Mustang Daily - 3/7

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SLO Film Festival hangs 10

Puppy joins Cal Poly softball

ARTS, pg. 5

SPORTS, pg. 8

Volume LXXVII, Number 78

Thursday, March 7, 2013

www.mustangdaily.net

SLO air quality ‘F’ grade misleading JESSICA BURGER

San Luis Obispo has

jburger@mustangdaily.net

COURTESY PHOTO

Spartan Training Resources offers women’s-only handgun courses every four to six months, with an emphasis on female self defense and gun safety.

Girls with guns SARA NATIVIDAD

snatividad@mustangdaily.net

One of the many stereotypes women face is unfamiliarity with firearms, but a local training group is looking to remedy that. Spartan Training Resources is offering a women’s-only handgun course this weekend that will highlight gun safety and use, specifically aimed at female self defense. “It’s good for women to have a viable means of self defense,” Spartan Training Resources co-owner Steve Odom said. “Even if a woman knows handto-hand combat, it may not be enough. If a women is less than 120 pounds and she is facing a 200 pound man that has more than likely been incarcerated before, proper firearms training may save her life.” The program is designed for

female shooters who have little to no experience with firearms, Odom said. The day begins at 8 a.m., when students are taught the basic safety and handling procedures of using and own-

in which students go through the motions of shooting an unloaded gun, he said. When the trainers believe the students are finally ready, the real fun begins, he said.

It’s interesting having women of different political beliefs come together and acquire shooting skills ... KATIE MARTIN ENGLISH SOPHOMORE

ing a handgun. The program also provides students with the different holster combinations suited to women’s needs. After the trainees are taught the fundamentals of handling a firearm, they are taught how to shoot one. The training starts with “dry practice,”

“Besides using firearms as a means for self defense, shooting is an enjoyable sport,” Odom said. “It requires discipline, hand-eye coordination and it’s exciting when you’re shooting ammunition.” English sophomore Katharine Martin grew up recre-

ationally using firearms for target practice, as well as hunting, and loves the challenges that come with additional training, she said. “I think that women’s training is valuable because women are able to become comfortable with firearms and learn about safety and maintenance,” Martin said. “This also allows them to acquire excellent marksmanship abilities, which is often stereotypically viewed as an activity for men.” Most of the training programs such as this one are designed to prevent crimes against women, Martin said. This usually brings people with a variety of backgrounds and views on firearms. “It’s interesting having women of different political beliefs come together and acquire see GUNS, pg. 2

COUTESY PHOTO

The event will take place this weekend, Friday and Saturday, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Santa Lucia Sportsmen’s Association Range in Atascadero. It costs $200 to join.

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Tomorrow’s Weather: high Sunny sunny

55˚F

San Luis Obispo County residents are often confused by the American Lung Association’s State of the Air report, which this past year placed San Luis Obispo as the ninth most polluted city by ozone with a letter grade of “F.” The annual report has been given for 13 years, and according to the manager for the planning and outreach division for the San Luis Obispo Air and Pollution Control District (APCD), Aeron Arlin Genet, the report’s grading technique uses a set of standards that differs from California state standards. “It’s been a challenge for us here locally every year,” Genet said. “They don’t take a look at the state standard, which is typically more health concerned.” According to Genet, the report bases its grades on data collected by air qual-

THE NINTH MOST POLLUTED DAYS IN CALIFORNIA, according to the American Lung Association.

ity monitoring stations. In San Luis Obispo, one of the monitoring stations located in east county happens to be in a spot that picks up pollution moving into the county from other sources. “There are times when Red Hills and Carrizo Plains gets pretty high, but there are no real sources of pollution out there,” Genet said. “The way it’s located, it’s really good at picking up pollution from places elsewhere in the state.” The area where the two monitoring stations are located also holds less than 1 percent of the population. see AIR, pg. 2

Students get preschooled KRISTINA MARTIN

Special to Mustang Daily

The Preschool Learning Lab on campus used to have almost as many students working as it had children. That has changed, as the lab has expanded to 40 hours per week with six students working at a time, Patty Clarkson, director of the lab, said. Now, she said, it is a better experience for the students to practice teaching children, which is what they will be doing for their careers. The expansion of the lab opens up opportunities for students to learn how to teach, play and talk with children. Before the expansion, students found it hard to get quality interactions with the children. There were so many adult bodies and the children were only there for two hours, three days a week, Clarkson said. “The challenge for the college students was that there were so many of them that the responsibilities of the lab got spread out,” Clarkson said. “There wasn’t as much opportunity to really dig in and be part of the lab and really help out.” The most important thing

for the students to learn in the preschool lab class is how to develop relationships with children because without this it becomes difficult for the students to support the children’s learning, Clarkson said. The lab is open 40 hours per week and children can enroll from four to eight hours a day, Clarkson said. The college students are spread out in sections of six at a time. “This gives them much more responsibility to carry the whole program and really get experience with all the different aspects of the program,” Clarkson said. “We rotate them through different areas and layer on different responsibilities each week.” There were a lot of challenges with the old system, Clarkson said. The children, approximately 25 to 28 at a time, were only in the lab for two hours. This made it difficult for the 20 college students to absorb any real sort of responsibility with it spread out so widely. “It’s kind of like a small circus venue, if you will, because there’s a lot of activities going on and there’s a lot of adults around so it didn’t really lend itself to a lot of peer-to-peer see PRESCHOOL, pg. 2

INDEX

Opinions/Editorial..............6 News.............................1-3 ClassifiedsComics..............7 Arts...............................4-5 Sports..................................8

low 39˚F partially cloudy

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