daily titan april 19, 2011

8
e Cal State Fullerton softball team (17-17, 6-2) took both games of a doubleheader Saturday by scores of 3-2 and 3-0 at Anderson Family Field against the Cal Poly San Luis Obispo Mustangs. In game one, senior center fielder Torrie An- derson gave the Titans an early lead in the first inning with her RBI-single to center field, which scored senior first baseman K.C. Craddick, who hit a single earlier and had advanced to second on a fielder’s choice. e Mustangs rallied back in the sixth inning when junior right fielder Nicole Lund swung on the first pitch she saw and hit a double to the gap in right field. Senior catcher Stephanie Cor- reia then hit an RBI-single down the right-field line and advanced to second on the close play at the plate, which saw Lund reach home to tie the game at 1-1. Sophomore Cal Poly SLO pitcher Rebecca Patton then came to the plate with run- ners on second and third and with no outs, and hit an RBI-single past the Titan infielders to give the Mustangs a 2-1 advantage. Senior pitcher Ari Cervantes kept her compo- sure, though, and got out of the inning with three straight outs to limit the Mustangs’ lead to one run. e Titans rallied right back in the bottom of the sixth with sophomore left fielder Ashley Carter’s RBI infield single that allowed two run- ners to score. “Coach told me before that at-bat that I had to put it on the ground and they will make an error or freak out someway, so I just focused on putting the ball in play and see if I could create havoc for them,” said Carter. “Sliding into first was a reaction thing. I knew I had to be safe, but I did it anyway.” Sophomore catcher Ariel Tsuchiyama walked to lead off the inning, and freshman right fielder Leesa Harris successfully bunted down the first- base line. Freshman second baseman Lauren Ma- rio then loaded the bases with a grounder to first that the first baseman bobbled, which allowed Mario to reach the bag just before the first base- man. at set the plate for Carter’s hit, and she barely made it to first with a feet-first slide, just in time because the first baseman and second base- man could not execute the relay fast enough. Her hit allowed freshman pinch runner Jena Rubio to score from third. Harris caught the Mustangs napping in the confusion of Carter reaching first and stole home to get the lead right back for the Titans at 3-2. Contact Us at [email protected] The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton April 19, 2011 Vol. 89 Issue 39 dailytitan.com President Gordon refuses to sign the Declaration to Defend Public Education. See more at DailyTi- tan.com/declara- tiongordon Scan to view Creator of Avatar language speaks ................................................3 ONLINE EXCLUSIVES dailytitan.com Get up-to-date coverage on top campus news stories at DailyTitan.com/ DTN341911 Scan to view ONLINE EXCLUSIVES dailytitan.com WHAT’S INSIDE NEWS Na’vi language creator comes to symposium ........................................2 OPINION Devil’s Advocate: Should we re-elect Obama? ........................................4 FEATURES For Your Health: e right foods for staying hydrated ........................................6 SPORTS Softball closes out series with Mustangs with a comeback ........................................8 New international adviser Mikyong Kim- Goh uses experience abroad to lead KATHLEEN ROSELL Daily Titan Study abroad inspires lifelong career See ADVISER, page 6 The beginning of the semester saw the appointment of Professor Mikyong Kim-Goh to the post of acting associate vice president of International Programs. Kim- Goh, a professor in the Depart- ment of Social Work and a faculty member in the College of Health and Human Development since 1992, has assisted in international affairs on campus before the ap- pointment. Kim-Goh is new to the posi- tion, but is not new to the world of international affairs. From an early age she became acquainted with international affairs and her studies abroad broadened her per- spective on the world and guided her path to where she is today. “I would say that (studying abroad) was a transformative ex- perience,” said Kim-Goh. “It was such an influential experience that it, in a sense, guided the direction in terms of my career.” Campout in Langsdorf After two meetings with President Milton Gordon, student activists stage an all nighter In an effort to merge the Declaration to Defend Public Education with a statement prepared by President Milton Gordon, students work through the night in Langsdorf Hall. LUCIO VILLA / Daily Titan Softball walks off with a sweep and first place The Titans outhustled Cal Poly San Luis Obispo for sole possession of conference’s top spot See TITANS, page 8 JEFF PRENOVOST Daily Titan Task force gets Climate Commitment signed at campus sustainability event ARIANNE CUSTER Daily Titan Earth Week goals signed See CLIMATE, page 2 As evidence of Cal State Ful- lerton’s commitment to embrace and enact sustainability methods on campus, university President Milton A. Gordon signed the Tal- loires Declaration and the Univer- sity Presidents’ Climate Commit- ment at the recent “Sustainability at CSUF: Progress and Goals” fo- rum. A main focus of Earth Week and the event Monday was sus- tainability, which was touched on by Steve Murray, the acting vice- president for Academic Affairs who described sustainability as the “long-term maintenance of envi- ronmental, economic and social well-being.” He continued with, “We under- stand that our planet is a limited environment and that the activi- ties of the human population can impact its well-being. We also know that many important re- sources necessary to support our way of life are in limited supply.” As a way of addressing those concerns, the documents were signed as part of a panel discussion given by Ad Hoc members. Ad Hoc is a group that was es- tablished by the Academic Senate in the fall of 2007 and is part of the sustainability task force ap- pointed by Gordon in 2010. According to Greg Dyment, di- rector of the Arboretum, “We are a committee of people who are from different disciplines and de- partments who are concerned with sustainability.” The Talloires Declaration has been signed by over 400 univer- sity leaders in over 50 countries, and CSUF is now the sixth CSU to sign. According to the university leaders for a Sustainable Future, the secretariat for the signatories of the declaration, it is an “action plan for incorporating sustainabil- ity and environmental literacy in teaching, research, operations and outreach at colleges and universi- ties.” KEITH COUSINS Daily Titan See GORDON, page 2 Two meetings took place between President Milton Gordon, students and faculty members Monday to discuss the Declaration to Defend Public Education that was presented to Gordon Wednesday. e second meeting came to a close in similar fashion to the first – Gordon refused to sign or work on a revision – when one student, Ally Bordas, 21, spoke up. “Why won’t you sit here and work with us on this?” said Bordas. Gordon’s reply echoed through- out the second meeting. “You don’t think I support public education?” said Gordon. Students interrupted the state- ment demanding to know why the president would not work with them to merge a statement with the dec- laration prepared by students and faculty. “Well you know what, you can sit here and merge these two docu- ments, and I will take a look at them when they are merged,” Gordon said. “I will make a decision then.” Gordon added that he had, “a lot of things to do,” and would look at the merged statements at a later date. After two hours of meetings Mon- day, waiting in the halls of Gordon’s office for some students was a not only a collaborative effort but their only course of action. However, Cal State Fullerton University Police Lt. John Brockie informed the students that the eighth and ninth floors of Langdorf Hall were officially closed at 5 p.m. When asked if the students could discuss their next course of action, Brockie responded, “(e students) can leave; I am deciding for you.” After deliberation between Brock- ie and Cameron Mahdad, a student organizer and CSUF student, the two parties came to an agreement that would allow the students to stay the night on the second floor to work on creating a merged document. “e plan for the rest of the night is to work as a people’s assembly and strategize on how we can get Presi- dent Gordon to sign the declara- tion,” said Mahdad. “Students, fac- ulty and staff are tired of trying to do all the work and the admin just sit- ting back and watching it. It should be a joint thing.”

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Daily Titan April 19, 2011 Volume 89 Issue 39

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Daily Titan April 19, 2011

The Cal State Fullerton softball team (17-17, 6-2) took both games of a doubleheader Saturday by scores of 3-2 and 3-0 at Anderson Family Field against the Cal Poly San Luis Obispo Mustangs.

In game one, senior center fielder Torrie An-derson gave the Titans an early lead in the first inning with her RBI-single to center field, which scored senior first baseman K.C. Craddick, who hit a single earlier and had advanced to second on a fielder’s choice.

The Mustangs rallied back in the sixth inning when junior right fielder Nicole Lund swung on the first pitch she saw and hit a double to the gap in right field. Senior catcher Stephanie Cor-reia then hit an RBI-single down the right-field line and advanced to second on the close play at

the plate, which saw Lund reach home to tie the game at 1-1. Sophomore Cal Poly SLO pitcher Rebecca Patton then came to the plate with run-ners on second and third and with no outs, and hit an RBI-single past the Titan infielders to give the Mustangs a 2-1 advantage.

Senior pitcher Ari Cervantes kept her compo-sure, though, and got out of the inning with three straight outs to limit the Mustangs’ lead to one run. The Titans rallied right back in the bottom of the sixth with sophomore left fielder Ashley Carter’s RBI infield single that allowed two run-ners to score.

“Coach told me before that at-bat that I had to put it on the ground and they will make an error or freak out someway, so I just focused on putting the ball in play and see if I could create havoc for them,” said Carter. “Sliding into first was a reaction thing. I knew I had to be safe, but I did it anyway.”

Sophomore catcher Ariel Tsuchiyama walked to lead off the inning, and freshman right fielder Leesa Harris successfully bunted down the first-base line. Freshman second baseman Lauren Ma-rio then loaded the bases with a grounder to first that the first baseman bobbled, which allowed Mario to reach the bag just before the first base-man. That set the plate for Carter’s hit, and she barely made it to first with a feet-first slide, just in time because the first baseman and second base-man could not execute the relay fast enough. Her hit allowed freshman pinch runner Jena Rubio to score from third.

