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CALIFORNIA POLYTECHNIC STATE UNIVERSITY Monday, February 1, 2010 www.mustangdaily.net Volume LXXIV, Number 68 TOMORROW: Sunny High 59˚/Low 43˚ IN ARTS, 6 IN SPORTS, 12 Multiple campus organizations celebrate Black History Month throughout February. Cal State Bakersfield hands Cal Poly men’s basketball its second- consecutive loss. Patrick Leiva MUSTANG DAILY Three Cal Poly students led a teach-in Friday to draw attention to budget cuts that they say are hin- dering education for students. Architectural engineering ju- nior Erik Fernandez, social science sophomore Jose Montenegro and ethnic studies junior Vanessa Soto discussed education concerns with a group of about 35 students and faculty members surrounding fur- loughs, budget cuts and privatiza- tion. The three students decided over winter break that they wanted to do something to fight the budget cuts. Their first step involved creating a Facebook group to help inform the public called “Cal Poly, Battle the Budget Cuts!” They said the premise of the presentation was to unify students, faculty and union workers at Cal Poly around a common goal: Put an end to the budget cuts on higher education and eliminate the trans- parency which exists between the administration and students. Soto said they wanted to get people informed since many in the Cal Poly community did not know much regarding the impacts of the cuts. But their struggle to end the cuts in higher education would take many more voices other than their own, she said. “We want to see as many people uniting together behind a common goal,” Montenegro said. “It’s outra- geous to no end that we have to take out more money to fund our Students host teach-in on campus Aimee Vasquez MUSTANG DAILY California State University (CSU) announced a graduation initiative last week that will at- tempt to raise the six-year gradua- tion rate by at least 6 percent. The initiative strives to cut the CSU’s existing gap in degree attainment in half for underrepresented stu- dents across all 23 CSU campuses by the year 2016. The average CSU six-year graduation rate is currently at 46 percent.The board want to bring it up by 8 percent systemwide, which would put it in the top quartile of national averages for similar insti- tutions. CSU campuses already in the top quartile will attempt to raise their averages by 6 percent. Eric Fallis, spokesperson for the CSU Chancellor’s Office said the initiative would also attempt to de- termine why the gaps exist. “Graduation is important, and the fact is that too many stu- dents do not graduate,” Fallis said. “There are several reasons for this, and the initiative is going to look into those reasons.” Fallis said one of the primary reasons students don’t finish col- lege is they do not have a clear roadmap to their degree. “The longer it takes to gradu- ate, the more likely something in a student’s life will get in the way,” he said. The goal is nothing new for Cal Poly. Provost Robert Koob said Cal Poly responded to CSU pres- sure to raise graduation and reten- tion rates a year ago. “The CSU system is a bit be- hind us,” Koob said. “But we can always get better.” Cal Poly currently has the high- est CSU graduation rate, with 73.8 percent of its students graduating within six years. The six-year rate is the most traditional standard to base gradua- tion success, according to Cal Poly Director of Institutional Planning and Analysis Brent Goodman. Cal Poly, however, has agreed to improve its six-year graduation rate by 8 percent by 2016, and to raise underrepresented students’ graduation rates by 13 percent. Each CSU will have the oppor- tunity to develop its own method of raising graduation and retention rates, based on size, demographics, academic programs and available resources. Graduation data for all 23 campuses is posted on the Cali- fornia State University Web site. CSU methods for increasing graduation and retention rates in- clude summer bridge programs, guides to graduation, degree au- dits and earlier advising. Some of Cal Poly’s methods have included block-scheduling, early registra- tion and prioritizing seniors in registration. Ian Muir, a biological sciences and material engineering senior, said the initiative has been a dou- ble-edged sword. “Cal Poly is a business; it’s very much about a turn-over,” Muir said. “They are all about making you successful and getting you out of here as quickly as possible.” Muir said as a double major, it was particularly difficult. “You’re sort of pushed out the door,” he said. New CSU initiative to raise graduation rates Teacher Feature: Meet lecturer Barbara Morningstar. IN NEWS, 4 see Teach-in, page 2 see Initiative, page 5 M USTANG D AILY CSU campuses to raise six-year graduation rate 6 percent by 2016 Megan Hassler MUSTANG DAILY Cal Poly’s National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) team should have bet the farm when they went to Las Vegas last week. The team won sixth place out of 39 schools at an annual construc- tion management competition in Sin City. But it wasn’t beginner’s luck. The team, which competed for the ninth year, was given a theoretical plot of land to build a housing complex proposal. The proposal had to include a budget, construction plan, and marketing and risk analysis, showing an em- phasis on sustainable practices. The site students built on was a 26-acre parcel of land, equal to almost 20 full football fields. Par- ticipants were given background on the land and told that zoning and preliminary plans were ap- proved by the city. After completing all of the tasks according to the prompt, students went to the competi- tion last week and presented their package of plans to a panel of judges from the industry. The team had to demonstrate sustainable practices that coincide with Green Building Initiatives, a set of guidelines that the judges critiqued based on factors such as low water usage and implement- ing recyclable materials. Teams are awarded bronze, silver or gold certifications if sustainable needs are met. Cal Poly’s student chap- ter’s work merited a silver certi- fication. Some of the comments from the judges said the financials were very detailed and also that the team’s proposal was innovative and had creative floor plans. One judge commented that the team lacked profiteering, or describing how the profits would be shared with investors. “The written proposal with its designs, management plans and fi- Team places sixth at home-building contest see Competition, page 2 46% 73.8% 8% 6% PATRICK LEIVA mustang daily Erik Fernandez, left, Vanessa Soto and Jose Montenegro, right, led a student teach-in to inform students and faculty members about the impacts of budget cuts on education. KASEY REED mustang daily
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CALIFORNIA POLYTECHNIC STATE UNIVERSITY

Monday, February 1, 2010 www.mustangdaily.netVolume LXXIV, Number 68

TOMORROW: Sunny High 59˚/Low 43˚

IN ARTS, 6 IN SPORTS, 12

Multiple campus organizations celebrate Black History Month throughout February.

Cal State Bakersfield hands Cal Poly men’s basketball its second-

consecutive loss.

Patrick Leivamustang daily

Three Cal Poly students led a teach-in Friday to draw attention to budget cuts that they say are hin-

dering education for students.Architectural engineering ju-

nior Erik Fernandez, social science sophomore Jose Montenegro and ethnic studies junior Vanessa Soto discussed education concerns with

a group of about 35 students and faculty members surrounding fur-loughs, budget cuts and privatiza-tion.

The three students decided over winter break that they wanted to do something to fight the budget cuts. Their first step involved creating a Facebook group to help inform the public called “Cal Poly, Battle the Budget Cuts!”

They said the premise of the presentation was to unify students, faculty and union workers at Cal Poly around a common goal: Put an end to the budget cuts on higher education and eliminate the trans-parency which exists between the administration and students.

Soto said they wanted to get people informed since many in the Cal Poly community did not know much regarding the impacts of the cuts. But their struggle to end the cuts in higher education would take many more voices other than their own, she said.

“We want to see as many people uniting together behind a common goal,” Montenegro said. “It’s outra-geous to no end that we have to take out more money to fund our

Students host teach-in on campus

Aimee Vasquezmustang daily

California State University (CSU) announced a graduation initiative last week that will at-tempt to raise the six-year gradua-tion rate by at least 6 percent. The initiative strives to cut the CSU’s existing gap in degree attainment in half for underrepresented stu-dents across all 23 CSU campuses by the year 2016.

The average CSU six-year graduation rate is currently at 46 percent. The board want to bring it up by 8 percent systemwide, which would put it in the top quartile of national averages for similar insti-tutions. CSU campuses already in the top quartile will attempt to raise their averages by 6 percent.

