The Daily Aztec - Vol. 95, Issue 17

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Monday, September 28, 2009

Vol. 95, Issue 17

THE

DAILY

w w w. T h e D a i l y A z t e c . c o m

AZTEC

Tw i t t e r : T h e D a i l y A z t e c

San Diego State University’s Independent Student Newspaper since 1913

I N S I D E T O D AY SPORTS

FALCON PUNCHED Despite solid defense and more big numbers from Vincent Brown, Aztecs fall to Air Force. page 2

STATE OF MIND

HOUSE THE NEEDY Should Chapultepec be used as a homeless shelter during the winter? page 3

DATING & ROMANCE

ONLINE DATING Read about how you just might find your next relationship via the Internet. page 5

TODAY @ SDSU World Music Series 6-7:30 p.m., Smith Recital Hall The SDSU School of Music and Dance will host Zimbeat to perform music from Zimbabwe. Tickets cost $12 or $15. For more of today’s headlines, visit:

www.thedailyaztec.com

CONTACT GENERAL INFORMATION 619.594.4199

Increase to CSU standards K R I ST I N A B L A K E S E N I O R S TA F F W R I T E R

California’s $571 million in budget cuts to the California State University system will force the CSU to reduce enrollment systemwide by 40,000 undergraduate students this year and next. Each CSU campus will have to implement changes in order to meet its share of the enrollment cuts. Like other campuses, San Diego State is making changes to its undergraduate admissions process for next fall to compensate for its enrollment reduction of 4,588 undergraduates or 10.8 percent. All majors and pre-majors, including undeclared, will now be impacted in order to help manage enrollment. In the past, students in the school’s service area, those who graduated from high schools south of State Route 56 or in Imperial County, gained admission with lower grades and test scores than those outside that area. Because all the school’s programs are now impacted, priority will no longer be given to local students, because every student will have to meet the same standards to gain acceptance into a program. SDSU Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs Sandra Cook said the decision is not to cut out locals, but to try to keep enrollment numbers down while maintaining the school’s commitment to both out-of-area and local students. Cook added that the campus will still provide local applicants with extra credit in the admissions process, but officials have not yet decided how much. “They’re tough decisions,” Cook said. “I’d really like to have everybody keep into perspective that it isn’t San Diego State doing this; this is kind of being forced onto San Diego State because of the economic situation of the state.” While the CSU Chancellor’s

Office instructed each campus to reduce its enrollment by a certain percentage, campuses have also been given the ability to decide how they will do so. Cook said that impacting all pre-majors and majors was the best decision, as it allows for campus diversity. “We do value our students from the service area and we do value our out-of-area students, too. It’s nice to have a balance,” Cook said. “Because San Diego State University is a university, you don’t really want it to have only students from its local area; you like to have a mix of geographic diversity as well as ethnic diversity.” Each CSU campus is handling the Chancellor’s directive differently. CSU San Marcos, which currently has approximately 9,300 students, will have to reduce enrollment by six percent. CSUSM spokesperson Margaret Lutz said offering admission to fewer students is hurting the school. “We’re feeling the impact, because as a campus, we’re only 20 years old next year,” Lutz said. “We’re relatively young and we have the capacity to grow.” According to Lutz, CSUSM also has a large service area, because it is the only four-year university in North County. The school serves southwest Riverside and south Orange County, too. Because of this, Lutz said CSUSM will still be giving priority to its service area students. “We think it’s important to be able to serve these students first, because they are the ones in our backyard; they are our neighbors,” Lutz said. “We have a strong economic impact on the local economy, because we feed directly into the workforce. The majority of our students are from this area, and when they graduate, they stay in the area. So to not give them priority, we felt, would not be serving our mission.”

