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Judge sentences Fullerton officer OPINION 3
Unmasking anonymous donors DETOUR 4
Assassin’s Creed III kills Stop Hunger Now - Orange County residents partner with the organization to feed hungry children in Vietnam.
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Women’s soccer falls in championship
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TITANS ARE PLAYOFF BOUND
dailytitan.com CAMPUS | Mihaylo
Business center establishes 18member board Notable professionals are chosen to help students develop leadership skills DANIEL HERNANDEZ Daily Titan
ALEX CALISH / For the Daily Titan
Senior forward Jesse Escalante and sophomore defender Mark Vasquez celebrate after a goal on Senior Night. Escalante scored in the 73rd minute of the game, it was his eighth of the year. The Titans head to UC Davis in a semi-final match-up on Wednesday.
Happy ending to ‘Senior Night’
Men’s soccer defeats the Highlanders 2-1, will play No. 1 UC Davis on Wednesday RODRIGO RUIZ For the Daily Titan
Goals by senior forwards Gerzon Blanco and Jesse Escalante were central to the Titan cause Saturday as the Cal State Fullerton men’s soccer team defeated UC Riverside 2-1 on Senior Night at Titan Stadium. The win ensured the continuation of the Titans’ 2012 season. The Titans (8-11-1, 4-6-1 in conference, 13 points) will play in the Big West Conference playoffs. Head Coach Bob Ammann’s team will advance as the 2nd seed in the Big West South and face the Big West North top seed UC Davis Aggies (9-6-4, 7-3-0 in confer-
ence, 21 points) Wednesday at 2 p.m. Saturday night’s match was a high stakes affair. It was the final game at Titan Stadium this year and represented a chance for CSUF and UCR to earn their ticket to advance in the Big West playoffs. A win or tie would guarantee safe passage for the Titans. “A win or a draw would have gotten us through, but there was not one time in any of our preparation that I’ve ever mentioned it. The reason was because our intent was to go out and win the game,” said Ammann. The Titans had to fend off the desperate intentions from the Highlanders, who were willing to spoil Titan postseason hopes. On a chilly
November evening with the stadium crowd buzzing with excitement, drums and vuvuzelas added to the atmosphere. Before the match seven seniors—Mario Alvarez, Jonathan Birt, Gerzon Blanco, Jameson Campbell, Jesse Escalante, Bobby Reiss and Nick Swart—were honored as their family participated in the celebration. It was a special moment for the seniors. “It’s a bit emotional during the presentation, you’re saying goodbye to all your teammates and your coaches,” said senior forward Jameson Campbell. SEE SOCCER, 5
DETOUR | Filmmaker
Disabled MLB player speaks about career Jim Abbott discusses life in the major leagues as a one-handed pitcher Daily Titan
Writer and director of the short film, Mark C. Roe, plans to send it to the Newport Film Festival and Sundance DEANNA TROMBLEY For the Daily Titan
Courtesy of Mark C. Roe
Mark C. Roe is the writer and director of Lewis. The cast of the short film includes John Sera (plays Lewis), Megan Hensley (plays Amber) and Rico E. Anderson (plays Greg).
