04.19.10_web

16
05:0+, MONDAY Height: 4 ft. Wind: 3-5 mph Water Temp: 64 F TUESDAY Height: 4 ft. Wind: 4-6 mph Water Temp: 64 F WEDNESDAY Height: 4-9 ft. Wind: 10-12 mph Water Temp: 64 F THURSDAY Height: 8-12 ft. Wind: 6-17 mph Water Temp: 64 F LOW $2.92 Quick Trip, El Cajon 596 N Mollison Ave. & I-8 HIGH $3.89 76, Point Loma 1704 Rosecrans St. & Nimitz Blvd. .(: 7,9 .(3365 :<9- 9,769; >,) 7633 SHOULD PROFESSOR DOMINGUEZ BE PUNISHED FOR HIS VIRTUAL SIT-IN? 6:12 A.M. 7:23 P.M. WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG *VTPJZ 3PNO[Z HUK :PYLUZ )LOPUK [OL *V\U[LY 3L[[LYZ [V [OL ,KP[VY :P[L :LLU *SHZZPÄLKZ :\KVR\ MONDAY H 66 L 53 TUESDAY H 64 L 51 -69,*(:; WEDNESDAY H 58 L 49 THURSDAY H 60 L 50 Yes No I don’t know MONDAY TUESDAY 50./; >(;*/ :<590:, :<5:,; THURSDAY WEDNESDAY &R2SV WR 1HJRWLDWH /RZHU 5HQW Minority Admit Rate Up 7 Percent By Ayelet Bitton Associate News Editor The number of students admit- ted from underrepresented races to UCSD for Fall Quarter 2010 increased dramatically since last year, according to statistics released by the UC Office of the President last week. The admis- sions office accept- ed 16.6 percent — or 3,041 — more black, Hispanic and American- Indian students out of the total admit pool, a 6.9-percent increase from last fall. It was also a record year for overall applications and admits: 48,073 students applied, compared to last year’s 47, 708, and the total number of students admitted increased by 3.7 percent, or 655 stu- dents. The overall admissions rate was 36.8 percent, down from 38 percent in 2009. A total of 18,334 students were admitted. There was a rise in the num- ber of minority applicants this year, but Associate Vice Chancellor of Admissions Mae Brown said she attributes the higher admit rate to the university’s augmented publicity and outreach efforts. “We experienced an increase in applications during the November filing period, which included under- represented students,” Brown said in an e-mail. “We visited high schools, participated in college fairs and used technology to extend our reach throughout the fall recruitment peri- od. We are very excited about our increase in applications.” A.S. Campuswide Senator and Black Student Union board member Desiree Prevo said the BSU has made recruitment community outreach a priority. This year, the BSU sent out a “Black Book” to black admits detailing cultural outlets on and off campus. By Sarah Smith Senior Staff Writer The student-run co-operatives at UCSD have begun redrafting their rent agreement with the university in hopes of reducing their monthly payments to a more sustainable level. Representatives from the co-ops — including the Che Cafe Collective, the UCSD Food Co-operative, Groundwork Books and the UCSD General Store Co-operative recently decided to request that they no longer be required to pay rent for their on-campus spaces. Though they said that this is still the ultimate goal of negotiations with the administration, the focus of their April 16 meeting with Director of University Centers Paul Terzino, A.S. President Utsav Gupta and Graduate Student Association President Alex James shifted instead to simply low- ering their rent. All those present at the meeting agreed it was time to redraft the rent contract between the co-ops and the university. Co-op representatives also requested that their Master Space Agreement be reworded to define them as student organizations rather than businesses. This request, they said, is in response to financial hard- ship the co-ops fell into following a remodeling of the Student Center and the opening of Price Center. James said the co-ops believe their current rental rates are negatively A potential pay-as-you- can policy would allow the student co-ops a chance to get back on their feet. See ADMISSIONS page 7 <5*64465 -632 See CO-OPS page 7 ;90;65 -66;)(33 :;<+,5;: (+405 /09, *65:<3;(5; )ZUIV\ZW]\ ?QV[ 8]TQ\bMZ I n case you failed to notice the giant three-quarter ad page dedicated to lit- erature professor Rae Armantrout on page six, hear it now: She’s become quite the celebrity. Just last week, the San Diego native was awarded the 2010 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry, along with $10,000. The honor was a grand finale to the heap of praise she has received for “Versed,” her tenth volume of poetry, published in 2009. It also received the 2009 National Book Critics Circle Award, and was a finalist for the 2009 National Book Award. Divided into two parts — “Versed” and “Dark Matter” — the 87-poem assortment is typical of Armantrout’s work: cognitive, com- pressed and acute. Armantrout wrote the latter part after being diagnosed with adrenal cortical cancer — or cancer of the adrenal gland — in June 2006. Sixty-three-year-old Armantrout said she was surprised to hear she’d won a Pulitzer — especially on the day before her April 13 birthday. “So far, it is amazingly exciting,” Armantrout said. “It’s really not something I expected. Of course, I thought about winning things, but the Pulitzer was not one of them — that was just like a bolt from the blue.” Since her win, Armantrout has been flooded with congratulations and media attention, including a front-page feature in the San Diego Union-Tribune. See ARMANTROUT page 8 4(205. ;/, *<; 381 1,937 615 108 AFRICAN- AMERICANS ADMITTED MEXICAN- AMERICANS LATINO- AMERICANS AMERICAN- INDIANS WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG MONDAY, APRIL 19, 2010 VOLUME XLII, ISSUE XLVII TAYLOR WEARS SHORT SKIRTS, THEY WEAR T-SHIRTS. PAGE 9 <5*64465-632 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 See CO-OPS page 7 p Nat final University attributes increase in minority applications to bolstered outreach programs. A .S. President Utsav Gupta has recruited university officials to pitch in for a consultant to evaluate moving sports teams to Division-I and the possibility of starting a football team at UCSD. Together, Gupta — along with Chancellor Marye Anne Fox, Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs Penny Rue and Director of Athletics Earl Edwards — hired consultant Carl McAloose from Athletics Staffing and Consulting — a company that specializes in advising universities on the development of their athletics programs. McAloose will begin work this quarter analyzing the university’s budget and determining if either D-I or football is feasible. If so, he will then estimate how much it would cost to implement either plan. See FOOTBALL page 2 Football consultant hired despite incoming A.S. president’s desire to table the team. PHILIP RHIE/GUARDIAN

