OPINION: Supersize me: journalist ‘Extenze’ his privates, page 4
SPORTS: Page 6
Titans’ five match win streak gets snapped
Since 1960 Volume 87, Issue 27
FEATURES: Cycling under the influence can have its consequences, page 3
Daily Titan
Monday Octobor 20, 2008
The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton
DTSHORTHAND Campus Life Guest speakers tell a story about two teenage lovers and how “complex and potentially dangerous a relationship can become.” Beth Chapman and Robert Diaz, who both are human options community educators, will roleplay the lives of Jason and Kelli, two teenagers who seem like “the perfect couple.” The event starts at 12 p.m. and ends at 1 p.m. on Tuesday in Room 205 of University Hall. For more information students can call Sue Passalacqua at 714-278-3651 or write her at supassalacqua@fullerton.edu.
Alumnus inspires students Self-made millionaire Steven G. Mihaylo offers advice to business majors By Allison Griggs
Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com
Anyone can get fooled, just don’t be the next one (MCT) Really? I didn’t know you were a cop: A 21-year-old Atlanta man, who enjoyed impersonating a police officer, put a blue strobe light in his car and proceeded to make nighttime traffic stops. This came to an end when one of the people he pulled over was his neighbor from across the street. This led to involvement by real police officers. So, I guess it’s illegal then, right?: Police in Covington, Ky., arrested a teenager for drug trafficking while he was wearing a T-shirt that read, “It’s not illegal unless you get caught.” Let’s see, 1111, 2222, 3333 ...: A man in Manchester, England, stole some bank cards and went to an ATM more than 50 times to try and guess the PIN numbers at random. His visits were recorded on closed-circuit cameras. He told police who arrested him that he was hoping to get lucky. He wasn’t.
For the record
Oct. 9: In the photo caption that was packaged with the “Use your smarts, not your fists” story, the Daily Titan identified Matt Braun as a Fullerton Police officer, when in fact he is a CSUF police officer. We apologize for this inaccuracy.
A new way to celebrate Easter in: ‘My big fat greek firework battle’
Chios, Greece – Each year this small island celebrates Easter in an unusual and slightly dangerous way. Two rival churches fire thousands of rockets at each other as part of an annual fireworks battle. The object is to hit the opposing church’s bell tower.
WEATHER
TODAY
TOMorrow
By Shruti Patel/For The Daily Titan Steven G. Mihaylo, 65, speaks, to a full lecture hall on Oct. 16, about his life story, encouraging students to always try to do better and never give up. Mihaylo reminded students that no matter what, doing their best is all we can do.
CSUF lecturer and alumnus applys art to the development of a growing child, improves test scores For The Daily Titan
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Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com
By Nicole Grodesky/For The Daily Titan Marsha Judd motivates guests to make one last bid during her fundraiser event on Oct. __
“She (Eschner) had gone to a workshop that talked about educating the whole child,” Judd said. “She came up with this brainchild idea of how to educate the whole child in the school with arts as part of the curriculum.” Eschner designed a program that included different forms of art disciplines that included music, dance, theater, and visual arts. They named the program “All the Arts for All the Kids.” The program is unique because the lessons are taught by professional artists like Judd. The arts curriculum includes six lessons in each discipline for students in the district, grades kindergarten through sixth. “We were very successful,” Judd said.” The teachers loved us, the test scores went up, we saw a huge support from the educational community.” It would seem that the art program that Judd co-founded was a success, but there was a problem. There wasn’t enough funding to support the program. See CERAMICS, Page 3
Purchasing Web cameras may soon be required for students taking online courses in order to satisfy Cal State Fullerton’s exams policy. Software Secure, Inc. has come up with the Securexam Remote Proctor in order to help universities across America catch students cheating during online exams. Securexam Remote Proctor is a $150 device that resembles a large paperweight. It attaches to a port of the computer of a student who is taking a test. The camera isn’t an ordinary Web camera; it has a fingerprint scanner in order to prove the actual student is taking the test, a voice recorder to capture others voicing the answer and a 360-degree view of the students’ environment to ensure complete independence. When students are taking courses online, there is no professor/proctor with them while taking exams, with a few exceptions to those that meet See ONLINE CHEATING, Page 2
Students get career pointers from the pros Sponsored by the Career Center and the PRSSA, students exchange Q&A news@dailytitan.com
Main line: (714) 278-3373 News desk: (714) 278-4415 Advertising: (714) 278-4411 E-mail: news@dailytitan.com
See MIHAYLO, Page 2
By Tatiana rodriguez
news@dailytitan.com
By Jennifer Tat
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CSUF in 1969 and is proud of how he has given back to the university. He emphasized the importance of education and taking full advantage of all CSUF has to offer. “We are the people that make the difference, not Harvard or Yale,” Mihaylo said. “We decide our own
Schools taking extra precautions to ensure academic honesty
By Nicole Grodesky
