2008 03 18

Page 1

Sports, Page 8

Women’s basketball ends their season

Since 1960 Volume 86, Issue 27

OPINION: Men need to step back, let women lead in workplace, page 4 NEWS: City council takes actions to be able to regulate restaurants, page 2

Daily Titan

Tuesday March 18, 2008

The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton

DTSHORTHAND Daily Titan Video

Where wildfires burned, wildflowers bloom

Interested in hearing your fellow students’ and staff members’ opinions on the upcoming elections? Visit the Daily Titan Web site and click on multimedia to hear student’s and staff’s reactions to the hot topics of this years presidential debate.

Sex loses its sex appeal HAMBURG, Germany (AP) The oldest bordello in Hamburg's red-light district is shutting down for lack of business. The familyrun Hotel Luxor, established in 1948, is being sold to an investor and will close down for good next month, madam Waltraud Mehrer said, according to the Hamburg Morgenpost and Bild newspapers. She blamed the decline in business on easily available Internet porn, the rise of call-girl services and "noisy discos and dance clubs" on the same street as her business, the newspapers reported. "You can't make any big money selling sex in St. Pauli any more," she was quoted as saying. "The only thing still in operation are the table dance clubs." Today Hotel Luxor employs four prostitutes and is only open Tuesday through Friday nights. "Two thousand euros (US $3,080) per night — It was like that once," one of the women, who gave her name as "Nicole," told the Associated Press. "Now, I can only dream of that. I've been here a year and only earn around euro 200 (US $308) per shift."

CSUF student receives $1,000 women’s award A CSUF student receieved the Soroptimist Women's Opportunity Award. The $1,000 award recipient, Julia Torre, is a working mother of two who has worked very hard and overcome several obstacles to reach her goal. Soroptimist is an international organization involved in service and welfare projects to the community, nation and world. The Fullerton Soroptimist club consists of female executives and professionals from the business, legal, banking, fire, pharmaceutical, aviation, advertising and eduction fields. Torre receieved the award for 2008 at the Wyndham Hotel in Fullerton on Monday for helping to improve the lives of women in our community and throughout the world.

WEATHER tuesday Sunny: High: 72, Low: 51

wednesday Partly Cloudy / High: 70, Low: 50

thursday Sunny/ High: 70, Low: 49

friday Sunny / High: 72, Low: 50

Saturday

Sunny / High: 75, Low: 52

CONTACT US

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By SEAN BELK/Daily Titan Staff Writer

The scientific term for the bright orange California poppy is Eschscholzia Californica, a common and showy fire flower.

CSUF students observe recovering plant life from the Santiago wildfires The Tucker Wildlife Sanctuary in Modjeska Canyon thrives again By SEAN BELK

Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com

Walking along a path between a barren mound of soil and a fresh cluster of dark green shrubs, Cal State Fullerton biology instructor Bill Hoese carefully watched his step. He doesn’t want to destroy what has just started to recover. About a year ago, the now bleak heap of earth used to be filled with native plants for students to observe at the Tucker Wildlife Sanctuary nature trail, an area of Modjeska Canyon, which CSUF owned and operated. Some of that land was scorched down to rubble in October of last year when the Santiago Fire engulfed more than 28,000 acres, destroyed more than 14 homes and caused thousands to evacuate. Officials blamed the fire on one or more arsonists. “Before it all burned, it looked like this,” said Hoese, as he pointed to a three-foot-high healthy

California scrub habitat. “But a lot of the plants are well adapted to fires.” Fast-growing plants, such as the wild cucumber shrub, chamise and coastline oaks are reaching toward the sun first, after recent rains have allowed native vegetation to resprout. Months after the fire came within 10 feet of burning down the sanctuary, ecology classes have now returned to find a recovering hillside, ripe for examining how vegetation adapts to fire destruction. Hoese and two undergraduate students began taking photographs of two-meter plots in January, and they are documenting each plant’s revival. The hillsides of Orange County have recently exploded with vegetation in the last few weeks, painting the canyons and valleys with wildflowers for the spring season. The land is covered with brightlycolored plants like the purple night shade, Canterbury bells, blue dick and the state’s own California poppies. Some of these hillside flowers are known as “fire followers,” which resprout many months later from the ash left on the ground. After a drought that lasted for about two years, the invasive plants weren’t able to grow as tall, allowing

By SEAN BELK/Daily Titan Staff Writer The wishbone bush (mirabilis laevis) is a perennial that grows as a small mound of leafy stems.

some of the wide variety of native wildflowers to grow freely. The exotic vegetation is specific to Southern California and can only by found in five parts of the world due to the area’s coastal climate

zone, an arid habitat that rains an average of 13 inches per year. Other parts of the world where these conditions exist include southwest Africa, southwestern Australia, Chile and the Mediterranean basin.

“Some people take it for granted,” said Michael O’Connell, executive director of the Irvine Ranch Conservancy, which takes care of preservations in Orange County. See PLANTS, Page 3

CSUs due for another set of budget cuts A $14.5 billion projected slashing may leave some schools’ welfare hurting By Muey Saephanh

Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com

Early this year, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger projected a cut of $14.5 billion to CSU campuses,

which will put Cal State Fullerton in a $10-15 million deficit. This will directly effect CSUF because about 1,000 prospective students will not be admitted, possible jobs may be terminated and funds will increase for the next fiscal year, according to the CSUF Web site. “Any budget reduction in the middle of the year is always more difficult because you have already spent a large percent of your budget

before the reduction is cut,” CSUF President Milton Gordon said. “The good thing is as of right now, it does not look like it’s going to impact this year’s budget, which is the 07-08. All of this is planning for the 08-09 budgets.” CSUF is hoping with the support of campus network and advisory groups, such as the Planning Resource and Budget Committee, Academic Senate, and others, that

they will come together to help and plan alternatives to deal with this crisis. As of right now, there are no increases for student fees, but it will affect students because current resources may not be available next year. The students, faculty and unions are working to get a budget increase in Sacramento without fees being increased. Lobby Corps, an Associated Stu-

dents, Inc. supported group, is one of the student programs that traveled to Sacramento on March 16 to propose a plan without cutting funds for any CSU campus. Lobby Corps is going to propose other alternatives to save money and keep the fund for higher education. “The state is in a deficit and we are looking for ways to save money,” Michael Ryu, vice-chair of Lobby See BUDGET, Page 2


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