Cleaning up Mihaylo
University singers play Meng
Business Inter-Club Council cleans up cigarette butts at Mihaylo Hall
University Singers and Concert Choir performed at Meng Concert Hall Saturday
News 3
Monday November 3, 2014
A&E 4
Volume 96 Issue 35
The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton
ECS unit waiver OK’d
Magic Johnson to speak in spring ASI Board of Directors has approved $40,000 of Johnson’s speaking fee
Nine GE unit waiver for College of Engineering and Computer Science approved by senate
AMBER UDDIN Daily Titan
SAMUEL MOUNTJOY Daily Titan
Associated Students, Inc. (ASI) Board of Directors has approved $40,000 to bring retired NBA legend and businessman Earvin “Magic” Johnson to campus to deliver a talk at Cal State Fullerton in the spring. The funds were allocated to the Business Inter-Club Council (BICC) from ASI’s contingency fund. “We have never actually allocated funding until this year to a specific speaker event, and it was only through the hard work of NSM (Natural Science and Mathematics) last year partnering with a lot of the ICCs that we brought one of the first high-rated speakers here to campus, which was Bill Nye,” said Chief Governmental Officer Kelsey Brewer. Following the success of Nye’s keynote speech at the Explorations in Citizen Science symposium in March, the 2013-2014 ASI Board of Directors allocated $40,000 to the executive senate budget for an event hosting a high-profile speaker, Brewer said. The vast majority of Johnson’s $90,000 speaking fee was paid by the ASI funds and a $40,000 donation from Anil Puri, Ph.D., dean of the College of Business and Economics, but many campus clubs and ICCs also donated. The CSUF Athletics Department will provide the use of Titan Stadium as a venue for the event. SEE MAGIC
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WINNIE HUANG / DAILY TITAN
Senior Adriana Gjonovich scored her only goal of the season at the perfect time to defeat Cal Poly 1-0 in the regular season finale.
Undefeated in Big West Titans cap off miraculous 2014 regular season with unbeaten Big West record
RUDY CHINCHILLA Daily Titan The Cal State Fullerton women’s soccer team clinched the Big West Conference regular season championship Sunday, beating Cal Poly San Luis Obispo 1-0 at Titan Stadium. “This is an absolutely great result for the program. I am incredibly proud and impressed with our women,” said CSUF Head Coach Demian Brown. “To be able to battle the way that we did, not just today, but throughout the course of our conference season—to conclude with a game like this is absolutely tremendous.” The Titans were eager to win, not just for the opportunity at a regular season title, but also for the opportunity to send off the team’s seniors in style. “Our conversation in the locker room was, ‘They don’t want it
WINNIE HUANG / DAILY TITAN
After winning the conference tournament last year, Cal State Fullerton dominated Big West competition in the regular season as they hope for another NCAA Tournament bid.
like we do. This is our home field, this is our senior day and this is our time, and we’re not going to let them take something from us that they don’t deserve,’” said winger Adriana Gjonovich. The Titans were honoring five departing players on senior day, including Gjonovich and team captain Chelsey Patterson.
WOMEN’S SOCCER
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After deliberating for over an hour, the Academic Senate approved a nine-unit general education exemption for students in the College of Engineering and Computer Science (ECS) in a divisive vote at their meeting Thursday. Students in the ECS college will not be required to complete the A.3 Critical Thinking, B.2 Life Science and D.5 Social Science portions of general education. Current students will be grandfathered in to the exemption and will not be required to complete the courses if they haven’t already. The exemption will take effect depending on the provisions of the signatures by CSUF President Mildred García and California State University Chancellor Timothy White. The proposal drew heavy criticism from the body, and narrowly made it past the General Education Committee of the senate. In January 2013, the California State University Board of Trustees limited all majors except specialty degrees to 120 units, a move that has been widely criticized and denounced by the CSU Academic Senate in a resolution passed in May. “This isn’t equal. This isn’t quality. This isn’t preserving the best interests of our students, necessarily. This is meeting a requirement,” said Academic Senator Nancy Fitch, Ph.D., chair of the Department of History, at the senate meeting. SEE ECS
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Three potential TSU designs unveiled Design firms show campus possible outcomes of $20 million TSU renovation
JAMIE CORPUZ Daily Titan The final three design proposals for the impending Titan Student Union renovation were revealed to the campus for the first time last week at the Titan Student Centers (TSC) Governing Board meeting. Students will have a chance this week to review the designs and submit feedback forms at drop-in sessions, which will be held through Wednesday. The TSC Governing Board and members of the Facilities and Planning Management team will consider the feedback before choosing the new design. The designs will not be posted online, and the dropin sessions are the only chance students will have to provide feedback on proposed designs. The three teams of contractors and architects designed their proposed renovations to the TSU, keeping the $20 million budget in mind. The budget for the redesign
project was approved last September using funds that come from available Associated Students, Inc. and TSC program reserves, said Kurt Borsting, TSC director. Over the next few weeks, the technical proposals for each of the designs will be reviewed by a committee consisting of student representatives as well as design and construction staff, including Jay Bond, Cal State Fullerton’s campus architect and the associated vice president for Facilities and Planning Management. The Governing Board’s requests obligated the architects to expand into the patio areas to the south and east of the TSU and to utilize the Garden Cafe as a sunken courtyard. These spaces would be incorporated with the existing first floor and basement levels, and redesigned as a “wow space” where students can collaborate and hangout. The second floor, which houses student government and administrative offices, will be redesigned to improve circulation, create more open work spaces and relocate office spaces according to departments and programs.
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MARIAH CARRILLO / DAILY TITAN
Students view potential designs for the Titan Student Union during the first drop-in session last week.
The three proposed designs The architects who designed the Student Recreation Center are among the teams vying to redesign the TSU. The C.W. Driver and Gensler team
also designed the Facebook headquarters, the AT&T Foundry and Airbnb office in San Francisco. Gensler’s designer, Li Wen, described their plan as free-flowing and climate appropriate, engaging
the indoors with the outdoors. The “wow space” is created using tiered staircase-like lounge areas to create a three-story multi-purpose amphitheatre style atrium that will connect the TSU
Underground to the first level up to the second floor offices. The design is very fluid and open, but still creates somewhat separated nooks and levels. SEE TSU
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