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MONDAYHeight: 4 ft.

Wind: 3-5 mphWater Temp: 64 F

TUESDAYHeight: 4 ft.

Wind: 4-6 mphWater Temp: 64 F

WEDNESDAYHeight: 4-9 ft.

Wind: 10-12 mphWater Temp: 64 F

THURSDAYHeight: 8-12 ft.Wind: 6-17 mph

Water Temp: 64 F

LOW

$2.92Quick Trip, El Cajon596 N Mollison Ave. & I-8HIGH

$3.8976, Point Loma1704 Rosecrans St. & Nimitz Blvd.

SHOULD PROFESSOR DOMINGUEZ BE PUNISHED FOR HIS VIRTUAL SIT-IN?

6:12 A.M.

7:23 P.M.WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG

MONDAYH 66 L 53

TUESDAYH 64 L 51

WEDNESDAYH 58 L 49

THURSDAYH 60 L 50

√ Yes√ No√ I don’t know

THURSDAY FRIDAYMONDAY TUESDAY

THURSDAYWEDNESDAY

Minority AdmitRate Up 7 Percent

By Ayelet BittonAssociate News Editor

The number of students admit-ted from underrepresented races to UCSD for Fall Quarter 2010 increased dramatically since last year, according to statistics released by the UC Office of the President last week. The admis-sions office accept-ed 16.6 percent — or 3,041 — more black, Hispanic and American-Indian students out of the total admit pool, a 6.9-percent increase from last fall.

It was also a record year for overall applications and admits: 48,073 students applied, compared to last year’s 47, 708, and the total number of students admitted increased by 3.7 percent, or 655 stu-dents. The overall admissions rate was 36.8 percent, down from 38 percent in 2009. A total of 18,334 students were admitted.

There was a rise in the num-ber of minority applicants this year, but Associate Vice Chancellor of Admissions Mae Brown said she attributes the higher admit rate to the university’s augmented publicity and outreach efforts.

“We experienced an increase in applications during the November filing period, which included under-represented students,” Brown said in an e-mail. “We visited high schools, participated in college fairs and used technology to extend our reach throughout the fall recruitment peri-od. We are very excited about our increase in applications.”

A.S. Campuswide Senator and Black Student Union board member Desiree Prevo said the BSU has made recruitment community outreach a priority. This year, the BSU sent out a “Black Book” to black admits detailing cultural outlets on and off campus.

By Sarah SmithSenior Staff Writer

The student-run co-operatives at UCSD have begun redrafting their rent agreement with the university in hopes of reducing their monthly payments to a more sustainable level.

Representatives from the co-ops — including the Che Cafe Collective, the UCSD Food Co-operative, Groundwork Books and the UCSD General Store Co-operative — recently decided to request that they no longer be required to pay rent for their on-campus spaces.

Though they said that this is still the ultimate goal of negotiations with the administration, the focus of their April 16 meeting with Director of University Centers Paul Terzino, A.S. President Utsav Gupta and Graduate Student Association President Alex James shifted instead to simply low-ering their rent.

All those present at the meeting agreed it was time to redraft the rent contract between the co-ops and the university.

Co-op representatives also requested that their Master Space Agreement be reworded to define them as student organizations rather than businesses. This request, they said, is in response to financial hard-ship the co-ops fell into following a remodeling of the Student Center and the opening of Price Center.

