Volume 94, Issue 20
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2013
dailytitan.com
NEWS | PROGRAMS
Suite of new journalism classes launch
Classes reflect new approaches to a rapidly changing profession CYNTHIA WASHICKO For the Daily Titan
In an effort to keep pace with an industry which has undergone huge changes in the past decade, the communications department has added two new classes to the journalism curriculum. Communications 461, Journalism Innovations, and Communications 325, Multimedia Journalism, were pushed by faculty who aim to better prepare students for their entrance into media careers. “We identified areas of need in our curriculum and we worked really hard to get these new courses approved and to realign our requirements to make sure that students have the best curriculum to prepare themselves for the job market,” Associate
Professor of Communications Jason Shepard, said. Both courses—the result of two years of planning—will be offered as communications electives. Journalism Innovations is being taught for the first time this semester and Multimedia Journalism will debut in the spring. Comm 325 prepares students for multimedia work. The course emphasizes video, audio and story writing for online content. Comm 461 focuses on the business of journalism. Shepard, who currently teaches the inaugural Journalism Innovations class, said it is vital to arm students with the knowledge of how the industry works to prepare them for future changes. He explained that the course would be useful to students who aspire to be independent in the field, by creating websites or new media companies. SEE MEDIA, 2
FEATURES | DOWNTOWN
Flea market attracts collectors and artists Mercantile Flea Market takes place the first Saturday of every month SILVIA PEREIDA For the Daily Titan
Savvy shoppers searching for a good bargain on one-ofa-kind items and handmade art pieces can find them at the monthly Mercantile Flea Market in the heart of downtown Fullerton’s SOCO District. The f lea market is a monthly event held the first Saturday of every month from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Boutiques are arranged behind the Carpe Diem Experience parking lot, where vendors display a vast array of antiques, vintage décor, jewelry and more. Many of the booth vendors also sell everything from handmade jewelry, hand painted wooden boxes and delicately arranged f lower hair clips.
Local music artists also contribute to the laid-back atmosphere as they play for bargain shoppers in search of unique treasures. Sabrina Contreras is the Mercantile Flea Market’s manager and says the f lea market idea is popular around the country, but especially in downtown Fullerton. The artful community and students from surrounding schools contribute interest to the fusion of unique items. “My big philosophy on design is when you put a combination of new, old and handmade (items) in your space, it has soul,” Contreras said. Contreras has owned the Carpe Diem Experience shop for 12 years and managed it for five years. She has been in the antique business for over two decades and is also the owner of the Red Hat Society and Stray Cat Vintage clothing shops. SEE MARKET, 6
ELEONOR SEGURA / For the Daily Titan
Collectables sold at the Mercantile Flea Market in downtown Fullerton.
NEWS 3
Santa Ana winds whip through campus OPINION 5
Who’s to blame for the government shutdown? FEATURES 6
Students utilize cultural centers on campus SPORTS 8
Benefits and harmful effects of juicing diets FOLLOW US ON TWITTER: @DAILY_TITAN
Photo Courtesy of Katie Robertson Empower Nepali Girls scholarship recepients stand in front of their primary school near Besisahar, Nepal.
Sex trafficking a global issue
Professor works with nonprofit to keep Nepali girls from global sex trade MAGDALENA GUILLEN Daily Titan
Along the rocky trail of Mount Everest, abandoned young girls line the road barefoot, hungry and homeless. Many of these girls will “disappear” into the sex-slave trade shadows. Cal State Fullerton professor Jeffrey Kottler, Ph.D., co-founded Empower Nepali Girls (ENG), a nonprofit organization which supports young women in Nepal, who are at great risk of being sold into sex slavery. Kottler is an expert in counseling who has published over 80 nonfiction books on counseling, psychology and human
trafficking. He travels to Nepal with a team of students, scholars and professionals every year to provide mentoring, support and scholarships that can help keep at-risk girls in schools and out of the sex-slave trade. According to one Indian study, 200,000 Nepali girls are currently being held captive in brothels in northern India. “Human trafficking, and not just girls and women, but also boys and men, is the third largest criminal enterprise in the world, and in some ways the most profitable because unlike guns and drugs—where you actually have to buy something at wholesale to sell it at an inf lated price, most of the humans that are being trafficked have been kidnapped or stolen,” Kottler said. Many young girls are kid-
Photo courtesy of Katie Robertson Sabita was one of the first scholarship recipients.
napped or bought in rural villages and are transported to brothels across the border to northern India, where many men believe that having sex with virgins will cure them of HIV/AIDS, Kottler said. Many of the girls are raped
10-12 times a day, become infected and die. Nepal has a higher maternal mortality rate than much of the world; limited medical access contributes to the high rate. SEE NEPAL, 3
Miss America, more than a pretty face Two CSUF students recieve scholarships from Miss America pageant RILEY TANNER Daily Titan
Two princesses knelt around a group of beaming children to take a photo in downtown Fullerton. They weren’t actual royalty, of course, but the local representatives of the Miss America pageant were easily mistaken by the young girls as a fairy tale come to life in their gowns and tiaras. Originating in 1921, the nonprofit Miss America organization is the single leading donor of scholarship money to women in the United States, issuing a staggering $45 million a year. The funds collected by the organization are widely distributed over numerous states and regions, but a large amount can find its way into the pockets of contestants. Accumulated from various fundraisers and donations, the money acquired in the competition is primarily used by recipients towards college or their professional aspirations. This year’s Miss Yorba Linda, Kaitlin Urell, 21, cashed in $5,500, while Carly Valdes, 21, current Miss Placentia and a top 10 finalist of Miss California, collected over $10,000 through the competition. Both Urell and Valdes are Cal State Fullerton students and have taken serious advantage of the financial aspects of
the pageant game to advance their schooling. A host of smaller scholarships are available, such as the Miss Congeniality award Urell recently won. Two unique grants for $5,000 are also allotted, tailored specifically to those studying science, technology, engineering and mathematics. The process behind becoming a local pageant girl is no walk in the park. Urell and Valdes both completed a grueling four-month process of mock interviews, round table discussions, walking practice in heels and color analysis under the tutelage of Executive Director of the Miss
Placentia and Miss Yorba Linda Scholarship Program, Katherine Baldwin. “A lot of people watch Toddlers in Tiaras and think it’s the same thing. But, what I’ve learned is how much it empowers females,” Valdes said. “It’s given me more confidence than I’ve ever had.” Pageant judges evaluate the women on a variety of attributes over a range of five subjects. The sequence of these subjects might change according to the specific competition, but presentation and community achievement are always ascertained through an interview conducted on the day of the competition.
Artistic expression and talent are weighed heavily in both the local and national levels of the pageants. Women wear gowns that are evaluated on their presence and poise mastery. Finally, attempting to distance the event from a chauvinistic stigma, pageant officials have redesigned the swimsuit segment as lifestyle and fitness. Initially exceeding 12,000 in number, the annual applicants of the various state and local events are gradually whittled down into a final 52 moving toward Miss America. SEE PAGEANT, 6
DYLAN LUJANO / Daily Titan
Carly Valdes, Miss Placentia, and Kaitlin Urell, Miss Yorba Linda, take pictures with children on the sidewalk.
VISIT US AT: DAILYTITAN.COM