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Women’s soccer coach builds solid rapport
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Daily Titan
Wednesday September 24, 2008
The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton
DTSHORTHAND Campus Life
I’m networking now
TSU Chapman Atrium presents the College of Education’s “Transforming Education” exhibit. This exhibition show cases the transforming education program for teachers at Cal State Fullerton. The College of Education offers a teaching credential program, graduate degrees and a Doctor of Education program. The college has a diverse faculty and alumni who continue to help contribute to the success of the college. The exhibition is located in the TSU until Oct. 31.
Thieves steal hood from ice cream delivery truck AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) – Dave Tracy said he can understand thieves snatching ice cream from one of the Hershey’s delivery trucks he manages. But stealing a hood off the truck? The branch manager at Hershey’s Augusta warehouse said “nothing like this has ever happened.” Tracy said the fiberglass hood, at 7 1/2 by 6 feet and 4 feet deep, is “not exactly small.” He said that even if the thieves had a pickup truck, the hood wouldn’t be easy to carry off. Tracy, who’s worked for Hershey’s for 23 years, discovered the theft when he got to work Monday morning. Augusta police said the thieves probably needed a hood identical to the one on the ice cream truck. Hershey’s Augusta warehouse has six trucks that deliver through Maine and northern New Hampshire.
One way to chill your beer: ‘10 sec freezing Corona’
What do two guys do when they are bored and have access to a freezer? Ivan and Gent figured out that leaving a Corona bottle in the freezer for three hours and tapping the top of the bottle will automatically freeze the beer. Putting liquid in a below zero enivronment centigrades the molecules and causes the liquid to turn into ice. The tapping of the glass causes the molecules to move around and disturbs the chemistry so it instantly changes liquid into ice. Make sure nothing disturbs the bottle when its in the freezer because it will mess up the experiment.
On a commuter campus, a Cal State Fullerton Professor says teacher-student interaction is minimal, but the Facebook Web site can help people connect By Breanna Moore
Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com
As a college student at USC, David Bowman would sit after class with a group of his professors and other students drinking coffee and arguing about politics. Bowman, who is now a professor and Chair of the Geology department at Cal State Fullerton, said he believes that this kind of “informal learning” is probably the most important part of college. Experiences like his, though, are seriously lacking at CSUF, Bowman said. Bowman is one of many CSUF professors who are now a members of the popular social networking site Facebook. Professors use the site like many other users do – to keep in touch with old classmates and colleagues and to joke around with friends and coworkers. But some CSUF professors, like Bowman, are also using the site to keep in touch with CSUF students and alumni. Bowman said that when students and professors befriend each other on Facebook, it has the potential to fill the void of informal studentteacher relationships at CSUF. There are few college students in the United States who have never heard of Facebook. Boasting over 100 million active users, www.facebook. com is the “4th most-trafficked Web site in the world” and the “most-trafficked social media site in the world,” according to its Web site. But few realize that over half of the users on Facebook are outside of college. In fact, according to the Facebook Web site, the fastest growing demographic is in the 25-and-over age group. This growing demographic also encompasses college professors, including a large group of CSUF professors. Bowman said that he got started on Facebook after a field trip with one of his classes. He said he became
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the need for one yet, but still values the idea of connecting with students outside of the classroom – whether that is on Facebook or not. “The classroom is a good place to expose students to different ideas and thinking,” Hollon said, “But the most important learning has always taken place outside the classroom. That was true when I was a student, and I don’t think it is any less true today.” Allison Cone, a 23 year-old geology major and a Facebook “friend” with Bowman, said she believes many college students would like to have a more personal relationship with their professors. “I think that a lot of students do want to be closer to their professors,” Cone said. “Especially ones that they admire their work, or just the way they teach a class. I think that should be encouraged on our campus.” Cone said that being friends with a professor on Facebook can create more talking points between a student and a professor. Facebook applications like bumper stickers and online political groups can give professors and students more subjects to touch on, Cone said, when talking on a more casual basis. Cone said that one of the positive aspects of talking casually with a professor is being able to learn from what they say and how they say it. “When you talk casually to a professor, you can gain an understanding of how to think critically about something,” Cone said. But while a more personal relationship with a professor may be valued, some students believe the relationship should still retain some boundaries and have certain parameters. CSUF student Andrew Corcoran, 21, a geology major, said by e-mail that while a less strict relationship with a professor is fine, there should still be limitations. See FACEBOOK, Page 2
is a symbol for freeing women from the moral and obedient image which has restricted them for generations. Mallory Adams, 23, a senior and business and arts management major at the University of Iowa, is one of the models who used her actual name in the October 2008 issue. “My experience posing for Playboy has been amazing so far. I have modeled in the past but nothing of this caliber and can’t believe the reaction so far. I was really fortunate that I got the opportunity to be in the Big 10 feature,” Adams said in an e-mail interview. Adams has had the attention of the entire city she was raised in due to her appearance in the magazine. “I recently did an article for the local newspaper of the town in Iowa I grew up in. The article was on the front page and got positive and negative attention. Needless to say I expected this, knowing Playboy isn’t for everyone,” Adams said. “Overall, however, everyone has been very supportive and needless to say everyone
in my family is now informed.” Students at Cal State Fullerton had reactions to the release of the Big 10 issue, despite the fact that no CSUF girls appeared in the magazine. “Smart women are hot,” business major Robert Serrano, 22, said. Kinesiology major Ryan Carpenter, 22, seconded that notion by stating, “Education is sexy,” as the two lifted weights in the Student Recreation Center. Both students took two big gulps of Gatorade and a break from their work out, before agreeing that Playboy makes a positive statement by featuring college girls in the magazine. “I mean if you’re hot, and you go to college, why not pose for Playboy?” Serrano said. There is no height, weight, or hair color requirement for those who try out, Playboy spokeswoman Tina Manzo told the Daily Northwestern. The Big 10 models need to represent See PLAYBOY, Page 2
“I think that its a really neat way to get closer to your professors and find out what you have in common with them.”
