2005 08 10

Page 1

SUMMER

Wednesday, August 10, 2005 Volume 2, Issue 10

Dukes of Hazzard: Review of the new ďŹ lm starring Jessica Simpson, Seann William Scott and Johnny Knoxville

Travel: Adventures from Hawaii to Washington D.C.

California State University, Fullerton

News: Lung cancer and the Warner Brothers Studios

blame game

Flying Over The X-Games

The Associated Press


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NEWS

Wednesday, August 10, 2005

Summer Titan

Weather

This Week

AUGUST 10 – AUGUST 16

FORECAST

Aug. 10 – Swing, Inc. will perform swing jazz at the Hart Park bandshell from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Hart Park is located at 701 S. Glassell St. For details call (714) 744-7278. Aug. 13 – Habitat Restoration Day, help clean up and restore the wetlands the second Saturday of every month from 9 a.m. to noon. Call (714) 963-2123. Through Sept. 25 – “Pat Morgenthaler exhibit, “The Rainforest Project” at the Muckenthaler Cultural Center in Fullerton. Call (714) 738-6595 for more information. If you would like to submit an entry to the calendar section, email korr@dailytitan.com.

WEDNESDAY: mostly cloudy in the morning ... becoming mostly sunny. Patchy fog in the morning. Highs 74 to 79 near the coast to 84 to 89 inland light winds. THURSDAY: mostly cloudy in the morning ... becoming mostly sunny. Areas of fog in the morning. Highs 72 to 77 near the coast to 83 to 88 inland. FRIDAY: mostly cloudy in the morning ... becoming mostly sunny. Areas of fog in the morning. Highs 72 to 77 near the coast to 82 to 87 inland.

Summer

Titan Main Line: 714.278.3373 EDITORIAL Fax: 714.278.4473 news@dailytitan.com News Editor

Kim Orr

korr@dailytitan.com

Asst. News Editor

Virginia Terzian vterzian@dailytitan.com

ERIKA LARA/Summer Titan Staff

Victor, the llama shows his pearly whites Sunday afternoon at the Centennial Farm in the Orange County Fairgrounds. Animals at this farm are used to educate the public on their species.

News in Brief

Discovery Shuttle Lands Safely in California

Britain May Create Secretive Terror Courts

Thieves Tunnel Three Months for Robbery

EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. – Safely back on Earth, though not quite home. Now the shuttle faces an uncertain future. Signaling its arrival with two thunderous sonic booms, Discovery hurtled out of a black desert sky to a smooth touchdown Tuesday after scrapping four landing attempts at its Florida base because of rain and lightning. The landing at a backup site was met with cheers and palpable relief after a tense two-week mission that raised fears of a Columbia-like disaster.

LONDON – Britain is considering setting up secretive courts to make it easier to prosecute terror suspects – and to hold them without charge for longer than the current 14 days – as part of the crackdown following the deadly London bombings, officials said Tuesday. The Home Office said it was weighing changing the pretrial process to deal with particularly sensitive terror cases, with the aim of “securing more prosecutions.” Currently, terror suspects can be held for two weeks without charge.

SAO PAULO, Brazil – Thieves spent three months tunneling under a busy city boulevard in northeastern Brazil to break into a Central Bank vault and pull off the biggest robbery ever in South America’s largest country. The crime that netted $67.8 million was remarkably similar to a tunnel heist last year in which more than $1 million was stolen from a Sao Paulo company. The suspected mastermind of that caper reportedly had escaped from prison three years earlier – by digging a tunnel.

Sports Editor

Kevin Metz kmetz@dailytitan.com

Photo Editor

Suzanne Sullivan ssullivan@dailytitan.com

Internet Editor

Joshua Sigar webmaster@dailytitan.com

Faculty Adviser

Tom Clanin

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ADVERTISING Fax: 714.278.2702 advertising@dailytitan.com Director of Advertising

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The Summer Titan is a student publication, printed every Wednesday from June 8 through Aug 17. The Summer Titan is a subsidiary of the Daily Titan, which operates independently of Associated Students, Inc., College of Communications, CSUF administration and the CSU system. The Daily Titan has functioned as a public forum since inception. Unless implied by advertising party or otherwise stated, advertising in The Daily Titan is inserted by commercial activities or ventures identified in the advertisements themselves and not by the university. Such printing is not to be construed as written or implied sponsorship, endorsement or investigation of such commercial enterprises. The Daily Titan allocates one issue to each student for free. Copyright  2004 Daily Titan

Briefs Courtesy of Associated Press

SATURDAY: mostly cloudy in the morning ... becoming mostly sunny. Areas of fog in the morning. Highs 73 to 78 near the coast to 82 to 87 inland. SUNDAY: mostly cloudy in the morning ... becoming mostly sunny. Areas of fog in the morning. Highs 73 to 78 near the coast to 82 to 87 inland. MONDAY: mostly cloudy in the morning ... becoming mostly sunny. Areas of fog in the morning. Highs 74 to 79 near the coast to 83 to 88 inland. TUESDAY: mostly cloudy in the morning ... becoming mostly sunny. Areas of fog in the morning. Highs 74 to 79 near the coast to 83 to 88 inland. Report Courtesy of the National Weather Service

WEEKLY QUOTE : “The most depraved type of human being ... (is) the man without a purpose.” Ayn Rand - ʻAtlas Shruggedʼ


