Showing posts with label Daily Titan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daily Titan. Show all posts

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Student receives $1,000



Published in the CSUF Daily Titan newspaper on March 20.

A new reality came barreling down on CSUF student Julia Patricia Torre, 37, when she transitioned from housewife to struggling single mother.

"I got divorced in this country," said Torre, who is originally from Mexico City. "I was a housewife and all of a sudden, I had to provide for my family. It's hard to rebuild your life. I'm trying to teach my children that education has rewards and you don't have to wait for a prince to solve your problems."

Torre, a senior, won the $1,000 Soroptimist Women's Opportunity Award. On March 17, a luncheon at the Wyndham Hotel in Fullerton allowed her to receive the award along with a certificate of commendation from the city of Fullerton and a Certificate of Congressional Recognition from Congressman Ed Royce.

"I was very excited [to win]," said Torre, an international business major. "[To me,] the award means recognition for efforts a single mom puts into school while raising kids."

The word soroptimist is a combination of sorority and optimist and can be defined as "best for women," according to the Soroptimist Web site.

The organization, Soroptimist International of the Americas, was founded in 1921 with the mission to better the lives of women and girls.

An overwhelming vote by Soroptimist members helped create the Soroptimist Women's Opportunity Award in 1972.

Born in Mexico City, Torre moved to Huntington Beach in 1993 after she met her ex-husband while working and attending college. Although she began studying for a business degree in Mexico, she started school all over again when the family moved to Miami in 1994.

She received her associate degree in business from Miami Dade Community College. At Miami Dade she graduated with honors and made the dean's list.

In 2003 Torre left her husband, worked for a year and half and then began studying again in 2005 at Golden West College in Huntington Beach. From there she transfered to CSUF.

While registering at CSUF, another low blow hit Torre. She learned the college would only accept 37 out of the 92 units she had accumulated.

"I was almost ready to go and work," Torre said.

Torre, a Huntington Beach resident, is now ready to graduate and begin the master's program in the fall.

"I want to save the [award] money for tuition for the master's program," Torre said. "I'll put it in a safe until I can pay for the first semester."

Torre's school involvement does not end simply with homework. She is also the co-vice president for the international honor society Phi Beta Delta and she recently finished an internship for the Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce, which included a trip to China where she toured jade, silk and carpet factories and interviewed government officials.

"I would like to run my own business importing art from Latin American countries," Torre said. "There's a lot of art that people in this country don't know about and through art we can learn about other cultures and respect them. That's my dream."

University Police Cpl. Iris Cortes-Valle made the call to inform Torre of her accomplishment.

"Julia had us in tears at the reception," said Cortes-Valle, who is also a member of the Soroptimist International of Fullerton. "She spoke from the heart."

Cortes-Valle said that since Torre won the award for the Fullerton club, her application will be reviewed along with all of the other winners for the region. The regional winner will be awarded $3,000.

"[The organization] is about helping people, such as Julia -- somebody that's had such hardships -- and giving them an opportunity to be recognized and enable them to feel a little more confident about what they're doing," Cortes-Valle said. "I think for Julia [this] is a wonderful opportunity to be an example for other people and to say you can break that cycle."

Assistant Dean of Student Affairs in the Mihaylo College of Business and Economics Emeline Yong encouraged Torre to apply for the award.

"Julia had shared her story with me a year ago," Yong wrote in an e-mail. "Once I heard the criteria for the scholarship, I thought of Julia. I'm so happy she was chosen. She has gone through a lot in life and she deserves this type of recognition."

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Anthropology department prepares for new exhibit

Published on the CSUF Daily Titan newspaper Web site on March 13.

The Anthropology department is gearing up for the arrival of a new exhibit next month and the Carl's Jr. on campus is hosting a fundraiser to help.

Students who present a flier advertising the event, which can be obtained in MH-426, will help the museum receive 25 percent of the profit from the purchase, which Carl's Jr. will donate to the new exhibit, "Ceramics of Sustenance: Elaborate Vessels of the Sawos, Papua New Guinea."

"Any cost of the food is being subtracted," anthropology major Vivian Cawthon, 23, said. "You have to hit a minimum of $500 in sales in order to qualify for the grant afterward."

Money raised will help with the cost of supplies and production of a catalog for the exhibit.

"We're not sure if we'll have the funds in order to publish the catalog," Cawthon said. "That's the big thing we need to gather money for because it's expensive to publish. I think the original price we got was $99 for the first one, then $20 for each catalog afterward."

The fundraiser, which ends Saturday, has produced about $100 so far and has provided Carl's Jr. with free advertising, according to Cawthon.

"We have quite a ways to go, but we still have some days left," Cawthon said. "Hopefully a lot of people want [to eat at] Carl's Jr."

The upcoming exhibit is fully developed, designed and promoted by Anthropology 498, the museum practicum class. It will have its grand opening on April 22 at 5 p.m. and run until June.