Harris caught the Mustangs napping in the confusion of Carter reaching first and stole home to get the lead right back for the Titans at 3-2.

Contact Us at dtnewsdesk@gmai l .com

The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton

April 19, 2011Vol. 89 Issue 39

dai lyt i tan.com

President Gordon refuses to sign the Declaration to Defend Public Education. See more at DailyTi-tan.com/declara-tiongordon

Scan to view

Creator of Avatar language speaks ................................................3

ONLINEEXCLUSIVESdailytitan.com

Get up-to-date coverage on top campus news stories at DailyTitan.com/DTN341911

Scan to viewONLINEEXCLUSIVESdailytitan.com

WHAT’S INSIDE

NEWSNa’vi language creator comes to symposium........................................2

OPINIONDevil’s Advocate: Should we re-elect Obama?........................................4

FEATURESFor Your Health: The right foods for staying hydrated ........................................6

SPORTS Softball closes out series with Mustangs with a comeback........................................8

New international adviser Mikyong Kim-Goh uses experience abroad to lead

KATHLEEN ROSELLDaily Titan

Study abroad inspires lifelong career

See ADVISER, page 6

The beginning of the semester saw the appointment of Professor Mikyong Kim-Goh to the post of acting associate vice president of International Programs. Kim-Goh, a professor in the Depart-ment of Social Work and a faculty member in the College of Health and Human Development since 1992, has assisted in international affairs on campus before the ap-pointment.

Kim-Goh is new to the posi-tion, but is not new to the world of international affairs. From an early age she became acquainted with international affairs and her studies abroad broadened her per-spective on the world and guided her path to where she is today.

“I would say that (studying abroad) was a transformative ex-perience,” said Kim-Goh. “It was such an influential experience that it, in a sense, guided the direction in terms of my career.”

Campout in Langsdorf After two meetings with President Milton Gordon, student activists stage an all nighter

In an effort to merge the Declaration to Defend Public Education with a statement prepared by President Milton Gordon, students work through the night in Langsdorf Hall. LUCIO VILLA / Daily Titan

Softball walks off with a sweep and first place The Titans outhustled Cal Poly San Luis Obispo for sole possession of conference’s top spot

See TITANS, page 8

JEFF PRENOVOSTDaily Titan

Task force gets Climate Commitment signed at campus sustainability event

ARIANNE CUSTERDaily Titan

Earth Week goals signed

See CLIMATE, page 2

As evidence of Cal State Ful-lerton’s commitment to embrace and enact sustainability methods on campus, university President Milton A. Gordon signed the Tal-loires Declaration and the Univer-sity Presidents’ Climate Commit-ment at the recent “Sustainability at CSUF: Progress and Goals” fo-rum.

A main focus of Earth Week and the event Monday was sus-tainability, which was touched on by Steve Murray, the acting vice-president for Academic Affairs who described sustainability as the “long-term maintenance of envi-ronmental, economic and social well-being.”

He continued with, “We under-stand that our planet is a limited environment and that the activi-ties of the human population can impact its well-being. We also know that many important re-sources necessary to support our way of life are in limited supply.”

As a way of addressing those concerns, the documents were signed as part of a panel discussion given by Ad Hoc members.

Ad Hoc is a group that was es-tablished by the Academic Senate in the fall of 2007 and is part of the sustainability task force ap-pointed by Gordon in 2010.

According to Greg Dyment, di-rector of the Arboretum, “We are a committee of people who are from different disciplines and de-partments who are concerned with sustainability.”

The Talloires Declaration has been signed by over 400 univer-sity leaders in over 50 countries, and CSUF is now the sixth CSU to sign.

According to the university leaders for a Sustainable Future, the secretariat for the signatories of the declaration, it is an “action plan for incorporating sustainabil-ity and environmental literacy in teaching, research, operations and outreach at colleges and universi-ties.”

KEITH COUSINSDaily Titan

See GORDON, page 2

Two meetings took place between President Milton Gordon, students and faculty members Monday to discuss the Declaration to Defend Public Education that was presented to Gordon Wednesday.

The second meeting came to a close in similar fashion to the first – Gordon refused to sign or work on a revision – when one student, Ally Bordas, 21, spoke up.

“Why won’t you sit here and work with us on this?” said Bordas.

Gordon’s reply echoed through-out the second meeting.

“You don’t think I support public education?” said Gordon.

Students interrupted the state-ment demanding to know why the president would not work with them to merge a statement with the dec-laration prepared by students and faculty.

“Well you know what, you can sit here and merge these two docu-ments, and I will take a look at them when they are merged,” Gordon said. “I will make a decision then.”

Gordon added that he had, “a lot of things to do,” and would look at

the merged statements at a later date.After two hours of meetings Mon-

day, waiting in the halls of Gordon’s office for some students was a not only a collaborative effort but their only course of action.

However, Cal State Fullerton University Police Lt. John Brockie informed the students that the eighth and ninth floors of Langdorf Hall were officially closed at 5 p.m.

When asked if the students could discuss their next course of action, Brockie responded, “(The students) can leave; I am deciding for you.”

After deliberation between Brock-ie and Cameron Mahdad, a student

organizer and CSUF student, the two parties came to an agreement that would allow the students to stay the night on the second floor to work on creating a merged document.

“The plan for the rest of the night is to work as a people’s assembly and strategize on how we can get Presi-dent Gordon to sign the declara-tion,” said Mahdad. “Students, fac-ulty and staff are tired of trying to do all the work and the admin just sit-ting back and watching it. It should be a joint thing.”

Page 2: Daily Titan April 19, 2011

dailytitan.com

NEWS2

April 19, 2011

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Editorial

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FOR THE RECORDIt is the policy of the Daily Titan to correct any inaccurate informa-

tion printed in the publication as soon as the error is discovered. Any incorrect information printed on the front page will result in a cor-rection printed on the front page. Any incorrect information printed on any other page will be corrected on page 2. Errors on the Opinion page will be corrected on that page. Corrections also will be noted on the online version of the Daily Titan.

Please contact Editor-in-Chief Isa Ghani at 657-278-5815 or at [email protected] with issues about this policy or to report any errors.

CLIMATE: Sustainability at CSUF

Scott Hewitt, a professor and the vice chair of the Chemistry and Biochemistry Department, said during the forum, “Sustainability is not just something done once. It’s something you continue to work on and progress on.”

With this in mind, Hewitt pointed out that in 2007 there were 53 courses that focused entirely or at least partially on sustainability in the curriculum. Now there are 82 courses where the “main focus is clearly on sustainability.”

In regards to the University Presidents’ Climate Commitment, “The overall goal is to make cam-puses more sustainable and address global warming by garnering insti-tutional commitments to reduce and ultimately neutralize green-house gas emissions on campus,” Murray said.

“I’m particularly proud of our actions that have been taken up to this point,” said Gordon just before signing the documents.

He listed examples such as the removal of cleaning products with harmful chemicals, the installation of better irrigation controls, solar power generating systems and LED lighting in place of fluorescent, and the establishment of the Center for Sustainability.

During the Q-and-A portion of the forum, Doug Moody, Associ-

ated Students Inc. Environmental Advocacy Committee chair, was asked how to get students more involved with the sustainability movement.

Moody expressed that he would like to see staff, faculty and stu-dents work together on future sus-tainability efforts, perhaps under the umbrella of the ASI EAC, so that it would be a more concentrat-ed effort and the word would get out to more people.

“Students need and want to do our part to make sustainability ideas a part of the world that we are inheriting,” said Moody.

Sean Takayoshi, a student in the environmental engineering gradu-ate program at CSUF, attended the forum and expressed his de-sire to see better efforts toward a “zero waste” university by asking the panel, “What is our Arboretum doing to work with our facilities to compost our food waste on cam-pus?”

Dyment explained that contrac-tors building the student housing inquired about installing a kitch-en composter, which would cook down the food waste and then be put in the compost pile at the Ar-boretum, and said, “It would be great to have something similar at our food court.”

For those who missed the forum but would like to express their ideas or know more about sustainability, go to Sustainability.Fullerton.edu.

...Continued from page 1

Students meet with President Milton Gordon and Vice President Silas Abrego to persuade the pair to sign the Declaration to Defend Public Education created by the students and faculty. The meeting was held in Gordon’s conference room on the ninth floor of Langsdorf Hall.

LUCIO VILLA / Daily Titan

GORDON: Refuses to sign the Declaration to Defend Public Education

The intent of students and fac-ulty for the initial 1 p.m. meeting with Gordon was to work with the president on creating a revised Declaration to Defend Public Ed-ucation that all parties involved would be willing to back.

Gordon raised concerns with the wording of several statements in the declaration – including the clause that states that CSU Chan-cellor Reed “refuses to bargain for fair contracts with faculty and staff.” Gordon added that he is not involved in any of the contracts for faculty members, and there were several other points made in the declaration he disagreed with.

“I won’t be able to sign this agreement,” Gordon said.

Questions arose over the Cali-

fornia Faculty Association’s in-volvement in the meeting and in the drafting of the declaration. Both Gordon and acting Vice President for Student Affairs Silas Abrego suggested that the meeting itself was a CFA function.

“The declaration makes refer-ence to the CFA,” said Abrego. “There are ongoing negotiations going on right now. There is rep-resentatives for the CFA and the CSU in negotiations. We can’t have anyone else intervene in those negotiations.”

