07-26-2012

Page 1

We can’t stop believin’ in Journey ARTS, pg. 3

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Volume LXXVII, Number 4

www.mustangdaily.net

Throwing in the towel BRITTANY WOODARD

brittanywoodard.md@gmail.com

After Sidney (who declined to use her last name) finishes her workout at the Cal Poly Recreation Center, she heads to the locker room to

gather her belongings. With the Recreation Center’s signature green towel in one hand and her water bottle in the other, she passes by the locker room’s laundry basket and forgets to drop the towel off. She places it in her backpack without even realizing it and leaves, underlining the very issue Cal Poly’s Recreation Center has had since open-

Cal Poly’s Rec Center is considering dropping its towel service amid losses

ing on campus in January. It’s a transgression that many members such as Sidney don’t realize they contribute to. However, out of 2,000 towels, only approximately 150 towels were remaining in the beginning of April. To try and solve the problem, Associated Students, Inc. (ASI) decided to buy lime green towels that month. These lime green towels would hopefully remind students to drop them off before leaving the center, according to ASI Coordinator of Membership and Staff Services Lindsey Lee. Lee said the solution hasn’t remedied the problem yet though. “If people are still taking them, then we are still losing inventory at the Recreation Center,” said Lee, who has worked for ASI for six years now. On the other hand, Lee said the new green towels and various signs around the center have slowed the rate of loss. “We have started with the same

amount of white towels when we opened the building,” Lee said. “Those went really fast. The green towels lasted a lot longer. So we have been able to hang on to them from July, which would be four months. Whereas the white towels were disappearing within two-and-a-half months.” Even with several signs around the Center reminding students to return them, the towels continue to disappear. Many members, such as kinesiology sophomore Ariana Elegado, said they read the signs, but simply forget once the time comes to leave. “I noticed the different signs in the Center to remind me to leave my towel, but I totally forgot about it when I saw a lime green one in my backpack when I got home,” Elegado said. Currently, the front desk of the Recreation Center cannot reveal the exact number of towels that have been taken from the center. However, according to Recreation Center staff such as Lee, there is a noticeable amount missing. Consequently, losing towel after towel throughout the past few months has also see TOWELS, pg. 2

GRAPHIC BY KAYTLYN LESLIE

Alumna awarded for achievements ANDREA KANG

andreakang.md@gmail.com

Every year, one Cal Poly graduate from each of the university’s six colleges is recognized for exceptional success in his or her career and experiences. Last month, the College of Liberal Arts awarded Michela O’Connor Abrams — president of awardwinning media company, Dwell Media — the Honored Alumni Award. Abrams will be honored at the Honored Alumni Banquet this October during homecoming on behalf of the university’s Alumni Association, said Associate Dean of the College of Liberal Arts, Debra Valencia-Laver. Abrams, a journalism graduate who has visited Cal Poly as a speaker in the past, was nominated for the award by the journalism faculty and then selected by the interim department chair. “She has had some continued relationships and influence in the journalism department,” ValenciaLaver said. “I think she’s trying to bring her experience back to Cal Poly students so they can see the career opportunities that are available to them.” Graphic communication department chair and interim journalism chair Harvey Levenson said he admires Abrams for her success at Dwell Media, which is “one of the most prestigious publications of its kind in the nation.”

COURTESY PHOTO

Michela O’Connor Abrams, winner of the Honored Alumni Award. “(Abrams) represents the type of graduate that Cal Poly has become increasingly known for — intellectual, critical thinker, highly intelligent and entrepreneurial,” Levenson wrote in an email. “I can think of no one more deserving of the coveted Cal Poly Honored Alum(na) Award than Michela.” Abrams, a transfer from UCLA, graduated from Cal Poly with a bachelor’s degree in journalism in 1980 with a concentration in advertising and public relations. She said she immersed herself in working for Mustang Daily — which was not student-run at the time — as the general manager. Besides work, she said her journalism education was invaluable to her success right after graduating. “The diversity of the curriculum I was allowed to have was significant not only in my breadth of knowledge and exposure see ALUMNA, pg. 2

Architecture, engineering students erect telescope HILLARY KAISER

hillarykaiser.md@gmail.com

“Big Woody,” one of the world’s largest portable telescopes, weighs 500 pounds and stands at 14 feet tall. It has a mirror that extends 60 inches in diameter. It can be broken down and transported by a team within a few minutes. And it was designed and created by Cal Poly’s own. Astronomy research scholar

in residence, Russ Genet, who has a bachelor’s in electrical engineering and a doctorate in astronomy spent the past school year designing and building “Big Woody” with three architectural engineering students, Mounir El-Koussa, Laura Rice and Mike Vickery. It will allow them to conduct research never done before, Genet said. They will use “Woody” and his counterpart, “Shiny Sam,” a much smaller telescope made of aluminum, to determine diameters

of nearby stars or double stars and see how far away they are from each other. “I was interested in working on telescopes again,” Genet, who has built several smaller telescopes over the years, said. “I began thinking about what niche wasn’t filled and something that could be developed that would be useful.” Before “Big Woody,” telescopes larger than the ones

HILLARY KAISER/MUSTANG DAILY

see TELESCOPE, pg. 2

SPORTS, pg. 6 Footbal makes new home in Big Sky.

Today’s Weather: high Sunny sunny

INDEX News.............................1-2 Arts..............................3-4

72˚F

Opinions/Editorial...........5 Sports.............................6

low 52˚F partially cloudy

cloudy

foggy

windy

light rain

rain

thinderstorm


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