Eric Fallis, spokesperson for the CSU Chancellor’s Office said the initiative would also attempt to de-termine why the gaps exist.

“Graduation is important, and

the fact is that too many stu-dents do not graduate,” Fallis said. “There are several reasons for this, and the initiative is going to look into those reasons.”

Fallis said one of the primary reasons students don’t finish col-lege is they do not have a clear roadmap to their degree.

“The longer it takes to gradu-ate, the more likely something in a student’s life will get in the way,” he said.

The goal is nothing new for Cal Poly. Provost Robert Koob said Cal Poly responded to CSU pres-sure to raise graduation and reten-tion rates a year ago.

“The CSU system is a bit be-hind us,” Koob said. “But we can always get better.”

Cal Poly currently has the high-est CSU graduation rate, with 73.8 percent of its students graduating within six years.

The six-year rate is the most traditional standard to base gradua-

tion success, according to Cal Poly Director of Institutional Planning and Analysis Brent Goodman.

Cal Poly, however, has agreed to improve its six-year graduation rate by 8 percent by 2016, and to raise underrepresented students’ graduation rates by 13 percent.

Each CSU will have the oppor-tunity to develop its own method of raising graduation and retention rates, based on size, demographics, academic programs and available

resources. Graduation data for all 23 campuses is posted on the Cali-fornia State University Web site.

CSU methods for increasing graduation and retention rates in-clude summer bridge programs, guides to graduation, degree au-dits and earlier advising. Some of Cal Poly’s methods have included block-scheduling, early registra-tion and prioritizing seniors in registration.

Ian Muir, a biological sciences

and material engineering senior, said the initiative has been a dou-ble-edged sword.

“Cal Poly is a business; it’s very much about a turn-over,” Muir said. “They are all about making you successful and getting you out of here as quickly as possible.”

Muir said as a double major, it was particularly difficult.

“You’re sort of pushed out the door,” he said.

New CSU initiative to raise graduation rates

Teacher Feature: Meet lecturer Barbara Morningstar.

IN NEWS, 4

see Teach-in, page 2

see Initiative, page 5

MUSTANG DAILY

CSU campuses to raise six-year graduation rate 6 percent by 2016

Megan Hasslermustang daily

Cal Poly’s National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) team should have bet the farm when they went to Las Vegas last week. The team won sixth place out of 39 schools at an annual construc-tion management competition in Sin City. But it wasn’t beginner’s luck.

The team, which competed for the ninth year, was given a theoretical plot of land to build a housing complex proposal. The proposal had to include a budget, construction plan, and marketing and risk analysis, showing an em-phasis on sustainable practices.

The site students built on was a 26-acre parcel of land, equal to almost 20 full football fields. Par-ticipants were given background on the land and told that zoning and preliminary plans were ap-proved by the city.

After completing all of the tasks according to the prompt,

students went to the competi-tion last week and presented their package of plans to a panel of judges from the industry.

The team had to demonstrate sustainable practices that coincide with Green Building Initiatives, a set of guidelines that the judges critiqued based on factors such as low water usage and implement-ing recyclable materials. Teams are awarded bronze, silver or gold certifications if sustainable needs are met. Cal Poly’s student chap-ter’s work merited a silver certi-fication.

Some of the comments from the judges said the financials were very detailed and also that the team’s proposal was innovative and had creative floor plans. One judge commented that the team lacked profiteering, or describing how the profits would be shared with investors.

“The written proposal with its designs, management plans and fi-

Team places sixth at home-building contest

see Competition, page 2

46%

73.8%

8%

6%

patrick leiva mustang daily

Erik Fernandez, left, Vanessa Soto and Jose Montenegro, right, led a student teach-in to inform students and faculty members about the impacts of budget cuts on education.

kasey reed mustang daily

Page 2: 2-1-10

nancial analysis accounts for 80 percent of the judges’ points, and the formal presentation accounts for 20 percent,” con-struction management depart-ment chair Al Hauck said.

This year, they not only built an award-winning presentation, they built a team. Not a team who merely met to work, but a team who spent time getting to know each other.

President of Cal Poly’s NAHB student chapter, Han-nah Salling, a construction management senior, said this was one of the team’s focuses while working on the project this year.

“One thing we tried to focus on this year was going out and doing things together rather than just working on our pack-et all the time,” Salling said.

Having four returning mem-

bers helped the team’s chem-istry. They spent a few hours working together during week-ly meetings and tackled the rest on their own. The effort did not end with the quarter for the students or faculty.

“This was a tremendous ef-fort on their part completed during fall quarter and over the break before Christmas,” con-struction management depart-ment chair Al Hauck said.

In order to complete all of the project’s components, the team had to stay the week af-ter finals, working for about 12 hours a day in a computer lab on campus.

A continuously running coffee pot and cookies pro-vided the fuel the team needed to work long days during win-ter break to complete all of the planning components for their site.

“We did a good job. We are all really proud of our package,” Salling said.

News editor: Kate McIntyre

www.mustangdaily.net

Monday, February 1, 20102 Mustang Daily

News

[email protected]

education.”Some things they wanted to

address were how Cal Poly plans on cutting enrollment. In a speech earlier this month at an Associ-ated Students Inc. Board of Di-rectors meeting, Provost Richard Koob said nearly 2,000 students will be cut in the upcoming year, bringing enrollment to 15,702 students. Also, the students were concerned about the fee increases that are making education harder for people to obtain. Finally, the group wanted students to under-stand the impact furloughs have on education and the financial impact on faculty as well.

They said one of the major hopes in holding the discussion was to allow a group of people to come together and stand be-hind a course of action. Those in attendance were able to voice their own opinions regarding the group’s direction.

The students plan on hold-ing another teach-in within the

next two weeks. Following the next meeting, the students want to form committees to organize an event for Mar. 4, which has been delegated as the Statewide Day of Action. The day of action is a call for everyone involved in public education to stand up against the cuts to education. The students hope that the event will portray the displeasure of the stu-dents and faculty at Cal Poly in order to provoke change within the system.

“We are going to push for the maximum and see what we can get changed,” Montenegro said.

The students also said they re-alize that their efforts will need to continue following the day of action.

Fernandez said he wants to see a shift in priorities toward emphasizing a quality education over funding for prisons.

The efforts from recent dem-onstrations around the state seem to be paying dividends as the governor proposed to place more money into funding higher education earlier this month. In a recent New York Times article, Susan Kennedy, chief of staff to Governor Arnold Schwarzeneg-ger, said the tipping point for choosing to fund higher educa-tion over the prison system was the protests on the University of California campuses.

Students who attended the teach-in said they thought it was beneficial. Josef Sanchez, an aerospace engineering graduate student, said he was concerned about how access to higher edu-cation was becoming more dif-ficult.

“I really wanted to see what other people thought and if they were as concerned as I am re-garding education,” Sanchez said.

Throughout the past couple months, neither of the three in-dividuals thought solely about their own benefits from making higher education more afford-able or through abolishing the cuts. Fernandez said their own individual experiences with edu-cation restriction, through fewer classes and furloughs, are com-pelling enough.

“We never thought about us,” Fernandez said. “Instead, we thought about what we could do to gain back our education.”

Teach-incontinued from page 1

Competitioncontinued from page 1

LeticiaRodriguezmustang daily

Vanna White and Pat Sajak won’t be the only people worth watching on Wheel of Fortune soon.

Recent Cal Poly graduate Jason Neubauer and microbiology senior Mike Toole were invited to compete in the game show after auditioning during spring break last year when the Wheel Mobile came to the Golden Hills Auto Center in Paso Robles. The two said they got the idea to compete on the show after seeing a commercial on television that said the show was look-ing for new contestants in the area.