Abrego added that the document was a way to generate support for the CFA and attendees were com-mingling two issues – for a better contract and better education.

After the issue was discussed, two CFA members who were pres-ent removed themselves from the room.

Gordon continued to stress that he would not sign the statement or any agreement at all despite the pleas of students and faculty.

After more dialogue, Gordon agreed to work on his own state-ment but had to leave to sign a cli-mate commitment as a part of the Earth Week program at CSUF.

“I’m not surprised, but I am frustrated,” said Bryan Norton, a student organizer. “The vice presi-dent of Student Affairs was largely speaking for (Gordon) … and was actually largely indecisive until the vice president of Student Affairs began feeding him answers.”

Newly elected vice president of ASI, Jay Jefferson, attended the first meeting and also expressed his feelings.

“I think public education is im-portant,” said Jefferson. “I knew that today they were going to take

action and try to get Gordon to en-dorse (the declaration), and I was interested to see if he was going to sign it and if he didn’t, why not?”

Jefferson added that it is a tough position for the president to be in and he hopes Gordon will take the initiative to sign something.

In the second meeting, Gordon read a prepared statement com-mending the students for their work and passion. But he contin-ued to stress that he would not sign anything nor work with the students to draft a merger of the two statements.

When late classes ended Mon-day night in Langsdorf Hall, there were still students waiting on the second floor.

They intended to camp out and work on a new draft throughout the night to bring to Gordon in the morning.

...Continued from page 1

The Niu ASI president balances priorities After winning the presidency, the international business major juggles school, work and new role

MARITZA VELAZQUEZDaily Titan

Eric Niu has a hefty plate full of re-sponsibilities, and now he can add one more to the top of the list as Cal State Fullerton’s newest Associated Students Inc. president.

The international business major, 22, is planning to make the most of his time while he’s energetic enough to juggle it all – his classes, his job and his involvement in his campus fraternity.

“I just believe we only live once and we should do as much as we can while we’re young. I can manage everything perfectly. I don’t really go out or any-thing. My priority is school and now it’s ASI and my fraternity. I’m handling it,” said Niu.

Niu and his running mate, Vice President-elect Jay Jefferson, garnered enough student votes to win the lead-ership positions last week in a runoff race against candidates Aissa Canchola and Megan Martinez. The first time around the race was too tight, with nei-ther team coming up with the majority of votes.

Now the work begins. He has even canceled his plans to travel to Barce-lona, Spain this summer to concentrate on his new role, Niu said.

Traveling is among his greatest pas-sions and he has already visited places like Japan and France. Last year he studied in Heidelberg, Germany, where he met some friends who ended up studying at CSUF last semester. His dream is to combine his love of travel-ing and a career in international trading someday.

“My dream is always to do some-thing with international trading,” Niu said. “Every place has its own culture. It was really good to see things from a different perspective. (In Germany) I learned from different people I met ev-eryday. It was a great experience.”

Niu, who lives in Irvine, was born in China and moved to the United States at 13 years old.

“It was a completely different world to me. I had to meet new friends, learn the language and adapt to the culture. It’s definitely another experience that has got me to be open-minded and be-come stronger.”

Michelle Santizo, a friend and for-mer CSUF ASI board member, said there is much students can learn from Niu. She even remembers last year when Niu mentioned that he would someday like to be president on cam-pus.

“There’s a lot of things students can learn from him,” Santizo said. “From his dedication and the way he strives for his dreams no matter how difficult the situations in life may be.”

In addition to his classes, Niu, a ju-nior at CSUF, also works roughly 15 hours a week as a community service leader at the Lakeview Senior Center in Irvine. There, he helps teachers plan exercise classes and organizes activities like pool, bridge and dances.

“My favorite part about my job is that I really get to become friends with seniors, and I love to listen to their sto-ries. I’ve learned to view the world us-ing different perspectives from people’s experiences,” Niu said.

He also serves as treasurer for his fra-ternity, Pi Kappa Phi.

Now as ASI president-elect, Niu’s first duty is to select an executive team. He and Jefferson will begin conducting interviews for the positions.

“I think we’re looking for passion,” Niu said. He is a former member of the ASI Board of Directors. “You need a lot of passion to do the work; it’s not easy. It requires a lot of time and definitely the ability to work with us.”

Jefferson and Niu met on a trip to Sacramento last spring to lobby against budget cuts. They were roommates for the weekend.

“We all became very good friends,” Jefferson said of Niu and a third room-mate. “It was definitely a good time and I learned Eric was a pretty good guy.”

Niu approached Jefferson two to three weeks before the election to ask him to be his running mate. During the campaign, Jefferson said he learned that Niu is very open-minded.

“He’s open to hearing what other people have to say and that’s going to be critical to his role as ASI president,” Jefferson said.

Page 3: Daily Titan April 19, 2011

dailytitan.com

NEWS 3

April 19, 2011

dai lyt i tan.com/news

DTSHORTHAND

Ticketmaster, owned by Live Nation Entertainment Inc., will introduce a new “dynamic pric-ing” program sometime this year, potentially dropping prices for some events, the Los Angeles Times reported Monday.

Live Nation Entertainment Inc., which is the largest event ticket retailer in the world, will base its prices on consumer de-mand. It will begin with concerts and sporting events and offer the program later for theater and arts events, according to the article.

That means if a concert isn’t selling well, the price could dip for consumers looking for a cheaper price.

“Efficient pricing is one of the most important and untapped opportunities,” said Nathan Hubbard, Ticketmaster chief executive, as quoted in the LA Times. “By utilizing Market-Share and Ticketmaster’s tech-nology, our clients will be able to retain economic value that is normally siphoned off by the sec-ondary market and to sell more of their tickets that go unsold today. Meanwhile, more fans will have more opportunities to enjoy live entertainment events because tickets will be more ac-cessible and pricing options will broaden.”

Ticketmaster’s Dynamic Pricing

Brief by Maritza Velazquez

Cal State Fullerton is hosting its annual Comm Week April 25 through May 1 for students, faculty and professionals in the communications field.

The event aims to educate stu-dents interested in working in the field on current communications issues while giving advice and providing an inside look into the industry through working profes-sionals and alumni.

Attendees can expect industry professionals from NBC Univer-sal, Churm Media, the Orange County Register, E! Online, the Los Angeles Times, Esquire, Echo Media Group, KTLA and much more.

There will also be industry mixers and internship fairs, dis-cussions on public relations, so-cial media and writing, as well as advice on how to get started and what to do after graduation.

For live coverage of the events, visit DailyTitan.com

CSUF Welcomes Comm Week

Brief by Jessica Druck

Cal State Fullerton student organizations are joining forces to present the “Corners of Hate, We’re Just As American As You” to respond to the recent protest rally at a Yorba Linda Islamic community center charity event. The anti-hate rally will take place April 28 at the Becker Amphithe-atre from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The ASI and AICA-sponsored event will aim to bring together individuals from different ethnic-ities and races that are often vic-tims of hate incidents and racism. The video of the anti-Islam rally in Yorba Linda shook Orange County and created a buzz online because of the hateful comments hollered by the protesters at the families present at the fundraiser.

Students will be able to voice their opinions and give personal testimonies at the event, while information tables and speakers will highlight the message of the rally.

A number of different stu-dent organizations including the Association of Chinese Stu-dents Cambodian Students As-sociation, Hispanic Scholarship Fund, Iran Students Association, Inter-Tribal Student Counsel, Middle Eastern Students, Mus-lim Students Association Society, Nikkei Student Union, Pakistani Students’ Association, Queer and Straight Alliance and the Viet-namese Students Association are all taking part in the rally.

For more information contact Soaliha Lakhani (of the PSA) at [email protected] or Sepideh Nia at [email protected].

Anti-Hate Rally to be Held at Becker

Brief by Alnas Zia

Hundreds gathered at the Or-ange County Great Park over the weekend for the Make-A-Wish inaugural Walk for Wishes, a two-mile walk to raise funds and aware-ness to help grant wishes for chil-dren with life-threatening illnesses.

Dozens of teams were at the event, with each team raising funds to grant a wish for one child. Reach for a Wish, a team comprised of Cal State Fullerton students, was also at the event.

“Our team has granted a wish. We’ve made over $5,000,” said Katy Davis, a CSUF student and member of Reach for a Wish.

At the time of publication, they exceeded their goal by $389 and had 55 members join their team, which also exceeded their goals of trying to hit 50 members.

“My team members and I went back and forth between, ‘This is easy, we’re gonna do this!’ and ‘Oh no, we’re halfway to our point and we only have half the members;

are we gonna make that?’ And you know what, really, to see the kind of people that are here, I’m not sur-prised that kindness came through and we made our goals with that,” said Davis.

Reach for a Wish is also part of the VIP group of teams, a group highlighted for raising the most funds out of all the teams at the event. They sit within the top five teams.

Reach for a Wish got its start due to Delivering Services for Communities 411, a class func-tioning as a learning experience for students pursuing a human services degree. Students enrolled in the class are split into a hand-ful of groups, finding and choosing benefit communities, like children with life-threatening illnesses and doing what they can to aid them. In this case, Davis and her team saw Make-A-Wish as the support community in which to help ben-efit the community.

Charles Royston, professor of human services, has taught the class for several years.

“(Katy and her team’s accom-plishments are) a confirmation

that people make a difference indi-vidually, but the best mechanism is groups,” Royston said.

