October 6, 2011

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Los Angeles

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Loyola Marymount University

Crime

Report Violent Crime

Venue

Total 2008

Total 2009

Sex Offenses: Forcible Robbery

On Campus On Campus

1

1

Total 2010 3

0

0

2

Property Crimes

Venue

Total 2008

Total 2009

Total 2010

Burglary Motor Vehicle Theft

On Campus On Campus

21

9

4

2

25 4

Arrests

Venue

Liquor law violations Drug-related violations

On Campus On Campus

Disciplinary Referrals

Venue

Drug-related violations

On Campus

Total 2008 1

Total 2009

Total 2010

Future of print news remains uncertain NEWS ANALYSIS

A recent Pew study indicates that many people don’t feel connected to their local paper. News Editor

Scholar Thomas Plate. Plate will teach the class, “Media and Politics of Asia,” to two groups of students who will be in classrooms more than 7,000 miles apart. These students, who will be connected via Internet, will be able to easily communicate and interact with each other during each session. “We’re breaking new ground,” said LMU senior Asian Pacific studies

See Class | page 5

See Newspaper | page 2

0

4

1

6

Total 2009

Total 2010

158

227

158

The 2010 Annual Security Report recently released by the Department of Public Safety (DPS) displays data that show an increase in seven categories. To account for these increases, DPS Chief Hampton Cantrell said that over the past three years, the department has “increased our reporting of these incidents on campus in terms of actually making sure that our public safety officers take a report.” DPS Assistant Chief Patricia Coffelt added that there seems to be an increased willingness for Student Housing to call DPS following these incidents.

Class connects LMU and Middle East remote, Arab-Islamic school. Despite the 11-hour time difference and the tremendous dissimilarity between students attending the universities, LMU will be introducing a course in the upcoming spring semester which will bring the two contrasting campuses together. “It’s the first time ever where, instead of civilizations clashing, civilizations are cooperating in an educational mode,” said LMU Lecturer and Asian Pacific Studies

www.laloyolan.com

Youthful boys and girls toss tightly-rolled papers onto green front lawns while riding their bikes, information-hungry parents pour over the morning paper at breakfast, and sentimental mothers clip out interesting articles to show to their children or friends later. Although these idealizations are very familiar to many Americans, recent studies and reports indicate that individuals today feel extremely disconnected to print newspapers, possibly due to a strong presence of online news outlets and aggregating sites. The Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism recently conducted a news consumption survey which revealed that 69 percent of the Americans questioned asserted they would have no problem keeping up with local news if their community’s newspaper no longer existed. “I think it’s sad but not surprising given the trend of the last decade or more,” said LMU English professor and award-winning journalist Lynell George in reaction to this statistic. Director of Student Media and former journalist Tom Nelson pointed out that a reliance on non-traditional sources for news is just one aspect of a larger cultural shift. “The way you buy plane tickets, order pizza and watch a movie – that has all changed in the last 20 years. It’s even changed in the last two years. Those services are based on how people send and receive information, which in today’s society changes quickly. … There is this informational agnosticism that is going

6 Total 2008

www.laloyolan.com

By Tierney Finster

Dol-Anne Asiru | Loyolan

LMU is not just a 17-hour plane flight away from the Al Ain campus of the United Arab Emirates University – it is also worlds away from the

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Loyola Marymount University

2010

News Intern

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6, 2011 April 11,October 2011 Volume Volume 89, Issue90, 41 Issue 9

Your Home. Your Voice. Your Newspaper.

Monika Kim

Sun

ESTABLISHED 1921

Your Home. Your Voice. Your Newspaper.

Upcoming class will be offered to students at United Arab Emirates University via video.

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Apple co-founder and former CEO passes away Students react to inventor and entrepreneur Steve Jobs’ death. By Kasey Eggert and Monika Kim Loyolan Staff

Apple Inc. announced the death of its previous CEO, Steve Jobs on Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2011. He was 56 years old. According to the Associated Press, his death has been attributed to pancreatic cancer, a disease he had been afflicted with since 2003. Jobs was the creative and innovative force behind Apple for several years, having founded the company in his family’s garage in 1976 with his longtime friend, Steve Wozniak. “The way Steve Jobs implemented technology really made the company what it is today,” said junior theater and history double major Lindsey Scanlon.

Although Jobs was the initial founder of Apple Computers, he departed from the company in 1985 after a number of executives pressured him into leaving his position. However, he returned as CEO in 1997, and reinvented the corporation’s image as well as restored its popularity around the globe. He resigned again in August 2011 due to health concerns related to his ongoing battle with pancreatic cancer. Immediately following Jobs’ passing, Apple Inc. honored his contributions to the corporation with a full-page spread on its homepage. “People will naturally lose trust in Apple [because of Steve Jobs’s death], but I don’t think the quality [of Apple products] will drop,” said junior business major Lisa Nicchi.

AP Images

See Jobs | page 2

Jobs co-founded Apple in 1976. He helped to create the Macintosh computer.

Flashback: ‘90s edition Arts and Entertainment Editor Kevin O’Keeffe reflects on the Nickelodeon shows and ‘90s phenomena that raised and defined a generation.

A&E, Page 10

Index Opinion...............................6 A&E...............................9 Classifieds...........................11 Sports..............................16

The next issue of the Loyolan will be printed on October 10, 2011.

Son to honor iconic LMU hockey founder Friday’s opening hockey game vs. Chapman will commemorate former football and hockey legend Tom Lieb.

Sports, Page 16


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