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Non-smokers Victims of Lung Cancer Too The Associated Press Most lung cancers occur in smokers, but nonsmoker Dana Reeve’s situation isn’t as uncommon as it appears. Like Reeve, widow of “Superman” star Christopher Reeve, 1 in 5 women diagnosed with the disease never lit a cigarette, doctors say. Yet they share an unfortunate stigma with cancer patients who smoked. “The underlying assumption is, you were a smoker and you caused this, therefore you’re not going to get my sympathy,” said Tom Labrecque Jr., who started a foundation to raise awareness after his nonsmoker father died several years ago of the disease. No one “deserves” lung cancer, doctors say. But nonsmokers do have one silver lining: They respond better to the newest targeted cancer drugs like Iressa and Tarceva. That’s because people who get lung cancer early in life, like the 44-year-old Reeve, are more likely to have genetic factors fueling their disease, doctors say. Only 3 percent of lung cancers occur in people under 45, regardless of smoking status. Reeve, an actress who leads a paralysis research foundation named for her husband who died last year, disclosed Tuesday that she was being treated for lung

cancer but gave no details on ecutive director of Joan’s Legacy, a fund-raising group named for how or where. Her announcement came two Joan Scarangello, a nonsmoker days after ABC News anchor and former head writer for newsPeter Jennings, a smoker, died man Tom Brokaw. Scarangello of lung cancer at died in 2001 age 67. of lung cancer, The underlying assumpas did her nonDespite their tion is, you were a smoking mother different smoking smoker and you caused histories, they before her. this, therefore you’re not “There is a share the most going to get my sympadefinite stigma,” common cancer thy. in the world, and said Labrecque, Tom Labrecque Jr. recalling comthe deadliest. lung cancer foundation ments after the This year in the United States, funeral for his father, a former an estimated 93,010 men and 79,560 women chairman of Chase Manhattan will be diagnosed with lung can- Corp. cer and almost an equal number “People would say, ‘I didn’t – 90,490 men and 73,020 women know he smoked,’” he said. – will die of it. His foundation’s Web site even About 10 percent of men and acknowledges this trend, by stat20 percent of women with lung ing that more than half of people cancer never smoked, and the newly diagnosed with lung cannumber of nonsmokers with the cer each year have either never disease doesn’t seem to be rising smoked or quit smoking. significantly, said Dr. Michael Doctors who treat the disease, Thun, chief epidemiologist for like Dr. Bruce Johnson of Danathe American Cancer Society. Farber Cancer Center in Boston, But awareness may be on the bristle at the notion of “innocent” rise because of the aggressive and “not so innocent” victims. anti-smoking campaigns in re“People who smoke don’t decent years. And stigma may be serve to get lung cancer, and rising, too. people have worked very hard to “When people get breast can- quit,” he said. cer, people say, ‘What can I do Nonsmokers who have surgery to help you?’ When people get for their cancer have a lower risk lung cancer, people say, ‘Did you of developing a second tumor smoke?’” said Susan Mantel, ex- than smokers. Also, smokers who

quit after cancer surgery have better survival odds, he noted. Nonsmokers also respond better to Iressa and Tarceva, said Dr. Alan Sandler, director of thoracic oncology at VanderbiltIngram Cancer Center in Nashville, who has been involved in testing these new-generation drugs that more precisely attack the molecular factors making these cancers grow. “The malignant cell in a smoker is much more complex” and has more mutations than nonsmokers tend to have, Sandler said. Researchers now are studying whether nonsmokers do better in general on chemotherapy than smokers, he said.

Meanwhile, the cancer society is hoping for an eventual decline in lung cancer cases to mirror the decline in smoking rates. “Cigarette consumption is down where it was at the start of World War II. About 1 in 5 people are current smokers,” Thun said. “Lung cancer death rates have fallen 17 percent in men from 1990 to 2002. Both incidence and death rates have leveled off in women, so we are turning the corner.” As for stigma, he would rather see it on those who sell cigarettes than those who use them. “If there’s blame to go around, most of the blame falls on the tobacco companies,” Thun said.

Congratulations Kristen Zulkouski

For winning the Full Effect name change contest” Winning Name “The Buzz” Look for the first issue August 22

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Wednesday, August 10, 2005

Outdoors

Summer Titan

Mis-Adventures of Kim: South of the Border By KIM ORR Summer Titan News Editor

Inventory from my trip to Mesa, Arizona/Rocky Point, Mexico goes as follows: 1) skin that looks like I’m part of the cast of “Survivor,” 2) three coin-sized bruises 3) a huge scrape on my ankle, two on my knuckles and 4) a lumpy welt on my left cheek bone. I could just say it was an interesting weekend and leave it at that, but interesting doesn’t even begin to describe my weekend.

Floating in Pollution: My home-town of Mesa, Arizona isn’t exactly the excitement capitol of the world. Growing up, my weekends would consist of deciding between driving aimlessly through the desert or sitting at home wondering why the closest Starbucks was a 15-minute drive away. So I was genuinely excited when I learned that I was about to go tubing on the Salt River – not to mention, amazed that free flowing water exists in the middle of Arizona. My mind was filled with thoughts of a luxurious drift down the cool river complimented by warm rays of sunlight. Instead, I was greeted with a grimy, polluted river full of odd bugs, empty beer

cans, brown algae (at least I hope it was algae) and 110 degrees of sun and humidity. Despite the less than stellar conditions, I figured the three-hour trip down the river (accompanied by my best friend) would be fairly relaxing. But there is something about being in the presence of my best friend that automatically makes any adventure 50 times more confusing than necessary. Within the first ten minutes on the water, we had already both been stuck behind a rock, lost a shoe, soaked our lunches and been covered in slimy brown algae. Hint: if you decide to go tubing, bring a towel to put across your tube so you don’t have to sit in the filth. As we drifted down the river, faces cringed at the amount of pollution in the water, we happened upon a cliff where fellow tubers had stopped to cliff dive. I decided to be adventurous and made my way up the 20-foot cliff. Employing the rock climbing skills I had learned just weeks earlier, I safely reached the top and jumped into the water below, but managed to somehow cut my knuckles in the process. After an almost five-hour float and a painstaking tread through knee-deep algae, we finally reached the end of the river. Need-

less to say we were happy to escape the pollution … although our escape was short-lived.