Make-A-Wish teams, like Reach for a Wish, have gone on to grant wishes to thousands of children and have granted wishes for more than 195,000 children since its in-ception.

“I can’t really express, not enough words to really go into what this foundation does for kids and for families who can’t really do their dreams for their kids. This foundation really makes a huge dif-ference,” said Tom Houwen, father of Kaylee Houwen. “She’ll never forget this whole experience for the rest of her life. It’s amazing.”

Kaylee’s wish was to go to Dis-neyworld and she got her wish granted. Kaylee has acute lympho-blastic leukemia. Her cancer is cur-rently in remission.

Make-A-Wish was founded in 1980 and has since grown into the largest wish-granting foundation and nonprofit organization in the world. Walk for Wishes, which Make-A-Wish hopes to make an annual event, has generated over $100,000 in funds.

The creator of Na’vi, the language of the fictional people of Pandora in Ava-tar, spoke at the 20th annual Linguis-tics Symposium Monday.

Other speakers included professors from UCLA, Claremont McKenna College and USC. Paul Frommer, linguist and creator of Na’vi, earned his Ph.D. in linguistics from USC and taught clinical management com-munication at the Marshall School of Business until he retired last year. He also taught a linguistics class for one year at Cal State Fullerton in the late ‘70s.

“I had a really good time teaching here,” said Frommer. “I taught a class on animal communication and lan-guage. Probably no one else wanted to teach it, so I picked it up.”

He also taught an introductory course on linguistics during his CSUF teaching gig.

Frommer is best known for the lan-guage he created in James Cameron’s $400 million epic science fiction film Avatar.

“Na’vi attracted a lot of interest,” Frommer said.

Roy Kouchakgi, a graduate TOESL student with a passion for linguistics, was excited to see Frommer speak. “The movie is out-of-this-world beau-tiful,” said Kouchakgi. “(Frommer) created a language! It’s not every day that a language is created.”

The creating of a new language started with phonetics and phonology.

“There are many misconceptions about language,” Frommer said. “It’s the most human thing that we do. It’s what defines us. No other living crea-ture communicates like humans.”

Frommer said every language has rules and the study of linguistics teach-es that every group has a legitimate way of communicating.

“There’s a misconception that any non-English language is inferior,” Frommer said. “(The study of linguis-tics) helps you appreciate different lan-guages and the variety of human com-munication.”

Kouchakgi, who plans to graduate

next spring and hopes to teach Eng-lish abroad, said he’s enthused about linguistics. “I’m fascinated with how sounds come together. The human capacity is to speak and communicate. We are the only animal to do so.”

Frommer also said linguistics helps people to understand themselves bet-ter because language “pervades every aspect of existence.”

Frommer was able to combine his love for astronomy with his passion for linguistics when he received a forward-ed email about Lightstorm Entertain-ment’s search for a linguistics expert to develop a new language for Cameron’s epic film.

Victor Hugo Miranda, a CSUF lin-guistics student and chair of the Lin-guistics Symposium, said, “Believe it or not, language is the most complicated thing we learn in school. It seems easy, but when you break it down it’s not so easy.”

Frommer defined linguistics as the “scientific study of language.”

“It helps you when learning other languages. It helps you appreciate languages more,” Frommer said. But more than anything, Frommer finds the study of language fascinating. That fascination is what drove him to create a language that is similar to many other languages in that it is 30 to 40 percent wordier than English.

The task was not an easy one and took Frommer four years working closely with the Oscar-winning direc-tor. The task included creating MP3 files of the 1,000-word language. He also met with actors in one-on-one tutorials to ensure that the syllables of Na’vi were pronounced exactly the way Frommer intended in a language-learning type setting.

Miranda said the symposium is in-tended to inform the general public of other fields and designed to introduce research to students interested in lin-guistics and languages.

Miranda, who is set to graduate this spring, said the study of linguistics is very useful when teaching a foreign language.

“The U.S. is a monolingual culture,” Miranda said. “There’s a joke that if you speak two languages you’re bilin-gual. If you speak one language you’re American.”

OC walks for wishes The Make-A-Wish Foundation holds its first two-mile awareness fundraiser

FLOR EDWARDSDaily Titan

Na’vi linguist speaks at CSUF

Avatar language creator takes part in annual symposium at Cal State Fullerton

It’s getting close to election time for the Health and Human Development Inter-Club Council (HHD-ICC) and as its executive board members are graduating, there is a need for strong leaders to fill vacant positions.

Krystal Santiago, a public ad-ministration major with a minor in human services, currently serves as the chair of the HHD-ICC. It is her fourth year on the council and her second year as chair.

“We don’t like to be seen as ‘poli-ticians’ or ‘elected officials.’ We’re no different than the students we serve,” said Santiago.

Every college on campus has its own ICC. Each ICC consists of a group of executives that act as a mediator between ASI and the clubs within that college. They are responsible for distributing funds provided by ASI and are commit-

ted to the growth and support of graduate and undergraduate educa-tion.

Student Associations are eligible to apply to the ICC for money to cover the cost of a guest speaker or to fund other activities, events, research, public service and profes-sional development.

“The upcoming elections are a very important part of campus life,” said Lindsey Ellsworth, a child and adolescent studies major. “(The interclub council) helps dis-tribute funds for events.”

Ellsworth served on the HHD-ICC as director of administration from 2009-10. She could not par-ticipate for another term because she became vice president of the Child and Adolescent Student As-sociation, which is an active orga-nization within the ICC. She said the ICC is currently promoting the organization, open positions and welcoming potential candidates to its upcoming meetings to help the council find suitable leaders to fill positions.

According to the HHD-ICC Constitution, the officers shall not hold any major officer positions in any of the various College of Health and Human Development clubs or organizations due to po-tential conflict of interest.

The HHD-ICC strives to strengthen school unity among the body within the College of Health and Human Development and throughout campus through their clubs. It is currently home to 12 student associations and facilitates aid and continual success to all of them.

Most of the clubs incorporate weekly or biweekly guest speak-ers. Through funding proposed by HHD-ICC and approved by ASI, the Inter-Club Council also funds members of organizations to pro-mote and host events. At the end of March the HHD-ICC put on the Carnival of Connections event that incorporated all of its student associations.

Santiago said since ASI is funded by the student body, the purpose of

HHD Inter-Club Council looks to elect new board members As executive staff of the HHD-ICC graduate this May, the council hopes to fill three leadership positions for next semester

AMY LEADBETTERDaily Titan

the Carnival of Connections was to let students know where their mon-ey was going. They hosted a fun way to inform students through carnival-like games of all the com-munity service and good deeds their clubs are doing.

Although 12 clubs do not seem like a lot, some of them consist of hundreds of members. Santiago assures that there are a lot of stu-dents within the College of Health and Human Development that are involved in their clubs and associa-tions.

The HHD-ICC is comprised of three officers in the executive staff that consist of the chair, vice chair and the director of administration. All three positions are issued schol-arships. According to the ASI Fis-cal Year 2010-11 Budget Summary, the three positions receive scholar-ships ranging from $890 to $1,840.

Lani Endo, a child and adoles-cent studies major and natural sci-ences minor, has served on the ex-ecutive board for three years.

In the fall 2009 semester she served as the director of administra-tion. She admits that through her involvement with the Inter-Club Council, she learned a lot about ASI and the way they worked and eventually became vice chair for the Board of Directors.

“There are so many leadership opportunities within our college and organizations and especially within ASI,” said Endo. “When it comes to leadership I started out as president of a club and eventually worked my way up to the Executive Board of the HHD-ICC. I enjoy being an advocate for students and helping fight for what the students and college wants.”

The positions’ qualifications con-sist of having at least six semester units of credit per term while hold-ing office, being in good standing with the university, not being on judicial or academic probation and having a cumulative GPA of 2.5. An officer also must be either ma-joring or minoring in health and human development.

The duties of the chair are to be the presiding officer and run all the meetings, rule on matters of inter-pretation of the bylaws, prepare the agenda for each General Council meeting and also be responsible for attending all Executive Senate meetings.

The vice chair fulfills all duties of the chair in the event that the chair is unable to do so. The vice chair manages all funds of HHD-ICC, serves as a liaison between the Ex-ecutive Staff and HHD-ICC rep-resentatives regarding all financial issues, reports financial data, co-ordinates the Finance Committee when needed and ensures that all HHD-ICC funding complies with ASI bylaws, policy statements and fiscal policies.

The director of administration takes minutes, maintains file of at-tendance, agendas and all relevant information to HHD-ICC.

The current HHD-ICC will begin preparing for elections the last week of April. The elections will take place Wednesday, May 4, where the council will vote in three nominated officers.

A transition meeting has been bumped up two weeks sooner than normal to Wednesday, May 11, to assure that the transitions between officers is effective and efficient.

“We want to guarantee that there will be a smooth transition. Anyone who is interested but ap-prehensive because they feel they are not qualified or inexperienced, please come meet with us,” Santia-go said. “During the transition, we will trade information, pass down all our documentation and records, and provide the new officers with the foundation they will need.”

Santiago encourages any stu-dents who are interested to sit in one of their upcoming council meetings to see the way they oper-ate and meet the current executive board.

The council meets every Wednes-day from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. in EC 605. The term of office is July 1, 2011 to June 30, 2012.

CHRISTOPHER PARKDaily Titan

Courtesy of Charles Royston

Page 4: Daily Titan April 19, 2011

dailytitan.com

OPINION4

April 19, 2011

Contact Us at dtopinion@gmai l .com

Yes we can! Yes we can! Yes we can!

