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Student Newspaper of the University of Southern California Since 1912 | www.dailytrojan.com | VOL. 165, NO. 44 | Monday October 27, 2008 InDEX 2 · News Digest 4 · Opinion 7 · Lifestyle 11 · Sudoku 12 · Classifieds 16 · Sports Depression Depicted: Clint Eastwood’s Changeling” isn’t the director’s best. PAGE 7 Sizing up the student vote: Check out the Daily Trojan voter guide in tomorrow’s paper. By alexandra tilsley Daily Trojan USC’s chapter of the Korean American Pharmacy Student Association hosted a health fair Saturday — the second culture-specific fair this month — aimed at spread-ing health awareness to members of the Los Angeles Korean community and providing basic health accommodations. Earlier this month, the Vietnamese American Pharmacy Student Association hosted a similar fair aimed at the Vietnamese community. Both events were manned by students from the USC School of Pharmacy. About 100 students volunteered at Saturday’s fair and helped run screenings and administer flu shots. Additionally, two School of Pharmacy faculty advisers, Dr. Susie Park and Dr. Emily Han, helped with the immunizations and diabetes screen-ings. Eleven professional pharmacists also volunteered at the fair’s booths. The services available to patients at the fair included screenings for osteoporosis, hypertension, diabetes, cholesterol and body fat, as well as free flu shots. There were also information booths aimed to educate the Korean population about health risks they might not otherwise know about. Nick Choi, a pharmacy doctoral student and KAPSA’s co-director of professional projects, said in an effort to make the fair run smoother and to increase awareness, patients visiting the health fair were re-quired to at least look at some information-al booths before receiving their flu shots. “There are a lot of people with only A shot in the arm for Korean community Students volunteered for a health fair, the second targeted at minorities. | see fair, page 11 | By CA T HERINE LYONS Daily Trojan Victory Headquarters is hard to miss. Alongside a giant window sticker of Gov. Sarah Palin’s smiling face and Sen. John McCain’s austere visage are American flags, strung from the headquarters’ second-floor bal-cony overlooking Hawthorne Boulevard. The McCain headquarters in Torrance, Calif., lo-cated in a suburban strip mall, consists of one large room directly above “The Healthy Bean” coffee shop, and the room was bustling with volunteers Saturday afternoon. Pro-McCain signs and editorial cartoons cover the office walls, “Yes on Prop 8” yard signs lie strewn on a table and volunteers showcase the latest McCain-Palin merchandise. Throughout the room, phone bankers sit at plas-tic collapsible tables with their cell phones in hand, checking off as many phone numbers on their lists as possible. “We’ve made 4,063 calls today!” said Pete Kesterson, chair of the 53rd Assembly District for the McCain campaign. The volunteers clapped and cheered. “We have to make at least 2,000 more calls today. Keep fighting the fight! We can only win this with you.” The diverse group of volunteers, who ranged in age, turned back to their cell phones and continued call-ing. Though California has voted Democratic in the last four presidential elections, Kesterson thinks McCain can pull off a victory in California. “We think we’ve got a shot in California, and we know Obama doesn’t think we do,” Kesterson said. “We’d like to keep it that way.” To gain the necessary support for McCain to win in California, Kesterson and his team of vol-unteers spend their weeks phone banking and pre-cinct walking to generate votes for McCain and for local Republican candidates such as Tom Vidal, run-ning for assemblyman of the 53rd District and Wendy At McCain HQ, this one ain’t over yet Polls show McCain is all but done in California, but workers at headquarters aim for an upset. | see mccain, page 6 | By callie schweitzer Daily Trojan A commission judge has ruled that the contractors of the new Expo Rail Line cannot build a pair of controversial crossings for the train at street level. The California Public Utilities Commission Judge Kenneth Koss denied the request of Expo Authority, which is construct-ing the line, to build a street level crossing at Farmdale Avenue. He also denied the request to build a rail line over an existing pedestri-an tunnel at Harvard Boulevard. The Expo Rail Line has 38 crossings, 36 of which have been approved. The final two have created controversy because of their proximity to neighbor-hood schools, including Foshay Learning Center and Dorsey High School. Some community leaders have argued the crossings would disrupt the school day and pose safety risks for the thousands of students who would cross each day. Damien Goodmon, coordina-tor of the Citizens’ Campaign to Fix the Expo Rail Line, a coalition of local residents, administrators, teachers and students, said he was “jubilant” when he heard the judge’s decision. “It was the first time this com-mission officially told the Expo Authority that its designs were not safe,” he said. “Rail safety ex-perts, USC employees and the community have been saying this for decades. It was good to see the judge recognize it at these two Commission judge blocks light rail work at crossings A judge agreed with some residents who think the rail would run too close to schools. | see crossings, page 6 | By jennifer smith Daily Trojan A student was robbed at gun-point in the parking lot of a Row sorority house Saturday night, an armed robbery that police said might have been linked to another just 15 minutes later. The female student was walking north on University Avenue at 7:40 p.m. when she was approached by a suspect in the parking lot of Alpha Delta Phi, a sorority on The Row, Department of Public Safety Capt. Dave Carlisle said. Pair of armed robberies may be related A student was robbed at gunpoint in parking lot of Alpha Delta Phi, DPS says. | see robbery, page 11 | Nathaniel Gonzalez | Daily Trojan 120 over 70 · Students from the USC School of Pharmacy administered checkups for members of the Korean community. 8 Days Until Election COUNTDOWN Disputed Expo Rail Stops In a nonbinding decision, a judge advised that the two crossings be elevated or placed below ground. Courtesy of Google Maps