“We were like ‘Dude, we have to at least try,’” Toole said. “And just the fact that they were giving money away for free, that was pretty motivational right there.”

But simply attending the audi-tion in Paso Robles didn’t mean they would get their chance to compete. The two were randomly selected to compete in a mock game of Wheel of Fortune with life-sized cut-outs of Sajak and White and answer questions about themselves. After a successful first round, the casting directors invited Neubauer and Toole back for a second round audition held at The Cliffs Re-sort a week later. The second round was the last chance for competitors to show

off their personalities and knowledge to a group of casting directors and a pro-ducer. In addition to more questioning, the competitors also had to complete a five-question written test. Neubauer said the two men had no real strategy going into the second round of audi-tions except to be themselves.

“Basically, we were just hoping to get picked,” Neubauer said. “We heard them ask a couple questions like where you’re from, so we just kind of thought of witty and funny answers so that we could stand out. Just something to set yourself apart from the rest of the field; it’s like a job interview.”

The crew of casting directors must have liked what they saw in Neubauer and Toole, because a week and a half later, both men received phone calls inviting them to compete in the ac-tual show. Before going on the show though, both men wanted to tell their parents. It was just getting their parents to believe them that was the difficult part.

“I’ve told them so many ridicu-lous things in my life they were like ‘Yeah, yeah, yeah,’” Toole said. “Then I brought home the letter and they were like, ‘That’s sweet.’”

In the months that followed until their taping in November, they stud-ied by playing a Wheel of Fortune cell phone application, a book of practice

puzzles titled “Winning on the Wheel” and by watching the show every single night. But practicing for the show had nothing on the excitement of actually being on air.

“It’s the most incredible feeling in the world,” Neubauer said. “When you actually get to the show, there’s nothing that describes the feeling of nervous-ness and excitement. You can’t believe that you’re there and you’re actually playing for real money, which is even funnier.”

The two men weren’t the only ones experiencing butterflies in their stom-ach that day. Neubauer’s mom, Diane, said she and her husband were “very nervous” for their son prior to the show. Their biggest piece of advice to their son? “Don’t choke.”

“He kind of does choke (during the show) so when he does, we looked at each other like ‘Oh no, this is not going to happen.’ But he did fine,” she said. “We thought he was doing really well and then one of the opponents, she was doing better and we thought she was going to beat him but the girl hit bankruptcy.”

Trepidation aside, both men were eager to meet Sajak and White. Toole said that Sajak was good at making the contestants feel comfortable and that White was “timeless” and “beautiful.” It was Sajak’s wit that had Neubauer so anxious to meet him.

“When I talked to (White), she was talking about how she knits backstage during puzzles,” Neubauer said. “I was more excited to meet Pat than I was to meet Vanna because I think Pat’s more witty and I wanted to be witty with him. I was actually in the first position so I was next to Pat the whole time.”

Both men lost in the bonus round but still walked away with a consid-erable amount of winnings totaling $47,000 between them in cash and prizes. Free money or not, participating on the game show was an adventure worthwhile for Toole.

“It’s petty surreal you know? The whole time you’re just sitting there thinking ‘Wow, it’s Pat Sajak. I just shook hands with Vanna White.’ It was very cool. It was definitely an experi-ence I’m going to remember for the rest of my life,” Toole said.

The Wheel of Fortune episode with Neubauer aired on Jan. 27 and the episode with Toole airs on Feb. 4 on KSBY.

Students win big on game show

courtesy photo

Microbiology senior Mike Toole (right) auditioned with graduate Jason Neubauer for Wheel of Fortune during spring break last year.

Page 3: 2-1-10

News

www.mustangdaily.net

Wire Editor: Jennifer TitcombMonday, February 1, 2010 3Mustang Daily

News

Pedal-defect theory comes under fire from manufacturer

Obama budget expects deficits for a decade

Ralph Vartabedian and Ken Bensingerlos angeles times

LOS ANGELES — Toyota Motor Corp.’s decision to blame its widening sudden acceleration problem on a gas pedal defect came under attack Friday, with the pedal manufacturer flatly de-nying that its products were at fault.

Federal vehicle safety records re-viewed by the Los Angeles Times also cast doubt on Toyota’s claims that sticky gas pedals were a significant fac-tor in the growing reports of runaway vehicles. Of more than 2,000 motor-ist complaints of sudden acceleration in Toyota and Lexus vehicles over the last decade, just 5 percent blamed a sticking gas pedal, the analysis found.

What’s more, the National High-way Traffic Safety Administration has conduced eight investigations into sudden acceleration problems in Toy-ota vehicles over the past seven years, none of which identified a sticking pedal as a potential cause.

“The way the sudden acceleration problems are occurring in reported incidents doesn’t comport with how this sticky pedal is described,” said Sean Kane, president of Safety Research & Strategies, a Rehoboth, Mass., auto safety consulting company. “We know this recall is a red herring.”

Sudden acceleration events in Toyota and Lexus vehicles have been blamed for at least 19 fatalities and 815 vehicle crashes since 1999.

Toyota last fall blamed the episodes on floor mats that entrapped the gas pedals, leading to a massive recall. Then last week Toyota said sticking gas ped-als were also causing sudden accelera-tion by not springing back into idle position, triggering another recall.

On Tuesday, the automaker stopped sales and production of eight models until it could remedy the problem.

Independent safety experts have been skeptical of Toyota’s explana-tions, saying floor mats and sticky gas

pedals can’t ful-ly explain the large number of complaints that have been mounting for the last decade, covering some of the most popular models in the com-pany’s lineup, including the Camry.

That argu-ment was given more weight Friday when the manufac-turer of the suspect ped-als insisted its products had been unfairly blamed.

CTS Corp. of Elkhart, Ind., said in a state-ment that it had “deep con-cern that there is widespread confusion and incorrect in-f o r m a t i o n ” about its prod-ucts linked to the sudden acceleration issue.

“The problem of sudden unin-tended acceleration has been reported to have existed in some Lexus vehi-cles and Toyota vehicles going back to 1999, when CTS did not even make this product for any customer,” the company said.

Toyota began using CTS-made pedals in the 2005 model year.

On Jan. 21, Toyota told federal regulators that CTS pedals were sus-ceptible to moisture and could stick, forcing the recall of 2.3 million cars

and trucks. CTS acknowledged that a tiny number of pedals had a rare con-dition that could cause a slow return to idle position, but it denied that this condition could cause unintended ac-celeration and knew of no accidents or injuries caused by the issue.

Toyota spokesman Brian Lyons said the company had no comment on CTS’s statement.

Another Toyota spokesman, Mike Michels, said in an e-mail that the company had identified the pedal problem as “abnormal friction in the

see Recall, page 5

Steven Thommamcclatchy newspapers

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama on Monday will propose a 2011 federal budget that would spend $1.3 trillion more than the government takes in — then continue with deficits of more than $700 billion a year for at least a de-cade. He promised an independent commission would step in later.

His plan would spend $3.8 tril-lion in the federal fiscal year begin-ning Oct. 1, a 3 percent increase over the current year. The budget foresees the government taking in $2.6 trillion in taxes and other revenue, an 18 percent jump as the deep recession ends and a grow-ing economy presumably boosts income

The budget also would extend temporary Bush-era tax cuts for those making less than $250,000, now scheduled to expire on Dec. 31, and the Making America Work tax cut enacted last year as a reces-sion fighter.

Tax cuts for those making more than $250,000 would be allowed to expire, however.

Obama’s other proposals include tax cuts for small business, includ-ing a cut to encourage small busi-nesses to hire new employees and pay existing employees more, and the elimination of the capital gains tax for new investments in small business.