In 2008, an obscure senator from the state of Illinois came into the limelight and stole the election.

At first we were all like, “Obama? Obama who?”

He had a funny name and was a different color than the last 43 presidents that have served before him.

But once we got over the ob-vious fact that he was different and began to listen to his talks of change, we realized that he may in fact be the guy that we had been looking for.

Only a couple mere weeks ago, Obama announced his intentions to run for presidential re-election in 2012.

Now the question is, should we re-elect him to continue his work and let him have four more years to come through with his prom-ises?

Critics like to say that he has not come through with his prom-ises.

Well, let’s think about it—what politician has?

The fact of the matter is, poli-ticians no longer believe in serv-ing their constituents; they serve themselves, thus the different parties are unable to compromise or work together in order to help the country move further into the future.

But one thing the country has forgotten is that Barack Obama, 49, is only human.

His lofty campaign slogans gave people an idea that he was their savior here to thwart the wrongdoers in the world and save them from everything.

The reason people are so un-happy with the last few years is they have realized that he’s not a god—he’s mortal and cannot just

wiggle his ears and change the world.

Unfortunately, it does not work that way.

In his first days in office, he did begin to go through with his campaign promises.

He ordered that Guantanamo Bay be closed; the reason that it has yet to be shut down is be-cause Congress will not approve the funds.

He ordered less secrecy with documents, which has been done, and he reversed the ban on funding for establish-ments that perform abortions.

He tried to imple-ment universal health care, but that turned into a nightmare be-cause no one was willing to put forth the effort to work to-gether.

His ideas and in-tentions were un-deniably good, but when you have a gov-ernment of thousands of people from different sides screaming for different footnotes in a bill, there is no surprise the bill ended up the way it did.

Like presidents before him, Obama started off with a high approval rating, and of course it has gone down.

What is remarkable is how quickly Americans lost faith in him.

According to the Los Angeles Times, Obama’s approval rat-ing hit a low of 38 percent last July, which then went up to 53 percent in January and has been staying between that and 46 per-cent since.

Many of the other complaints against him are about the econo-my, national budget and various wars around the world that we are involved in.

Just in case everyone forgot, let me remind you that all of those

problems were around before he took the oath of office.

You cannot make a national debt of $14 trillion disappear overnight; the money to repay that has to come from some-where.

Cutbacks and higher taxes are really the only solutions.

The trouble is Americans have gotten so used to so much for so little that they will not even think of considering paying more in

taxes.Obama is only one man in the

world. He has done many good things

for this country, but they are overshadowed by some of the biggest problems our country has faced in decades.

Plus, incumbent presidents always do more in their second term because they are no longer concerned about being re-elected and do not mind stepping on toes.

If we elect in another newcom-er, then we are going to have an-other four years of nothing hap-pening.

Obama needs another four years to execute the promises that he has put forth.

We have yet to see the full power of Obama.

By voting him out of office we will only be left with the ques-tion, “What if?”

What was your greatest disap-pointment in the last few years? The loss of a favorite sports team? The unfortunate cancellation of a TV show?

Mine is the abysmal perfor-mance of Barack Obama as presi-dent of the United States.

The historic election of the first black U.S. president brought with it many great expectations. Sadly, Obama’s ideological shortcomings and ineptitude as a leader have critically damaged the interna-tional standing of our great nation. In nearly every aspect of analysis, Barack Obama’s presidency has been a failure of disastrous propor-tions.

Barack Obama spends like a drunken sailor: Obama’s hor-rific mismanagement of economic policy is inexcusable. For all his talk of “inheriting” a bad econ-omy from his yokel predecessor, Obama has somehow managed to outdo George W. Bush in frivolous spending.

According to the Congressional Budget Office, the U.S. Budget deficit was $438 billion in 2008. The deficit in 2011, according to projections by the CBO, will be a colossal $1.5 trillion; Obama has

nearly quadrupled the deficit in less than three years.

Barack Obama is operating as an imperial president: In stark contrast with the actions of his pre-decessor, Barack Obama has failed to request congressional approval for the recent military engagement in Libya. The Constitution of the United States as well as the War Powers Act of 1973 require that the president obtain approval for military intervention from Con-

gress. Even Bush man-

aged to drag himself before Congress to get the go-ahead for Iraq and Afghanistan; Obama hasn’t even paid them lip service.

Barack Obama supports military interventionism: A recent study by the Stockholm Interna-tional Peace Research Institute found that the United States alone accounts for 43 percent of global

military expenditures (more than $687 billion). The people scream-ing about the military-industrial complex seem to be right. Obama has failed to withdraw troops from Iraq (nearly 50,000 troops still remain, according to CNN), and U.S. troops are still dying in Af-ghanistan.

The recent military assault on oil-rich Libya has convinced me that Obama doesn’t deserve the Nobel Peace Prize he was given for allegedly strengthening “interna-tional diplomacy and cooperation between peoples.”

Barack Obama continues to break his promises: During his initial campaign, Barack Obama presented himself as a reform can-didate and a constitutional scholar. The reality, however, doesn’t live up to the fantasy. Obama has broken a vast array of campaign prom-ises, from public negotiation of his health care policy to the immedi-

ate closure of the Guantanamo Bay detention facility.

We have not seen even minimal progress on the comprehensive immigration reform bill he guar-anteed would surface in the first year of his presidency or on the cap and trade bill to limit carbon emissions. The campaign slogan of “Yes we can!” has become “No we didn’t.” Why would anyone believe his grandiose promises when this man begs for another four years?

Barack Obama rammed through a broken and costly health care bill: According to re-search from economist Veronique de Rugy and the CBO, the health care act will result in a federal deficit increase of $254 billion as a direct consequence of passing Obamacare. The health care law is not only expensive, but was passed by lawmakers who didn’t under-stand its provisions.

David Freddoso of the Washing-ton Examiner said former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi might as well have stated to the Legisla-tive Conference for National Asso-ciation of Counties in 2010, “We have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it.”

Scary. Sadly, the hope that millions of

people had for Barack Obama has turned out to be baseless. Obama’s recycled policies and playbook have earned him the illustrious title of Bush 2.0; he speaks more eloquently than Dubbya, but is otherwise disturbingly similar. As his record proves, we cannot trust Barack Obama with our secu-rity, and least of all, the economy. Obama’s rabid and fanatical apolo-gists always attempt to rationalize away blame placed on our dear leader, but Americans are slowly figuring out the truth; we deserve more than an armchair president with an ego approaching the size of the federal deficit.

When it comes time to vote in 2012, I will be checking the box entitled, “Anyone but Barack Hus-sein Obama.”

Should we re-elect President Barack Obama in 2012 for another term? Four years is not enough time to change the world, re-elect him We cannot trust President Obama with our economy or security

KATHLEEN ROSELLDaily Titan

PETER CORNETTFor the Daily Titan

“One good thing about music, when it hits you feel no pain.”

Bob Marley was able to put the quality of music into a sentence so simple.

What if I told you listening to any kind of music was actually a way to ultimately improve your health?

Well, listening to music will improve your health.

Music may not cure cancer or AIDS, but it does have a positive impact on your well-being.

According to Japanese re-searchers, participants in a study who were exposed to music over a three-month period lowered their blood pressure by five to six points.

This means that listening to music may reduce your risk for diseases linked to high blood pres-sure.

According to the American Heart Association, high blood pressure, which is also known as hypertension, is also linked to heart disease and stroke.

This is not to be confused for being a magical medicine that will lower blood pressure and prevent heart disease.

The results found in the study are not enough for doctors to pre-scribe music for high blood pres-sure.

Vera Brandes, the director of the research program in music and medicine at Paracelsus Medi-cal University, believes that music may influence the parasympathet-ic nervous system, which allows the body to relax and slows heart rate.

The correlation between lower blood pressure and music is vague and not very widely observed or

understood. However, according to a recent

meeting at the American Heart Association in Atlanta, music re-portedly lowered blood pressure, resulting in the possible loss of weight.

This does not mean that listen-ing to music will make you lose 10 pounds, although that would be amazing.

This simply means that music may cause relaxation of the heart or blood vessels, which will de-crease blood pressure.

From elevator music to your fifth grade musical, we are sur-rounded by music on a daily basis.

Now every time you are exposed to music of any genre, you know you are benefiting yourself and your health.

Music can offer hope when there is nothing else left to believe.

Music can be therapeutic when times are difficult, and it can touch your heart with each power-ful verse.

Music is something you can feel not only in your body, but your spirit.

People can express themselves through music in ways they might not be able to otherwise commu-nicate.

Although there hasn’t been re-search or a study done on how music can affect your soul or spir-it, I think we each understand the positive influence music has on us.

It doesn’t matter what type you listen to; the universal feeling people get from music is happi-ness, and happiness improves your health.

Turning on the radio in your car after a long stressful day and hear-ing your favorite song will ease all of your worries for that brief mo-ment.

A life without music is like a life without soul and passion.

I love to explore nonconven-tional ways to improve and benefit your health.

Music will have such a positive impact on each and every person’s life.

Enjoy your favorite music that much more knowing you are cre-ating a healthy environment for yourself.

Peace, love and recycle!

Hippie Healthby NICOLE FELTON

“How to Live a Greener Life”

Music: Our favorite therapy Studies show that music can lower blood pressure,

subsequently lowering risk of heart disease and stroke

It doesn’t matter what

type you listen to; the universal

feeling people get from music

is happiness, and happiness improves your

health.

