Features, Page 4
Andy Warhol artwork displayed in Santa Ana
Since 1960 Volume 86, Issue 40
Daily Titan
Wednesday April 16, 2008
The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton
DTSHORTHAND
A bird’s eye view
Fourth Annual Social Justice Summit
The fourth Annual Social Justice Summit will be held on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Titan Student Union. Issues about human rights, environmental concerns, inequality and oppression on a local, national and global level will be discussed. The summit is set up to provide a forum to exchange ideas about improving the state of communities, creating change, taking action and finding grassroots solutions to problems. Keynote speakers include Suheir Hammad, who is a PalestinianAmerican poet, author and political activist and Staceyann Chin, who is a political activist and fulltime artist. The event is free and open to the public. For more information, visit the Volunteer and Service Center at TSU Room 2.
Awareness through films A festival at Fullerton College helps spotlight issues otherwise obscured By ANDREW MEZA
Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com
Exhibit displays rare bowls of Sawos people
It started with a passion for film and a membership to Netflix. The online movie rental site has had a significant impact on Fullerton College student Lisa Gonzalez. It was one of the main factors that led to the documentary film festival currently taking place at the college. The showings, which are being screened through late March and early May, focus on current and past social issues from around the world. Some subjects spotlighting the event include human rights in Darfur, disability in Ghana, gay communities in Africa, India, Vietnam and Honduras, the environment and Woodstock. Gonzalez, with the help of Fullerton College film instructor Jay Goldstein, has complied eight previously released features that contribute to the festival’s ultimate goal. “It’s my passion through the wonderful medium of film to promote See FILMS, Page 2
The “Ceramics of Sustenance: Elaborate Vessels of the Sawos, Papua New Guinea,” which opened Tuesday, is the new exhibit at the Cal State Fullerton Anthropology Teaching Museum. The objects on display, part of a Bowers Museum collection, have never been researched, said Julie Perlin Lee, a lecturer of anthropology. The rarely seen pottery originated in the Middle Sepik region. The exhibit will run through June 2 and is open for public view daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Anthropology Department in Room 426 of McCarthy Hall.
Upgrading the 911 wireless system is a joint effort
Six million pounds of trash found in a day
Improved technology allow police to react in a more appropriate way
WASHINGTON (AP) – The world’s beaches and shores are anything but pristine. Volunteers scoured 33,000 miles of shoreline worldwide and found 6 million pounds of debris from cigarette butts and food wrappers to abandoned fishing lines and plastic bags that threaten seabirds and marine mammals. A report by the Ocean Conservancy, to be released today, catalogues nearly 7.2 million items that were collected by volunteers on a single day last September as they combed beaches and rocky shorelines in 76 countries from Bahrain to Bangladesh and in 45 states from Southern California to the rocky coast of Maine. The 378,000 volunteers, on average, collected 182 pounds of trash for every mile of shoreline, both ocean coastlines and beaches on inland lakes and streams, providing a “global snapshot of the ocean trash problem.” The most extensive cleanup was in the United States where 190,000 volunteers covered 10,110 miles – about a third of the worldwide total – and picked up 3.9 million pounds of debris on a single Saturday last September, according to the report. That’s 390 pounds of trash per mile.
By DANIEL SUZUKI/Daily Titan Staff Photographer
To promote upcoming events for Cal State Fullerton students, various groups at CSUF drew with chalk on the pavement in the Quad. Among these events publicized is Comm. Week., beginning Monday.
By JEREMIAH RIVERA
Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com
The Cal State Fullerton University Police department recently finished testing their new 911 emergency response system that allows for police to pinpoint a wireless caller’s location, giving police an edge on responding to emergency situations on campus.
University Police made the decision to upgrade their system over two years ago after a nationwide concern for dropped calls, delayed emergency response times and wrongful death lawsuits attracted the attention of media and concerned citizens. The upgrade was completed late last month. Students should be aware that MetroPCS users do not have the capability of being traced, unless their phones are equipped with global positioning system technology. Phones with GPS technology automatically give University Police their latitude and longitude coordinates whenever a 911 call is made.
However, police use triangulation, a process that analyzes a wireless signal’s location with relation to three cellular towers, to locate callers whose phones are not equipped with GPS technology. “With the way we have set up the system, generally speaking, all 911 calls made on campus should come directly to us,” Brian Barnes, the CSUF police dispatcher and public safety answering point manager, said. Not to mention calls made in the nearby residential areas, he said. Barnes explained that in some instances, such as a cellular tower being repaired, a high call volume or geographic obstacles such as large
A crowd Teaser
By DAWN PETTIT
Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com
WEDNESDAY Partly Cloudy/ High: 76, Low: 55
THURSday Partly Cloudy/ High: 81, Low: 56
FRIday Sunny/ High: 76, Low: 52
SATURday Partly Cloudy/ High: 62, Low: 50
sUNday Mostly Sunny/ High: 67, Low: 49
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PHOTO COURTESY OF RANDA WAHID/CAL STATE FULLERTON MIDDLE EASTERN SOCIETY
Daisy, a belly dancer, performs for a crowd of Cal State Fullerton students Monday afternoon as part of the Middle Eastern Student Society fourth annual Hookah Titan-Up event held on campus.
the other hand, still claims “[Our biggest] problem is we don’t know where people are.” People are under the impression that police can zero in on their location, but that is not the case. In some situations, there are other factors such as computer challenges that conflict with that assumption, she said. It is imperative in any emergency situation that callers give operators their location, even if that’s all they could communicate, Downing said. The new system is the result of contributions from several departments on campus. Professor of geography John CarSee 911, Page 2
New housing aims for a better sense of community CSUF plans for a new residence hall to provide students another option
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buildings, those calls that would normally be picked up by the nearest tower would be forwarded to the next available tower. That call would then be picked up by whichever jurisdiction the tower is located in and police would respond accordingly. Because wireless signals can be forwarded to the next available tower, University Police cannot define where their ability to pick up calls ends and Fullerton City Police’s abilities begin. “It just depends on which one [cellular tower] has a better signal,” Barnes said. Fullerton City Police lead Dispatch Operator Sue Downing, on
Plans for building a new fivestory student housing unit, which will accommodate 1,000 residents at Cal State Fullerton, are currently underway. The Student Housing Phase III project will include double-occupancy rooms, shared lounges, kitchenettes, restrooms, study rooms, a recreational lounge and a convenience store, according to Stephen Chamberlain, CSUF’s senior project manager. CSUF’s facilities planner Kim Apel, who takes part in the site selection, pre-design and programming, said the new housing will not necessarily be better than the existing one, but it will be different. “Adding residence halls to the current apartment-style complexes would offer more of a variety for students and suit different needs and preferences,” Apel said. The future site for the student housing unit is at an existing parking lot located on the east side of
campus near the current apartment housing complex. An abandoned oil pipeline currently occupies the site as well as trees, which will be removed during construction. A brand new dining facility and parking structure are also included. The estimated budget for the student housing project is $115 million, Chamberlain said. Chamberlain said the new proposed phase of housing are dormitories and are geared toward firstand second-year students. Since the rooms do not come equipped with kitchens, a 19,000square-foot dining facility will accompany the new housing unit and encourage residents to participate in meal plans. “We expect the food to be exceptional and the dining room to promote social interaction,” Chamberlain said. The dining facility will be programmed and designed by Webb Design, whom Chamberlain said is a leader in the food service industry. As the campus has grown and evolved to a more urban character, Apel said CSUF is not the suburban commuter campus it once was. The result is there is an increasing need for student housing, which CSUF See HOUSING, Page 2