On the spending side, the pro-posal includes:

— $33 billion for the current year and $159 billion next year for the wars in Afghanistan and Paki-stan;

— $43.6 billion for Homeland Security, a 2 percent increase, in-cluding money for 1,000 new Ad-vanced Imaging Technology ma-chines for airport passengers, new explosives detection equipment for baggage, and more federal marshals

aboard international flights;— a 20 percent increase for the

Department of Veterans Affairs;— $100 billion to cities and

states for infrastructure work;— $28 billion for the Elemen-

tary and Secondary Education Act, a 12 percent increase;

— $17 billion increase for Pell grants to college students.

The new budget for next year would be the third in a row with a deficit of more than $1 trillion, thanks to a flood of federal spend-ing to stimulate the economy and rescue Wall Street as well as a drop in expected tax revenues.

Still, Obama’s top budget of-ficials said his plan would ease the flow of red ink that’s been piling up since the onset of the recession.

His plan would shave $1.2 tril-lion off the administration’s pro-jected deficits over the next 10 years, aides said, by:

— raising taxes on those making more than $250,000

— slapping a fee on big banks— ending subsidies for oil, gas

and coal production— cutting or eliminating 120

programs— freezing overall spending for

three years for some federal depart-ments and programs outside of na-tional security, Medicare and Social Security.

Budget officials also predict-ed the annual deficit as a share of the economy would shrink as the economy rebounded, from 10.6 percent in the current federal fis-cal year, to 8.3 percent next year, and to 3.9 percent by the fiscal year starting Oct. 1, 2013.

Peter Orszag, director of the White House Office of Manage-ment and Budget, said Sunday eve-ning that Obama wanted to bring the deficit down gradually in rela

see Deficit, page 4

Page 4: 2-1-10

News

www.mustangdaily.net

Monday, February 1, 20104 Mustang Daily

News

Do you have a funny, inspiring, crazy or interesting teacher you want to know more about? Send teacher suggestions to:

[email protected]

Recall continued from page 3

Music Monday

“Last Time” by Fabolous

-Bipan Atwal, kinesiology junior

“Forever” by Drake

-Kody Fudenna, kinesiology freshman l science junior

“Feelin’ Way too Damn Good” by Nickelback

-Katy Warren, political science sophomore

“Like a Hobo” by Charlie Win-ston

-Cole Woods, animal science junior

“Stay” by Neyo

-Khanh Oho, electrical engi-neering junior

“Still Here” by Girl Talk

-Matt Lattanzi, aerospace engi-neering junior

What’s on your iPod?

compiled and photographed by jennifer titcomb

Where did you at-tend school? My parents insisted I attend Cal Poly my first year. After that I went to school at San Jose State and then UC Berkeley. Of course, most of my education took place outside of school. Eventually I came back to get the degrees I wanted from Cal Poly.

What did you do before becoming a professor? I worked in child care, landscaping and gardening; I’ve taught yoga and painting. I’ve been a wife and

mother and raised a beautiful daughter. I had a studio and made stained glass windows for a living, managed art galleries, spent time as a pastry chef, bakery owner and made Barbara’s Famous Cheesecake for Cambria restaurants for years. I managed a bookstore; and dabbled in many other things.

What do you hope your students learn from you? I hope they find some love of learning and having fun what-ever they do. I also hope they find some passion in their lives; something they care about enough to express their opinions or go out on a limb.

What is your favorite book? I’m fond of Elizabeth Bishop’s “Complete Poems” and I’m rereading Clarissa Pinkola Estes’ “Women Who Run With the Wolves;” I love things like Elizabeth Gilbert’s “Eat, Pray, Love.” And whatever looks good at the library.

Where are you when you aren’t teaching?I’m often at home reading, writing, cooking, gardening and beach walking.

If you could meet anyone alive or dead who would it be? I would want to meet Mary Magdalane and Alan Watts.

If you could be anywhere in the world where would you be? Right where I am and with people I love — or maybe Bali.

Where is your favorite place in SLO? Mission Plaza on Friday evenings in the summer, dancing and anywhere along the creek.

patrick fina mustang daily

English lecturer Barbara Morningstar has been teaching at Cal Poly since 1996.

Do you have a funny, inspiring, crazy or interesting teacher you want to know more about? Send teacher suggestions to:

[email protected]

pedal pivot mechanism” and that the automaker hoped to announce a remedy soon.

Toyota has honored CTS three times since 2005 for the quality and efficiency of its work, citing the fact that the supplier “exceeded quality expectations” and achieved “100 per-cent on-time delivery and for ship-ping accelerator pedal modules with zero defects.”

The automaker also uses ped-als supplied by Denso Corp., a Japa-nese company with North American headquarters in suburban Detroit, but has said those do not appear to be de-fective.

However, the Times review of federal safety records shows several instances of complaints of stuck ped-als on vehicles built in Japan, which Toyota has said are not subject to the recall. For example, one complaint, filed two years ago, told of a 2007 Jap-anese-built Camry in Maryland with a pedal that “stuck to the floor.”

A wide group of national automo-tive experts say there is strong evi-dence that a hidden electronic prob-lem has to account for at least some, if not most, of the large number of Toyota sudden acceleration events. The 19 sudden acceleration deaths involving Toyota vehicles is more than those that have occurred in vehicles from all other automakers combined, according to figures provided to the Times by NHTSA.

The Times has previously report-ed that consumer complaints of un-intended acceleration surged in the years after the automaker introduced electronic throttles, by fivefold in some cases.

The electronic throttle system uses sensors, microprocessors and electric motors, rather than a traditional link such as a steel cable, to connect the driver’s foot to the engine.

Of the complaints about sticking pedals examined by The Times, only one resulted in a fatality. But that ve-hicle was a 2003 Camry, which con-tained a pedal assembly that was not manufactured by CTS. In fact, of the 11 injuries reported to NHTSA in complaints that alleged stuck pedals, only one — a 2008 Camry Hybrid that ran into a tree in Minnesota last October — was in a vehicle includ-ed in the current recall, The Times found.

So far, NHTSA officials, as well as officials at the U.S. Department of Transportation, have said they have exhaustively investigated Toyota’s problems and found no evidence that any electronic defect exists in the company’s electronic throttle system.

tion to the total size of the econ-omy. That would make a “smooth landing” more likely and avoid what he called the mistake of 1937, when, he said, the government moved back toward a balanced budget in the midst of the Great Depression and triggered a recession.

Obama’s budget also calls for an independent “Fiscal Commission” that would find ways to further re-duce the deficit, with the goal of bal-ancing the budget outside of interest costs by 2015.

Aides did not provide details of when Obama would name the com-mission, how it would work, or who might serve on it.

Deficitcontinued from page 3

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News

www.mustangdaily.net

Monday, February 1, 2010 5Mustang Daily

News

MEXICO CITY (MCT) — Gunmen stormed a party packed with teenage revelers in Ciudad Juarez early Sunday, killing at least 13 people in the latest spasm of violence to slam the border city, authorities said.

Officials in the northern state of Chihuahua said high school stu-dents and others were at a private home celebrating a school soccer victory when armed men rolled up in seven vehicles and opened fire.

Eleven of the dead were under 20, officials said. At least 10 people were reported wounded.

• • •JERUSALEM (MCT) — A

Hamas military commander slain in a Dubai hotel room played a key role in smuggling antiaircraft mis-siles and other weapons into the Gaza Strip, Israeli and Hamas of-ficials said Sunday.

But they disagreed on whether Mahmoud Mabhuh’s death would deliver a blow to Palestinian armed groups in the seaside enclave or in-spire them to redouble their arms campaign.

