Daily Titan: Thursday, April 15, 2010

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April 15, 2010

Vol. 87 Issue 35

This week at the Becker: The 88

Los Angeles-based band The 88 lured a sizeable crowd to the Becker Amphitheatre Wednesday afternoon. SOUND-OFF, Page 6

Multimedia

THURSDAY

Spring Concert is coming up this weekend, find out more about the concert and performers at: www.dailytitan.com/springconcert10 Learn more about what could happen after graduation at Senior Dis-orientation, only on: www.dailytitan.com/seniordisorientation

The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton

Azerbaijan

Ukraine

Kyrgyzstan

Dominican Republic Moldova

Honduras Bulgaria

Nicaragua

Micronesia

Survivor shares Holocaust story with students

Peru

Gambia

Paraguay

Zambia

*each Tuffy represents one graduate

Number of CSUF alumni volunteering in the Peace Corps

graphic By Kristen hulsey/Daily Titan Design Editor

Titans travel for peace Cal State Fullerton alumni have a long history of donating their time and effort to the Peace Corps after graduation By lauren Mccann

Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com

Established March 1, 1961, the Peace Corps, a volunteer program, and United States governmental agency has served 139 host countries, with 310 Cal State Fullerton alumni contributing to the count of nearly 200 thousand Peace Corps volunteers. In 1960, then Sen. John F. Kennedy challenged students at the University of Michigan to serve their country by delivering peace efforts in developing countries. Through this, the inception of an agency devoted to world peace and friendship was born. The Peace Corps requires a volunteer to be committed for 27 months in a foreign country. Peace Corps is working towards three simple goals: 1. Helping the people of interested countries in meeting their need for trained men and women. 2. Helping promote a better understanding of

Americans on the part of the peoples served. 3. Helping promote a better understanding of other peoples on the part of Americans. Also established in 1961, the CSU system has been a significant contributor, with 8,747 Peace Corps volunteers from all 23 campuses. “Cal State University, Fullerton students have always had a strong commitment to community service. More and more college students are realizing that the marketplace is global. This has spurred increased interest in the Peace Corps,” said Kate Kuykendall, Peace Corps public affairs specialist. Today, there are 7,671 volunteers and trainees involved with the Peace Corps. Of that number, 920 are from California, 22 of which are CSUF alumni. Currently, California has the most serving volunteers in the U.S. In 2009, there were 15 alumni who served in the Peace Corps and in 2008 there were 11.

“I asked myself, how can I get more global experience, travel more and benefit myself, while investing in my future? With the chronic unemployment of young people today, there’s no other option,” said Jeffrey Sigler, 27, a CSUF economics alumnus of ’07. After examining options and choices for his future, Sigler chose Peace Corps as the clear path. Two weeks ago he was told his departure date is June 10. In Peru, Sigler will serve as a small business promoter. “I’m so blessed and fortunate to be going somewhere that I love,” Sigler said. “To have the experience of the Peace Corps, it opens all the doors. It’s the most incredible decision you can make. I dare anyone to find anything like it.” The Peace Corps requires volunteers to be at least 18 years of age. Varying education levels are acceptable, however, 95 percent of volunteers have at least an undergraduate

degree. The other five percent have three to five years of full-time work experience in qualifying fields. The application process is something that takes patience, and focus typically ranges from nine to 12 months. After receiving an invitation, most people depart for their country assignment within two to three months. Ultimately, the placement of a volunteer depends on where their qualifications and skills match the needs of countries requesting assistance. The fields in which volunteers are placed in ranges from education, health and HIV/AIDS, business development, environment, agriculture and youth development. “We really ask that applicants be as flexible as possible about where they serve so that we can do our best to meet the needs of the host countries we serve,” Kuykendall said. See PEACE CORPS, Page 2

‘CSI’ films ‘They All Fall Down’

photo By christa connelly/Daily Titan Photo Editor Mary Bauer, a survivor of the Holocaust, tells her life story to a crowded room full of students in the Pollack Library.