way his life is projected five years from now, acknowledging there is a struggling and starving artist within all of us. “I feel like this can reach anybody in any field, it’s kind of a wide arching theme of coming face to face with failure,” Roe said. The character of Lewis is not a prodigy in his craft, and in a sense doomed from the start. “He’s just failing and failing, and that’s kind of where the dark comedy comes from. You know that this guy got into this big show on
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some stroke of luck,” Roe said. This big show is going to take place in the gorgeous Warner Grand Theatre, where the production team received access to film. Lewis can end his story as a magician along for the ride, or by settling down and taking care of his budding family. Roe’s favorite character written for the story is Dane. SEE FILM, 4
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LOCAL | Motivational speaker
JAZMIN SANCHEZ
Lewis brings magic to the indie screen
The short film Lewis is finally under production now that its crew has sufficient funds from the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, Cal State Fullerton’s Associated Students Inc. and donations from loyal fans on Indiegogo. Lewis is a drama with dark comedic elements about the collision of a man’s aspirations and his reality. Writer and director Mark C. Roe said Lewis is a story about a struggling magician whose life is on the ropes when when he gets the opportunity to open for much larger acts. The title character, Lewis, has to make choices between his relationships and deepest dreams. This story is highly relatable to the young and impoverished artist we all find in ourselves during our golden years. “I kind of refer to it as my horror story,” said Roe. “Anyone who’s trying to do something in an artistic field, the biggest fear they have is obviously failing.” Roe added that the short film is similar to the
Cal State Fullerton’s Leadership Center, housed in the College of Business and Economics, established an 18-member advisory board last week made up of business professionals from around the community, school officials said. The board was brought together to help develop programs and initiatives that assist students and members of the business community in leadership development, officials said. “The advisory board guides all initiatives of the center, which includes academic programs, extracurricular opportunities for students and an executive program,” said John Barbuto Jr., Ph.D., director of the center and associate professor of management. “We are pleased that so many leaders have joined with us to help us work to meet the leadership needs of our region.” Established to link together the business community and the college, the Center For Leadership developed in 2009 and held its first major event in spring of 2010. With several initiatives on hand for the center, the lure of a big business program at CSUF and many alumni scattered across Orange County businesses, Barbuto said the program was able to attract notable professionals to its board. “The motto for the Mihaylo College of Business as it relates to its students is that they are ‘Ready to Work, Ready to Lead,’” Greg S. Arbues, a
member of the Mihaylo College Executive Council Advisory Board, said. “This is why the Center for Leadership is such an important center within the college.” Arbues, one of 18 members on the advisory board, is president and chief client advocate of Client Advocate Network in Santa Ana. “Leadership skills can be developed over time, some through classroom lecture, but mostly from real-world experiential learning from those who have been there and done that,” he said. The center also started a Leadership Scholars Program. It had 114 members as of October and 175 now enrolled, said Barbuto. The program saw a growth at the beginning of the semester in the form of a 47-percent increase in members from August to October. Additionally, the Scholars Program provides undergraduate students with access to some of Orange County’s most “prominent and successful executives through a speaker series and networking receptions,” Barbuto said. The events are conducted once a month—four times per semester. “Our students wear business attire and come to campus for a 2-4 p.m. Friday afternoon Leadership Scholars event,” Barbuto said. “And they hear executives share their insights and wisdom across a number of themes, followed by a reception that gives students one-on-one opportunities to glean insights from these executives that have so generously volunteered their time and energy to give back to the Mihaylo students.”
Former major league baseball player turned motivational speaker spoke to a crowd of all ages Sunday afternoon at the Fullerton Public Library. Michigan-born Jim Abbott, 45, discussed overcoming his physical disability through his will to make his baseball dreams come true. Abbott, whose career lasted 10 seasons in the MLB, played on the California Angels, New York Yankees, Chicago White Sox and Milwaukee Brewers. “When he was 20 years old, he won the Sullivan Award, which is given out by the Amateur Athletic Union for the outstanding amatuer athlete of the year nationally,” said Virginia Nelson, a Friends of the Library board member. “At 21, he earned the gold medal by playing as a pitcher on the U.S. team in the 1988 Summer Olympics.” Abbott also pitched a no-hitter in 1993 while playing for the New York Yankees, which he admitted was a highlight of his career and one of the main focuses of his book Imperfect, which was released in April. “One of the hardest parts about the book was trying to find a title,” said Abbott. “Imperfect was a title that we thought fit for a number of reasons. One of the obvious ones is I was born imperfect—I was born missing my right hand.” Abbott never let his physical imper-
fections overcome his ability to excel in sports. He was also quarterback for his high school football team. “It was almost as if being born this way was something to be looked up to,” Abbott said. “My dad used to say this to me all the time: ‘What’s taken away once will be given back twice,’ and I believe that to be true.” Abbott described his parents as lasting motivation in his life, calling them his heroes. “I know that they struggled trying to find ways for me to do things. The story in the book in a lot of ways talks about learning how to tie my shoes and learning how to take the glove on and off,” said Abbott. “But they didn’t shield me from life, they made me feel up to the challenge.” “My hand has taught me that if you can find your own way of doing things, if you believe in who you are make the most of what you’ve been given, nothing can stop you. Amazing things can happen,” he said. Abbott turned down multiple book offers while he was playing in the MLB because he wanted to concentrate on the sport, not his disability. He waited until he was retired from professional baseball to work with Orange County writer Tim Brown to draft his story. “I wanted to tell the story of what it’s like to be a baseball player and what it’s like to have baseball mean so much to you that you’re scared to death of losing it. And to go through the process of losing it,” he said. SEE PITCHER, 2