“This guy was a middleman for smuggling weapons from Iran, not only to Gaza but to Hezbollah” in Lebanon, said an Israeli military of-ficial speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the issues involved.

InternationalSEATTLE (MCT) — On

Friday, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and his wife continued their support for child immunization. The $10 billion, 10-year commit-ment to childhood vaccines they announced at the World Econom-ic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, ranks as the biggest philanthropic pledge ever to a single cause.

But despite the staggering amount of cash he’s putting on the table, Gates was really making a plea for others to ante up.

The world’s richest man has become adept at parlaying his superstar status and access to the corridors of power into gains for global health funding, and he leaned hard on world leaders gathered in Davos, Switzerland.

• • •WASHINGTON (MCT) —

The Obama administration has increased the U.S. military pres-ence near Iran and is accelerat-ing installations of anti-missile systems in nearby countries, of-ficials said Saturday, as the White House builds pressure for stern new sanctions against Iran.

New air defense systems are being delivered to Persian Gulf countries and specially-equipped cruisers, a linchpin of the U.S. missile defense system, are being deployed in the waters of the Per-sian Gulf, the officials said.

NationalSAN LUIS OBISPO (MCT)

— State wildlife officials have re-newed a proposal to open San Luis Obispo County to trophy hunting of black bears.

A large swath of the center of the county would be opened to bear hunting for the first time, according to an environmental report released last week. State bi-ologists estimate that 1,067 bears live in the county, and as many as 50 of them a year could be taken if the hunt is authorized.

The San Luis Obispo County hunt is one of a series of pro-posed changes in big game hunt-ing rules in the state. The state Fish and Game Commission will make the final decision on April 21. The commission postponed authoriz-ing that hunt for a year in order to address concerns raised by the public.

• • •LOS ANGELES (MCT) —

A new study from the Highway Loss Data Institute released Friday found that the rate of crashes before and after the landmark hands-free cell phone law took effect in 2008 has not significantly changed.

The research also found that California’s auto accident trends before and after mirror those of neighboring states such as Arizo-na and Nevada, which don’t have hand-held phone bans.

State

BriefsChina upset over U.S. arms sale to TaiwanBarbara Demicklos angeles times

BEIJING — The Chinese gov-ernment Saturday announced a se-ries of harsh retaliatory measures in protest of the Pentagon’s $6 bil-lion arms sale to Taiwan, including a suspension of security exchanges and threatened sanctions on U.S. companies selling to Taiwan.

“The U.S. decision seriously endangers China’s national secu-rity and harms China’s core inter-ests,” the Defense Ministry said in a statement attributed to spokes-man Huang Xueping.

Denunciations from Beijing over arms sales to Taiwan have an element of ritual about them, but the threat of sanctions on U.S. arms contractors is a new one. It remains to be seen whether China will follow through, given its need

for commercial aircraft and avia-tion systems.

The United States has admon-ished Beijing over its reluctance to join in a fresh round of inter-national sanctions against Iran for its nuclear program. And the Dalai Lama, Tibet’s spiritual leader, plans to visit the United States next month and is expected to seek a meeting with President Obama — a move sure to infuriate Beijing.

The biggest immediate casu-alty of the Taiwan arms sale may probably be Obama’s nuclear se-curity summit planned for April. It had been hoped that Chinese President Hu Jintao would attend; now China is more likely to send a lower-ranking official. In addi-tion, an expected visit to Beijing by Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates this year could be put off.

Muir said the “super-senior letter,” the message that notified high-unit students of their priority registration, was a good thing.

“It’s been kind of awesome. I’m in shock. I wasn’t sure how I was gonna do it before I got that message,” he said.

The initiative attempts to comply with Obama Administration goals,

CSU Chancellor Charles Reed said in a press release.

“The Obama Administration has set a goal for the United States to be the leader in college degree holders by the year 2020,” Reed said. “We cannot reach this national goal with-out the CSU increasing the number of students that we graduate each year.”

The Board of Trustess is expected to receive an update on the gradua-tion initiative at its next meeting in March.

Initiative continued from page 1

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Arts

monday, february 1, 2010 arts & entertainment editor: cassandra keyse

Organizations honor Black History Month with various eventsRaquel Reddingmustang daily

Cal Poly will be having several events on campus in observance of Black History Month this month ranging from a poetry slam to a dis-cussion on the difference between dark skin and light skin.

The first event is a Soup and Substance presentation on the his-tory of step dance tomorrow at 11 a.m., hosted by Student Community Services in University Union (UU) room 220. Step has been influential in the African American communi-ty as a way to create and tell a story through the music made by bod-ies instead of instruments. Student Community Services said there will

be a step show in the Performing Arts Center in April.

Soup and Substance is a 50 min-ute presentation on a topic fac-ing the world today discussed over soup.

The Cal Poly Performing Arts Center is hosting a tour group called “The Spirit of Uganda,” Wednesday, at the Cohan Center. According to “The Spirit of Uganda” Web site, called Empower African Children, the performance will be benefiting Uganda’s 2.4 million AIDS orphans. The performance includes music and dance from performers ranging from 8 to 18 years old who are all AIDS orphans themselves.

Also on Wednesday, the Multi

“Om nom nom nom”

see Month, page 8

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Arts

Arts editor: Cassandra Keyse

www.mustangdaily.net

Monday, February 1, 2010 7Mustang Daily

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New campus club celebrates the Chinese New Year

katie grady mustang daily

Members of the Chinese Cultural Club work on lucky phrases with cal-ligraphy ink at Wednesday’s meeting. The CCC club began this year.

Katie Gradymustang daily

The Chinese Cultural Club (CCC) hosted its second meeting of the quarter Wednesday night with a calligraphy workshop on lucky phrases in preparation for the Chinese New Year.

The ASI-sponsored CCC club is new to Cal Poly with its ini-tiation beginning this school year. They hold meetings every other Thursday. The club formerly ex-isted and died out, and the new club keeps the same name with a different mission, Maggie Lau,

club president and biochemistry junior, said.

“To promote diversity at Cal Poly and teach the Chinese lan-guage as well as Mandarin and Cantonese,” Lau said. “We are try-ing to promote the Chinese cul-ture, but anyone is welcome.”

The club is affiliated with the modern languages and literatures department at Cal Poly, as well as the Multicultural Center (MCC).

Lau grew up in Hong Kong and came to the United States in 2001 when she was 13 years old. When Lau first came to Cal Poly she felt out of place.

“I’m so used to speaking in Cantonese or Mandarin that I felt very lonely and shy,” Lau said. “I decided to gather everyone and promote the culture.”

The theme of the quarter is the Chinese New Year Scroll.

The club practiced writing cal-ligraphy in the form of a Chinese New Year Scroll. Club leaders di-rected attendees to hold the brush as you would hold chopsticks. The idea is to write lucky phrases about topics like happiness or longevity on red paper to hang outside of

see Club, page 8

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doors and windows, a tradition that has long been celebrated by the culture. Other traditions for the New Year include the Lion Dance, where the dancer mimics the lion’s movements in a costume made of paper-mâché, and reciting myths such as the story of the Zodiac.

The officers also covered current events including the world’s small-est tiger sculpture at 1 mm tall. So

small it can pass through a needle, the sculpture is trying to enter the Guinness Book of World Records. Ruoxuan Lim, vice president of the CCC and biomedical engineering junior, explains why the club covers current events.

“We do the current events to keep people updated with not only Asia, but internationally (as well) to keep people informed,” Lim said.

Lau explains how the club is a place for people to share and learn from one another. For those that don’t know much about their history, students of similar back-grounds can share a different point of view, she said. The club has ac-ademic-based activities as well as social activities.

