Sports, Page 6
Titan baseball on a five-game win streak
Since 1960 Volume 86, Issue 23
Daily Titan
Tuesday March 11, 2008
The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton
DTSHORTHAND Campus Life: Representatives for the Associated Students Inc. Board of Directors will be elected this month. Students interested in running for an elected position can get an application in the ASI Executive Offices located in the TSU, Room 207 or online at www.fullerton.edu/deanofstudents. All completed applications for candidacy must be returned to the ASI Executive Office today at 5 p.m. The ASI will hold elections for the Board of Directors on March 26 and 27. Students will vote for representatives. The ASI Board of Directors is responsible for setting policies for the ASI. For more information, visit the Web site at http://asi.fullerton. edu or call the ASI Executive Office at (714) 278-3296.
Graffiti art showcased
CSUF’s Fullerton Idol
Cal State Fullerton held its first Fullerton Idol event last week, similar to the popular show “American Idol.” Seven brave contestants took to the stage to battle for the title in front of CSUF audience members and three judges. With over 80 people attending, contestants sang to the beats of classic songs. To watch the good and the bad of this competition, check out the Daily Titan’s Multimedia section online.
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) - A state lawmaker wants to give the "King of Beers" its own kingdom by making Budweiser the official beer of Missouri. Budweiser is a Missouri-based international icon that, if officially recognized, might persuade more people to visit., state Rep. Curt Dougherty said. "We've got a state dinosaur, a state frog, a state reptile, a state flower, a state nut, but no one has given a thought to a company that's been in Missouri for many, many years and is bringing prosperity to our state and manufacturing a product in our state that many people enjoy," Dougherty said. Dougherty's bill was introduced last week. An executive for AnheuserBusch said the legislation was "flattering," but not requested. So far, 27 states have given official designation to their favorite beverages. Most have opted for one that is less intoxicating and builds strong bones — milk. But Missourians would not be alone in excusing alcohol runs as evidence of civic pride. Alabama made Conecuh Ridge Alabama Fine Whiskey its official spirit in 2004 .
WEATHER tuesday Partly Cloudy: High: 75, Low:53
wednesday Partly Cloudy / High:75, Low: 52
thursday Mostly Sunny/ High: 74, Low: 51
friday Sunny / High: 69, Low: 49
saturday Mostly Sunny / High: 65, Low: 47
CONTACT US Main line: (714) 278-3373 News desk: (714) 278-4415 Advertising: (714) 278-4411 E-mail: news@dailytitan.com
In a collaborative effort, Phillip Marquez, a CSUF alum- in two of Marquez’s photography classes, documenting grafnus and community members have put together “Meshed: fiti and tagging found around Santa Ana. Graffiti Art,” a free exhibition at Santa Ana College featurMarquez has plans of moving the exhibit around the city ing photographs, murals, facts about graffiti and video inter- once it closes at Santa Ana College. views with artists and the Graffiti Task Force. See Features, Page 3 The photographs were taken as a final project by students
Race clouds Democratic voting habits Nader Professors discuss the demographics of voters participating in elections By STEVEN MARTINEZ
Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com
The race for the Democratic Party nomination is coming down to the wire and racial voting habits could be the topic that puts either candidate in the top spot for good. Hillary Clinton leads Barack Obama by a significant margin in the Latino community, according to a poll cited in “The Emerging Minority” in the New York Times Magazine Web site. These polls are designed to indicate how specific groups tend to vote, but the numbers do not always tell the whole story. Recently, a boiling pot of controversy was stirred when a senior member of Senator Clinton’s staff made a general statement about the voting habits of Latino Americans based on their polling numbers. “The Hispanic voter – and I want to say this very carefully – has not shown a lot of willingness or affinity to support black candidates,” Sergio Bendixen, a pollster for the Clinton campaign said in an interview for the “Minority Reports” in The New Yorker magazine’s Web site. While it may be an innocent statement on the surface, Bendixen
is actually suggesting Latinos usu- Chicana and Chicano Studies. Instead of racism, their conflict ally tend not to vote for black cancould also be explained by ecodidates or in the current election nomics. with Barack Obama. “Hispanics and blacks are com“The evidence does not really support it, it doesn’t mean there peting for the same jobs,” said Jesse isn’t conflict between blacks and Smith, an emeritus professor of the Latinos, but there is no real evi- Department of Afro-Ethnic Studdence that it has been guiding vot- ies. Latin Americans make up the ing behavior over the years,” said largest minority group in the Raphael Sonenshein, a political science professor at Cal State Ful- United States at around 44 million people, which constitutes about lerton. However, the media spun Ben- 15 percent of the U.S. population, according d i x e n’s to the U.S. stateCensus Bum e n t , reau. They and in are a sigthe weeks nificant deafter the mographic N e w in the Yo r k e r Democratarticle came out, – Robert Castro, ic Party and like many political Chicana/Chicano Professor minoranalysts ity groups, b e g a n they tend to focus to vote in a their sights on the large problem Obama and many black candidates block, Smith said. In recent contests, Hillary Clinseemed to have with the Latino ton showed the ability to garner a vote, Sonenshein said. There is some evidence to sug- majority of the Latino vote, which gest long-standing racial tension helped her win in California and between the two communities, New York, according to a recent National Public Radio article by Castro said. “These populations kind of Nancy Cook. It is not that Latino voters do embrace, internalize and popularnot want to vote for a black canize racial animosities even though those racial animosities might be didate, however. They want to vote the by-product of social fictions,” for a name that they trust, Sonensaid Robert Castro, a professor of shein said.
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The Clintons have the reputation of pushing forward sympathetic policies and laws for Latino voters.
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Budweiser may be the official Missouri beer
By CINDY ROBLES/Daily Titan Staff Writer An exhibition of graffiti art, put together by a former CSUF student and local community members is on display at Santa Ana College.
“There is not a lot of evidence that suggests either group [Latinos or blacks] would pick out the other to vote against,” he said. “Hillary is very close to the Latino community [and] very well regarded in the Latino community.” The Clinton name resonates with Latinos because of her support of Latino issues. “The Clintons have the reputation of pushing forward sympathetic policies and laws for Latino voters,” Castro said. Most of the animosities that do exist between the communities would tend to be in the older generations and Obama actually has a decent following with young Latino voters, Castro said. Still, the Clinton campaign is resolute in its findings, saying that Bendixen was making “a historical statement.” Regardless of the reason for Bendixen’s statement, the idea that Latinos do not vote for black candidates has already made its way into the national consciousness. In an article by Los Angeles Times columnist Gregory Rodriguez wrote that Bendixen’s statement already changed the way the Nevada Caucus was analyzed when Hillary won the Latino vote by more than 2-1. As proof of this, Rodriguez pointed to political news pundit Tucker Carlson and articles from as far away as the Agence FrancePresse and the London Daily TeleSee VOTING, Page 2
biopic viewed at CSUF A chance meeting allows the documentary to be shown by a professor By HALEY BARNETT
Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com
The name Ralph Nader will once again be a topic of debate in the upcoming presidential elections as he begins his fourth presidential campaign. A group of Cal State Fullerton students are now more educated on the controversial third-party candidate after a screening with the co-director of the Nader documentary, “An Unreasonable Man.” Radio-TV-Film professor Jule Selbo invited the filmmaker, Steve Skrovan, to the CSUF campus. She met Skrovan while picketing for the writer’s strike outside a Los Angels studio. “When you march in a circle for three hours you get to know people and tell your stories,” Skrovan said. After working for years as a writer for sitcoms such as “Seinfield” See NADER, Page 2