Mustang Daily 4-10

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STUDENTS GET SCHOOLED BY BLUE MAN GROUP ARTS, pg. 4

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Volume LXXVII, Number 87

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Ayala remembered as ‘sweet,’ great listener SARA NATIVIDAD

snatividad@mustangdaily.net

Members of the Cal Poly community will gather Friday evening to light candles for sociology freshman Giselle Ayala, whose death left many friends and acquaintances recalling memories of a smiling, happy 18-year-old this week. Ayala, who went missing while partying with friends at

the annual spring break party Deltopia this past weekend, was found dead in the surf on Saturday morning. Santa Barbara sheriff ’s officials suspect she may have fallen off a cliff when local officers broke up a party she was attending, though an investigation into her death is still ongoing. Despite the unknown circumstances of her death, Ayala will be remembered as

the kind of person who was always smiling, graphic communication freshman Alyssa Wigant said. The two students lived in Tower 1 of Yosemite Residence Hall and became close friends from the moment they met — Wigant said Ayala even helped her through a difficult breakup. According to Wigant, Ayala was a great listener — someone Wigant was able to

confide in when she felt like she could not talk to anyone else, she said. The feelings of trust and confidence that Ayala instilled were felt among many other students in her tower, Wigant said. Ayala was one of the people who brought the tower together, and the change in the atmosphere since her death demonstrates the lasting impact she’s had on

Yosemite Tower 1. “She made us feel safe and comfortable,” Wigant said. “We have to find another way to cope with things like that now that she’s gone.” Ayala’s roommate Deborah Newberry, a computer science freshman, described her as “the sweetest girl,” and the last person to deserve see AYALA, pg. 2

Born this way

Orfalea moves up in Bloomberg rankings

Pride Month speaker discusses the science behind sexual orientation.

LAURA PEZZINI

lpezzini@mustangdaily.net

Cal Poly’s Orfalea College of Business was ranked No. 64 on the Bloomberg Businessweek magazine’s ranking of the nation’s top undergraduate business colleges, making 2013 the fifth consecutive year the college made the list. The Orfalea College of Business moved up five spots from number 69 in 2012. Orfalea College of Business Dean Dave Christy said this higher ranking has much to do with the quality of relationships between the students and faculty. “One of the things I give students a lot of credit for is that this is really a partnership between the students and the faculty,” Christy said. “Cal Poly students are already so selective and they understand these things. They don’t want the university to slip behind and they want to hold us accountable.” The Orfalea College of Business was one of only three public California business colleges to make the list, the others being University of California, Berkeley and University of California, Riverside. Four private institutions in California were also represented — University of Southern California, University of San Diego, Loyola Marymount University and Santa Clara University. “Most of the schools that

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What makes a person gay, straight or bisexual? Former Harvard neuroscientist Simon LeVay discussed the science behind sexual orientation during his presentation last night at Cal Poly’s Recreation Center as a part of Pride Month hosted by the Pride Center. LeVay said the speech was an effort to educate people on discrimination and change attitudes about what it means to be gay, he said in an interview prior to the event. “We need to create a world where people welcome gay people and value them for the difference they create in the world,” LeVay said. LeVay’s extensive research in whether a person is born gay or if they become gay found concrete evidence that homosexuality is biological rather than a lifestyle choice. He said some people think it’s important to figure out what makes people gay before they decide about equal rights with marriage and other legal cases. “Quite often we hear people say that when they learn that see PRIDE, pg. 2

COURTESY PHOTO

NHA HA/MUSTANG DAILY

Simon LeVay, a former Harvard neuroscience professor and author of “Gay, Straight and the Reasons Why,” spoke at Cal Poly on Tuesday for Pride Month.

DEAN DAVE CHRISTY

are ahead of us in the rankings are either private universities or the flagship state universities,” Christy said. “We hang very well and I’m proud.” But Christy said he prefers not to overhype the few steps up the Orfalea College of Business has taken in the ranking. “One of the things I don’t make a big deal about is moving a step up or down, because there’s so much noise in the system that it means we’re basically in the same place, and that’s not a bad place,” Christy said. “Where we are in the rankings means that we’re in a very, very attractive place.” Instead of focusing on rankings and lists, Christy said he would rather focus on the quality of the school. “I think that if you look at the data, our students are happier with their experience,” Christy said. “The quality of our students and the quality of their faculty have been rising.” The college’s admission statistics speak to its position as well. According to Cal Poly’s Fall 2012 Census, 28.3 percent of first-time freshman see BUSINESS, pg. 2

English professors say e-books will not take place of physical books JENNIFER SILVA

Special to Mustang Daily

People don’t use the typewriter anymore, they’ve given up on floppy discs and cassettes are out. But, paper books will still be necessary in the future, Cal Poly professors say. “There’s just something about sitting in a room full of books than sitting in a

bare room with a Kindle,” English lecturer Mark Roberts said. “It’s like there’s so much potential knowledge in there, you feel like you could know everything if you spent enough time, and you don’t get that from looking up something on iTunes.” Even if e-books do not completely outsell books, data on sales indicates a change. In 2011,

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Amazon sold 105 Kindle ebooks for every 100 paperback and hardback books, according to The New York Times. But people are not moving away from print books to ebooks, English lecturer James Cushing said. “I think it’s a lie, I think it does not exist,” Cushing said. “I think it’s people trying to sell pieces of technology that

SPORTS, pg. 8 Why baseball in March is the best

they can delete and get you to buy more expensive technology. It’s a rip off.” Still, e-books are a great new technology, marketing professor Stern Neill said. “It certainly makes a lot of sense, efficient delivery mode, easy to update, saves trees,” Neill said. “You can constantly change content, so if there’s a new case of social

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media update, I could immediately update and the content will be fresh.” E-books have their advantages as well, Roberts said. “As revolutionary as the iPod, in the same way you can suddenly carry around an entire library of music, you can now carry around an entire library of books,” Roberts said. E-books can be a new innova-

tive teaching technique to keep students engaged, Neill said. “You can have students manipulate the info,” Neill said. “The content is more interactive.” A major advantage to having print books, however, is that people can read or write in the margins, Roberts said. “One of the things we have see E-BOOKS, pg. 2

INDEX

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

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