Tackling “The Hill”: While Californians tend to escape to Tijuana and Rosarito for south of the border fun, Arizonans prefer the more upscale Rocky Point, Mexico - virtually the same place with fewer stray dogs. Only a four-hour drive from Phoenix, the growing city has much to offer in the way of nightlife and off-road excitement. My best friend, Ashleigh and I were in the company of two Phoenix police officers, Ashleigh’s sister and her sister’s best friend (a New Jersey officer) who were each at least 10 years older than us and 100 percent more insane. So I was a little nervous/on the verge of having a heart attack when I learned that we were about to go off-roading on something called “The Hill,” in the middle of the night. Now, I’m all about adventure, especially when it comes to trying new sports, but I was definitely not “all about” rolling a brand-new Nissan truck in the middle of the desert in Mexico, where the closest hospital could double as a trailer park. And it didn’t help any that the first words out of anyone’s mouth were, “If we roll, duck your

head, because there will be glass flying everywhere.” As we approached “The Hill” I held on to the side handle and secretly wished for my life. The Truck bounced and swerved up the hill barely missing the jagged rocks littering the sandy cliff. After a brief hiatus at the top and thanking God I was still alive, we turned to continue down “The Hill” reaching speeds and angles that put me on the verge of peeing my pants out of fear. You can imagine my excitement when we reached the bottom and someone suggested tackling “The Hill” again. Of course, this time we not only got stuck on the way up, but also managed to almost flip the truck at least four times during our decent. It was one of those adventures where the fear outweighs the fun … let’s just say I was just happy to return to the paved road.

Ashes, They All Fall Down: Rocky Point is famous for its strange forms of water recreation. Certain activities, such as floating a cooler of beer 20 feet down the beach into 80 degree water and managing not to drown in the process, is just one of the amazing sports that would be considered taboo here in California.

And then, there’s the Banana Boat. I first had the opportunity to see one of these boats in action during a relaxing stint at Rocky Point’s local seafood restaurant – which, of course, serves Mexican food. Basically the sport consists of a crappy speedboat pulling a banana shaped inflatable tube on which six people manage to stay attached. We, however, did not … stay attached, that is. There’s something about riding a 15-foot inflatable banana that doesn’t inspire the greatest confidence. Perhaps it’s the life vests that look like they have just gone through a hurricane, or the speedboat that looks like it is about one ride away from breaking down, Either way, it wasn’t a huge surprise that the four of us capsized twice on a 20-minute ride. Ashleigh, who weighs about 98 pounds, decided she wanted to ride in front and was literally flying in the air throughout the entire ride. I was lucky enough to be accidentally punched in the face the second time we capsized and thus received a lovely bump on my left cheek. By the end of the weekend, I looked like I had been in at least three fights. Then again, maybe I had.

Ms. Smith Goes to Washington: Valuable Life Lessons By NICOLE M. SMITH For The Summer Titan

I’m sitting in the middle seat on a Jet Blue flight, between a rotund man who snores profusely in his sleep and a woman whose face seldom leaves the pages of her Danielle Steele novel. I have my headphones on as I putter around on my laptop, killing time during my four-and-ahalf-hour flight. Don McLean’s “American Pie” comes on, starting slowly at first: “A long, long time ago / I can still remember…”

I’m reflecting. After two months living the urban city life on a private university campus in the upscale Northwest quadrant of Washington, D.C., now the time has come for me to return back to my way of life in sunny Southern California. I look up from my computer to glance through the tiny, porthole window as the plane makes its way across the Oklahoma Panhandle, but the lady with the Danielle Steele novel gives me a cold stare, so I resume work on my laptop.

The last two months have felt like a lifetime, and at the same time it seems like I arrived in D.C. just a week ago. And already it’s time to leave; but not before I recognize the many life lessons I’ve learned while living on my own. For example, most foods are best cooked when not set on fire. I learned this one on Italian night while baking lasagna with a side of garlic bread. On this particular occasion, employing the use of an oven mitt or even a dishtowel would have prevented the incineration

of that ill-fated garlic loaf. Instead, I chose to reach my bare hand into a 425-degree oven and grab for the bread with the hopes of quickly tossing it onto the counter. After ample cooling, I would then be able to slice the loaf into appropriately portioned serving sizes. In actuality, the loaf slipped between the oven racks, landing on the oven’s heating coil, thus spontaneously combusting into a fairly well-sized flame. Acting fast now, I heaved the garlic loaf into the sink where I promptly extinguished the fire under the faucet and learned another valuable lesson: conservation. After the fire, a damage assessment and some fancy knife work,

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the garlic loaf appeared just as appetizing as the picture on the box and tasted just as good. From my middle seat in the plane, I can remember other lessons I’ve learned about what it means to function as an independent adult, going out into the real world and interacting in a professional environment (still sheltered of course by the whole internship experience). I can’t tell if I’ve changed at all, but it’s a possibility. I like to think of it this way: Cost of internship at Georgetown with room, board and tuition: $6,000. Two month’s living expenses in the District of Columbia: $1,200. Summer internship experience in D.C.: priceless. Yeah, I’m broke.

