Daily Titan: Monday, April 5 2010

Page 1

Vol. 87 Issue 28

Multimedia

Learn how a swap meet in Cypress saves students money at:

www.dailytitan.com/cswapmeet

MONDAY

April 5, 2010

Budget issues are forcing Huntington Beach to reduce bonfire pits.

www.dailytitan.com/firepits

Small businesses cope in Fullerton

Several small businesses discuss how they have been managing their companies during the downturn NEWS, Page 4

KIDS THESE DAYS: How to make a teen movie OPINION, Page 7

The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton

Titans sweep Big West foe

Venue change requested in Stewart case By cort tafoya

Daily Titan Staff writer news@dailytitan.com

Defense attorneys for Andrew Gallo, the man accused of killing Angels pitcher Nick Adenhart and two others in an alcohol-related car-crash a year ago, requested a change of venue April 1. The attorneys cited negative pretrial publicity as the primary reason to move the trial out of the Orange County area. The motion to move the trial will occur May 28 in front of Superior Court Judge Richard Toohey. Gallo, who is charged with three counts of seconddegree murder, drunken driving causing great bodily harm and driving under the influence, had pleaded not guilty. Gallo’s minivan ran a red light April 9, 2009, and crashed into a Mitsubishi Eclipse that was carrying Adenhart, 20-year-old former Cal State Fullerton cheerleader Courtney Stewart and Henry Pearson, a 25-yearold law student. The fourth passenger and only survivor was 24 year-old Jonathon Wilhite, a former CSUF baseball player who is still recovering from injuries.

photo By sue lagarde/For the Daily Titan The Cal State Fullerton baseball team looks on during the Titans’ 3-0 non-conference victory over the Hawai’i Rainbow Warriors March 26 at Goodwin Field.

we proved to ourselves we could come from behind and win a close one. This was a character builder for this team.” In his third start of the season, senior righty Kyle Mertins overcame some early control issues (six walks including a hit batsman) to throw 6.2 innings allowing just two runs on four hits, while striking out five. “I think a couple times I just got too amped up and tried to do too much instead of just going back to my old self and throwing strikes,” Mertins said. “I think I found my groove in the middle of the game, just throwing strikes. I felt good.”

By Brian Whitehead

Daily Titan Staff Writer sports@dailytitan.com

Though the Cal State Fullerton baseball team (15-11, 3-0) did not score 20 runs (like they did on Thursday) or 23 runs (like they did on Friday), they did score just enough Saturday to squeak out a 3-2 win against the visiting UC Davis Aggies. “If the coaching staff could’ve scripted it any way, this would be the way,” Titan Head Coach Dave Serrano said. “We proved we could win the lopsided games pretty easily and

The Aggies got on the board first via an RBI-single in the first inning by sophomore right fielder David Popkins. Popkins padded the UC Davis lead to 2-0 in the top of the third with an RBI groundout. With two outs in the bottom of the fifth inning, the Titans loaded the bases for sophomore right fielder Tyler Pill who tied the game with a twoRBI double to left field. Pill’s double scored junior shortstop Christian Colon (who started the two-out rally with a single) and junior center fielder Gary Brown (who followed Colon’s single with getting hit by a pitch).

200+ quakes rock West Coast

“I was looking for something I could drive,” Pill said. “I knew he was going to throw the fastball because he was struggling with everything else, so I just went with the pitch. I just got what I wanted.” With the score knotted at two, sophomore first baseman Nick Ramirez led off the sixth inning with a double to left-center. In an attempt to move Ramirez to third, senior third baseman Joey Siddons’ sacrifice bunt hugged the third-base line for a single. See SPORTS, Page 10

Theater majors must face juries By Lindsay White

For the Daily Titan

news@dailytitan.com

Finals are a stressful for college students, but on top of exams, secondyear theater and musical theater majors have to showcase their skills in front of juries every May. This process determines whether the students will be permitted to continue on the path to earn a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree. Cal State Fullerton’s theater department is highly impacted and there is not enough room for every student, no matter how talented, said theater

graphic Courtesy UNited States Geological survey The Salton Sea and Baja California (above) were centers of seismic activity Sunday with 20 quakes magnitude 4.0 or higher.

professor Eve Himmelheber. The jury is used as an assessment process to see how far along the training has taken students, said theater professor Maria Cominis. It is to see where they stand after the first two years of training. Throughout their second year, theater and musical theater majors prepare for each of the juries. At the end of the first semester, the students perform in front of their first jury, Cominis said. The faculty then cuts the number of students from 100 to about 70. See THEATER, Page 2

By cort tafoya

Daily Titan Staff writer news@dailytitan.com

photo By lindsay white/For the Daily Titan Kaitlyn Etter performs in front of her class while many of her peers must prepare for their jury showcase.

Cuts continue to harm Fullerton programs Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com

When Christina Garner led her Fullerton High School Spanish class on a virtual tour of a museum in Uruguay last year, she was amazed at how many students had never been inside a museum. That day, she made it her mission to get them to as many ‘real-world’ museums as she could. Her students have been to six this year, including The Muckenthaler and the Fullerton Mu-

seum Center. decades may become relics of the past. “So far I’ve met my goals. I’ve taken On March 9 the city council held the them to almost every first of several budmuseum I can get get workshops to try them to. And I’m goto close the gap on a ing to keep doing it,” $5.5 million shortfall Garner said. for fiscal year 2010Maybe not. Like 2011, which begins many cities across the July 1. country, Fullerton Although cuts are is grappling with a expected to be made – Zoot Velasco massive budget defiin all departments, executive director cit and the arts and one hotly-debated cultural programs edissue is a proposed ucators and residents have enjoyed for $80,000 funding cut to The Mucken-

I’m willing to take a cut, but our cut should be more proportional.”

By Jennifer Karmarkar

thaler Cultural Center, which has provided arts and cultural programs to the community for more than 40 years. Since the announcement, the city has received dozens of letters supporting The Muckenthaler. Last month about 150 people attended a city council budget meeting to protest the cuts. “The cuts (to the Muckenthaler) will cut out a lot of programs that are actively being used by a lot of different parts of the community,” Garner said. See BUDGET, Page 2

Multiple earthquakes erupted Sunday afternoon in Southern California and Mexico resulting in scattered power outages and aftershocks felt in three different states. The largest earthquake, a 7.2 magnitude, occurred near the Mexicali region of Mexico at 3:40 p.m., causing aftershocks that rattled Orange County. The quake happened along the Laguna Salada fault line in Baja California. Two students working in the Titan Recreation Center reacted to the aftershocks felt on Cal State Fullerton’s campus. “I saw all the lights shaking. The water in the pool was shaking,” said Vince Rosas, a 19-year-old mechanical engineering major. “I looked up and was hoping the lights over head weren’t going to fall on me. Everyone in the gym literally stopped moving.” Another CSUF student, Quang Ho, a 19-year-old kinesiology major, was working in the SRC’s weight room when he also felt aftershocks. At first he thought he was experiencing nausea. “I thought something was wrong with me. I thought I was going to pass out if I didn’t sit down,” Ho said. “I went to see what the procedure was (in case of an earthquake). Then I went back to my desk and tried to stay calm.” All of the earthquakes in Southern California were minor and no major damage has been reported. Professor David Bowman, associate professor and chair of the department of geological sciences at CSUF, said he is trying to get permission to take a trip with a team of earthquake experts to Mexicali to study what happened. He also said Orange County residents should expect additional aftershocks.


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