"It's super cool to have support from an on-campus restaurant," anthropology graduate student Jaclyn Ross, 23, said. "I've never seen that before."

Ross said the museum is an important part of CSUF because students prepare the entire exhibit.

"It's really good to have the hands-on experience," Ross said. "Plus, any student can walk by and enjoy it."

Monday, March 10, 2008

'Evil, Evil Woman' speaks at CSUF


Published in the CSUF Daily Titan newspaper on March 10.

The Women's Studies Department kicked off Women's History Month with a lecture by evolution proponent Barbara Forrest in the Titan Student Union, Pavilion C.

The lecture, "Evil, Evil Woman: What it was like to be the only female witness in the Dover Intelligent Design trial," focused on Forrest's experiences during the 2005 Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District trial, in which Dover High School board members in Pennsylvania attempted to integrate intelligent design into ninth-grade biology classes.

"People are fascinated by the trial and they want to hear about it," Forrest wrote in an e-mail. "So I get invitations [to speak]."

The Liberal Studies Student Association originally picked Forrest, a professor of philosophy at Southeastern Louisiana University, to speak during its annual Liberal Studies Week.

"During these events, we try to highlight speakers or films that exemplify the interdisciplinary nature of liberal studies," said Jim Hofmann, the chairman of the liberal studies department at Cal State Fullerton. "[Forrest's] research on the sources and activities of the intelligent design movement requires knowledge of constitutional law, comparative religion and philosophy as well as various aspects of evolutionary science."

One particular aspect Hofmann wanted students to learn from Forrest's lecture was the understanding of where the intelligent design movement fits in with promoting anti-evolutionary agendas in the public school system.

"[Forrest] will be able to give them a detailed account of how this movement is funded by a Seattle-based think tank called the Discovery Institute," Hofmann wrote in an e-mail. "Students will also learn about some of the legal tactics used by advocates of intelligent design and why these tactics failed in the Dover trial."

Starla Gonzales, 26, a Liberal Studies Student Association representative for the Associated Students Inc., presented a proposal to ASI and succeeded in obtaining a $1,700 honorarium to have Forrest visit the campus.

"I'm going into the teaching profession and I think she's a really important figure in the issue of separation of church and state," Gonzales said. "I think intelligent design, or creationism, shouldn't be taught in schools. I grew up going to a private school and learned about creationism. I feel private schools is where that should be taught."

Forrest began her lecture with an explanation for why she was chosen as a witness for the trial. She co-authored a book with Paul Gross titled "Creationism's Trojan Horse: The Wedge of Intelligent Design" They describe the intelligent design movement as a religious movement, or in other words, creationism, and they document the execution of the movement's strategy.

"When Paul and I published our book in January 2004, we knew eventually somewhere there would be a lawsuit," Forrest said. "So we were very careful in our documentation and in our arguments because we figured that book would be very useful and, as it turned out, it was."

Forrest's role in the Dover trial almost came to an abrupt end when the attorneys for the school board attempted to have her eliminated from the case because she didn't have scientific credentials.

"I wasn't called as a scientist, so that didn't work," Forrest said.

Forrest said the most disturbing aspect of intelligent design comes in the form of religious exclusionism and the attempt to remove the idea of separation of church and state from U.S. government. According to Forrest, the intelligent design movement is trying to use the government to implement a system guided by the religious right.

"Intelligent design isn't really about science," Forrest said. "It's about using politics to advance a religious movement that they intend to make the foundation of public policy, especially with respect to public education."

The "they" Forrest refers to is the people representing the Center for Science and Culture within the Discovery Institute. Forrest said the Center is promoting a sectarian religious agenda as a scientific program.

"They themselves have described what they are doing as a religious program," Forrest said.

Casey Luskin, an attorney and staff member for the Discovery Institute, said the Institute is a secular think tank, or a think tank not connected with religion.

"Dr. Forrest has a long history of misrepresenting the Discovery Institute and promoting blatantly false conspiracy theories about intelligent design and 'theocracy,'" Luskin wrote in an e-mail. "I do not consider her to be an accurate or reliable source when it comes to Discovery Institute or intelligent design."

Judge John Jones ruled in favor of the plaintiff Tammy Kitzmiller, the mother of two daughters attending Dover High School during the trial, on Dec. 20, 2005. Eight of the nine creationist school board members were voted out of office and had to pay $1 million in court fees, according to Forrest.

"The first and most important thing I hope people learn is that intelligent design is merely another variant of creationism, and there is virtually nothing there in any scientific sense," Forrest said. "Intelligent design has been shown over and over again by competent scientists and other scholars to be scientifically empty."

Forrest said her religious beliefs shouldn't be an issue, but she no longer hesitates saying she is not a religious person in any sense.

"I was devout for a good deal of my early life, so I certainly understand how important religion is to people," Forrest said. "However, I think Americans are coming to realize that one can live a good life morally and can function in every way without endorsing any theological doctrines."