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5

Hawaii Outshines California Way of Life

By JACKIE KIMMEL For The Summer Titan

In numerous summer vacations, from the time I was 4, I have visited a total of 44 states in our union. This year, at 19, I was given the wonderful opportunity to add the beautiful state of Hawaii to my count. When I was told I was to travel to the Hawaiian Islands, my first thought was: this trip is going to consist of a five-hour flight, tons of unusual food and an extraordinary amount of cash. With all of those factors verified, I changed my skeptical mind when I stepped off the 767 aircraft in Honolulu and was greeted with a lei made of real flowers. Hawaii is truly an enchanting set of islands. I began my fiveday journey on the busiest of the eight islands, Oahu. Oahu is best known for four treasures: The capital city, Honolulu, Waikiki Beach, the Polynesian Cultural Center

and the U.S.S. Arizona Memorial located in Pearl Harbor. Thankfully, I was able to visit three of the four sights. Although my time in Honolulu was short (two days), I decided that it was the best looking capital city I have seen thus far. Waikiki Beach makes California beaches look like a joke. Waikiki has crystal clear blue water, soft (but often) hot sand and an ocean that remains approximately 80 degrees all day long. Waikiki also has some of the best surfing waves in the world. This explains why surfboards are more common on Waikiki Beach than plastic leis. In my two days I spent on Oahu, the best moment I had on my entire trip was visiting the U.S.S. Arizona Memorial in Pearl Harbor. Anyone who has taken an eighth grade history course has learned about the worst day in navel history, Dec. 7, 1941. The U.S.S Arizona Memorial consists of a short

boat ride to the floating memorial over the sunken navel WWII ship. Now, any American who has a shred of patriotism would not take visiting this memorial lightly. I took my visit seriously because Dec. 7, 1941 made my last name (Kimmel) famous, prior to the renderings of Jimmy Kimmel who also is a family relative. Admiral Husband E. Kimmel, Commander in Chief of the U.S. Pacific Fleet was the man in charge of Pearl Harbor when that fateful day arrived. Aside from the family tie to this eerie graveyard, I was speechless for the good part of half of a day thinking about what it would have felt like to be at Pearl Harbor more then sixty years ago. Movies and photographs do not come close to revealing the sheer amazement one feels from standing on the sunken ship of melded steel, which contains close to one thousand American deaths within

its decks. After my two wonderful days in Oahu, I boarded another plane to take a 20-minute flight to the resort island of Maui. After landing, I took a 45-minute drive to the other side of the island to our hotel, the Royal Lahaina, near the actual town of Lahaina located on the beautiful Kaanapali Beach. After a half-day of traveling, stepping foot on the beaches of Maui took away all of my stress and brought instant relaxation. While in Maui, I spent three days attempting to surf, shop, eat unlimited pineapples and on one special evening, attend the famous Royal Lahaina luau. As a luau attendee, mainlanders partake in Hawaiian cultural traditions. Such traditions include: a pig cooked solely by being forged into the sand for approximately half of a day, native Hawaiian dancing, and eating poi (a Hawaiian delicacy). For those who have

not had the privilege of trying poi, I would have to say it is not a very pleasant experience. Although it is a traditional Hawaiian dish, it has a taste that resembles that of potatoes and glue. But you should try poi, just to say you had the chance. Now that I have returned to my mainland, California home, I have re-accustomed myself with the terrible traffic, pollution and heat. Since returning, I have spent numerous hours reliving my five days on the islands. The realization I have come to is that Californians make life more complex than is really necessary. This state is so infested with cars, stress, impoliteness and a lack of common courtesy that we have overlooked the beauty of the people and our land. Sure, Hawaii is a land of paradise, but who says we Californians can’t make life as easy going as the Hawaiians?


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Wednesday, August 10, 2005

THE INSIDE BUZZ By MAHSA KHALILIFAR Summer Titan Staff

Ozzy Osbourne was forced to miss shows and reschedule tour dates for his famed Ozzfest due to throat problems. His doctor

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advised him to give his throat a rest in fear that he might damage his singing voice. Refunds are available, but the show will resume and Osbourne will join in the coming dates … Another Ozzfest rocker missing the show is Velvet Revolver’s, Matt Sorum. The drummer, according to his label RCA, was said to have fractured his hand in a boating incident. He is sitting on the sidelines, for now, as his band mates go on with the rest of the tour. But Sorum is hoping to get back on the tour when the group hits their summer scheduled Ozzfest dates … Giving

birth to her first child, Michelle Branch, 22, and her husband and drummer, Teddy Landau, 41, named their first baby girl Owen … I am sure most of you have heard about the BB gun incident over the weekend regarding Britney Spears and paparazzi, Brad Diaz, who was hit in the leg by the gun. Now police are investigating who hit Diaz while he was trying to get pictures of Spears’ baby shower on Saturday; the investigation is ongoing … Moving on to much more painful news, journalist and celebrity, Peter Jennings, passed away this weekend, at the age of

olds) looks to destroy a number of Hazzard farms (conveniently including the Duke’s moonshine land) in order to create a strip mine of pure wealth. Already in trouble with Sheriff Roscoe P. Coltrane (M.C. Gainey) for numerous automobile felonies, Duke cousins, Bo (Scott) and Luke (Knoxville), along with their sexy, sweet-cheeked cousin Daisy (Simpson) and Uncle Jesse (Nelson), take measures into their own hands to stop Hogg’s dream from coming true. Throughout their adventurous escapades of police pursuits, bar brawls and racing routes, the Duke family remains true to their name and their town, literally jumping over any car or freeway in order to make their statements clear.