“I have no problems with befriending a professor, the only concern is whether my facebook is clean enough, but I try to lock up any private information about me that might be embarassing. I did like facebook better when only college students could get one though.”
“We all drink beer and have worries and opinions and concerns. And if you can’t handle that relationship [then] you should remain in the third grade where teachers and students are alien to each other in the real world.”
The Bicycle Tree Playboy presents ‘Big 10’ flips hot cakes
The special college issue features university coeds in a 10-page spread. By Laura Olsen
WEATHER
interested when the class started sharing the photos from the trip online. But Bowman said he didn’t really get “hooked” until after getting a friend request from the girl he went to his senior prom with. Bowman now refers to Facebook jokingly as “crack-book.” “Once you start, you can never stop,” Bowman said. “Its horribly addictive.” Though Bowman said he uses Facebook mostly to joke around with other CSUF faculty and to “waste time,” he also said that he doesn’t have a problem being Facebook “friends” with certain CSUF students. “College is about blurring the lines,” Bowman said. “You’re adults.” Bowman said that a lot of what college is about is learning to be open to new ideas and new experiences. It’s about opening students’ eyes and minds to new things, Bowman said. “Facebook helps to break down some of those barriers,” Bowman said. “Part of college, part of you (being) an adult is learning to talk to people who have different ideas than you do.” Facebook, Bowman said, can help facilitate this need. Katie Perdue, a 31 year-old CSUF alumna who double-majored in drawing and painting and in illustration, said in an e-mail interview that the teacher she learned the most from in college was one with whom she would share a beer and discuss art with outside of the classroom. “Be real,” Perdue said. “We all drink beer and have worries and opinions and concerns. And if you can’t handle that relationship (then) you should remain in the third grade where teachers and students are alien to each other in the real world.” John Hollon, a CSUF communications professor, said that he also sees the value in informal learning. Hollon said in an e-mail interview that he doesn’t have a Facebook account simply because he has not seen
Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com
Playboy’s college pictorials are some of the most popular features in the October issue, and this year the magazine toured 11 universities snapping pictures of coeds who eagerly hoped to strip down for the notorious 10-page spread. The college issue of the men’s magazine has featured the “Girls of the Big 10” since 1973, according to Uwire, a newswire Web site for college newspapers. This year’s issue of the Big 10 hit newsstands Friday Sept. 12, featuring 48 of the conference’s hottest college girls. Hugh Hefner, editor-in-chief and creative officer of Playboy Enterprises Inc., first published the magazine in 1953. He has stated that Playboy
Orange County cycling club holds fundraiser for new faciliity By Rae Nguyen
Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com
Some students who are fed up with traffic, gas prices and other downfalls of driving are opting to ride their bikes as a means to avoid the negatives of the road. Across the nation, cycling has increased in recent months and bicycle shops are busier than ever, according to various media sources. According to the Bicycle Helmet Safety Institute, there are between 73 and 85 million riders in the U.S. With so many bicyclists on the road, finding a unique social club to share the love of the bicycle has given Paul Nagel a chance to start the Bicycle Tree club. “It’s a club where people believe in
communities getting together for the love of bicycling,” Nagel said. The nonprofit organization first started in an Anaheim garage in April 2006. A group of friends met every Saturday to repair, recycle and restore bicycles. Some of those bikes were given to less privileged people. Word of mouth spread quickly and the Bicycle Tree became a popular attraction to local and neighboring residents of Anaheim. Nagel’s organization soon outgrew its small garage. Since then, Nagel has been in search of a larger facility in Orange County. While the search continues, the group will offer informative seminars and do-it-yourself workshops will be offered as soon as a facility is confirmed, which Nagel said might be in a couple of months. Bicycle Tree also organizes youth programs and afterschool activities to help children learn how to maintain their bikes and value their belongings, Nagel said. See BICYCLE, Page 2