THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2014
Volume 95, Issue 41
Rallying aid for homeless in Fullerton Organizers expect more than 50 to hand out supplies
HOMELESSNESS
GINA VAN STRATTEN Daily Titan
• 4,251 homeless residents are in Orange A huge surprise is in County as of January store for numerous home- 2013
AMANDA SHARP / Daily Titan It was all smiles for the Titans as they huddle around home plate to celebrate a home run. CSUF defeated its rival Long Beach State in run rule fashion and clobbered two home runs in the game. The Titans handed the 49ers their first conference loss of the season.
Titans strike gold vs. 49ers
Softball earns a run rule victory against rival Long Beach MICHAEL HUNTLEY Daily Titan
The Cal State Fullerton softball team won the first of a three-game series against Long Beach State, 8-0, Wednesday at Anderson Family Field. The 49ers (32-10, 9-1 Big West) came into the game riding an 11-game winning streak. They entered play with a three-game lead over second place UC Santa Barbara and a fourgame lead over third place CSUF. Sophomore Jasmine Antunez got the start in the circle for the Titans. Antunez made three appearances against the 49ers in 2013 and had an earned run average of 1.72. Antunez got herself into a jam in the first inning. She allowed a leadoff triple to junior shortstop Shayna Kimbrough. She walked two other batters to load the bases. She got senior catcher Sarah Carrasco to fly out to end the inning. “There was pressure right away and she just handled it,” Head Coach Kelly Ford said. “The first inning was a little tough,” Antunez said. “I just relied on my defense
helping me and tried to get balls hit to them.” Senior Erin Jones-Wesley took the circle for the 49ers. She came into the game with a record of 18-4 with an earned run average of 2.52. Wesley is second in the Big West in strikeouts per game with 7.68. The Titans jumped on Jones-Wesley early. Sophomore third baseman Missy Taukeiaho led the first inning off with a double. After a sacrifice bunt, junior Eliza Crawford hit a sacrifice fly to score Taukeiaho. After a leadoff double and sacrifice bunt in the bottom of the second inning, senior left fielder Leesa Harris beat out a grounder to third base to drive in a run. In the bottom of the third, Crawford hit her first home run since March 26. The solo shot was her 10th of the season. The home run and ensuing walk prompted Head Coach Kim Sowder to bring in junior Amanda Hansen to pitch. The Titans continued their offensive onslaught in the fourth inning. Harris hit her second infield single of the night. Taukeiaho followed Harris with a two-run home run. It was her conference-leading 14th home run. “Today I was really
AMANDA SHARP / Daily Titan Sophomore third baseman Missy Taukeiaho rips the ball down the left-field line. Taukeiaho hammered her 14th home run in the win.
SOFTBALL
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aggressive, but I tried staying calm,” Taukeiaho said. “Whatever they gave me, (I) took it and ran with it.” With two outs in the bottom of the fourth, Hansen walked back-to-back Titans. Sophomore second baseman Samantha Galarza singled to drive in a run. Carrasco attempted to throw out the stealing Galarza, but no 49er
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was covering the base. The throw sailed to the outfield, which scored the runner from third base to give the Titans a 7-0 lead. After cruising through the previous three innings, Antunez once again ran into trouble in the top of the fifth inning. SEE SOFTBALL, 8
less people in Fullerton this Saturday night. More than 50 Orange County residents, including Cal State Fullerton students, are going to give goodie bags to homeless people they encounter on a journey through the Orange County area. The bags are filled with necessities such as toothpaste, toothbrushes, socks and clothes. Hot food will also be purchased to hand out alongside the goodie bags during their walk. The whole event is coordinated by Amie Zeoli, a graduate student studying public administration, who hopes to influence city policy with a career in public administration. Zeoli started these events in hopes of addressing the issue and changing people’s perceptions of the huge homeless population in the area. “I seek to make people understand that homeless people are not just lazy or drug addicted- they have simply hit a hard time in their lives,” Zeoli said. Zeoli started coordinating these types of events last year. She has put on two events, one for the Christmas season and one on Valentine’s Day. “I want to remind them that we are thinking about them during the holiday seasons,” Zeoli said. Alin Buna, another student in the public administration masters program, saw Zeoli’s event on Facebook and helped her reach out to more CSUF students. “Usually students in our department (public administration and political science) have a desire to bring good change in their community,” Buna said. “The desire to help should come from within.” Zeoli said she is ecstatic