In the words of “General Lee,” “No one can pull off a spectacular leap, crack a funny farm joke, or show off a little leg as profoundly well as the Dukes in “Hazzard,” especially when it comes to racing that orange beauty beneath the bright Georgian sun. While the original Duke cast will always remain irreplaceable in the viewer’s mind, Scott and Knoxville shine provocatively as the modern brotherly duo during their funny pranks and perverted plays with women. With Scott’s surprisingly sensitive interior and Knoxville’s goofy exterior, one cannot ask for better “peas in a pod.” Expecting much heated footage from Simpson’s “Daisy Duke” photo shoots and music videos, there was a shared masculine dis-

Summer Titan 67, from lung cancer. The wellknown journalist was one of the last, aged reputable newsmen left and he will be missed by the journalism and news watching community. New CD releases of the week include: deceased rapper, Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s “A Son Unique,” rockers’ Staind “Chapter V,” Hootie and the Blowfish’s “Looking for Lucky,” Tommy Lees’ “TommyLand: The Ride” and new 16-year-old pop singer Kaci Brown’s “Instigator”… New DVD releases are: Jeff Daniel’s “Because of Winn-Dixie,” comedy “Kung-Fu Hustle,” and Ashanti’s “The

Muppets’ Wizard of Oz” ... Celebrity gossip of the week: Lyricist and actor Mos Def cleared up beefing rumors between him and Death Row Records honcho Suge Knight on BET’s channel music countdown “106 & Park” indicating he does now want to stir up the feud pot … Sadly, this is the last summer version of The Inside Buzz, but no worries because we will be back for the first issue of The Daily Titan (Aug. 22) and every Thursday in “The Buzz” (the Titan’s all new entertainment section) so check us out for a bigger, better, juicier Inside Buzz.

ʻDukes Of Hazzardʼ is Better Than Moonshine By ANNA LOUSTAUNAU For The Summer Titan

Warner Brother’s “The Dukes of Hazzard” zooms into theaters with the same accelerated energy, good-natured humor, beautiful imagery and super stardom as its famous orange 1969 Dodge Charger, knowing when to leave the audience in the dust wanting more. Taking the place of the famed television series that ran from 1979 to 1985, “Hazzard” is set in the present day and stars credible musicians Willie Nelson and Jessica Simpson, as well as hilarious actors Seann William Scott and Johnny Knoxville as the “good-ole Duke clan.” The fun begins when evil commissioner Boss Hogg (Burt Reyn-

WB Studios

appointment to see no more than 15 minutes of Jessica’s gorgeous smile and perfect figure onscreen. However, Simpson’s acting skills weren’t as entirely sharp as her body appears to be, but perhaps, if given more film footage, she could have showed off her talent more strongly. Classic heroes Burt Reynolds and Willie Nelson generate a twinge of traditional charm to the fresh “Duke” cast, although Reynolds’ bad ass character had far more depth than Nelson’s.

Truth be told, “Hazzard” wasn’t flawless with its film mix-ups and slightly repeated footage at times, but can easily be remembered as containing a “heck of a lot of action” and a plot “better than apple pie.” In a nutshell, “The Dukes of Hazzard” displays an enjoyable contemporary story twist to the snappy original series. Fans, new and old, will be giggling and rearing their engines long after the last credit rolls off the screen.


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Wednesday, August 10, 2005

Cool Picks for Summer By KIM ORR

By VIRGINIA TERZIAN

Summer Titan News Editor

Summer Titan Assistant News Editor

I’m a slave to mellow music, especially the acoustic kind. So I was genuinely excited about the new Jack Johnson CD, “In Between Dreams.” For the most part, the songs are typical Jack Johnson sounds, although the guitar riffs are a bit more poppy than his Jimi Hendrix inspired licks in “Brushfire Fairytales.” But there are a few unique additions such as “Belle,” a bossa nova style song in which Johnson includes a bit of French vocals. This is a great CD to ad d to your mellow collection if you enjoy the classic beach inspired sounds that Johnson produces. “In Between Dreams” is definitely a good CD to wake up to, even at 7 a.m. when the drive to school can seem impossible. And if you’re lucky, you may even be ale to find it on sale.

I’m typically not a fan of shoot-‘em-up style films, especially ones that involve the mob or drug dealing. I didn’t want to see “Kill Bill” and I hated that movie, “Payback” starring Mel Gibson. But after I watched “The Boondock Saints,” I was pleasantly surprised. This film is not your typical mob boss/drug dealer movie. The plot centers around two Irish brothers who, following a “message from God,” decide they must “destroy all evil.” As the brothers fulfill their path to destruction an odd detective investigating the ongoing murders becomes torn between the law and doing what he feels is right. The cinematography is amazing and the film is much more intriguing than most other films in this genre.

By KEVIN METZ

Summer Titan Sports Editor

7

Concert Calander Wed. 8/10/05 at 8 p.m. The WallFlowers House of Blues Anaheim Anaheim Thu. 8/11/05 at 7:30 p.m. Suicide Maxhine Showcase Theatre Corona

Considered to be the most influential books by world-renowned Lebanese author, Kahlil Gibran. “The Prophet” is a short story, which tells the tale of Almustafa, a young man who has spent the last 12 years of his life as an outsider in the city of Orphalese. One morning he is greeted with the sight of a ship that will take him back home to his family, friends and his life; but as he prepares to leave the city the people come to speak to him, seeking his advice. Almustafa speaks to the people telling them what he has seen and understood of the world before he must journey home. The book is a combiniation of both tales of phiosophy and faith.