Page 5: Daily Titan April 19, 2011

dailytitan.com

FEATURES 5

April 19, 2011

dai lyt i tan.com/features

Visitors to the Fullerton Arboretum’s Green Scene 2011 Plant and Garden Show purchased gardening-related items as well as eco-friendly items to support the Earth Week cause.

ARIANNE CUSTER / Daily Titan

The Green Scene 2011 Plant and Garden Show at the Arboretum kicked off Earth Week and Califor-nia Native Plant Week at Cal State Fullerton. Attendees were able to shop for unique plants, garden art and supplies from over 100 ven-dors last weekend.

Attendees walked from tent to tent, spread out over the Arbore-tum garden, purchasing items such fair-trade baskets, eco-friendly bags, hand-thrown planters and license plate roof-topped bird-houses.

Exotic, drought-resistant and California-native plants were also for sale in abundance.

Sarah Jayne, a volunteer with the California Native Plant Soci-ety since 1985, was at one of the booths explaining the importance of and how to go native in the gar-den.

“I just happen to be a native plant enthusiast,” said Jayne.

Part of her efforts was to explain proper gardening practices to gar-deners who stopped by.

“They think that natives grow so well out in nature neglected and then they try to grow them at home and it’s not as easy as they expect,” Jayne said.

Jayne explained that with knowl-

edge on drainage and watering, new gardeners could enjoy growing Cora Bells, Sages, California Fuch-sia and native grasses, for example.

Jayne also answered questions on California Native Plant Week. “It was voted in by legislature last year to begin this year.

It will be an annual event the third week of April from now on,” Jayne said. “The purpose is to cel-ebrate Native plants. Just get out there and enjoy them. Appreciate them in the wild.”

More experienced gardeners, like Helen Cunningham from Whitti-er, also attended the show. This was her fourth year at the show.

“We came for very specific things and found them. Some of the time we come to see what’s new, but this year we had a specific list,” said Cunningham.

One of the 13 items that Cun-ningham came for and bought was Viburnum, a flowering plant with big snowballs of white flow-ers, something that she had seen the previous year at the show and wanted for this year to start a cot-tage garden.

Brita Lemmon, who has owned her business, Brita’s Old Town Gardens for 14 years, educated any of her shoppers who wanted to

know more about cottage gardens. She explained, “Having a really di-verse garden, like a cottage garden, attracts bees, butterflies and hum-ming birds. You’re going to use a little more water, but you’re also going to bring in an ecosystem.”

“When you are using annuals that make seeds, that means you are going to have pollen to attract wildlife. If we don’t have pollen, then we don’t eat,” Lemmon said. “It doesn’t take a lot of space to have a few of these plants.”

She suggested mixing and matching perennials and annuals.

Lemmon recommended the an-nual Cerinthe, which has deep, purple tubular flowers and seeds each year.

“The bird reaction to the seed litter is so fun,” Lemmon said.

She also suggested tall poppies, an annual that bees are attracted to. Another annual cottage flower is the Scabiosa. According to Lem-mon, “It is a beautiful tall one great for cutting.”

A perennial to incorporate with the cottage annuals would be Ver-bascum Phoeniceum, because it is drought tolerant and seeds, accord-ing to Lemmon.

If you missed out on the show, you can still visit the Arboretum’s

potting shed for gardening items. “The potting shed propagates

a lot of the California natives we have on the grounds,” said Janet McGarvey, coordinator of events at the Arboretum.

McGarvey suggested stopping by the Arboretum because, “It’s a quiet, peaceful place where you can learn more about plants in the world. It’s a beautiful park-like set-ting, an oasis in the city. You for-get the freeway is right there. It’s a tranquility that is often missed out on by the community or even people on campus.”

The Arboretum is open every day, except for major holidays and for occasional special events. The grounds are open from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. each day. Special extend-ed visiting hours (on the grounds only) occur during the summer months. The Arboretum closes in July at 8 p.m., August 7:30 p.m. and September 7 p.m.

Admission is generally free, except during occasional special events. However, to help support the development of the Arboretum gardens and educational programs, voluntary donations at the main entrance are encouraged. For more information, visit FullertonArbo-retum.org.

Arboretum celebrates Earth WeekARIANNE CUSTERDaily Titan

Almost 11 years ago, stores like Tower Records and Wherehouse Music were mobbed with over 2.4 million people waiting to pur-chase N’Sync’s No Strings Attached album.

Today, music stores like those are almost non-existent, and those that are still in business do not re-ceive much foot traffic in the CD aisles.

The sales of compact disc al-bums have seen a significant de-cline since that record week in 2000.

Nielsen Sound Scan reported that over 730 million units sold in 2000.

In 2010, album sales hit an all-time low of 326 million units sold, including digitally down-loaded albums.

“Nobody wants to go through the trouble of going to a music store, finding and buying a CD, opening the package, etc. Now we just click a button on the In-ternet and instantly have music,” said Keegan Gogerty, 22, a singer/songwriter and radio-TV-film stu-dent.

Digitally downloading music has played a major role in the de-cline of CD sales, but the biggest factor is the illegal digital down-loading of music.

Pirating music has been on the rise since Napster launched its peer-to-peer file-sharing software in 1999.

Napster was known for allowing users to share and trade their MP3 files with one another over the In-ternet for free.

Napster was later shut down after multiple lawsuits, but more peer-to-peer outlets surfaced,

such as Kazaa, Morpheus and LimeWire.

Peer-to-peer sharing has grown from MP3 sharing to multiple-file sharing and torrent sharing.

“I don’t blame people for not wanting to purchase music. If I want to support a band, I will attend their concerts or buy a T-shirt. That is where they receive the most royalties anyway,” said Charlie Hatano, an advertising graduate student.

“We live in a generation of simple living, the digital age,” Go-gerty said.

Online music stores such as iTunes and Napster give consum-ers the option to purchase music at the click of a button.

However, Ashley Sutton, 24, a psychology major, still buys com-pact discs.

“Nothing beats getting a new CD, reading the booklet and reading the lyrics,” said Sutton. “I agree Internet downloading is more convenient, but I find own-ing a physical CD collection re-warding, rather than clogging up my computer with music I down-load.”

The music industry has tried to crack down on the peer-to-peer file-sharing software programs, but people are still using differ-ent forms of illegally downloading or sharing music, such as torrents and Google searches.

“I’ll admit that I have had friends burn an album for me or copy them into my computer for my iPod,” Sutton said. “Making copies of CDs, illegally download-ing the album and sharing, it is all the same.”

In an interview with USATo-day.com, the Recording Industry Association of America’s (RIAA) CEO said illegal music sharing has been “contained.”

“I remember people download-ing one song at a time with Nap-ster. More recently I have seen people download 10 albums at the same speed they could download one song in 1999,” Hatano said.

The inevitable decline of CDs

A look into reasons music sales, digital and physical, are on the way out

MICHAEL ESQUIVELFor the Daily Titan

Page 6: Daily Titan April 19, 2011

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FEATURES6

April 19, 2011

Contact Us at dt featuresdesk@gmai l .com

styleWatch

Jolie Warstadt, an entertainment studies major, loves putting outfits together and dressing up for school. She attributes her inter-est in fashion to her job at Nordstrom. She is inspired by menswear and often adds androgynous touches to her outfit. She is wearing a Zara top, with pants from Nordstrom and Jessica Simpson shoes. Her style stands out from the crowd because it makes a strong fash-ion statement that is both practical and inspiring.

1. Puffed sleeves add a feminine touch to a striped boyish shirt. 2. Simple accessories, such as this simple chain necklace, should be worn with a statement-making outfit to keep the look from being overwhelming.3. Colored denim, pleated trousers and harem pants should be on your shopping list if you want to be seen sporting the latest trend, because this spring it is all about the pants. Warstadt’s choice of silky pleated trousers is both stylish and comfortable, and is a per-fect example of menswear-inspired women’s fashion.

Style Watch will feature photos of some of the most styl-ish and trendy looks sported by the students on campus. So whether you consider yourself the vintage queen or king, or a trendy fashionista, you never know when our Style and Fashion expert might spot you anywhere on campus!

ALNAS ZIA / Daily Titan

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About halfway to San Francisco on the 5 Freeway, somewhere be-tween Kettleman City and Los Banos, Calif., my 18-month-old nephew was screaming in his tod-dler seat to my right while my mom jerked the gears of my black RAV 4, apologizing that the radio was stuck on a Christian station and she didn’t know why. I buried my face in Flannery O’Connor, adjusting to the awkwardness of someone else handling my vehicle and thought to myself, “What was I thinking? Spending spring break with my mother!? Who does that?”

San Francisco seemed like the best destination to escape to for spring break this year. Why I chose to tote along my mother and nephew is a whole other story, but I’ll justify it by saying we have family in the area.

My aunts and cousins live in the hippie town of Ukiah, two hours north of San Francisco, and my twin sister lives in a cute apart-ment near the bluffs of Seacliff, one of the richer parts of San Francisco, with breathtaking hikes and multi-million dollar mansions hanging onto some of the rockiest cliffs in Northern California.

I’ve always had a love affair with Northern California ever since I first visited San Francisco when I was 17.

There’s something about it - the clean air, the early morning fog that rolls in from the bay, the de-licious food - that makes one feel content.