• 26.9 percent of homeless individuals rely on emergency shelters • Currently no yearround homeless shelter in Fullerton • Source: Orange County Homeless Count and Survey Report over the amount of volunteers who have contacted her and signed up to help. Volunteers are meeting Saturday night at La Palma Park in Anaheim at 7 p.m. They will circle the park and give bags to the homeless people who take shelter there. From there, Zeoli and volunteers are going to caravan to the train station in downtown Fullerton and continue handing out goodie bags. “I give everyone something to give to the homeless people so they can talk to them and personally hear their stories,” Zeoli said. Zeoli is also open to any ideas from volunteers regarding additional areas to visit that are heavily populated by homeless people. She also said she hopes to get more requests from CSUF students who want to volunteer. “This opportunity to reach out to the homeless people will really open the volunteers’ eyes to the issue of homelessness no matter what major you are,” Zeoli said. For more information on how to volunteer for the event, email Zeoli at azeoli@csu.fullerton.edu.
A once-in-a-lifetime European adventure Student travels through Europe to see six countries in 14 days KALEY WILLIAMS Daily Titan
My mom always wanted to see Paris. For as long as I can remember, she’s had a framed painting of the Eiffel Tower hanging on her bedroom wall. I used to stare at the painting as I walked past it, and before I understood the gravity of what I was looking at, I wondered about her fascination with the big metal structure in the
middle of the canvas. I suppose that somewhere along the way, her dream became my dream too, but it was more than just the Eiffel Tower. This incredible wanderlust grew within me. I longed to travel the world and experience cultures and sights that I had only ever dreamed about. So a few weeks ago, I did. I jumped on a plane and spent two weeks backpacking through Europe with my boyfriend. The journey was terrifying, unorganized and completely insane, but I wouldn’t have changed a moment of it.
After we landed in London, I fell in love with it immediately. Everything in London feels as if it were built with so much precision. The buildings are squished together, but are still donned with crown molding and old-fashioned streetlights lined the centers of the streets. Camden town felt like an entirely different place. This small area of shops and food carts is filled with so many different people and cultures that it feels like a world of its own. From London we traveled to Italy. We spent the first night there in a small town called Treviso. It’s a
little city surrounded by walls, and nobody speaks a word of English. The cobblestone streets were tiring on my feet, but the charm of the town was hard to miss. The next day, my boyfriend and I took a train to Venice. We were lost for hours while trying to navigate our way to Saint Mark’s Square. When we eventually found our way there, I had an extremely surreal moment when I was standing in the middle of Venice, Italy, in Saint Mark’s Square eating hazelnut gelato. The experience felt real to me then. After touring Italy, we took two day trips to Austria and Switzerland. The homes in Austria are
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painted in bright pinks, greens and yellows, and many have murals of saints and the Virgin Mary hidden along the lesser viewed sides. Switzerland is incredibly beautiful and expensive. My boyfriend repeatedly explained that the average salary in Switzerland is high, but all I could think about were the $11 cheeseburgers from McDonald’s. When our adventure in Switzerland ended, our next stop was Germany. My boyfriend graduated college a few years ago, but while he was there he spent his last semester studying abroad in Freiburg. I could tell that he wanted
me to love Freiburg. We’ve talked about living there one day, and I knew that he expected me to see it and immediately decide that our abstract plans should be made into reality, but I didn’t. We spent a few days wandering the streets and viewing the city from the top of a huge hill at sunset. I really liked Freiburg, but I didn’t love it. I could feel his disappointment, but we cut our losses and took a train into France. The country-side was everything I imagined it would be. SEE EUROPE, 5
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