As the most popular and successful addition to EA Sports annual collection of sports franchises, Madden is a game that pushes the genre forward by raising the bar on its competition. And while this entry has no competition, Madden 2006 offers a slew of new features on the field (like a more realistic QB Vision passing system) and off the field (like Superstar Mode) to keep fans content this season.The game is not revolutionary by any means. The animations are unchanged and the game play is very similar to last year. Not that it is a bad thing, but here is hoping EA will rise to the challenge of the upcoming next-generation hardware for their next installment.

Sun. 8/14/05 at 7:30 p.m. Tom Petty & The Heattybreakers Verizon Ampatheater Irvine Mon. 8/15/05 at 7:30 p.m. The White Stripes Greek Theater Los Angeles Tue. 8/16/05 at 8 p.m. Faith Hill Pantages Theatre Hollywood


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Wednesday, August 10, 2005

Entertainment

Music to Our Ears

Summer Titan

ʻMainstayʼ Brings Listeners to Life By JACKIE KIMMEL For The Summer Titan

When I was handed a CD case, last week by one of the Summer Titan editors I was quite underthrilled with the story I had just been given. My task was to listen to a CD I had never heard, by a band who is unknown and come up with a make or break opinion piece of the product within my hand. I was considerably lucky to have received an artist’s work, which I actually enjoyed. I was perfectly prepared to spend sixty to ninety minutes listening to whatever CD I was given and rip the band and their work to shreds. My duties were relieved when I began listening to Speed of Life’s “Mainstay.” “Mainstay” was surprisingly

soothing. It was a pleasure to listen to, which is unusual since Speed of Life’s style of rock music is rare in my CD collection. This band places a large focus on drums and bass, with the vocal sounds

similar to that of the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Speed of Life is a New York based band with a West Coast sound. This three-person group displays

relaxing instrumentals and passionately written, but relatively simple, lyrics. The one draw back is that of the nine tracks on this album, seven of them sound as if they could be played as one extended song. I would gladly recommend this CD for anyone who likes relaxing rock style music. I would not be surprised if one of Speed of Life’s songs appeared as a background song in a film or as background music in malls across the country. If this bathroom-acoustic sounding CD can keep the attention of this oldies-loving gal, then it has made its way past the hard critics and just needs a larger fan base to become a popular album. If you would like more information on Speed of Life visit www. speedoflifemusic.com

Captain Bringdown is a Buzz Kill By KRISTINA RIDENOUR Summer Titan Staff

When listening to the music of Captain Bringdown and The Buzz Killers, you might get the sense that you have heard it before. And your hunch will be mostly right. The band is a ska/punk group outfitted with members in their early 20s who were probably playing with GI Joes when the legendary ska/punk band Operation Ivy was in it’s glory days. The problem with this band is that it does have catchy songs and it does play ska/punk music well; and I hate that I found myself singing along to most of their total of six songs with the overwhelming feeling that this band is a blatant rip-off of their early influences. The six-member band hales

from Elgin, Texas and was formed in 2002. Their newest CD was released in 2005 and is titled “Feel Good Tunes.” The majority of songs on the record follow the same format of:

catchy chorus with some horns that showcase the ska vibe. The urge to skank or be in a mosh pit might be prevalent for the listener during most of Buzz Killers’ songs,

so hopefully the live show is a good one. Living in Southern California, most rock music lovers are bombarded with local bands that all have the same pop-punk sound, so the main positive attribute of this Texas-based band is that they mix it up with both ska and punk. Those who are fans of this genre will have flashbacks to the old days, whether good or bad. The ultimate question when judging this band is whether to judge them based on what came before them or to judge their overall music now. Most current, popular bands have copied their influences, so maybe we should just listen and enjoy … Or you could pop in the Operation Ivy CD and listen to the real deal.

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Drew Crew, LLC.

ʻDate With Drewʼ is A Cinderella Story

By ALLIE BULLOCK-KAGAMASTER gotta-try-anyway film schedule. Summer Titan Staff What sets this handmade movie apart from this summer’s Drew Barrymore once said, “If blockbusters is its honesty and you don’t take risks, you’ll have unwavering message: never give a wasted soul,” and those words up on your dreams. With reality shows being all are the capstone of the new documentary film, “My Date With the rage, why not make a reDrew,” a film about a fan who ality film about a guy who has seeks some private time with $1,100 and 30 days to hook up his favorite actress. with the lifelong muse he claims Brian Herzlinger’s (the fan) is responsible for his windfall? crush on Barrymore began when “Drew” captures the essence of he was in grade school after first triumph over the extremes. seeing “E.T.” Four years ago, The oddest part about the Herzlinger, then 26, decided to film is that Herzlinger didn’t do something about it. just stumble upon this project. He networked his project to The film school student from Hollywood hitters from vari- New Jersey landed an internous degrees of separation from ship at Steven Spielberg’s AmBarrymore and, during the pro- blin Entertainment where he cess, formed “The Drew Crew” worked on several production to document the pursuit of his spots before becoming officially unemployed. After dragging his daydream. “My Date with Drew” is a no-budget film to several film charmer from its conversational festivals, Herzlinger’s “little fade-in to its inspirational fade- movie” drew attention. out. Herzlinger and the crew “Drew” snagged the Audideliver the “Drew” package like ence Prize from “Garden State” pros despite the use of a “bor- and “Napoleon Dynamite” (two rowed” digital camera that had popular cult favorites) at last to be returned to the local Cir- year’s “HBO Comedy Arts Festival,” convincing the humble cuit City in 30 days. “Drew’s” crew, all unknowns, Herzlinger that his story about deftly follow the witty, Woody chasing dreams is something Allen-esque Herzlinger as he audiences can relate to. “Drew” plots his seemingly not-gonna- is truly the Cinderella film of happen-in-this-lifetime-but-I- the year.


