Daily Titan: Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Page 1

OPINION: Nerdgasm imagines the future of Disney/Marvel, page 7

INSIDE: FEATURES The do’s and don’ts for road trips, page 5

SPORTS: Alumnus Bruce Bowen retires from NBA, page 10

Since 1960 Volume 85, Issue 4

Wednesday September 9, 2009

The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton

Coffee and opportunity to study abroad The Study Abroad Office is offering its weekly international coffee break Wednesday starting at 1 p.m. at Aloha Java between the Humanities and University Hall buildings. The event is open to everyone and is a place for prospective study abroad students, study abroad returnees, and international students to interact during the school week. The Study Abroad Office encourages all students that are interested in the study abroad process to join them in enjoying a universal treat.

So you think you can dance? CSUF Dance Team tryouts are tomorrow from 7 to 10 p.m., room 203 of the kinesiology and health science building. If you want to cheer on the basketball team with style, and you have a background in competitive hip-hop and jazz dancing, then the dance team might be just what the doctor ordered. The team also performs at various other events on and off campus. The team was the national champion for five consecutive years, from 2000-2004, taking the top spot again in 2006. So strap on your dance shoes and get ready to boogie!

Obama urges students to stay in school (MCT) – Though it inspired a swirling controversy about politics in the classroom over the past week, President Barack Obama’s back-to-school address to America’s students on Tuesday ended up being decidedly motivational rather than political – and even won praise from some Republicans. Speaking to students in a nationwide broadcast from a suburban D.C. high school, the Democratic president urged school children to rise above their mistakes and challenges to succeed in school, offering himself as an example of “a goof-off” who went on to make good. “You can’t drop out of school and just drop into a good job,” Obama said. “You’ve got to work for it and train for it and learn for it.”

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H1N1 plagues campuses By Patrick Cowles

Daily Titan Assistant News Editor news@dailytitan.com

Out breaks of H1N1, also known as the “swine flu,” have begun to infect college campuses across the nation. Washington State University has reported 9.5 percent of their student body displays symptoms of H1N1. Cal State Fullerton officials have been preparing for the event of a local outbreak. “We’re gearing up,” Dr. Richard Boucher, chief staff physician for the Student Health and Counselling Center said. The World Health Organization has deemed the current swine flu, H1N1, a pandemic. However, this does not mean it’s time to panic, just that the virus has spread globally; ‘pandemic’ has no connotations of lethality. For the first week of the fall semester, more than 1,600 college students at 165 colleges and universities reported having H1N1-like symptoms, the American College Health Association’s Web site states. In response, college campuses across the United States have prepared for the return of students amidst this pandemic. For resident students returning to school, many campuses have set aside rooms to “isolate” ill students from healthy students. “The whole idea is to create a social distance,” Dr. Howard Wang, vice president of Student Affairs said. “If they can, we encourage the students to go home.” Thus far, CSUF has fared well. Only five out of the 213 students

who visited the student health center in the first three weeks of August had flu symptoms, Tom Whitfield, director of Environmental Health and Safety said. In July, only six out of 475 students came with flu symptoms, added Whitfield. In Orange County, there have been 223 people hospitalized with suspected H1N1, according to the Orange County Health Care Agency’s Web site. The site reports that 19 people have died in Orange County because of H1N1-relatBy TODD BARNES/Daily Titan Photo Editor ed problems. Whitfield is Purell hand sanitizers placed in College Park are more important leading CSUF’s than ever as a new strain of flu spreads panic across America once again. pandemic planning, and says the university is pay- Todd Cohen, director of University ing increasing attention to the issue Relations at Kansas. They have also now that students are back. The uni- set aside rooms to “isolate” ill stuversity has maintained a committee dents from the healthy. However, in on pandemic planning which meets some cases the healthy students will once a week, said Wang. be moved out if most of the residents Kansas University has also geared in a room are ill, added Cohen. up against the flu. So far, 75 resident See SWINE FLU, Page 3 students have contracted the flu, said

Group likens Obama to Hitler By Damon Lowney

Daily Titan Assistant News Editor news@dailytitan.com

Members of LaRouche Political Action Committee (LPAC) visited Cal State Fullerton’s campus yesterday to protest President Obama’s proposed health care bill. They related it to Hitler’s Action T4 health policy, a plan that supported euthanasia, or as Nazis called it, “destruction of life unworthy of life” for people who were sickly. “It’s a carbon copy of Hitler’s T4 health program,” Lugina Qhespe, organizer for LPAC said. She said that LaRouche believes that Obama’s health care bill is a consequence of the snowballing economic crisis. “Hitler started to eliminate people who were sickly,” Qhespe said about Action T4. Action T4 was a program headed by physicians and psychiatrists that aimed to get rid of disabled people by way of starvation, sedatives, sleeping pills. Legal drugs were used in the killings so physicians could claim that patients died of natural causes, states “Medicine and Medical Ethics in Nazi Germany,” a book by Francis R. Nicosia and Jonathan Huener. The essence of Obama’s proposed health care plan is cost effectiveness, said Nick Walsh, an organizer for LPAC. He said Obama’s idea is that the government needs to get rid of sickly people to save money. If Obama’s plan is passed, the government would review the costs of treating injuries and illnesses and make a decision based off the cost. LPAC wants a single-payer, universal health care system, which means that it wants health care to be fully subsidized by the government

