Daily Titan: Wednesday, April 4, 2010

Page 1

April 7, 2010

Vol. 87 Issue 30

Check out photos from the exciting Nuclear Cowboyz show Music, fire, and motocross stunts combine to form a unique show DETOUR, Page 4

WEDNESDAY

Titans slay Bruins at Jackie Robinson Stadium SPORTS, Page 8

Multimedia

Experience the Lebowski Fest for yourself at www.dailytitan.com/lebowskifest The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton

ASI elections begin today General elections for Associtated Students Inc. officials run from April 7 to 8 at various polling locations around campus

Lebowski-fest sparks up

photo By Christine Amarantus/Daily Titan Editor At Large “Mind if I do a J” a Big Lebowski fan says during a costume contest at the Lebowski Fest bowing party at Cal Bowl.

By Christine Amarantus

Daily Titan Editor at Large detour@dailytitan.com

photo By Christa connelly/Daily Titan Photo Editor Candidates gathered in the Becker Ampitheatre to answer questions about their platforms. Ice cream was served to students who attended and candidates wore T-shirts promoting their candidacy.

A closer look at this year’s Playing field increases available ASI positions with added candidates ington said. ASI was established in 1959 as the news@dailytitan.com result of student votes. It was known as Student Senate for 26 years, but Cal State Fullerton students will was re-named in 1976 when it behave the opportunity to vote for their came a non-profit organization. Associated Students Inc. representaASI is managed by an executives this Wednesday and Thursday. tive team which consists of the ASI The elected ASI officers will repre- President and CEO, Executive Vice sent the entire CSUF student body at President, Vice President of Finance, the local, state and national levels. Chief Administrative Officer, Chief Gregory Washington, ASI’s chief Governmental Officer and Chief governmental officer, said that ASI is Communications Officer. an non-profit organization that proCSUF students vote for the presivides students with auxiliary services dent and vice president who, once at CSUF. ASI fundelected, appoint ed the construction individuals for the of the Titan Student other executive poUnion, Children’s sitions. Center and RecreWashington said ation Center. ASI that the executive also employs over officers meet at least 300 students. twice a week for two “We (ASI) are hours each time. – Gregory Washington the go-between for “This week ... I ASI’s chief governmental CSUF students, have 11 meetings officer state legislature scheduled,” Washand even national ington said. Washlegislature. We’re ington is also the also the representatives to university Chair of Lobby Corpsan ASI comadministration and faculty ... if stu- mittee that represents students at dents don’t vote, they’re really losing state legislature. their voice and their influence over the decisions that ASI makes,” WashSee OVERVIEW, Page 3 By Katie Rossomano

Daily Titan Staff Writer

(Working for ASI) has been a really great experience for me

See LEBOWSKI, Page 5

photo By Christa connelly/Daily Titan Photo Editor Candidates answer student questions the day before the commencement of Associated Students Inc. general elections.

By Zan Anwar

Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com

The Associated Students Inc. spring elections are here again, but unlike last year, there are four sets of candidates vying for the positions of president and vice president of ASI. Esiquio Uballe, associate dean of students and elections adviser, said that he hasn’t witnessed as many candidates running for election in the past eight years, and was pleased to see more candidates this time around as it made for

more awareness about ASI and what it does on campus. One of the reasons could be that more students want to get involved as opposed to just being apathetic or complacent, Uballe said. When things are not going well, when funds are tight, people want to either see or make changes, he added. “There are segments of students who may be disappointed and frustrated with the way members of the ASI allocate funds and these students may want to see a change,” he said.

By Laura Barron - Lopez Daily Titan News Editor news@dailytitan.com

Saint Martin De Porres Catholic Church seated a small crowd that left the memorial mass of Marine Lance Cpl. Rick J. Centanni, Tuesday, with the echoing words, “I’ll never let you down, even if I could I’d give up everything, if only for your good … So hold me when I’m here and love me when I’m gone,” of 3 Doors Down, accompanied by a slideshow of pictures encompassing the life of Centanni, from his birth to the time of his death at the age of 19. For all who knew Centanni, those words reflected what he stood for. A song chosen to play at this memorial service

Shadow day enlightens

See CANDIDATES, Page 3

Hundreds attend fallen Marine’s service

photo By Laura Barron - Lopez/Daily Titan News Editor At Riverside National Cemetery, Marines fold the American flag over Rick J. Centanni’s casketß to present it to his parents.

He stares intently at the 10 pins. They taunt him with their mere stillness. Ball in hand, he positions himself for the roll. He slips as he releases it. As he lies dazed on his back in the waxed lane, a crowd headed by a handful of bearded men in yellow, shooting glasses and khaki vests shout, “Over the line!” and “Mark it zero!” followed by “You’re entering a world of pain!” Nearby, red bob-haired ladies, possibly naked beneath their green robes, sip Kahlua-vodka beverages, while look-a-likes of a familiar bum intermingle with other bowlers. To you, that bum is The Dude. Or His Dudeness. Or even El Duderino, if you aren’t into the whole brevity thing. Lebowski Fest LA, held April 3 in the Wiltern and April 4 at Cal Bowl in Lakewood, honors the ’98 Coen Brothers flick The Big Lebowski with a screening of the movie one night and a bowling party the next.

by his father, Santa Ana Police Sgt. John Centanni, who during the days leading up to the funeral, listened to that same song as he remembered his son. Centanni, a Yorba Linda native and alumni of Esperanza High School, was killed March 24, along with Sgt. Maj. Robert J. Cottle, 45, by an improvised explosive device (IED) while on patrol in the Helmand province, Afghanistan, according to the Department of Defense. Although the number of people inside St. Martin’s was small, seating only immediate family and friends, the mass of people surrounding the church and along Yorba Linda Boulevard reached high numbers. See MARINE, Page 3

photo By Charles PURNELL/Daily Titan Staff Writter President of the Candela Club Sen Nandayapa, 24, teaches attendees of the event how to salsa dance.

By Juanita Vasquez

Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com

Nearly 80 high school students from Anaheim and Santa Ana got to experience college firsthand by attending classes and touring the campus alongside Cal State Fullerton students during “TRIO Shadow Day” Tuesday. The event, put on by the Talent Search and Upward Bound programs at CSUF, was to help high school students experience college for a day by shadowing university students. “We want students to be comfortable and know that college is accessible to them and that it’s a reality,” said Adriana Badillo, director of the Talent Search Program. To first generation college students, college is even more daunting than it is for the rest of us, Badillo said. Without parent guidance or past family experiences to help them relate, some students don’t see college as a possibility. Badillo said this turns into “fear of the unexpected.” See SHADOW DAY, Page 3


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