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Outsourcing Woes By ANNA LOUSTAUNAU For The Summer Titan

Delicious cooking smells wafted from the kitchen as a young girl gingerly picked up a double-layer chocolate cake from the oven, talking dynamically with a rosycheeked woman about its soft texture and dark color. Both were clearly proud of themselves for having created this “work of art” in time for the Girl Scout bake-sale that very afternoon. The lady sitting at the table smiled and clapped her hands with delight. While this scene may seem like a storybook, suburbia moment from one of June Cleaver’s family photo albums, the truth is that the woman at the table is actually the little Girl Scout’s mother and the jolly, Sara Lee cook is a professional chef hired to educate the little girl about cooking. The modern parental trend of “outsourcing” (hiring pros to help teach common parenting tasks such as toilet-training, bike-riding and cooking) is rapidly consuming suburban society as a result of new anxieties about failing ones children. In a parent’s mind, the pressure to be the “perfect father / mother” can be stressful, especially with all of the competitive preschools and aggressive parents pushing them to be more superhero-esque than loving. In turn, parents with migraine headaches and fists full of money turn to specialists to help guide their children through thumb sucking, rollerblading, sewing, learning etiquette and even playing catch as a way of relieving or transferring the demands of parenting onto someone else. Although parents’ time commitments may be a major source of money for these professionals

(more so in dual-employed households), it does not erase the fact that parents are losing precious family time and potential memories with their children. And thus, the true “price of perfection” for such parental un-involvement is not just the general price range of $15-200 per hour for specialists but also the bitter loss of childhood reminiscences. If paranoid fathers and mothers are willing to use expensive measures to teach their children how to gift-wrap and organize their closets, then why would they even consider giving birth in the first place? One of the greatest things about having kids is being able to show them the world through an adult’s eyes, especially when it comes to the basic learning tasks of pottytraining and bike-riding. It’s okay for parents to make mistakes throughout these lessons because even mistakes form the beginnings of a familial friendship. Children are not so intimidating that their own parents should be too afraid to offer advice about thumb sucking and instead ask a stranger to offer parental guidance. Do parents even realize how such “perfection determination” may affect their children psychologically or when it comes to raising their own children? As the unethical idea of “outsourcing” continues to dominate suburbia, a formidable distance will start to form between parent and child that will not easily be replaced with money and regrettable apologies. Look at it from this angle: Do you really want your child to think of you as a stranger, or call her cooking instructor “Mommy.” I think not.

Opinion

Wednesday, August 10, 2005

9

King Features Syndicate inc.

Is it Just Me? ... Senioritis Calls By VIRGINIA TERZIAN Summer Titan Assistant News Editor

Welcome to the last year of the rest of your life. As a college senior, you have just reached the point where you’re trying your absolute hardest to leave the university you called home while, at the same time, having absolutely no idea what you’re going to do with the rest of your life. You’ve just spent a good chunk of you and your parents’ money on a degree in order to enter a field where your first-year salary is probably less than the amount of money you put into your education. If you, like me, have laid awake at night wondering, “Where the hell am I going to be in a year?” you’re not alone. Senioritis is a common disease among college seniors. Symptoms include failure to attend classes, failure to participate in discussions and a tendency to write important papers within

30 minutes of their due time. And if you feel like this is similar to your last three or more years of college, you’re mistaken. As a senior, you no longer have the excuse of “I don’t know what I want to do yet.” You’ve picked your major, and that means that you are now expected to know what you want to do, where you want to go and have some career aspiration beyond the Gap. As many of my former senior friends have told me, they spent the last four years getting a degree in something they’ll never use. With one friend now running a subway after earning a bachelor’s in communications, the future becomes the monster under my bed because I fear what I don’t know. Will I achieve anything? Or will I be selling oranges on the side of the freeway? So my solution is this: Just enjoy this last year of innocence when the real world is limited to MTV. Enjoy the freedom of

3 a.m. study sessions and trips to Off Campus between classes. They will be few and far between once you’ve graduated. It’s all downhill from here into the land of mortgages and marriages. Stressing out about your senior year is ridiculous and redundant. It’s going to arrive no matter what you do and short of failing all your classes, This year will pass. Life will change. You can’t plan the future because no one knows what tomorrow will bring. As the famous phrase goes, “Don’t sweat the petty things and don’t pet the sweaty things.” You can’t control the downward spiral that is today’s job market, just as you cannot pretend that a college degree is the answer to the world’s question: “What is the meaning of life?” There is no guarantee that a B.A. or a B.S. will mean any stability or success in the end. All we know for sure is that we’re at least one step ahead of our high school counterparts.


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Wednesday, August 10, 2005

SPORTS

Student Newspapers Xʼd Out Only in a place like Southern California can people KEVIN METZ complain Summer Titan a b o u t Sports Editor having too much to do. To go to the beach or to the mountains? Disneyland or Knotts? Starbucks or Jamba Juice? A dysfunctional marriage between the laid-back lifestyles we lead and the chaotic culture we live them in, few words in the English dictionary epitomize what those on the outside looking in simply refer to as “the OC.” Of course, very few actually posses the patience to flip all the way to the “X” section, where a certain annual games provides a definitive answer each year in Los Angeles (which, for the last time to all Northern Californians, is not Orange County).

