Monday Dec. 1, 2014

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Hosting a historic holiday

‘Kiss Me, Kate’ stays traditional

Arboretum to present 1940s-themed Christmas event

Lighthearted musical opens in the Little Theatre with conventional staging

News 2

Monday December 1, 2014

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The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton

Volume 96 Issue 46

Jazz singers play the Meng

Student starts discount food site Exclusively serving CSUF students, ThePopNom.com provides discounts on food

CSUF singers are joined by Clockwork Jazz Singers, Pro Jazz Trio and Rosana Eckert

CYNTHIA PLEITEZ Daily Titan

ALEXANDER DOMINGUEZ Daily Titan

A senior accounting student has launched a website that provides discounts on local food exclusively to Cal State Fullerton students. Andrew Liu and business partner Chris Wong started building ThePopNom.com, a Groupon-style website, in 2012. While interning at DreamWorks, the studio’s system of free food for employees reminded Liu of the convenience of pre-purchased food at the Gastronome, sparking his idea for the site. The deals work the same way traditional coupons do, enticing businesses to provide discounts with the promise that more customers will come through the door and possibly buy other products. However, the Internet allows for a guaranteed minimum number of customers using the coupons, which can result in extremely high discounts. Wong taught himself how to code over the summer and launched ThePopNom.com two weeks ago and has since had a handful of customers. Wong reaches out to local restaurants to see if they would like to partner with PopNom to provide discounts, and some restaurants provide discounts only to CSUF students. “Sometimes they give us special deals that are just for students. It’s not even on the menu. Other times, they’ll just knock off the price a little bit,” Liu said. Promotions vary on a weekly basis from restaurant to restaurant. Current partners include Tokyo Kitchen, El Pollo Fino, 85 Degrees Bakery and B & B Donuts. SEE POPNOM

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WINNIE HUANG / DAILY TITAN

Kathleen Iwuoha (33) and Chante Miles (5) led the Titans to a pair of wins on the road against Weber State and New Mexico State.

Seniors take charge The upperclassmen took control against New Mexico State in a 66-51 win on the road

MICHAEL HUNTLEY Daily Titan The Cal State Fullerton women’s basketball team won two of three games on the road last week, putting their regular season record at 2-4. The Titans began Thanksgiving break on a rough note, losing 50-43 to Villanova at Titan Gym on Nov. 21. Senior point guard Chante Miles led the offense with 14 points and converted 5-of-8 shots from the field. It was the second time this season that Miles played all 40 minutes in a game. Fullerton out-rebounded Villanova 39-26, but turned the ball over 19 times. The Titans shot 43.9

percent compared to 29.8 percent for Villanova. Sweden native Amanda Tivenius had five of those turnovers and Tailer Butler had four off the bench for CSUF. Caroline Coyer had 15 points and converted 3-of8 3-point attempts for the Wildcats. The Titans did not have much time to recover from the loss, as they embarked on the first leg of a six-game road trip Monday at Weber State. A career-night from Miles guided the Titans to their first victory of the season. She had a career-high 35 points, along with six assists and three rebounds. “Chante was amazing tonight, she was the best player on the floor,” Head Coach Daron Park said in an interview with FullertonTitans.com. “She played with

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL

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51 composure, ran the team and she just wanted to win. You could see it in her eyes and it was special to see.” The Titans also had offensive contribution from sophomore Samantha Logan, who scored 12 points and made four 3-pointers. Butler also had 12 points on four 3-pointers and had four steals on the defensive end. Senior Kathleen Iwuoha had 10 rebounds and added seven points. After the win, Park’s squad flew to Las Cruces,

New Mexico to play in the Hotel Encanto Thanksgiving Classic. Iwuoha had a huge game against Eastern Michigan in the first game of the Classic, but the Titans fell 78-74 to the Eagles. She had a double-double, posting 24 points and 11 rebounds and shot 9-of-14 from the field. It was the first double-double for the Titans this season. Miles added 23 points and made five 3-pointers. SEE W BBALL

Cal State Fullerton singers took to the stage Nov. 21, performing alongside an internationally recognized vocalist to jazz up the evening. The concert took place in the Meng Concert Hall at the Clayes Performing Arts Center. It featured the Clockwork Jazz Singers, who performed various jazz selections, some holiday tunes and multiple duets. Clockwork is a 12-voice ensemble under the direction of Grammy-winning composer John Proulx. Clockwork was joined by multiple instrumentalists in the Pro Jazz Trio, composed of Ed Zack on piano, Alex Frank on bass and Kendall Kay on drums, as well as guest student saxophonist and flutist Nathan King. The night opened with the full ensemble performing Steve Allee’s song Art’s Groove, arranged by Jennifer Barnes. It featured multiple singers and King on saxophone. During the next song, the ensemble was joined by special guest vocalist Rosana Eckert. Eckert is currently a professor at the University of North Texas. She is known as a live and studio vocalist, songwriter, arranger and a voice-over talent. Eckert has released four studio albums. Many of the selections performed by Clockwork were arranged by Eckert, which she performed alongside the group. One of the pieces arranged by Eckert was Johnny Mandel and Paul Francis Webster’s A Time for Love, which stood apart from all other pieces because it was performed a capella. SEE JAZZ

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García updates campus on state of university In spite of lower-thanrequested funding, university improves graduation rates

SAMUEL MOUNTJOY Daily Titan President Mildred García briefed the Academic Senate on progress made on the University Strategic Plan during her State of the University address Nov. 20, including a higher-than-ever graduation rate and the launch of a new website centered on the plan. A growing number of diverse tenure-track faculty and a graduation rate among transfer students that has climbed 3.4 percent to 75.4 percent were included in her address as examples of the plan’s success. García touted the progress of her five-year strategic plan. “We are doing things now, not just planning,” she said. CSUF has had to cope with a state allocation to the California State

University system that was nearly $100 million lower than what was requested by the system’s Board of Trustees, García said. Of the 23 CSU campuses, CSUF is the lowest funded per student, an issue which she is advocating to be remedied. The funding issue was the first thing she addressed with the CSU Board of Trustees during a meeting about the Student Success Fee, García said. At the conclusion of the Thursday meeting, the Academic Senate passed a resolution that addressed the funding formula that determines CSUF’s state funding level. The resolution pressures CSU Chancellor Timothy White and the CSU Task Force on a Sustainable Financial Model for the CSU to resolve inequities in state funding distribution. “We don’t have a whole lot of money,” said Danny Kim, vice president for administration and finance

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and CSUF’s Chief Financial Officer, during his first-ever Fiscal State of the University address. A $19 million increase in state funding, and another $19 million—$9 million from university-wide reserves and $10 million in one-time tuition revenue—increased the total CSUF budget by nearly $39 million. While the budget has improved, it is still recovering from massive budget cuts made during the economic recession which began in 2007. Compared to the 2008-2009 fiscal year, a much higher proportion of the university’s operating budget is now comprised of revenue from tuition when compared to allocation from the state. However, state allocation is on the uptick, increasing by more than 10 percent this year from $130 million to $144 million with revenue from tuition growing by 3.2 percent, or $6 million.

YUNUEN BONAPARTE / DAILY TITAN

Cal State Fullerton President Mildred García addresses the Academic Senate during her State of the University address on Thursday, Nov. 20.

The systemwide budget next year includes a $119 million baseline increase

from the state’s multi-year budget plan,17 percent lower than the increase of $142

million this year. SEE UNIVERSITY

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