OPINION: Veterans deserve more than one day per year, page 5
SPORTS: Page 6
Hockey club on the verge of returning to campus
Since 1960 Volume 87, Issue 40
FEATURES: Campus organization helps students deal with depression, page 4
Daily Titan
Wednesday November 12, 2008
The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton
DTSHORTHAND Campus Life Joseph Cervantes, Ph.D., Counseling Department will explore the spiritual and healing traditions in the Latino communities. He will discuss his latest book and provide a book signing for us. He will be giving his presentation today at noon to 1 p.m. in Room 205 of University Hall. For more information please contact Sue Passalacqua at (714) 278-3651.
Titans lead veterans parade
Teachers facing disciplinary charges for Facebook posts CHARLOTTE, N.C. (MCT) – A Thomasboro Elementary teacher faces firing for posting derogatory comments about students on Facebook, while four other Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools teachers have been disciplined for posts involving “poor judgment and bad taste,” spokeswoman Nora Carr said Tuesday. WCNC, the Charlotte Observer’s news partner, turned up questionable pages on the social networking site by searching for people who identified themselves as CMS employees. The Thomasboro teacher listed “teaching chitlins in the ghetto of Charlotte” as one of her activities and drinking as one of her hobbies. In her “About Me” section she wrote: “I am teaching in the most ghetto school in Charlotte.” Most of Thomasboro’s students are minorities from lowincome homes. The teacher has been suspended with pay and Superintendent Peter Gorman has recommended firing her, Carr said. The dismissal is not final because teachers have a right to appeal. Reporter Jeff Campbell of WCNC said he showed district officials pages involving seven CMS teachers. Carr said four faced unspecified discipline that is less than suspension or dismissal.
By tiffany le
For the Daily Titan
news@dailytitan.com
Five members of Cal State Fullerton’s Army ROTC led a 500-person procession up Harbor Boulevard yesterday. The 21st Annual Veterans Day Parade in downtown Fullerton brought together vets from different generations and wars. Families and children wearing patriotic colors waited anxiously on the sidewalk. On this brisk, chilly morning, excitement and happiness filled the air. They cheered as students, veterans and a marching band marched up Harbor Boulevard towards Hillcrest Park. On Tuesday, five students from
Cal State Fullerton’s Army ROTC led a 500-person parade for the 21st Annual Veterans Day Parade in downtown Fullerton. Marching behind a police motorcade, Sean Summerfall, 21, a political science major, led his color guard up the street, heading towards Hillcrest Park. Summerfall was excited
to be part of the event. “It’s an honor to be with the veterans here,” he said. To him, Veterans Day is a day to honor all the men and women who’ve been deployed or are currently deployed. It also reminds him that he took an oath with the Army to serve. Jordan Fankhauser, a criminal
By tiffany le/For the Daily Titan Naval JROTC students from Troy High School await for the parade to begin. This is the first time the parade had flags representing all 50 states.
justice major, was one of the members of the color guard. Flanked by his fellow cadets, the 20-year-old rifleman held a Springfield rifle from 1903. While most students were at home relaxing, this is the day Fankhauser was honoring veterans. Marching behind the ROTC students were about 40 veterans.
Although this group was not wearing their uniforms, their camouflage jackets spoke for themselves. Military ribbons and medals were pinned and displayed on their chests. These veterans probably did not know each other. But on this particular day there was a sense of See PARADE, Page 2
Student veterans CSUF tests the feeling of a 8.0 try to heal, help Members of the Student Veterans Association at CSUF share camaraderie as they readjust to civilian life and work to improve services for other veterans
A drinking and driving evaluation for this man is a ‘drunk fail.’
By Jessica Terrell
Daily Titan News Editor news@dailytitan.com
This man is helping the police officer conduct his own sobriety test and the turnout was not in his favor. Check out how much of a fool he makes of himself and maybe you will learn to not do what he just did. It will take a miracle for this man not to get a DUI.
WEATHER
TODAY
TOMorrow
By Shruti Patel/ For the Daily Titan The Quake Cottage simulates 7.8 earthquakes and Mary Ruelas, Veronica Alvarado, and Lesley Hernandez (right to left) have a great time learning what a huge earthquake like that would feel like Monday.
CSUF Chinese film festival By Damon Lowney
For the Daily Titan
news@dailytitan.com
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Monday marked the end of the two-day Chinese American Film Festival at Cal State Fullerton that sought to help spread knowledge of Chinese culture among students by showing four Chinese films. The film festival, which took place on Sunday and Monday night, was organized by a local Chinese media company, Eagle Dragon Media Limited Company (EDI Media Inc.), and screened two Chinese movies per night that aimed to give insight to the differences and similarities between Chinese and American culture. The event was screened to the public free of charge. “It is basically a cultural exchange program,” said
Guohua “Mark” Wu, a CSUF professor and one of the organizers of the event. “It is important, for American students especially, to experience Chinese culture.” One of the main incentives to attend the film festival is that the movies shown are usually not available for viewing. There are not many venues for foreign films, which is why the film festival was brought to CSUF, said Craig Ihara, a philosophy professor and one of the founding members of CSUF’s Asian American and Pacific Islanders Faculty and Staff Association, one of the festival’s See FESTIVAL, Page 2
Cal State Fullerton student Eddie Kim had been back from Iraq for over six months before he realized that he had post-traumatic stress disorder. Kim could not go to sleep without inspecting his house, checking to make sure each door was locked. He would go outside to make sure no one was there, securing the perimeter of his home. Often, when he did go to sleep, he would wake up in a cold sweat. “When we went on our missions ... there was no room for error, so you have that anxiety level,” the former Navy aviation warfare specialist said. That sense of anxiety was something that Kim held on to when he returned to California. He felt constant performance pressure, even if it was about small things like getting to school on time. “I was cutting people off on the freeway ... it was something that was embedded in us I guess,” Kim said. A member of the year-old CSUF Student Veterans Association, Kim is one of an estimated 700 veterans who attend CSUF. Now that the U.S has had troops in Iraq for over five years, more and more veterans like Kim are returning home to grapple with not only how to find help and readjust, but how to improve the support systems that are available.
A lack of services Two years ago, when Joseph
Chang returned to CSUF from Iraq, there were few services available for veterans on campus. Struggling with symptoms of PTSD, Chang was frustrated by the lack of help on campus. He found it difficult to make the trek to the Long Beach Veterans Affairs Hospital in between classes for counseling, and with no veterans club available, felt like he lacked connections on campus. A human services major, Chang decided to start a veterans discussion group as part of his internship with the Women’s Resource Center. Unaware of exactly how many veterans were on campus, Chang simply searched the Quad for anyone who looked like they might have served in the military. “I had my head shaved and had a desert camo backpack,” said Brandon Larson, current SVA president. “He asked if I was a vet.” For Chang, who was still struggling with feelings of anger and confusion about his time in Iraq, the group was part of his healing process. “I was inspired,” Chang said. “I realized that my PTSD symptoms of anger, furiousness, were easing out. I was being healed by helping others, listening to what they went through. It was a powerful experience.” The next semester, the discussion group turned into an official student organization. Then, right before Chang’s graduation last spring, school officials decided that the number of veterans on campus warSee VETERANS, Page 3