Some students scurry around the ceramics lab carrying their newest creations while other students are sculpting. They are quietly focused, feverishly carving and scraping shapes from fresh lumps of clay. In the back corner of the lab, huddled with students, is a woman with grayish-brown hair curled up in a bun held together with pencils. Perched on a stool, her moist clay-covered hands outstretched, she looks up with her piercing green eyes and asks with a grin, “Can I help you?” Cal State Fullerton alumni and ceramics lecturer Marsha Judd is an artist, an educator and a philanthropist dedicating her life to art and teaching. “In the ceramics lab there is always someone who needs help patching a cracked pot or trimming an off-centered lip,” public relations major Melanie Getman, a senior, said. “Professor Judd continuously roams the classroom throughout the lesson, stopping by each student to see if they need help. Her dedication to art is admirable, and her commitment to her students is extraordinary.” Judd attended CSUF as a student and returned to the university in 1999 as a professor. For the past 10 years Judd has been teaching ceramics, but her history of teaching art in the Fullerton community goes much deeper. Eighteen years ago, Judd volunteered at her son’s preschool. It was there where she made a connection between children, learning and the role that art plays in the development of a child. “Each and every child has something to say, and art is part of their way of relating to the world,” Judd said. Around the same time that Judd made her discovery, another woman named Lauralyn Eschner fostered the idea of creating an extensive art education program within the Fullerton School District.
Steven G. Mihaylo
Online class ethics
Helping mold lives
Daily Titan Staff Writer
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Cal State Fullerton alumni Steven Mihaylo is the founder and retired chief executive officer of Inter Tel, a business telephone systems company that grossed $458 million in 2006 before it was sold in 2007, according to the CSUF news and information Web site. After he made a $30 million gift to CSUF in 2008, the new College of Business and Economics building was named Steven G. Mihaylo Hall in his honor. On Oct. 16 the American Marketing Association, along with the Society for the Advancement of Management, sponsored a guest appearance and speech by Mihaylo. The squeaky-clean, brand-new Mihaylo Hall lecturing room was filled with business students focused on Mihaylo. Mihaylo, 65, graduated from
The Titan Student Union Theatre was filled with students who got a chance to hear 13 professionals speak about their careers during the second annual Cal State Fullerton Career Panel and Networking Event with NBC Universal and General Electric on Oct. 16. Sponsored by the Career Center and the Public Relations Student Society of America with support from the Entertainment and Tour-
ism Club, students had the unique opportunity to learn about NBC Universal and GE as a companies, as well as the different divisions of each entity. The event was moderated by Laarni Rosca Dacanay, the diversity communications specialist at NBCU and a CSUF alumni. She was responsible for choosing the panelists for the evening.“I wanted to make sure we had representation from each affinity group (to make up a diverse panel), and to have different levels of where these people were in their career,” said Dacanay. “It’s important for students to hear how these professionals got to where they are.” While each panelist had a different question they were asked about their profession, all of them stressed to students the importance
of internships to get one’s foot in the door during the question and answer portion. After Rick Pullen, dean of the College of Communications, gave the welcome speech, the panelists were each asked a question that related to their specific career. “They gave a lot of great internship advice that’s not just targeted toward entertainment majors,” said Christine Najm, business marketing major. Vanessa Garcia, assignment editor of KVEA/KWHY-Telemundo and a panelist, said that she is looking for well-rounded interns. “Part of the journalism business is being able to move with the market,” Garcia said. “I work in broadcast journalism and we see a lot of people not viewing television as much
anymore; how many people do you know pick up a newspaper? Everything is moving online.” Garcia encourages students to take editing classes and other forms of online media to broaden their skills. “You can be an excellent writer, but if you don’t know how to convert something virtually, there’s going to be somebody who does and can write just as well,” Garcia said. “You want to be ahead of the competition.” Panelist Kiersten Robinson, manager of Original Scripted Series Programming for the USA Network, is responsible for overseeing the production of the hit series, “Law & Order: Criminal Intent.” She said that she looks for interns who are passionate about what they do.
“We want somebody who really enjoys watching television and can articulate why they love watching a certain show,” Robinson said. “(Part of being an intern) is doing the grunt work, but it’s also about having the opportunity to be around and interact with the executives ... “ “(The panel) gave me moral encouragement to get involved (on campus),” Sharon Johnston, a third year Spanish major, said. “It also reassured me that it doesn’t matter what you major in, but to get your foot in the door.” After the question and answer portion, each panelist asked the audience a trivia question relating to NBCU, ranging from singing the NBC official “jingle,” to naming three summer hit Universal Pictures See NBC PANEL, Page 2