It’s one of the places I can go and truly relax my body and my mind. It’s also an excellent place to go for great food.

I’ve discovered plenty of great eateries tucked away in the city during my travels to the bay, some well known and some not so well known.

One such not so well-known place is Tommy’s Mexican Restau-rant. Located on Geary Avenue between 23rd and 24th Streets, Tommy’s may not be a tourist hot spot, but it’s a tequila connois-seur’s heaven and a Yucatan flavor-lover’s dream.

My sister and I walked to the tiny restaurant on a drizzly Sun-day afternoon after sending mom and baby Patrick up to Ukiah to visit the aunts. There is no happy hour and no reservations. It’s first come, first served and seating can be tight, especially as drinking hour nears the evening.

The first thing you notice when you walk in is the decor. Child-like paintings and old photos clut-ter the wall, small piñatas hang from the ceilings, unlit Christmas lights dangle from the rafters and the rusty red carpet seems old and dusted with permanent debris.

By 6 p.m. there is a line out the door. Waiters pick up speed as they shout commands in Spanish. No one seems to speak English.

Tommy’s is run by Tommy Ber-mejo and his wife, Elmy, both na-tives of Yucatan, Mexico.

Their son, Julio Bermejo, is the ambassador of tequila to the Unit-ed States and can often be found at the bar with a wide smile and infinite, abundantly ready tequila wisdom, pouring “the most ex-tensive collection of 100 percent agave tequila outside of Mexico,” according to their website. My sister’s roommate Jen dubbed him “the tequila nerd,” and the nick-name seemed to describe him per-fectly.

Tommy’s prides itself in making what they believe to be “the best margarita on Earth.”

If you’re a tequila novice like me, there’s no need to feel intimi-dated since “less than 5 percent of people who already drink tequila are knowledgeable about the ex-quisite qualities of a 100 percent agave tequila.”

When at Tommy’s, mentioning the word “Patron” is sacrilegious and pretty soon it becomes appar-ent that Americans have no idea how to drink tequila. They don’t know that tequila, like wine, is truly an art form to be appreciated and savored.

Tequila at Tommy’s is sipped in delicate glasses, not gulped in rowdy shot-taking competitions.

The margaritas are perfectly bal-anced between sweet and citrus, with ice clanging against home-style margarita mini-goblets.

And the best part is that the te-quila is so pure you’ll wake up the next morning sans a hangover.

Waking up in San Francisco is one of my favorite things to do. You don’t have to look far to find some of the best coffee and pastry joints.

One of my favorites is Camp-bell’s Irish Bakery, just a few blocks from Tommy’s.

Fluffy scones are a bargain at around a buck and baked fresh ev-ery day.

One street over, Emma’s Coffee House serves up steaming lattes and organic coffee.

Driving home from San Fran-cisco, I always feel just a slight pang of nostalgia, as if I’m saying goodbye to something I will never find again. But comfort comes in knowing that at any time, I can pack up my car and drive up the 5. The fog will still roll in. The trees will still be standing, and the people will always be smiling.

Consuming liquids such as teas and soups are common methods used when trying to fight minor illnesses, but keeping hydrated is not exclusive to those times when you start to feel under the weather.Staying hydrated is necessary when trying to maintain a healthy life-style, and while frequently drinking water and other liquids is extremely beneficial to your health, there are also various hydrating foods that will equally do the trick. Accord-ing to Shape magazine, cucumbers, tomato sauce, applesauce, canta-loupe, eggplant, watermelon, bell peppers, raw broccoli and popsicles are all hydrating foods. Each food contains high percentages of water as well as different nutritious com-pounds. For instance, bell peppers are composed of 92 percent water. They also carry other wholesome compounds that are not limited to vitamin C, thiamine and folic acid.

Raw broccoli, which is made up of 91 percent water, also contains vitamin C as well as fiber and cal-cium.

Erin Mac-donald, a registered di-etitian and nu-tritionist, said fresh fruits like mango, watermelon, strawberries and cherries are generally the leading h y d r a t i n g foods, as they contain higher percentages of water—usu-ally carrying over 90 per-cent.

“The more v i v i d l y c o l o r e d they are, the more antioxidants that the fruit is going to possess, so it’s going to (help out) work out recovery and it’ll aid in muscle tissue damage repair and boost the immune sys-tem,” said Macdonald.

Keeping hydrated is essential, as it can improve well-being and pre-vent failure of your body’s regular performance in a healthy state, like muscle spasms, exhaustion and loss of coordination.

Laura Posada, of the Las Vegas Review-Journal, said, “Staying properly hydrated is imperative. Encourage your family to drink more water and integrate more of the foods that are naturally hy-drating, such as grapefruit, honey-

dew, cucumbers and plums. Make ice pops using low-sugar fresh fruit juice in the summer or serve hot cider during cold weather months.”

However, it can be difficult to follow guides for healthy eating be-cause oftentimes it requires us to go out of our way to obtain the foods with high water content. Some-times going to fast-food restaurants is easier and more convenient.

“I try to whenever (hydrating foods) are there. I definitely try to eat it,” said Jessica Vazquez, a hu-man services major.

Still, Vazquez said she would most likely not go out of her way to buy the foods that could give her

extra hydrat-ing nutrients.

“I’d still eat what I like,” said Michelle Krueger, a criminal jus-tice major. “I guess I’d just drink water to stay hy-drated.”

R e g a r d -less, main-taining your health by keeping hy-drated, in w h i c h e ve r method fits your prefer-ence, is very important.

A n n a Warwick, from the Cumberland Courier Newspaper, said, “To stay hydrated, eat fruits and vegetables that are rich in antioxidants. Ensure you include plenty of essential fatty acids in your diet, from avocados, nuts and olive oils. Diluted fruit juices, milk and vegetable juices will rehydrate your body and pro-vide essential vitamins.”

Reggie Grovey, from the Shaw-nee News Star, said studies show roughly 70 percent of humans are constantly experiencing dehydra-tion.

“Water is so vital to the success-ful operation of the human body. You need water for all chemical re-actions in your body,” said Grovey.

by SABRINA PARK

For Your Health: Staying hydrated

Immigrant StudentBeing immersed in international

issues is not a new lifestyle for Kim-Goh. In the late 1970s, her family was at the beginning of the Korean wave of immigration to the United States. She describes her life as being turned upside down during the transition from Incheon, South Korea to South-ern California. Yet, even with the new country, it was not long before Kim-Goh became friends with another in-ternational student. In her senior year of high school, Kim-Goh became best friends with a student from the Aca-pulco region of Mexico.

“We became very good friends, so when she left for Mexico after my se-nior year in the summer, I went with her because she invited me to come and stay with her family for about a month,” Kim-Goh said.

Study AbroadOnly a few short years passed before

Kim-Goh would follow in her friend’s footsteps and become an international student herself. In the second semester of her junior year at Pomona College, Kim-Goh had the chance to study abroad. With 12 other students, she traveled to Lund, Sweden, where she spent the semester living in a Swed-ish dormitory with her classmates and other Swedish students, getting the full immersion experience that studying abroad provides. The group was led by Professor Steven Koblik, who is now president of the Huntington Library.

Koblik arranged many guest speak-ers for the students to hear, including the Prime Minister of Sweden Olof Palme, who was the leader of the Swed-ish Social Democratic Party. Palme was

assassinated only a few years later. It was while Kim-Goh was studying abroad that she found her calling in life.

“It was there in Sweden we learned about the social welfare policy and programs in Scandinavian countries,” Kim-Goh said. “I had never heard of those programs as a psychology major. We did not have a social work major at my school. That was the very first time I was exposed to the topic of so-cial work and social welfare. So, when I returned to the United States I started

looking into graduate programs in the area of social work.”

Field WorkThe jolt of inspiration while study-

ing abroad sent Kim-Goh’s life in a new direction. She earned a Ph.D. in social welfare from UC Berkeley and has been active in the field ever since.

“It is amazing how small the world is now,” Kim-Goh said. “You have this constant flow of people coming and going. When we talk about social work

field and the areas within the social work field that I have been interested in, we see many issues that have to do with immigration, immigrants, dis-placed people and refugees.”

In 2009 Kim-Goh traveled to Korea to do a three-month-long field research on married immigrants in Korea. She focused on the multicultural changes in Korea, which she said is a relatively new phenomenon.

“Social work not only covers indi-vidual family issues at the micro level, but it also deals with the broader issues such as social justice,” Kim-Goh said.

International Campus AffairsKim-Goh’s career, inspired while

studying abroad, has had a great im-pact on Cal State Fullerton. Not only has she taught social work classes, but she has helped the small program grow into a department.

“She taught our cultural diversity class,” said Professor Caroline E. Bailey. “We were so lucky to have someone like her teaching that class. She has a good grasp of international issues and of cross-cultural social work issues, and she is a leader in her field in that way.”

Kim-Goh was a driving force in helping create the newly accredited Department of Social Work.

“She was really responding to a need within Orange County,” Bailey said. “She saw that need in our community, and she put forth that process to create the Department of Social Work.”

FutureThe position of acting associate vice

president of International Programs is not a small one.

“My job is not to actually run all the international activities on campus, but to oversee and make sure that the pro-grams are cohesive and well commu-

nicated,” Kim-Goh said. “What I am hoping in the long run is for this office to become a depository of information about all international activities at Cal State Fullerton.”

