2008 12 02

Page 1

OPINION: Castle’s Corner: revealing the mysteries of love, page 5

SPORTS: Page 6

Titan transfer excels at every level

Since 1960 Volume 87, Issue 47

FEATURES: Do not let Web scams ruin your holiday, page 3

Daily Titan

Tuesday December 2, 2008

The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton

DTSHORTHAND Campus Life The Osher Lifelong Learning Institute is having a presentation today in the Ruby Gerontology Center about technology and its effects on the elderly. Where do grandparents and parents begin to learn and interpret the language of this technology-savvy generation? The discussion will also focus on differences in each generation’s communication styles and norms, the use of disclosure and how to bridge the gaps. The guest speaker will be Daley Hilburn For more information please call (714) 278-2446.

Atheists proselytize this year’s holiday season OLYMPIA, Wash. (MCT) – In the latest round of what’s become almost a winter tradition – conflicts over religious symbols in public places – a group of atheists and agnostics have put up a sign in the Capitol building that says, in part: “Religion is but myth and superstition that hardens hearts and enslaves minds.” Freedom From Religion Foundation members put up the sign Monday, partly in response to a nearby Nativity scene. They also debuted a billboard in downtown Olympia that reads: “Reason’s Greetings.” “Nonbelievers are a part of the fabric of America and we claim our place at the table to exercise free speech and freedom of religion, which includes freedom from religion,” said Dan Barker, co-president of the Wisconsin-based foundation. The organization claims 12,800 members nationwide and 670 in Washington state. Debate over such displays have become a regular occurrence in recent years. In 2005, Republican state Rep. John Ahern created a stir when he said the fir tree inside the Capitol rotunda in Olympia should be called a Christmas tree, not a holiday tree. This year’s tree lighting ceremony is scheduled for Friday. In 2006, there was a brouhaha when Port of Seattle officials took down Christmas trees at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport after a local rabbi requested that an 8-foot-tall menorah also be displayed.

Show off ends up in a ‘soccer fail’

‘I’m not a terrorist’

(MCT) Hasan Elahi has spent most of the past six years trying to prove that he isn’t a terrorist. This is odd in a way, because during that time no one has ever said publicly that the San Jose State University assistant professor is an accused terrorist. Except Hasan Elahi. While re-entering the country following a trip to Africa in 2002, Elahi says he was accused of stockpiling explosives for al-Qaida in a Florida storage locker. Elahi went through six months of questioning and the questioning finally ended after nine consecutive polygraph tests. He has been attempting ever since to disprove that he is the most malign threat to civilization of the post-Sept. 11 world. Elahi says he is still fearful that he could be dragged off an airplane and taken to the prison camp at Guantanamo Bay. So Elahi reasoned that if he was fated to live under a perpetual cloud of suspicion anyway, he would turn his

Watching ‘Big Brother’ Question and answer with Daily Titan Staff and Hasan Elahi DT: What is the purpose of your Web site? HE: There are multiple purposes and the main purpose is to question our surveillance culture and to question our methodology of collecting information because I think one of the things that I really try to get at with the Web site is that it is not really about gathering or collecting information about an individual but about the analysis of that information. And because I am providing so much information to you, I am providing everything and nothing at the same time. So much of my information demonstrates that you really have to analyze everything in order to get the complete picture. Whereas if you were to look at our security policy we are still stuck in our Cold War mentality of information gathering and we haven’t fully made that transition from a Cold War intelligent operation to a information age intelligent. There have been some advances but we are still operating on a much older model.

See HASAN ELAHI, Page 2

By hasan elahi An excerpt of some of the toilets used away from home in 2005 and 2006.

By hasan elahi Still sequence from Rua Bin Laden. Originally shot on the streets of Bissau shortly after civil war and new election in 2002.