“You get to learn a language for free,” Lau said. “We are a fun club. There are a lot of stereotypes about our culture, but most of them aren’t true and aren’t reflective of how we actually live.”

The club has set up fundraising events and plans to do a lot more community service throughout the year.

They plan to be a part of the 30 hour famine, an international youth movement to fight hunger. The idea is to starve for 30 hours to feed children in Third World countries.

They are also planning a Recycle for Haiti Challenge where members compete to raise as much money from recycling bottles through My Coke Rewards, a lid and point sys-tem for donating to the Red Cross Haiti Relief sponsored by Coke.

The CCC will be hosting a Chi-nese New Year party on Feb. 18 to celebrate the year of the tiger. The party will be held in Engineering West room 105 at 6:30 with a $5 entrance fee.They will have cal-ligraphy, paper-cutting, food from a local Chinese restaurant, a Lion Dance, Martial Arts, skits per-formed by members and a surprise performance by one of their board members.

Sometimes, in post-coital em-brace, we live outside of time. Our bodies cuddle close to the warm nucleus, letting the world outside of our beds hazily disintegrate. And in the hours we live in the “real” world, our minds occasion-ally look back, remembering the glow, the freedom from triviality.

In attempting to document this spiritual moment, Mazzy Star’s 1994 song “Fade into You” opened

a very specific musical inlet, breathing the embrace into reality through a mixture of warm shoe-gaze and delicate female vocals. Ten years later, Baltimore duo Beach House entered this inlet, following it into a personal expanse of ten-derness, intimacy and sexuality.

Since beginning their voy-age, the band has never altered its course, but instead found itself in an ever-deepening ocean, paint-

ing their intimate pop with in-creasing amounts of wonder and orchestration. If their 2006 debut was merely a lo-fi glimmer of sex-ual connection and 2008’s “Devo-tion” was a richer commitment to the religion of sexuality, this year’s “Teen Dream” is the encompass-ing memory of transcendent inter-course alive even in the wake of its current loss.

Musically, Beach House lounges in the world of comfortable cor-respondence: the tones of clasped hands, open mouths and bending bodies. But, on “Teen Dream,” lead singer Victoria Legrand sings about separation, valleys without columns. “Walk in the Park” medi-tates on the experience of forget-ting the body, the blood and the language.

Legrand croons over a lonely drum beat and evocative guitar, slowly blending together with keyboard melodies into a climax: “The face that you saw in the door

isn’t looking at you anymore/The name that you call in its place isn’t waiting for your embrace/The word that you learned to behold cannot hold you anymore/In a matter of time, it would slip from my mind.”

It’s all loss on this album, separation from those rare mo-ments of human connection that so frequently come in long-term sexual correspondence. “Used to Be” is the anthem of human be-ings growing apart, but at the same time the soul of the moments they cling to. Legrand calls out, “Don’t forget the nights when it all felt right/Are you not the same as you used to be” and we feel it, the mu-sic acting as comfort so difficult to tear away from.

Closer “Take Care” is the defin-ing statement of the album. “You can hide the way you make us glow/It’s no good unless it glows/Feelings burning/Lover while/Deep inside the ever spinning/Tell

me does it feel/It’s no good unless it’s real.”

They waltz around the nucleus. We can only make it to the bliss-ful center together, the true origi-nal sin is our denial of the blood. Language, modernity and triviality pull us away from the core. Legrand calls out, “I’ll take care of you/If you ask me to” and from that mo-ment the band shows us nothing but the beauty of two bodies car-rying the message.

This album is nothing but re-assurance. We speak of Southern cuisine as comfort food because it’s savory and filling. It descends into our bellies and makes us feel whole. Much the same way, Beach House is comfort music — music that descends into our loins and fills us, reassures us.

Graham Culbertson is an English graduate student, KCPR music direc-tor and “Hipster Bullshit” contributing columnist.

Arts

www.mustangdaily.net

Monday, February 1, 20108 Mustang Daily

Arts

Clubcontinued from page 7

music column

Beach House once again comforts our souls

cultural Center presents Anoth-er Type of Groove, their monthly spoken word poetry showcase. The featured poet is Shihan, who is a National Poetry Slam Grand Champion and a frequent con-tributor to Russel Simmon’s HBO Def Poetry.

A movie night is scheduled for Feb. 8 in UU room 221. The mov-ies are undecided, but will be “race films,” which is a film genre exist-ing from 1915-1950. Multicultural Center program assistant Melody Shirazi said two films will be shown

from 7:30 to 9 p.m.“The films were made especially

for African-Americans, since they weren’t allowed in white movie theaters,” Shiraz said. “The films feature all African-American casts.”

The next movie screening will be later on in the month, showing Chris Rock’s film “Good Hair.” The movie will be presented by Myraline Morris, founder of the Sister/Soldier project, which sends hair care products to black women in the armed services. The movie focuses on how hair affects Afri-can-American culture and at what lengths people go to get “good hair.”

The Multicultural Center will

also host a discussion of the differ-ence between light skin and dark skin Feb. 17 in University Union, room 220. The discussion will fo-cus on whether or not there is a difference in perception of the me-dia of lighter skinned and darker skinned African-Americans.

“Were bringing to attention the way media has portrayed light skin and dark skin — showing if the is-sue is as prevalent in black culture,” student coordinator for Black His-tory Month Shauna Kimball said.

The discussion, which takes place at 7 p.m., will be accompa-nied by media clips and documen-taries that have been shown in var-ious ethnic studies classes.

www.mustangdaily.net

Monthcontinued from page 6

www.mustangdaily.netAlways in color

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“I really like 3-hole punches.”

9

opinion/editorialMonday, February 1, 2010

Editor in chief: Emilie EggerManaging Editor: Alex Kacik

[email protected]

www.mustangdaily.net

I made an effort to watch the State of the Union in its entirety this past week. To say the least, I was not impressed. The more I learn about what’s going on, the harder it is for me to stomach what the Pres-ident says. I find some of what he said to be full of flawed logic, some of it just wasn’t true, and some of it seemed downright tyrannical to me.

As for flawed logic, the Presi-dent said they’re “working to lift the value of a family’s single larg-est investment, their home.” My first issue with this statement is that homes aren’t investments. The President has a way of overusing the word “investment,” and this is a good example. You can invest in a company that you think will grow, but you really no more invest in a house than you invest in food you buy to eat: a house is simply a consumer good that you buy or rent. The main issue with this statement though, is that keep-ing home prices high shouldn’t be a goal (nor should keeping them low be a goal; the market should set prices). In case you missed the whole housing crisis, people were unable to afford their homes, and we’ve seen foreclosures at record rates. Housing prices should be allowed to fall so that they are more affordable. Trying to lift the values of homes unreasonably fa-vors existing owners while making things more difficult on people that are looking to buy homes in the fu-ture (college students for example).

Another piece of flawed logic is that we need to impose a tax on big banks to recoup TARP money. TARP money should never have been handed out in the first place, but even though it was, taxing big banks is not the way to get it back. Under the current proposal, banks that never received TARP funds will be taxed, and some banks that did receive it, won’t be. The Con-stitution outlaws what it calls “ex post facto” laws, meaning laws that

are passed after the fact, on prior actions. Imagine if income taxes went up and they were retroac-tive for the past year, so that you needed to pay up the difference on what you earned last year. That’s unconstitutional, much like a tax to get back at the banks that received TARP money and never mind the

fact that many banks who

received TARP money were strong-armed into tak-ing it, and never wanted it at all.