Apart from helping develop new agreements between CSUF and for-eign universities, she will also be in-volved with international students, study abroad programs, promoting faculty research abroad and exchange,

and the Fulbright program.“She is a very thoughtful faculty

member,” said Jeannie Kim-Han, di-rector of the OURIP and CICE offic-es. “I think that she has all of the skills as well as the intellectual capacity to pull all of these sort of disparate kinds of activities and to really help create a strategic infrastructure to help support the students to have these international experiences.”

FLOR EDWARDSDaily Titan

One CSUF student documents her travels and delicacies in San Francisco

Spring in the bay

ADVISER: Cal State Fullerton’s new international adviser thanks studying abroad for inspiring her lifelong career

...Continued from page 1

Mikyong Kim-Goh stands in Amsterdam, Netherlands, one of the places she traveled to on a class trip.

Courtesy of Mikyong Kim-Goh

On a class trip, Mikyong Kim-Goh stands with her group in front of the Drottningholm Palace in Stockholm, Sweden, the residence of the king.

The more vividly col-ored they are, the more antioxidants that the fruit is going to possess.

-Erin MacdonaldRegistered dietician

Page 7: Daily Titan April 19, 2011

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Horoscopes

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How To Play:Each row must contain the numbers 1 to 9; each column must contain the numbers 1 to 9: and each set of boxes must contain the numbers 1 to 9.

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Aries (March 21-April 19) Emotions run high; don’t resist them. It’s a great day to catch up on letter or e-mail writing. Remember to take breaks and rest your eyes. Your health is sensitive.

Taurus (April 20-May 20) Today could be like a roller-coaster ride. Will you raise your arms and scream? Fun is in the interpretation. Smile for the camera! If tempers flare, let it go. Let the words pour out.

Gemini (May 21-June 21) Work faster, and make more money. A brilliant insight requires quick action. Schedule what you can do, and delegate the rest. Watch out for frayed tempers.

Cancer (June 22-July 22) Watch out for leaky pockets and short tempers. Schedule flexibility pays off, and you see the path ahead clearly. An amazing revelation presents a new opportunity.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) A brilliant insight opens up a new possibility. Investigate all considerations before embarking upon this path. Double-check the data, and make a thorough plan.

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Your intellect is hot right now. Fix something before it breaks. Think and act quickly. A strong temptation is calling, but shop carefully and stay objective.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) There’s potential for making money now. Meditation brings insight. What you learn benefits the group. Add color to your home. Replenish your reserves and then socialize.

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) It’s not about “win” or “lose,” but you can still play to help your team. Share insights with others. Watch for opportunity at the top, and be prepared to move.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Let your heart pour onto the paper. Writing helps today. Hold on tight for a diffi-cult situation. Get plenty of rest for tomorrow promises exciting action.

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Splurge on a loved one. Work with your community: put on a block party, a barn raising, a garden exchange program or a sock hop. Learn something new from a neighbor.

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Be patient with a partner who’s passionate. Find power in your community and get things done. You could run for office or step into another form of leadership.

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Offer corrections to errone-ous assumptions, even if you have to do it in writing. Then take time for a long walk or a trip to distant, unexplored lands.

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April 19, 2011

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April 19, 2011

Contact Us at dtsportsdesk@gmai l .com

‘Power in Pink’ too much for Mustangs

Titan junior third baseman Nicole Johnson accounts for the out and checks for other base runners. Johnson went 4 for 5 from the plate Sunday, including a two-out three-run walk-off home run in the bottom of the seventh inning.

CAMILLE TARAZON / Daily Titan

“I saw she was arguing with the umpire and so I knew I could get home before she saw me running, get the ball out of her glove and throw it, so I knew I could beat her,” said Harris.

Cervantes took the circle for the seventh inning and protected the one-run lead by getting three straight infield outs to earn anoth-er complete game win.

Cervantes allowed just six hits to the Mustangs and struck out three batters to improve her record to 11-10 for the year. Harris went 3 for 3 at the plate, and Carter and Craddick both finished with two hits.

Redshirt sophomore pitcher Katey Laban put together her first career complete shutout in game two of the doubleheader and al-lowed just five hits to the Mus-tangs in the Titans 3-0 victory.

Craddick got the early lead for the Titans with her RBI-single up the middle of the field, which scored Mario in the first inning to give them a 1-0 advantage.

The Titans didn’t get another hit until the fifth inning when ju-nior shortstop Adriana Martinez led off with an infield single that the second baseman got to, but could not throw to first in time to get the speedy shortstop out.

Cal Poly SLO threatened in the top of the sixth with a deep ball by Lund that forced Carter to the warning track. With her back against the fence, Carter made a spectacular jumping catch to get the first out.

Laban shut down the Mustangs with two consecutive outs after that, and in the bottom of the sixth inning the Titans got an in-surance run by way of junior third

baseman Nicole Johnson’s leadoff home run over the left-field fence. Her third home run of the season gave the Titans a 2-0 edge.

Johnson said, “I felt like a base hit would do but luckily it went over by a centimeter, and so (I’m) thankful that it did and that I

could put up a run for Katey, be-cause she deserves it.”

The Titans applied more pres-sure with Tsuchiyama’s single to right field, which was followed up by a successful bunt by Harris. Martinez then hit one back to the pitcher who bounced the throw

past the first baseman, which al-lowed Martinez to advance to sec-ond and brought around Tsuchi-yama to home to give the Titans the 3-0 lead.

Laban took the circle in the seventh looking to cap her excel-lent performance. She got the first

two batters out with a ground ball to short and a strikeout. She beaned the next batter she faced, but closed the game out when she got the next batter to fly out to left field.

Laban earned the win, her fourth in a row to improve her re-

cord to 4-4 for the year, and im-proved to 4-0 in the circle in Big West Conference play this season.

Pitchers Rebecca Patton and Anna Cahn each suffered a loss Saturday for the (6-28, 2-6) Cal Poly SLO Mustangs as the Titans gathered their fourth straight win.

Softball in driver’s seat for Big WestJEFF PRENOVOSTDaily Titan

Titan senior pitcher Ari Cervantes (12-10) pitched in two victories this weekend for a combined 12 innings of work. The ace in the circle leads the team with a 2.47 ERA.

CAMILLE TARAZON / Daily Titan

In the third annual Power in Pink event to support breast cancer re-search and awareness, the Cal State Fullerton softball team finished the weekend with a three-game sweep over the Cal Poly San Luis Obispo Mustangs with an action-packed 11-8 come-from-behind victory.

Sunday at Anderson Family Field the Titans claimed their first Big West Conference series sweep of the season from junior third baseman Nicole Johnson’s clutch game-winning three-run home run to left field. Her fourth home run of the season flirted with the foul pole, but stayed fair.

“It felt really good to get the win for the team,” said Johnson, who went 4 for 5 at the plate Sunday. “It was a huge win for the team and I just hope we stick with it, have the confidence that we got and go in hard the next weekend.”

The win over preseason favorite Cal Poly SLO earned the Titans sole possession of first place in the Big West and improved their re-cord to 18-17 overall and 7-2 in the division.

The Mustangs (6-29, 2-7) came out swinging but ended up losing their sixth straight contest.

The Titans put five runs on the board by the end of the second in-ning with RBI-hits from redshirt freshman Latisha Dedeaux, senior Ari Cervantes, sophomore Ashley Carter, senior K.C. Craddick and senior Torrie Anderson.

Cal Poly SLO squirmed from be-hind for the 6-5 lead in the fourth inning with junior right fielder Ni-cole Lund’s three-run blast over the left-field fence.

The Titans tied the game up in the bottom of the frame with an-other RBI from Dedeaux when she laced one through the left side, which allowed Carter to score.

After two impressive defensive plays by freshman right fielder Leesa Harris and junior shortstop Adriana Martinez, the Mustangs again retaliated with a two-out RBI-double from senior pitcher Anna Cahn followed by an RBI-single that put the Mustangs ahead by two in the sixth inning.

The Titans were able to tie the game again in the bottom of the sixth.

Johnson drew a walk and senior center fielder Torrie Anderson shot off a double to left-center field, which was just a few inches away from leaving the park. Dedeaux then hit an infield dribbler, which the shortstop mishandled and al-lowed Johnson to score. Anderson had advanced to third base on the play and was able to steal home af-ter a two-out wild pitch by Mus-tangs’ pitcher Cahn.

“Just to be able to help my team with each at-bat felt good, so it was nice,” said Anderson, who went 3 for 3 at the plate.

With the game tied at eight, Cervantes was re-entered into the game to pitch the seventh inning.

She gave up a one-out double, but managed to keep the Mustangs from scoring with a crucial strike-out and groundout to end the in-ning.

Martinez singled to center field to lead off the bottom of the sev-enth inning for the Titans.

After a sacrifice bunt by fresh-man second baseman Lauren Ma-rio, Carter was then intentionally walked to put runners on first and second.

The Mustangs had gotten an-other out when Johnson came to the plate and crushed a changeup over the left-field fence to give the Titans the walk-off 11-8 victory.

“It felt good just to know that by myself getting on base gave an-other person an at-bat. It obviously worked out with Nicole coming up to hit, so that felt good to set the tone for the last inning,” said Mar-tinez, who went 3 for 4 at the plate and scored twice.

The Titans hit the road this weekend for a three-game battle with UC Davis starting with a doubleheader Friday at 1:30 p.m. at La Rue Field.

TITANS: Softball takes third straight series in sweep

...Continued from page 1