Nursing mothers in need of facilities By Lauren Felechner

Daily Titan Staff Writer news@dailytitan.com

The first day of school for Sirena Ramirez proved to be filled with long hours and pain as she struggled to find a designated area at Cal State Fullerton to utilize her breast pump. Ramirez, 28, a senior at CSUF and a public administration major, is the mother of an eightmonth-old son, and she spends eight hours a day on campus. She was quick to find out that pumping her breast milk while on campus would be a more difficult task than she had anticipated. Ramirez called the Disabled Student’s Center and the Health Center inquiring if there were any facilities on campus where she could use her pump. With no luck, she was – directed to the Children’s Center. Although the Children’s Center accommodates breastfeeding mothers with a room with rocking chairs, there are no proper outlets available for the breast pump. However, Ramirez was offered to use the men’s restroom inside the center where there is no proper place for her to sit, and where there may or may not have been a proper lock for privacy. “What was I supposed to do,” said Ramirez, “Sit in the stall and pump the milk?” She was also offered a source of ‘privacy’ by putting a chair in front of the restroom door. “It was a little bit discouraging,” said Ramirez, “I was kind of upset because the school can accommodate someone with learning disabilities but can’t accommodate me for 15 minutes.” After being given the runaround on the telephone, Ramirez reached out to her former professor, Pamela Fiber-Ostrow, who is the assistant professor for political science, for help. FiberOstrow, who has a 17-month-old son herself, understood the physical pain Ramirez was experienc-

ing, so she took sympathy on the student’s situation. “I just want to be able to go and ask a question and be sent to the right place,” said Ramirez. Fiber-Ostrow offered Ramirez her office as a private and safe space, but with conflicting schedules, she instead looked into the Women’s Center on campus. When that didn’t work, Fiber-Ostrow reached out to other faculty mothers who lent leads on other avenues of help for Ramirez. “I think ... as new moms who breastfed, we have a better understanding of the physical pain of not being able to express milk and needing to pump,” said Fiber-Ostrow. The problem was addressed within 24 hours once Ramirez got in contact with the Dean of Sirena Ramirez S t u d e n t s , Kandy Mink Salas, FiberOstrow said. “I think there needs to be a more permanent and generally available option for students,” Fiber-Ostrow said. A more general and permanent option would be helpful since Ramirez hasn’t been the only student-mother on campus that inquired about this matter. Fiber-Ostrow isn’t the only faculty member that believes there should be a solution in this matter for the students either. Betsy Gibbs, the director of the Children’s Center said, “I really see this as something the students, faculty and staff should work on to find a solution.” Gibbs added that she believes that faculty members should lobby for the notion as well since the matter affects them just as much, if not more, than students. In regards to the importance of benefiting the students of CSUF, Salas was able to find a private office on campus for Ramirez. “(If there is) any student that needs help and wants to facilitate their education, we will find a place to accommodate them,” said Salas.

What was I supposed to do ... sit in the stall and pump the milk?

By Ron Fu/Daily Titan Staff Photographer Chris Roque, 27, (center) debates President Obama’s health care issue with Nick Walsh at the Titan Walk on Tuesday Sept. 8, 2009.

and available to anyone at anytime, Walsh said. Chris Roque, a senior theater major, passed by the booth early in the afternoon and was shocked by a poster of Obama with a Hitler mustache hanging from the LPAC booth. The poster said: “I’ve Changed.” Roque stood next to LPAC’s booth to offer his opinion to passing students. Roque said that the current health care system isn’t good because a lot of people can’t pay for it, including himself. When forced to pick between health care and school, he picked school. He said he doesn’t believe in a fully subsidized health care system, like what LPAC advocates, but would like to see a balance between a single-payer system and the current system. Steve Jobbitt, a history professor at CSUF, said he disagrees with LPAC’s view that Obama’s proposed health care system mirrors that of Hitler’s because their motives are different.

“Hitler wanted to build a racially pure state. Obama is completely different,” said Jobbitt. In Obama’s plan, “everyone’s life is worth living.” The only comparison that one could make to relate Obama’s health care plan to Hitler’s is that they would both be state run, he said. “Most societies have moved toward some state-centered health care.” Jobbitt, who is from Canada, said he supports universal health care, having lived with it most of his life. As a professor, he said he has seen how the current health care system has affected his students. One of his past students was injured and had to skip a semester to pay for his medical bill, he said. If there was universal health care, students wouldn’t have to make that decision, Jobbitt said. For a slide show on this news story go to: http://www.dailytitan.com/2009/09/news

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