The President said the White House has “excluded lobbyists from policy-mak-ing jobs or seats on federal boards and commissions.” This statement is either a lie or word-play. For it to have any real meaning it must include former lobbyists, as no-body would remain a lobbyist while holding

a position on the White House’s staff. If that’s what the President means and it isn’t wordplay, then it’s a lie. Eric Holder, the Attorney General, was registered as a lobbyist until 2004. Mark Patterson, who is the chief of staff to Treasury Sec-retary Tim Geithner, was registered as a lobbyist for Goldman Sachs up until last year. The list goes on and

on.

W h i l e the President welcomed suggestions for

healthcare reform, he has rou-tinely disregarded valid sug-gestion, such as eliminating mandates for coverage that

people don’t want, tort reform and allowing interstate com-

petition for health insur-ance. I’m baffled why he hasn’t accepted or at least addressed these points more.

As for what seemed a bit ty-rannical to me, the President said “with all due deference to separa-tion of powers, last week, the Su-preme Court reversed a century of law that I believe will open the floodgates for special interests, in-cluding foreign corporations, to spend without limit in our elec-tions.” He then directed Congress to pass another bill that “helps correct some of these problems.” I don’t know what he doesn’t under-stand about our three branch form of government, but when the Su-preme Court strikes a law down, it usually means that law is unconsti-tutional and that’s the end of it. You don’t just try to circumvent the system by throwing more laws at the Supreme Court until they give up. Calling the Supreme Court out like that during the State of a

Union was rather disrespectful and unprofessional too.

File this one under ty-rannical: when the President

said in regards to bipartisan fis-cal commission: “the Senate blocked a bill that would have

created this commission. So I’ll issue an executive order that will allow us to go forward, because I refuse to pass this problem on to another generation of Americans.” Hello there Mr. President, but you have no legal authority to force Congress to create a commission. There are, after all, rules on the Presidency that make it an execu-tive branch rather than a monarchy. But to hell with those silly rules I guess.

I thought there was too much managing of and providing vi-sion for our economy, which came across as dictatorial. I hate it when any President gets up in front of the country and essentially tells us how he wants to run it. This is not the President’s job, nor do I want it to be!

Aaron Berk is a computer engineer-ing junior and Mustang Daily political columnist.

State of the Union was misguided, illogical

pedro molina newsart

I think the salad bars on campus could come close to the word “fresh”, but not quite. Ask around the staff where the vegetables come from. All that I know is that most, if not all, of the ingredients on the Campus Mar-ket salad bar come pre-packaged. Even though it helps decrease the amount of risk of having Cal Poly staff han-dling food, it decreases the level fresh-ness, increases the level of the environ-mental impact, and decreases the jobs that could be created on campus.

—AnonymousIn response to “The Green Spot: Cal Poly doesn’t offer much in the realm of

‘real’ food”

Nice! I learned a lot and your ar-ticle made me want to get out there and indulge in my own exbeerience!

— Elizabeth In response to “Local breweries provide

unique samplings”

NOTE: The Mustang Daily features select comments that are written in re-

sponse to articles posted online. Though not all the responses are printed, the Mustang Daily prints comments that are coherent

and foster intelligent discussion on a given subject. No overcapitalization, please.

WHAT’S YOUR

RANTYOU WRITE IN.mustangdai lywire@gmai l .comWE INVESTIGATE.

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Games

The Mustang Daily is looking for a Business

Manager for 2010-2011 school years. Responsibilities include the coordination and management of National Advertising Agencies, maintaining runsheets, billing,

newspaper filing and office organi-zation. If interested, please email

resume and cover letter to Advertising Coordinator,Stephanie Murawski at [email protected]

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Laptop Repair www.laptoprepair.com

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Graphic Designer Needed Creative Graphic Designer with Photogra-

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Nanny/Tutor Needed We need a Nanny/ Tutor for Mon-day- Friday from 2:00-6:00 pm in Arroyo Grande home.Experience a must in childcare and be highly active, fun and creative.Referenc-es needed. Call Andrea 712-5679

Apartment For Rent: Awesome 1 Bedrooom Unit Near Pismo Beach

Area. Available Feb 1st. (805) 674-3164.

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Male sophmore looking for roomate in downtown condo

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If you are interested in law and want to help bring justice for the

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Pro Bono lawyer referral service. Through this program, money

bears no price on justice for the people in need!!! Contact Ken Mangalindan @ lawlineslo@

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Roommate

Announcements

Events“See ham radio in action! On Feb.

2 the Cal Poly AmateurRadio Club will host a series of

demos on Dexter Lawn.See www.w6bhz.org

for more info.”

“Get your ham radio licenses. The Cal Poly Amateur

Radio Club will hold a testing session on February 6th

@ 9:30 AM in 20-129. RSVP’s to calpolyradioclub@gmail

are appreciated. See www.w6bhz.org for more info”

Free List of Houses and Condos For Sale in SLO. Call for info on

Federal Credits & Buying atBottom of Market.

Nelson Real Estate (805) 546-1990www.slohomes.com

To book flights, cruises, hotel and car rentals at competitive prices,

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For Sale

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2010 Al Landdwher Creative writ-ing contest! cash prices. for rules

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Sports

Monday, February 1, 2010 Mustang Daily

Sports11

www.mustangdaily.net

Ailene Voisinmcclatchy newspapers

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Ja-son Thompson is one of those people who laugh at the people who consume pots of coffee for energy.

He can’t sit still long enough to experiment with relaxation tech-niques. He is all atwitter about so-cial networking.

His life is a chronic race be-tween mind and body, and when his size 20 sneakers slap across the finish line ahead of his brains, when he gets ahead of himself, that usually means trouble.

He commits too many fouls. He drops too many passes. He bobbles too many rebounds. He muscles in-side against double-teams, launches jumpers out of his range, becomes so discombobulated that he for-gets about defending his man. And then he gets benched, furthering his frustration, and depleting the Kings already thin frontcourt.

“Once I get back to being myself, things will be better,” the second-year forward predicted after the club’s slide continued with Saturday’s loss to the Char-lotte Bobcats. “I wouldn’t say I hit the wall, but I guess, looking at my numbers, you could say that I did.”

Actually, you could say the 6-foot-11, 250-pound Thompson smacked into the side of a brick building.

After averaging 16.6 points, 8.9 rebounds and shooting 52 percent throughout December, he contrib-uted 8.9 points, 6.8 rebounds and shot 35 percent this month before erupting for 16 rebounds (and 12 points) against the Bobcats. He also continues to lead the league in personal fouls, a distinction he earned last year, and one that con-tinues to irritate his coaches and bosses.

In general, these young Kings are an emotional bunch, and about as transparent as toddlers. But Thompson, 23, who is a ma-ture, delightful figure off the floor, is the ringleader of the on-court outbursts, and it’s no coincidence that the slump coincides with his recent pattern of self-destruction.

Paul Westphal reminds him all the time. It’s not the refs. It’s not a conspiracy. It’s him. Stop grab-bing. Stop reaching. Stop with the theatrics.

“Jason’s at the point now where he’s got to decide that he’s going to stop paralyzing himself,” said Westphal.

Thompson’s protracted strug-gles have added an unwanted wrin-kle to the rebuilding process. The issue is raised: Is he a legitimate starter or better-suited for a back-up role? And if he’s not a starter on a team that desperately needs another big man, is he vulnerable as the Feb. 18 trade deadline ap-proaches? Petrie has no plans to take a jackhammer to the roster,

of course, because the immediate goal is to upgrade the talent level and then maneuver for the pieces that form a team. But who knows? The Kings basketball president strikes when least expected.

The attempt to assess whether rookie Tyreke Evans can grow into an effective floor leader, or in the alternative, whether he and his teammates would benefit from the presence of a facilitating point guard, remains a factor here, as well. Indeed. The death-by-drib-bling offensive overdose has few fans in the locker room.

