MUSTANG DAILY TOMORROW: Sunny High 72˚/Low 46˚
CA L I F O R N I A P O LY T E C H N I C S TAT E U N I V E R S I T Y Book and Author Festival returns after a year hiatus. IN ARTS, 10
Volume LXXIV, Number 21
The National League picks are in. Find out what the experts think
Obama feels the pressure from republicans to send more troops to Afganistan
IN SPORTS, 16
IN NEWS, 4
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
www.mustangdaily.net
Provost Koob answers questions DNA backlog about Cal Poly’s financial future helps Tim Miller mustang daily
Editors note: The following is not a transcript of a conversation with Provost Koob but a paraphrasing of several questions that were answered by Koob in a phone interview regarding the budget situation.
California State University system is for personnel, so the furloughs have saved the most money. Operational cuts refer to things like facility expenses and lowering travel allowances. It also includes payroll cuts that are not furloughs.
Q. How many staff and faculty have been laid off Q. How is Cal Poly dealbecause of the budget cuts? ing with the $33 million A. None. What has happened is deficit? that positions have remained unfilled. A. Cal Poly has made up that deficit through furloughs, student fee increases and operational cuts.
All lectures are on a case-by-case basis based on the amount of money that each college has available.
What this means: The bulk of Cal Poly’s expense like the entire
What this means: It is possible that the university is employing
Q. How has the chancellors’ recent delay of the College Based Fees affected Q. How many classes this year’s budget? A. We expected that that CBFs have been cut? more lectures but those lecturers are getting paid less for teaching a smaller course load.
A. There were 92 sections cut this quarter but the average course load for students has gone up.
What this means: Cal Poly has cut this many sections in order to save money by not paying lectures to teach those sections. The number of students per section has gone up. Some teachers have let more students into their classes than would previously been allowed.
would not be approved for this year after the initial delay so we had budgeted without the fees as an option.
Q. What happens next year? A. If the furloughs are not extended to next year Cal Poly is looking at staff and faculty lay-offs.There are also other long term money saving initiatives that see Koob, page 2
Another type of groove kicks off with Latino heritage month Hillary Preece special to the mustang daily
Tomás Riley used to rap as he took orders at a San Diego taco shop. Wednesday night, Riley, a Chicano spoken word poet, will be delivering a different message at the Another Type of Groove for Latino Heritage Month. “I feel a responsibility to speak on behalf of people who don’t have the opportunity to speak for themselves,” Riley said in a Facebook interview. He represents people whose stories wouldn’t be heard or maybe not even asked for otherwise, Riley said. The MultiCultural Center on campus is presenting Riley as part of its Latino Heritage Month program. Renoda Campbell, Coordinator of MultiCultural Programs and Services, says the event will focus on sharing ideas between people and cultures, enabling dialogues and recognizing diversity. “We look forward to it all month long,” Campbell said.“It’s our biggest event and attracts the biggest crowd.” Riley said his words create and enable dialogue and introduce people to new cultures and ideas unfamiliar to them. “I look at every performance as an extended conversation with the audience so the goal is to promote
dialogue,” Riley said. natural scenes for poetic expression. free food before the program starts The event is expected to draw “I try to celebrate the every day and ATOG T-shirts for $10 over 300 people, welcoming an audi- in our world and create new sites for The event includes Riley’s rap, ence from all backgrounds and cul- poetry in places not always regarded a chance for audience members to tures, said Melody Shirazi, the assis- as beautiful,” Riley said. speak through open mic on stage and tant coordinator of the MultiCultural Another Type of Groove, ATOG, a closing performance by Riley. and Pride Centers. is a free event held the first Wednes“As an artist I don’t think anyIt is an opportunity to introduce day of every month from 7:30 to 10 thing should be off-limits so I would people to new ideas, Riley said. p.m. in Chumash Auditorium. expect a multicultural bilingual lyri“I realize that you have to meet The MultiCultural Center offers cal free for all,” Riley said. folks where they are and that for some people Another Type of Groove is held the first Wednesday I may be describing a of every month in Chumash Auditorium. world they’ve never seen. This is an opportunity Another Type of Groove features an open mic for an exchange to take portion for audience members to share their poetry. place,” Riley said. MultiCultural Center and Student Life & Leadership created Another The MultiCultural Type of Groove in 2000 to promote diversity on campus. Center’s goal is to create a safe place for the exLast year Dante Basco, well known for his role in “Hook” as Rufio, spoke at change of race, diversity another Groove event for Asian Pacific Islander American Heritage month. and cultural matters and to encourage expression and unity, according to the center’s official website. Riley’s recognition as a Chicano activist led Renoda Campbell to invite the poet to Cal Poly, one of more than 200 venues he will have performed at. Not all of the places Riley performs are what might be considered kasey reed mustang daily
criminal Robert Napper
mcclatchy newspapers
BRADENTON, Fla. — Federal authorities acknowledged Tuesday they had a DNA sample from home invasion and rape suspect Delmer Smith III during the months detectives say he attacked numerous women in their homes in a violent crime spree. But Smith’s DNA had never been entered into the FBI’s DNA databases, so Sarasota authorities did not get a match from DNA they say Smith, 38, left behind in four cases. FBI spokeswoman Ann Todd said Smith was part of a huge backlog in entering DNA collected from federal prisoners into the databases, which are used regularly by local law enforcement agencies across the nation. Smith was a federal inmate until late 2008 for a 1995 bank robbery. “The FBI Laboratory has a backlog of offender samples, and Delmer Smith’s DNA sample was part of the backlog,” Todd wrote in an e-mail Tuesday to McClatchy Newspapers. As early as Feb. 22, the Sarasota County Sheriff ’s Office had DNA from a home invasion attack in which detectives say he beat two women in their home, raping one of them. DNA was also found at three similar home invasion attacks, according to reports. In April, Sarasota authorities announced they had tested DNA samples from two of the attacks, and they came back as being left by the same person. But no match came back from databases. Without Smith’s DNA in the federal database, Sarasota officials went without a match to the DNA collected in the home invasions. Between Feb. 16 and May 26, officials with the sheriff ’s office in Sarasota, the Manatee County Sheriff ’s Office and Bradenton Police Department suspect Smith committed as many as 11 home invasion attacks in both counties. When Smith went to prison in 1995, the law did not mandate taking DNA from federal convicts. But in 2000, with the enactment of the DNA Backlog Elimination Act, federal authorities began obtaining samples from offenders. see DNA, page 3