DT: What are some of the responses you have gotten from your Web site? HE: Oh I get all sorts of responses. The most interesting thing I get is when people say “Oh wait a minute, if this idea catches on. We’re in trouble because the government will expect this type of behavior from all of us.” That’s the main thing. DT: What is the statement you are trying to make on the Web site and in your art? HE: Well, the work I am doing on the Web site is part of my work and art. That is my art in a lot of ways. What I am really trying to do is question and try to get people to question what is happening around them. While I am hopeful that with the new administration in Washington, things will change, unless people recognize that things are seriously wrong with the way we are doing things ... nothing will change. We need to take this to the next level where we really do question what we are doing and how we are going about it. DT: Are you still afraid of being mistaken for a terrorist? HE: Well, not really mistaken for See Q&A, Page 2

CSU budget cuts force admission impaction WEATHER

TODAY

High: 72˚ Low: 49˚ A.M. Clouds P.M. Sun

CONTACT US

TOMorrow

High: 73˚ Low: 50˚ Partly Cloudy

Main line: (714) 278-3373 News desk: (714) 278-4415 Advertising: (714) 278-4411 E-mail: news@dailytitan.com

Many campuses set early deadlines, decrease new students and transfers By christian brown

Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com

With the CSU facing significant mid-year and future budget cuts, CSU officials will eliminate 10,000 admission spots from the 20092010 academic year by declaring “statewide impaction.” This stipulation allows the 23campus system, the nation’s largest, to reduce its 450,000-student enrollment by pushing up its application deadlines while raising academic expectations for incoming freshmen, said CSU Chancellor Charles Reed, during a conference call with reporters in November. As the state’s budget deficit continues to mount, Reed said the CSU system expects $66 million in midyear budget cuts and further reductions for the 2009-2010 academic

year. Teresa Ruiz, CSU spokesperson, During the teleconference hosted acknowledged the increase, but exby Reed, California Lt. Governor pressed regret that cuts must be John Garamendi asserted that the taken. CSU serves a pivotal role in the state “We’ve already seen a spike in apand must be sustained. plications. That’s good,” Ruiz said “The biggest university system in during a telephone interview. “The the nation is on a starvation diet, outlook, however, is not positive. and the CaliforThe cuts will nia economy is have a tricklegoing to be seridown effect at ously weakened all of our CSU if we do not adecampuses.” quately fund this Popular CSU university syscampuses, such tem,” Garamendi as San Diego – Mary Jo Wilson, State, said. Long High School Counselor Though the adBeach State, Cal mission cuts will State Fullerton, restrict transfers, and Cal Poly San out-of-state and international stu- Luis Obispo have had impaction redents, California high school gradu- strictions for many years. ates will bear the brunt of the downThis year only CSU campussizing, according to CSU officials. es in Sonoma, Channel Islands, Since impaction, many campuses Northridge, Chico, San Jose, San moved application deadlines to Nov. Marcos and San Francisco will ac30, despite reports from CSU offi- cept all qualified students living in cials that Fall 2009 applications have their communities. increased 10 percent compared with Guidance counselor Mary Jo Willast year. son of Sunny Hills High School in

Popular universities like Fullerton have always rejected people.

When soccer players try to show off their many skills on the field, they may need to put into consideration that others can and will get hurt. Check out this soccer fail because it looks painful.

Fullerton, believes that the admissions cuts only add to the difficulty students face when attempting to get into a CSU school. “Popular universities like Fullerton have always rejected people,” said Wilson, who encourages her students to apply nonetheless. By moving up the admissions deadline to Nov. 30, Reed agrees that the statewide impaction could potentially be hitting minority and low-income groups the hardest. “Many of these students come from families that are underserved and families of color,” Reed said. “They are unsure about financial aid and when and how to apply for that. So that hesitancy will put them at a disadvantage.” For Jessie Pawling, a counselor at Santiago High School of Garden Grove, the announcement adds one more hurdle for her students to jump over. “It’s a shame,” she said. “Our students are told that if they meet limited eligibility, they will be able to get into a CSU. That may not be the case.”


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.