Advertising: (714) 278-4411 E-mail: news@dailytitan.com

In the courtyard between the Cal State Fullerton Student Recreation Center and Kinesiology building, students came by to celebrate National Intramural Recreational Sports Day. Passersby stopped and stared at the rock wall while others fearlessly climbed the wall in hopes to reach the top. Shay Spitz, a sophomore kinesiology major, made a $10 bet with his soccer teammate, Nick Dodd, a junior and communications major, that he would be able to climb to the top in the first attempt. “It was a great accomplishment getting to the top,” Spitz said. “I couldn’t get to the top on the first shot, but I did it on the second.” Like Spitz, many students filed a line to climb an approximate 20-foot rock wall. “We are just getting some excitement created of what’s going to happen when the center is open,” said Alain Bourgault, rock wall coordinator. “The rock wall is going to be very prominent, right in the beginning of the lobby area.” Bourgault said the new center will provide rock wall climbing classes for $25, By Daniel Suzuki/Daily Titan Staff Photographer equipment included. Students will have an opportunity to Breana Hope, left, and Kayla Douglass, right, climbing a rock wall outside the new Recreational Center.

try it out first and later they will be encouraged to participate in a two-hour-long safety certification class before advancing to other classes. “Our safety certification class will give them the opportunity to learn how to put on a harness, tie the knots and handle the ropes,” Bourgault said. NIRSA Day at CSUF mainly focused on fitness and well-being while promoting the new student recreation center among the students. Various activities such as rock wall climbing, a basketball free-throw contest, pingpong and exposition classes were made available to the students last Thursday. Music and free food were also available. Although the portable rock wall was the highlight of the event, many students were very excited about the basketball free-throw contest as well. Students waited their turn to shoot, in hopes of beating the winning score and earning a prize. “I wanted a free T-shirt. If you make 11 shots, you get a free shirt. I made 10,” said Jeff Ignacio, a senior business marketing major. A few feet away fitness instructors took the stage and presented a series of condensed classes, from Pilates to cardio-kickboxing to cycling. See NIRSA, Page 2

Sexual orientation implied by subtle acts Car thefts may pose a threat to CSUF

CSUF professor builds on the idea of “gaydar” by observing actions By SEAN BELK

Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com

About 10 years ago, Cal State Fullerton psychology Professor Richard Lippa walked up and down Brea Mall, perusing areas known to have gay populations. Whether at a beach or a festival, Lippa and a few students searched for certain physical characteristics in both gay and straight men, such as whether their hair swirled to the right or to the left. Every time they noticed a man’s hair whorl swirling in a counterclockwise fashion, they quietly pressed their left-hand clicker. For a clockwise whorl, they pressed the right-hand clicker. Click. Click. Click. By the end of his study, Lippa had assessed the hair whorls of over 1,000 men, and he found that about 21.3 percent of men at gay pride festivals had counterclockwise whorls, whereas a little under 10 percent of men in general had clockwise whorls. Lippa is quick to emphasize that most gay men (about 80 percent), like most straight men (about 90 percent), have the majority pattern: a clockwise hair whorl. But what interests him is, when compared to straight men, gay men had a higher frequency of counterclockwise whorls. While some might find this confusing or odd, Lippa speculates his study could add to recent evidence that sexual orientation is a trait someone is born with. Throughout his years of re-

Campus police said meth addicts are looking for something to feed habits By HEather perry

Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com

By SEAN BELK/Daily Titan Staff Writer Cal State Fullerton psychology Professor Richard Lippa has studied behavior in both gay and straight men and claims to be able to tell one from the other by particular characteristics such as the way men walk, talk and interact with each other.

search, Lippa said he is now able to easily decipher a person’s traits and whether one is homosexual, which is commonly termed as “gaydar.” A CSUF teacher since 1976, Lippa appeared on the Tyra Banks Show in October, where he was asked to judge a panel of six men and decide whether each was gay or straight. By the way they walked, talked and interacted with each other, Lippa was, in fact, able to judge each person’s sexual orientation ac-

curately. But observing the 1,000 men for his recent study was more difficult, Lippa said. Lippa’s research comes on the heels of a similar study by biologist Amar Klar, who published an observational study in 2003 suggesting gay men are more likely to have counterclockwise hair whorls than straight men. In an attempt to replicate Klar’s finding, Lippa conducted his own research and found that the rate of

counterclockwise hair whorls is, indeed, about twice as large in gay men as in heterosexual men. The study left out women, because, Lippa said their hair tends to be longer and thus, harder to observe. His research not only looks at the patterns of people’s hair, but also whether they are left-handed or right-handed. This study concluded that more gay men (about 13 percent) than See LIPPA, Page 2

Cal State Fullerton civil engineering major Matt Rampone’s said his stolen car had a tainted feeling to it when it was recovered. “It was a crappy feeling realizing that my car was stolen, but it was even worse getting it back the next day because it had that dirty, scummy stolen feeling to it,” Rampone said. Even when precautions are taken, there is still a great possibility that grand theft auto may occur. Often times the assailants know exactly what they are looking for and exactly what they are doing, according to CSUF Police Detective Robert Botzheim. “Each crew has their own thing,” Botzheim said. “Some take the airbags to sell, some take the stereos and some take the steering wheels.” Between September and December, a huge spike in grand theft auto had occurred on campus due to a group of methamphetamine-addicted suspects who stole and burglarized 14 cars. In previous months, the amount of cars broken into or stolen was at See CAR THEFTS, Page 2


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