Sports IN BRIEF

Soccer Recruit a Factor in USA raw

EINDOVEN, Holland - The U.S. Under-17 Men’s National

Fewer people – almost 50,000, in fact – came out to the X Games this year to see Danny Way soar his way to gold in the Big Air competition on a broken left ankle or Dave Mirra suffer a concussion during the first day of competition ,only to take first in the BMX freestyle on Saturday. Perhaps people stayed home to watch the expanded coverage of the event on ESPN and ABC. Maybe they got sun burned and burned out by the similar US Open of Surfing at Huntington Beach the weekend before. Or maybe they were at Starbucks. At least at Starbucks they honor your request for a half-calf, nonfat, no-foam whatever; more than I can say for ESPN, which denied The Daily Titan’s request to cover the event because they “don’t provide press credentials to student publications.” Notice the lack of photos and the Associated Press article on this page. That is what happens when your photographers aren’t authorized to take pictures and your reporters can’t get close enough to

Team battled the PSV Eindhoven reserves to a 2-2 draw Monday in their first match of a 12-day tour of Holland. Incoming Cal State Fullerton freshman Gabriel Farfan played for the U.S. The U.S. will play a total of four matches against reserve teams from Dutch clubs.

interview athletes. ESPN’s policy did not come as a surprise. The Angels organization sang the same song to us last semester when we tried getting home game credentials It seems to me that the X Games would benefit from the coverage in publications like ours. Our readers certainly fit the 18 – 35 age demographic of the event. We also have reporters that actually know what a “candy-bar saran-wrap combo into a no-hander lander” actually looks like. Apparently, freedom of the press is restricted to the corporate policies put in place to govern it. Student newspapers deserve to be treated on an equal level with other professional publications. There is an irony both amusing and sad that a college student interning at ESPN was the one to email me back denying us press credentials. Hopefully the Mighty Duckss don’t either, because, lets face it, hockey needs all the publicity it can get.

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Summer Titan

Low Attendance Floors X-Games

CARSON, – Doug Henry coast- sports competition ended its foured to an easy victory in supermoto day run with overall attendance and Danny Way flew to another down from last year. skateboard big air title as the X About 122,000 people showed Games wrapped up Sunday with a up at the four venues, compared dip in overall attendance. to 170,000 last year. Attendance Henry, a 35-year-old AMA mo- had previously grown nearly every tocross rider from Torrington, year the games were held, but this Conn., led the field of 20 for 33 of was the first time they stayed in the 45 laps on a dirt and asphalt one city for three straight years. course in the Home Depot Center. Event general manager Chris The race included Stiepock said mandatory pit the dip was We lost 25,000 stops that he said partly the result spectators and kept him looking of shifting the gained 7 feet of over his shoulder surfing event surf. despite a comfortfrom Huntingable lead. ton Beach some Chris Stiepock “I was just con2,000 miles X Games General Manager stantly waiting for south to Puerto Escondido, Mexsomebody to come out of the pits right beside me,” he ico, for its bigger waves. said. “I didn’t want to get lazy with “We lost 25,000 spectators and gained 7 feet of surf,” he said. He my riding.” Jeremy McGrath of Encinitas also speculated that a distribution was second and Chad Reed of of the popular motocross events across all four days may have hurt Dade City, Fla., was third. There was slightly more sus- attendance. pense at the Staples Center in “If I’m a family of four, I might downtown Los Angeles, as vert just pick one of those days to winner Pierre-Luc Gagnon took come,” he said. the lead early in skateboard big Though there was more wideair. But Way, creator of the mega spread TV coverage of the games ramp used in the event, pulled off a through the Spanish-language frontside 360 and so-called Christ ESPN Deportes, they got less Air to take his second straight title prime-time coverage on ABC compared to last year. with a 94.75 score. In the trick, he jumped across a X Games executive director 70-foot gap and soared off a 27-foot Jack Wienert said he didn’t know quarter pipe, then stuck both arms why that was, but noted that inout to the side in mid-air, holding line skating had been dropped for his board in one hand. He then lackluster TV ratings. “They weren’t happy about it,” moved his board back under his feet to stick the second landing. he said of the skaters. “But it’s not The 31-year-old Way was one of our job to grow their sport.” The X Games will remain in Los three athletes depicted on a huge X Games advertisement painted Angeles through 2009 under an on a hotel wall overlooking the agreement with venue owner Anevent, and had been expected to schutz Entertainment Group. win easily despite a leg injury. But AEG is also launching a “I felt the pressure to win last new development project around year because everyone expected Staples Center and contests held me to. So this year with this mu- this year in the arena parking lot ral on the wall, they put me in the - including skateboard big air and same position,” he said. “It was Moto X best trick - are being forced just a lot of pressure again. I feel out next year, Wienert said. very relieved of all the stress. I Some will move to the Home Depot Center but the huge mega want to go fishing, man.” Last month, Way earned head- ramp on busy Figueroa Street lines for jumping across the Great serves as a constant reminder of Wall of China atop his board, be- the competition’s presence. coming the first person to clear the “No offense to Carson, but we’re wall without motorized aid. He surrounded by freeways here. ... I’d completed four jumps with 360- like to keep it downtown,” Wienert degree spins on three of them. said, adding that ESPN officials The nation’s biggest action would be scouting for possible new


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