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Full text | Student Newspaper of the University of Southern California Since 1912 | www.dailytrojan.com | VOL. 165, NO. 44 | Monday October 27, 2008 InDEX 2 · News Digest 4 · Opinion 7 · Lifestyle 11 · Sudoku 12 · Classifieds 16 · Sports Depression Depicted: Clint Eastwood’s Changeling” isn’t the director’s best. PAGE 7 Sizing up the student vote: Check out the Daily Trojan voter guide in tomorrow’s paper. By alexandra tilsley Daily Trojan USC’s chapter of the Korean American Pharmacy Student Association hosted a health fair Saturday — the second culture-specific fair this month — aimed at spread-ing health awareness to members of the Los Angeles Korean community and providing basic health accommodations. Earlier this month, the Vietnamese American Pharmacy Student Association hosted a similar fair aimed at the Vietnamese community. Both events were manned by students from the USC School of Pharmacy. About 100 students volunteered at Saturday’s fair and helped run screenings and administer flu shots. Additionally, two School of Pharmacy faculty advisers, Dr. Susie Park and Dr. Emily Han, helped with the immunizations and diabetes screen-ings. Eleven professional pharmacists also volunteered at the fair’s booths. The services available to patients at the fair included screenings for osteoporosis, hypertension, diabetes, cholesterol and body fat, as well as free flu shots. There were also information booths aimed to educate the Korean population about health risks they might not otherwise know about. Nick Choi, a pharmacy doctoral student and KAPSA’s co-director of professional projects, said in an effort to make the fair run smoother and to increase awareness, patients visiting the health fair were re-quired to at least look at some information-al booths before receiving their flu shots. “There are a lot of people with only A shot in the arm for Korean community Students volunteered for a health fair, the second targeted at minorities. | see fair, page 11 | By CA T HERINE LYONS Daily Trojan Victory Headquarters is hard to miss. Alongside a giant window sticker of Gov. Sarah Palin’s smiling face and Sen. John McCain’s austere visage are American flags, strung from the headquarters’ second-floor bal-cony overlooking Hawthorne Boulevard. The McCain headquarters in Torrance, Calif., lo-cated in a suburban strip mall, consists of one large room directly above “The Healthy Bean” coffee shop, and the room was bustling with volunteers Saturday afternoon. Pro-McCain signs and editorial cartoons cover the office walls, “Yes on Prop 8” yard signs lie strewn on a table and volunteers showcase the latest McCain-Palin merchandise. Throughout the room, phone bankers sit at plas-tic collapsible tables with their cell phones in hand, checking off as many phone numbers on their lists as possible. “We’ve made 4,063 calls today!” said Pete Kesterson, chair of the 53rd Assembly District for the McCain campaign. The volunteers clapped and cheered. “We have to make at least 2,000 more calls today. Keep fighting the fight! We can only win this with you.” The diverse group of volunteers, who ranged in age, turned back to their cell phones and continued call-ing. Though California has voted Democratic in the last four presidential elections, Kesterson thinks McCain can pull off a victory in California. “We think we’ve got a shot in California, and we know Obama doesn’t think we do,” Kesterson said. “We’d like to keep it that way.” To gain the necessary support for McCain to win in California, Kesterson and his team of vol-unteers spend their weeks phone banking and pre-cinct walking to generate votes for McCain and for local Republican candidates such as Tom Vidal, run-ning for assemblyman of the 53rd District and Wendy At McCain HQ, this one ain’t over yet Polls show McCain is all but done in California, but workers at headquarters aim for an upset. | see mccain, page 6 | By callie schweitzer Daily Trojan A commission judge has ruled that the contractors of the new Expo Rail Line cannot build a pair of controversial crossings for the train at street level. The California Public Utilities Commission Judge Kenneth Koss denied the request of Expo Authority, which is construct-ing the line, to build a street level crossing at Farmdale Avenue. He also denied the request to build a rail line over an existing pedestri-an tunnel at Harvard Boulevard. The Expo Rail Line has 38 crossings, 36 of which have been approved. The final two have created controversy because of their proximity to neighbor-hood schools, including Foshay Learning Center and Dorsey High School. Some community leaders have argued the crossings would disrupt the school day and pose safety risks for the thousands of students who would cross each day. Damien Goodmon, coordina-tor of the Citizens’ Campaign to Fix the Expo Rail Line, a coalition of local residents, administrators, teachers and students, said he was “jubilant” when he heard the judge’s decision. “It was the first time this com-mission officially told the Expo Authority that its designs were not safe,” he said. “Rail safety ex-perts, USC employees and the community have been saying this for decades. It was good to see the judge recognize it at these two Commission judge blocks light rail work at crossings A judge agreed with some residents who think the rail would run too close to schools. | see crossings, page 6 | By jennifer smith Daily Trojan A student was robbed at gun-point in the parking lot of a Row sorority house Saturday night, an armed robbery that police said might have been linked to another just 15 minutes later. The female student was walking north on University Avenue at 7:40 p.m. when she was approached by a suspect in the parking lot of Alpha Delta Phi, a sorority on The Row, Department of Public Safety Capt. Dave Carlisle said. Pair of armed robberies may be related A student was robbed at gunpoint in parking lot of Alpha Delta Phi, DPS says. | see robbery, page 11 | Nathaniel Gonzalez | Daily Trojan 120 over 70 · Students from the USC School of Pharmacy administered checkups for members of the Korean community. 8 Days Until Election COUNTDOWN Disputed Expo Rail Stops In a nonbinding decision, a judge advised that the two crossings be elevated or placed below ground. Courtesy of Google Maps |