OPINION: Has sex in comedies gone too far? page 5
SPORTS: Page 8
Winning streak moves Titans into fourth place
Since 1960 Volume 87, Issue 42
FEATURES: ‘Hunger and Homlessness Awareness Week’ starts today, page 4
Daily Titan
Monday November 17, 2008
The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton
DTSHORTHAND Campus Life Cal State Fullerton’s College of Education is hosting “Education Night,” Tuesday from 4-7 p.m. in the Titan Student Union Pavilions. This event will highlight the College of Education programs in a resource fair and will include two panel discussions, one with students from various credential and graduate programs and one with teachers, administrators and district representatives. Several industry experts will also be available to review student résumés.
Fires lead to evacuation
Survey reveals big salaries for college presidents CHICAGO (MCT) – A dozen presidents of private colleges earned more than $1 million in compensation during the 200607 year. The annual survey of presidential pay released Monday by The Chronicle of Higher Education found that 89 private college presidents took home more than $500,000 in annual compensation, more than double the number who did five years earlier. News of the increase comes amid concerns that the economic downturn and skyrocketing tuition costs could put a college diploma further out of reach for many prospective students. “One thing colleges have to be worried about is this perception that you have a lot of presidents making big dollars at a time when students and their parents are really worried about making tuition payments,” said Chronicle editor Jeffrey Selingo.
Firefighters prepare the hoses to put out a palm tree that caught fire across the street of Wildcat Way in Brea on Saturday, Nov. 15
Fast-moving fires in Brea, Diamond Bar, Yorba Linda, Corona, and Anaheim Hills caused concern for students and visitors at Cal State Fullerton over the weekend By Jonathan Montgomery For Daily Titan
news@dailytitan.com
On the ground were pieces of white ash, some as large as a dollar. The air was filled with smoke and it looked like it was snowing, but this was no snow. Fast-moving fires in Brea, Yorba Linda, Corona and Anaheim Hills caused concern for students and visitors at Cal State Fullerton over the weekend. At lease one fire was visible from CSUF rooftops on Saturday,
with smoke enveloping the campus. Despite the choking atmosphere, two youth soccer teams stayed behind to finish their game at the intramural field. By Saturday afternoon, a line of cars stretching for about two miles on North State College Boulevard, a clear sign that people were evacuating. The fire caused concern for some
residents of Fullerton University Village, a housing complex for students across the street from the Fullerton campus. The fire left residents standing on their balconies, staring at the sky. “Fullerton Police Department told us it’s not a mandatory evacuation,” Jori King, a resident adviser at See O.C. FIRES, Page 3
‘Tubing fail,’ is one way to take advantage of a Hurricane Fay’s effects
This man still seemed to have enjoyed his urban inner tubing session regardless of its abrupt end. He and his friends secured an inner tube to the tailgate of a car and hydroplaned down the streets of their neighborhood. The extreme water quantity was produced by Hurricane Fay earlier this year.
WEATHER
TODAY
TOMorrow
Photos By Ron Fu/For The Daily Titan A L.A. County Fire helicopter dumps water over the flames along Wildcat Way in Brea on Saturday, Nov. 15.
Budget cuts to hit CSUF Online classes may be capped Sales tax may increase as the state deficit grows
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CONTACT US Main line: (714) 278-3373 News desk: (714) 278-4415 Advertising: (714) 278-4411 E-mail: news@dailytitan.com
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Main line: (714) 278-3373 News desk: (714) 278-4415 Advertising: (714) 278-4411 E-mail: news@dailytitan.com
A possible $66.3 million budget cut could be coming to the CSU, leading to an increase in tuition costs and class sizes while decreasing student services and faculty. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger called a special session of the legislature on Nov. 6 in response to an $11 billion budget deficit and the possibility of the state running out
By Lori Herbold
For The Daily Titan news@dailytitan.com
of money by February if no immediate action is taken, according to San Jose Mercury News. “In the six weeks since I signed our last budget, the mortgage crisis has deepened, unemployment has increased, and the stock market has lost almost 20 percent of its See BUDGET, Page 2
Senate Executive Committee will discuss limiting online classes that may be credited to a degree
At the same time that schools such as Cal State East Bay are expanding their online options to include several online-only degree programs, some Cal State Fullerton faculty members are discussing a potential cap on the number of online classes that would count towards a degree. Just as there is a cap on the number of units that can be transferred from
other colleges and universities, the cap would be applied to distance education courses on the basis of online courses being considered not as valuable to students as face-to-face classes. “The Senate Executive Committee will discuss this proposal sometime in the next few weeks,” Scott Hewitt, professor of chemistry and
By Ashley Wood For Daily Titan
news@dailytitan.com
CSUF Academic Senate chair, said. Hewitt sees both advantages as well as disadvantages to putting a cap on online courses. Many students say that saving gas and time in the commute and the fight over a parking spot are reason enough to stay home and turn on the computer for class. See ONLINE CAPS, Page 2