W EDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 2014
Volume 95, Issue 12
CSUF No. 1 in design contest
CLUBS CHALK IT UP Ballet Folklorico de CSUF holds ‘chalk off’ event in the Quad
Teams will construct designs in Atlanta engineering contest ELIZABETH MUÑOZ Daily Titan
Cal State Fullerton civil engineering students will travel to Atlanta next week to compete in the national geotechnical engineering competition at the 2014 Geo-Congress, presented by the Geo-Institute of the American Society of Civil Engineers. The Geo-Institute ranked CSUF’s concept for a stabilized Earth wall, a small-scale retaining wall that could be used for roads or other infrastructure, as the No. 1 design in the nation. Next week, the four-member team will build and test its design in the hands-on “Geo-wall” portion of the competition. Binod Tiwari, Ph.D., an associate professor of civil and environmental engineering, serves as the faculty advisor for the undergraduate team whose research and preparation for the competition began in the fall. CSUF students have fared well in the design division of the event in the past, with a first place finish in 2011, and second place in 2012 and third in 2013. They placed third in a tie with UCLA last year for the construction portion of the competition. This year, they have reached the top once again. In Atlanta, student teams will construct their designs and test them using loads of up to 150 pounds and seismic loads that will test how the design would fare in an earthquake. These stabilized walls are typically made of concrete, which can be costly, but competitors will be restricted to using paper for the wall’s construction. The objective is to use the lowest amount of paper and resources to create what would be the most economically efficient wall if it were to be made out of concrete. “They have to design it appropriately. Exactly in the same way how people design the wall in practice, and at the same time they have to follow rules and regulations,” Tiwari said. “Whoever can have that wall working with the minimum amount of craft paper, that means it is economical.” The weight of that paper also plays a significant role in the judges’ evaluation. The CSUF team’s current design weighs four grams. SEE ENGINEERING, 3
ETHAN HAWKES / Daily Titan Campus organizations were asked to draw a ‘fun fact’ about their club. This piece was done by Hermanos Unidos de CSUF, a club for advancing young Latino males. The chalk drawing depicts snakes as universities where Hermanos Unidos chapters are located.
Doctoral candidates aim for excellence Education doctorate students present their research AMAL ROCKN Daily Titan
Cal State Fullerton’s doctoral candidates in education and alumni from education leadership programs presented their research into how education can be improved during a Tuesday symposium and panel discussion. Alumni and doctoral students presented their research on best practices in educational leadership during the symposium titled “Pursuing Excellence in Educational Practice.” The event also offered an opportunity for high school students to present their own projects. The Ed.D. program partners with the Center for
Research on Educational Access and Leadership (C-REAL), which develops strategies to help make education more accessible and foster proper leadership, according to the program’s website. Esmeralda Medrano, along with her fellow doctoral candidates, Luis M. Magallon Garcia, Angela Hoppe Nagao and Josie Macharia Lowe, conducted a study as partners of the Santa Ana College “¡Adelante!” program, which aims to give students a college-going mentality as early as middle school. “The city of Santa Ana wants to have at least one degree in every household by 2020, so they’re trying to get the entire Santa Ana community to go to college,” Medrano said. ETHAN HAWKES / Daily Titan Carol Mattson greeted the public with her display on leadership stress that she worked on alone.
SEE EDUCATION, 2
CSUF remains undefeated at home after UNC blowout SOFTBALL
Tsuchiyama and Aragon go yard in the 9-3 thumping MICHAEL HUNTLEY Daily Titan
The Cal State Fullerton softball team bounced back from a rough tournament and beat North Carolina 9-3 Tuesday at Anderson Family Field. The Titans struggled in the Campbell/Cartier Classic last weekend, dropping three out of their five games. They lost both games on Saturday to South Dakota and UC Berkeley. Sophomore pitcher Jasmine Antunez started for the Titans in the circle. Antunez pitched four of the five games in the Campbell/Cartier Classic and picked up the win in one of those games. She had a 5.16 ERA in the games she pitched and recorded 12
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strikeouts in 12.2 innings pitched. Antunez started the game on Tuesday out shaky in the circle. She allowed a leadoff single to sophomore Aquilla Mateen, who was picked off at first on a snap throw by senior catcher Ariel Tsuchiyama. “She was testing me a little bit. Her first couple of leads were pretty big,” Tsuchiyama said. “It was perfect. I feel it was a really good way to set the tone of the game.” Antunez then allowed a solo home run to sophomore Kristen Brown to put the Tar Heels up 1-0.
The Titans responded with three runs of their own in the bottom of the first. UNC senior Lori Spingola hit sophomore third baseman Missy Taukeiaho with a pitch and allowed a single to Tsuchiyama. Senior shortstop Gabby Aragon hit a three-run homer to put the Titans on top 3-1. Antunez (4-2) retired the Tar Heels in order in the second. CSUF was unable to take advantage of a Taukeiaho two-out double in the bottom of the frame.
INSIDE VP OF FINANCE Danny C. Kim faces big challenges as he settles into office as new CSUF CFO NEWS 3 FOLLOW US ON TWITTER: @DAILY_TITAN
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SEE SOFTBALL, 8
WINNIE HUANG / Daily Titan Sophomore pitcher Jasmine Antunez earned the win on Tuesday against North Carolina to improve her record to 4-2 on the season. She holds a 3.42 earned run average and has struck out 26 batters.
OC RESTAURANTS Favorite Fullerton restaurants featured in annual Orange County Restaurant Week DETOUR 5 VISIT US AT: DAILYTITAN.COM