By Zam Anwar

Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com

The students of Cal State Fullerton’s European studies society presented speaker Mary Bauer, a survivor of the Holocaust, who shared her personal experiences during the war and after with students, faulty and community members at the Pollack Library, Wednesday evening. According to literature posted by the students of the European studies society, Bauer was born in Budapest, Hungary, on May 29, 1927. When she was a teenager, Bauer was deported to Auschwitz, along with her mother and grandparents, in the spring of 1944. In prison, Bauer was forced to work as a weaver, converting the shorn hair of prisoners into items necessary for the Nazi war effort. In January 1945, Bauer and her mother were forcibly marched from Auschwitz, Poland, to Ravensbruck, Germany. Liberated by the Russian Red Army in the spring of 1945, she returned to Hungary with her mother, only to find their home looted, and antisemitism as strong as ever. Realizing there was no future for her daughter in postwar Hungary, Bauer’s mother sent her to Berlin. Bauer sailed to the United States soon after and settled in Los Angeles with her husband. See HOLOCAUST SURVIVOR, Page 2

Rally ignites week of Greek

By Christine Amarantus

Daily Titan Editor at Large news@dailytitan.com

Investigators who rushed to Dade University’s pool were greeted with a grisly crime scene. A murder has taken place. The seasoned Lieutenant Horatio Caine arrives, checks out the unlucky corpse, and delivers a notorious one-liner while dramatically removing his shades. Cal State Fullerton doubled as the fictitious institution Dade University for the television drama “CSI: Miami” on Wednesday, with the shoot resuming today. Cast and crew are filming the season finale set to air May 24 at 10 p.m. on CBS. “This campus was the best. We shoot the whole show in Los Angeles,” said the episode’s director, Joe Chapelle, regarding CSUF’s selection to pose as a college in Florida. “What’s great about Cal State Fullerton is with all the palm trees and the expanse it really feels like Dade County. The look of the show is very modern and high-tech, and a lot of the buildings here, especially the newer buildings, fit the look of the show perfectly.” Executive Producers Barry O’Brien and Marc Dube wrote the episode being shot, “They All Fall Down.” “We basically chose Fullerton State because of the pool,” O’Brien said. “There’s a murder, unfortunately for the guy who dies, that happens in the

photo By Nick marley/Daily Titan Photo Editor Cast and crew film a scene for the season finale of ‘CSI: Miami’ outside of the Performing Arts building.

pool. (CSUF has) a fantastic pool area down there. We shot near your music hall. Beautiful, beautiful facility. We turned that into our behavioral psychology wing.” “The school was very accommodating, too. We’re going to spend three days here,” Dube added. “We have Horatio Caine interviewing professors, a grad student – they’re all suspects – so we’re near classrooms getting shots.” The two commented on the episode’s storyline. “There’s a terrifying incident in the lab where one by one, all of our CSIs lose consciousness. It’s a cliffhanger,” O’Brien said. “All of our characters all fall down,” Dube said. “We don’t know who gets up until the premiere of next season.” Kinesiology major Alanna Meek, 20, stepped in to assist with the production.

photo By nick marley/Daily Titan Photo Editor Sorority sisters cheer wildly in preparation for can castle building and chalk murals.

“I just overheard them talking to another student asking around if someone knew Tai Chi,” the Delta Zeta member said. Meek came forward and showed the crew what she could do before she was placed as a coach for one of the actors who was playing a suspect in the episode who practiced the Chinese martial art form. “I went over it with the actor, he had done it when he was 17 and so it was kind of familiar to him,” she said. “And he said it seemed a bit right and that he just needed enough to make it look good on camera and that he only needed four movements.” O’Brien was pleased with Meek’s help. “She was just plucked from walking past our shoot in the music hall. She’s proving to be quite an expert,” he said.

About 500 members from Cal State Fullerton’s Greek organizations celebrated the first evening of Greek Week by jumping on moonwalks, air-filled slides and partying to music supplied by Michael Olivares, also known as DJ Mikey O, Wednesday starting at 6 p.m. in front of the Titan Gym. “Oh my God! This was amazing. I’ve never seen the student body party like we did today,” said 28-year-old Olivares, also a fraternity member. “There is nothing like partying with the Greeks here at Cal State Fullerton.” Olivares, a senior in Delta Chi, started winding down the entertainment at 8 p.m.

See ‘CSI,’ Page 3

See GREEK WEEK, Page 3

By Charles Purnell

Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com


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