“We haven’t been getting enough stops and running,” said Thompson. “Once we get the re-bound and we run ... I mean Kev-in (Martin) had a bunch in tran-sition (Saturday), we get fastbreak points, we get into a rhythm, and things are easier. Everybody gets energized. Early on, I was getting some easy ones, and it was opening things up for me. I was shooting a couple jumpers, then getting some blocked shots. And I gotta learn how to protect the paint. If I’m going to be here for a while, I’ve got to be a presence down there.”

That’s on him. Controlling his demeanor, cool-

ing it with the refs, re-establishing himself as a starter, that’s on him, too. But it’s not all on him.

Circumstances. Style of play. Collective youth. All are factors. So is Westphal’s inability of late to cobble together a cohesive unit,

his persistent lineup tinkering notwithstanding.

“We need to get our mojo back,” the coach noted the other night.

No kidding. The Kings are on the cusp of

becoming boring, and in the NBA, there is no worse coupling than losing and boring.

Sacramento Kings are on the cusp of becoming boring

mcclatchy-tribuneSacramento King’s leading scorer Kevin Martin is averaging 22 points per game this season despite missing most of this season to a wrist injury.

Page 12: 2-1-10

Brian De Los Santosmustang daily

Junior forward Kristina Santia-go has played with Mustang’s for more than two years. In her career at Cal Poly, she has never seen any-one as fast as Roadrunners’ point guard Phynique Allen.

With seven seconds on the clock, and the game deadlocked at 81-81, Allen grabbed an inbounds pass, ran down the court and scored a layup to put the Road-runners (13-9) over the Mustangs (13-7), 83-81 as time expired.

“Allen is so quick, she is prob-ably one of the quickest players I have seen,” Santiago said. “She ran down the court and scored a lay-up. I don’t know how else to put it.”

The Mustangs rallied back from a 10-point deficit within the final four minutes to tie the game, but

the Mustangs didn’t have enough to edge out the Roadrunners.

“The last minutes are crunch time, you gotta know what to do, when to step up on the ball,” San-tiago said. “It happened so quick

in the end; now that’s happened, it better not happen again.”

The lightning-fast Allen rep-resented a bigger problem for the Mustangs than just her scor-ing abilities. Allen was able to use her quickness to penetrate driving lanes and create open looks.

“They pretty much had wide-open threes whenever they want-ed them,” Santiago said. “We were playing them as a penetrating team, which they were because they were so quick, but once they penetrated they would kick out … They were just killing us from the three-point line.”

During the first half, Cal State Bakersfield shot a quiet 35 per-cent from the three-point line, but in the second half they shot near 60 percent from long range. Even though the Mustangs erased a 10-point lead with four minutes left by shooting 50 percent from the field, the three-point showcase was just too much for the Mus-tangs to overcome.

“We’re going down scoring two pointers and they’re coming back shooting three pointers, it just kind of adds up after a while,” Santiago said.

Cal State Bakersfield held five scorers who tallied double-figures. Allen and guard Amber Williams finished with 20 and 22 points re-spectively. Allen added 10 assists as well.

“She pretty much did what she wanted on the court,” Santiago said.

Despite the loss, Santiago looked at it as a game her team could benefit from.

“It was a good learning experi-ence — I think we can definitely take a lot away from it,” Santiago said. “I’m glad it wasn’t a confer-ence game.”

Foul trouble forced Santiago to see the floor for only three min-utes in the first half, but Santiago responded with 18 points in the second. Santiago racked up a total of 22 points and seven rebounds.

“I came out in the second half and played really hard … my mind-

set was to attack,” Santiago said.Junior guard Rachel Clancy

finished with a career-best 24 points, hitting 62 percent of her shots from the field.

Cal Poly is still off to its sec-ond-best start in program history. It will face off against conference-leading UC Davis at home Thurs-day night.

Sports

MUSTANG DAILYSPoRTSmustangdaily.net

Monday, February 1, 2010

sports editor: Brian De Los [email protected]

Men’s basketball falls short to Bakersfield againAlex Kacikmustang daily

The Cal Poly men’s basketball team is off to one of its best starts in conference and home play, but apparently Cal State Bakersfield didn’t get the memo. Two of the Roadrunners’ four wins have come against the Mustangs, notching a 57-53 victory at Mott Gym Satur-day night.

The Mustangs trailed for nearly the entire game, but rode a 21-6 run to capture a brief 43-42 lead with just under six minutes to go. Bakersfield hit 7-8 from the free-throw line from that point on to edge Cal Poly.

“We exerted so much energy to get that comeback, never seemed like we hit that big shot to put us ahead by three or five, to get that total momentum to get the crowd (in it),” head coach Joe Callero said.

Since a loss to Montana State Dec. 21, Cal Poly (8-12) had defied preseason expectations with a 5-2 Big West record and 3-1 at home, prior to a 80-57 blowout loss in Santa Barbara Thursday.

“The first five minutes of the game we were flat-footed, we felt like we were still looking in the rear view mirror of what happened to us in Santa Barbara,” Callero said.

While Cal Poly crashed the boards, Bakersfield (4-16) used its

speed to capitalize on poor tran-sition defense. The Roadrunners opened the game with a 12-2 run, mounting a 32-20 lead at half.

“They hit us in the face, we weren’t ready for it,” forward Da-vid Hansen said. “We had to play catch up.

The Mustangs out-rebounded

their opponents 25-5 on the of-fensive glass, a stat Callero said is indicative of effort but also poor shooting. Cal Poly didn’t shoot the ball confidently, failing to convert numerous second-chance oppor-tunities in the paint. The Mustangs shot just over 30 percent from the field, a drop from a meager 36 per-

cent against UCSB.Cal Poly had its worst showcase

from behind the arc this season, shooting 12.5 percent on two of 16 shooting.

Forward Jordan Lewis put it simply.

“It comes down to finishing,” Lewis said. “We missed a lot of easy

shoots, some nights you just have a bad shooting night.”

The crowd at Mott Gym was uneasy, looking for some way to rally the Mustangs. A chant of “de-fense” persisted throughout the first half, but the Mustangs didn’t give their fans much to cheer about.

“The crowd was on the edge of their seat to try to erupt with en-thusiasm and make that shot and it just never got over the hump,” Cal-lero said.

Bakersfield kept the crowd quiet by converting 19-23 free throws and shooting 38.3 percent from the field.

A stymied backcourt didn’t bol-ster the Mustang Maniacs’ enthu-siasm either. The Big West’s second leading scorer Lorenzo Keeler, who put up 20 against Santa Barbara, was limited to five points on two of 11 shooting. Keeler and Justin Brown were three of 18 from the field combined.

Big man Will Taylor put up ca-reer highs with 12 points and 12 rebounds. Hansen led the team with 17 points and 15 rebounds, but uncharacteristically missed 10 shots, as did forward Shawn Lewis.

Cal Poly faces a critical stretch, 11 of its next 20 games are on the road, with UC Davis and confer-ence-leading Pacific next week.

“We’ve got to refocus,” Hansen said. “Thankfully tonight wasn’t a conference game ... we gotta com-pete more.”

ryan sidarto mustang dailySophomore forward David Hanson finished with a team-high 17 points and 15 rebounds. Hanson was one of two Mustangs who recorded double-doubles — Will Taylor was the other. He finished with 12 points and 12 rebounds.

Women’s basketball lose last-second thriller to Bakersfield

ryan sidarto mustang dailyRachel Clancy, who was one of two Mustangs who scored more than 20 points, finished with a career-best 24. Kristina Santiago scored 22.

They pretty much had wide-

open threes whenever they wanted them

—Kristina Santiago

Cal Poly forward