Kallie Larson / Staff Photographer

In order for CSUSM to still give priority to its service-area students, only a handful of the school’s majors will be impacted. The school will enforce other rules, such as application deadlines, in order to help meet its enrollment reduction. This is because impaction is not the only tool campuses can use to maintain enrollment. Cook said CSU officials held a summit last month so they could discuss enrollment management options with CSU representatives. She noted that SDSU currently uses all available tools except one: graduating super-seniors. This, however, will now be implemented, too. While campus officials have not finalized the details, she said SDSU will now be able to graduate

students who have excessive units and meet graduation requirements. Still, she said the new changes shouldn’t affect current students, only the incoming class. Cook also said that prospective students should be aware the future may be even tougher. “I think next year’s going to be very challenging, more so than this year. I don’t see the state budget getting any better. I think they’ve overestimated revenues and they’re going to find more shortfalls and have to figure out how to fix that,” Cook said. “I hope the economy recovers and I hope it’s not going to be worse, but nobody’s predicting that. Everybody’s thinking next year’s going to be worse.”

EDITOR

IN CHIEF, FARYAR BORHANI 619.594.4190 EDITOR@THEDAILYAZTEC .COM

CITY EDITOR, KEVIN MCCORMACK 619.594.7782 CITYEDITOR@THEDAILYAZTEC .COM

FEATURES EDITOR, AMINATA DIA 619.594.6976 FEATURE@THEDAILYAZTEC .COM

SPORTS EDITOR, EDWARD LEWIS 619.594.7817 SPORTS@THEDAILYAZTEC .COM

STATE

OF

MIND EDITOR, ALLAN ACEVEDO

619.594.0509 OPINION@THEDAILYAZTEC .COM

TEMPO EDITOR, ANYA MOBERLY 619.594.6968 TEMPO@THEDAILYAZTEC .COM

Event highlights rape awareness W H I T N E Y L AW R E N C E A S S I S TA N T C I T Y E D I T O R

ART DIRECTOR, ELENA BERRIDY 619.594.6979 ARTDIRECTOR@THEDAILYAZTEC .COM

PHOTO EDITOR, GLENN CONNELLY 619.594.7279 PHOTO@THEDAILYAZTEC .COM

WEB EDITOR, MYLENE ERPELO 619.594.3315 WEB@THEDAILYAZTEC .COM

ADVERTISING 619.594.6977

INDEX SPORTS............................................................................2 STATE OF MIND.............................................................3 DATING & ROMANCE.................................................5 CLASSIFIEDS....................................................................7 THE BACK PAGE...........................................................8

Covering the windows of nearby restaurant La Casita last Thursday were raindrops bearing the signatures of San Diego State men who pledged to help end sexual assault on campus. In an effort to educate men about sexual violence and dispel rape myths, Fraternity Men Against Negative Environments and Rape Situations, hosted RAINN Day in coordination with the Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network. Since 2006, 41 reported forcible sex offenses have occurred on and around campus, 13 of which occurred in residence halls, according to SDSU Police Department internal reports.

Information and decision systems senior Nick Kwok, FratMANers secretary, said many students do not understand consent laws. “A lot of people are under the conception that as long as this person says yes, even if she’s intoxicated, it doesn’t really matter, it’s still consent. No, that’s actually considered rape,” Kwok said. Charges were never filed for an incident earlier this month when a woman reported to police that she’d been sexually assaulted at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity house. “Rape and sexual assault is a problem on every campus. I don’t think (SDSU) is perfect. I think we’re far from it,” FratMANers President Kevin Guerrero, a business management senior, said.

A.S. BRIEF Children’s Center furlough days The San Diego State Children’s Center will refund up to five days of services in light of furloughs and budget cuts. Families needing a monetary relief for child care at SDSU can potentially save an estimated $355. Children will not be present for days previously requested as furloughs by parents.

E3 events The Enviro-Business Society, or E3, will be hosting a beach cleanup next month. The event will be from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 18 in Ocean Beach. E3 also hosts the local farmer’s market on

campus. It runs from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. every Thursday on Campanile Walkway and participants are encouraged to bring cash.

Aztec Nights Associated Students will continue to host bowling and games night in October as a part of Aztec Nights. Festivities run from 8 p.m. to midnight every Thursday, Friday and Saturday. In addition, the next Aztec Nights event will be at 10 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 8. A.S. will be hosting the Reel Rock Film Tour featuring the Reel Rock movie premiere and a rock climbing competition.

—Compiled by Senior Staff Writer Sarah Kovash


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