Vol. 89 Issue 35
April 12, 2011
Fullerton Farmers Market provides fresh options to shoppers ..........................5
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Gymnastics falls from budgeting dismount
Olympic sports tradition continues no further after countless debates and fundraising JESSICA Mc COY Daily Titan
Walking up to where the gymnastics practice used to be held, there is a sense of emptiness once you enter. A room that was filled with laughs and tears and powder everywhere will be soon flushed away because the official announcement of the Cal State Fullerton gymnastics program being cut has set into reality. A month has gone by and the gymnastics administration had been eager to find out what would happen to their department, and they got their answer Friday. What will the Athletics Department be like without gymnastics? “One less team. The reason why gymnastics and wrestling were singled out was because they are not a part of the Big West Conference sports. You got to cut something, you have to have at least 14 sports to be Division I, so there was no place else to go, truthfully. It’s going to be a very gaping hole, especially with gymnastics being a successful program over the years,” said Mel Franks, sports information director. See TITANS, page 8
WHAT’S INSIDE NEWS 8 Murders A Day film to open in Fullerton ........................................2 OPINION Hippie Health: The health benefits of drinking coffee ........................................4 FEATURES Cal State Fullerton student becomes Miss Placentia ........................................6 SPORTS Baseball takes the series over UC Irvine in Big West battle ........................................8
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CAMILLE TARAZON / Daily Titan Many students take notes or record lectures onto their laptops, but the unlimited wireless access provides them with the temptation to surf popular websites instead of concentrating on the professor’s lesson.
Laptops: Tool or time-waster?
While students find the usage helpful, many professors feel the devices in class can often be a major distraction DARCY BOSANKO For the Daily Titan
There are many things students seem to need in preparing to go to college. Among all the utilities, furniture and that new wardrobe, one thing that always seems to be needed most is a new laptop. When asking students about why they take
their laptops to class, their answers were almost simultaneous: it helps them stay organized, it is easier for homework and it is easier for notetaking. One question is, though, are they really the best thing for students to take to class? Danielle Mee, an undeclared freshman, believes there are both pros and cons to having your laptop in class. Mee uses her laptop in every class but one. For the one class she does
not use it for, her teacher prohibits the use. “It keeps my notes organized and neat, but it does leave more areas for distraction,” said Mee. So how many students that bring their laptops to class actually use them for class purposes? “I probably use it for about 3/4 note-taking and 1/4 for other things like Facebook or even
homework for other classes,” Mee said. Taylor Hartman, a sophomore business major, believes there are far more cons than pros of having your laptop in class. Unlike Mee, most all of her teachers do not allow the use of laptops, and she agrees with their decision. See LAPTOPS page 3
University Police picks new chief Interviews with candidates began Monday, with applicants undergoing thorough assessment ANDREW KWOK Daily Titan
Candidates for the new chief of University Police are being interviewed on day-long schedules, including public discussions and meetings with officials on campus. Dexter L. Thomas, one candidate for the position, spoke to personnel from various campus departments and other interested parties yesterday during an open forum discussion.
Students climb the equivalent of El Capitán on the rock wall. See the coverage at: Dailytitan. com/climbelcapitan2011
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“The chief of police is one that’s very important to us as a campus, and we’ve been very lucky to have such a great chief as Chief King,” said Sandra Rhoten, Cal State Fullerton associate dean of Judicial Affairs. “This is the beginning of a process where we’ve brought in several candidates that will go through a day-long process in order for us to get the right person for a position on this campus,” Rhoten said. Thomas is a captain at the Ontario Police Department and has over 30 years of law enforcement experience, including nine years of management, and gave years of campus policing at the University of Southern California. He is a graduate of the West Point/LAPD Leadership Academy and has a BA in psychology from CSU San Bernardino. Participants of the discussion presented topics such as Thomas’ transition from municipal to campus police work. “It’s just a difference in the community you serve,” said Thomas. Thomas said city and campus policing were not completely different animals, and the chief position primarily involved monitoring officers and working with administrators. “If you look at what we’re trying to do in Ontario and what we’re trying to do here at Cal State (Fullerton), is basically making people feel like it’s okay to be here – that bad things aren’t going to happen.” See CHIEF, page 2
LUCIO VILLA / Daily Titan “Auschwitz 2045: What Will Become of the Holocaust” speaker Stephen D. Smith shows the USC Shoah Foundation Institute’s searchable records and testimonials from up to 52,000 Holocaust survivors and how they are used for research and archival purposes.
Auschwitz revisited in memories Stephen D. Smith urges students to preserve records of the Holocaust CHRISTOPHER PARK Daily Titan
Speaker Stephen D. Smith spoke at the Portola Pavilion in the Titan Student Union. His lecture, titled “Auschwitz 2045: What Will Become of the Holocaust?” spoke on the subject of preserving the memories, accounts and testimonials of those who experienced the Holocaust firsthand and how this knowledge must and will be carried into future generations. “What will Auschwitz be in the next 100 years?” asked Smith. Smith, executive director of USC’s
Shoah Foundation Institute for Visual History and Education, has been involved in the archival of up to 52,000 testimonials from survivors of the Holocaust, eyewitnesses, aid providers and more. Smith offered plenty of anecdotes and his own personal accounts. “I stand in this empty space, this void. There was nothing. A million people have been murdered simply because they were Jewish,” Smith said when talking about his experiences when visiting Auschwitz. Smith did admit that memories were naturally skewed or in some cases, certain details became mud-
dled, but after listening to and archiving thousands of testimonials, Smith found all of them generally shared a common ground. “What is interesting is that the basic facts are pretty similar,” Smith said. However, the focus was how these anecdotes and experiences must be preserved, and he offered an elegant solution on how. “If you preserve memory, you always have that for the future,” Smith said. “Our key objective right now is not education, but preservation.” See SPEAKER, page 2