James said the co-ops believe their current rental rates are negatively

A potential pay-as-you-can policy would allow the student co-ops a chance to get back on their feet.

See ADMISSIONS page 7

See CO-OPS page 7

In case you failed to notice the giant three-quarter ad page dedicated to lit-erature professor Rae Armantrout on

page six, hear it now: She’s become quite the celebrity.

Just last week, the San Diego native was awarded the 2010 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry, along with $10,000. The honor was a grand finale to the heap of praise she has received

for “Versed,” her tenth volume of poetry, published in 2009. It also received the 2009

National Book Critics Circle Award, and was a finalist for the 2009 National Book Award.

Divided into two parts — “Versed” and “Dark Matter” — the 87-poem assortment

is typical of Armantrout’s work: cognitive, com-pressed and acute. Armantrout wrote the latter part after being diagnosed with adrenal cortical cancer — or cancer of the adrenal gland — in June 2006.

Sixty-three-year-old Armantrout said she was surprised to hear she’d won a Pulitzer — especially on the day before her April 13 birthday.

“So far, it is amazingly exciting,” Armantrout said. “It’s really not something I expected. Of course, I thought about winning things, but the Pulitzer was not one of them — that was just like a bolt from the blue.”

Since her win, Armantrout has been flooded with congratulations and media attention, including a front-page feature in the San Diego Union-Tribune.

See ARMANTROUT page 8

381

1,937

615

108

AFRICAN- AMERICANS

ADMITTED

MEXICAN- AMERICANS

LATINO-AMERICANS

AMERICAN-INDIANS

WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORGMONDAY, APRIL 19, 2010VOLUME XLII, ISSUE XLVII

TAYLORWEARSSHORTSKIRTS,THEYWEART-SHIRTS.PAGE 9

See CO-OPS page 7

pNatfinal

University attributes increase in minority applications to bolsteredoutreach programs.

A.S. President Utsav Gupta has recruited university officials to pitch in for a

consultant to evaluate moving sports teams to Division-I and the possibility of starting a football team at UCSD.

Together, Gupta — along with Chancellor Marye Anne Fox, Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs Penny Rue and Director of Athletics Earl Edwards — hired consultant Carl McAloose from Athletics Staffing and Consulting — a company that specializes in advising universities on the development of their athletics programs.

McAloose will begin work this quarter analyzing the university’s budget and determining if either D-I or football is feasible. If so, he will then estimate how much it would cost to implement either plan.

See FOOTBALL page 2

Football consultant hired despite incoming A.S. president’s desireto table the team.

PH

ILIP

RH

IE/G

UA

RD

IAN

2 THE UCSD GUARDIAN MONDAY, APRIL 19, 2010 NEWS

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The $28,000 McAloose is charg-ing for his services will be split evenly among A.S. Council, the chancellor’s fund, the vice chancellor of student affair’s fund and the athletics depart-ment, according to Gupta.

“We are getting a good deal with this con-sultant,” Gupta said “We have debated the issue of Division-I sports and a football team every year I have been on A.S. [Council], and now we will actually find out the costs of these things.” 

He praised the partner-ship between the council and the university depart-ments involved in hiring McAloose. According to Gupta, Chancellor Marye Anne Fox was the first to suggest splitting the cost of hiring a consul-tant.

“We have set up an amazing part-nership with the administration so that A.S. [Council] is really only pay-

ing one-fourth of the total costs,” Gupta said. “It is an unprecedented level of partnership.”

Chancellor Fox said she was will-ing to help pay for the consultant in order to explore all options on the table for the athletics department.

“Intercollegiate ath-letics are an important part of the college expe-rience for our students,” she said in an e-mail. “UC San Diego has grown over the last 50 years to become one of the top public universities in the nation; this is an oppor-tunity to explore taking UC San Diego athletics to the next level as well.”

Fox added that the consultant’s findings will

determine whether the administration is interested in putting money or time into a football team or move to D-I. 

“The purpose of contracting with a consultant is to provide the campus with research and recommendations

regarding the feasibility of making a move from Division-II to Division-I athletics and the optimal mix of sports, based on the size, resources and fundraising capabilities of the university,” Fox said. “The consul-tant’s findings will inform decision about any future steps.”

The $7,000 cost paid by the A.S. Council will be taken from enterprise income: money generated by council-owned businesses, such as A.S. Soft Reserves and A.S. Lecture Notes.

The results of the consultant’s study will be renewed by the 2010-11 A.S. Council, which will then decide whether to pursue the issue. The new council will take office Week Seven of this quarter.

Campuswide Senator and A.S. President-elect Wafa Ben Hassine said that she was in favor of hiring the con-sultant, as well as the proposal to move the UCSD athletics program to D-I.

“I do support the passage of leg-islation for the $7,000,” Ben Hassine said. “There has been a lot of debate about football and Division-I sports, so it will be nice to see if these options are possible.”

However, she said she would not support the creation of a football team, even if the consultant determined the idea was financially feasible.

“I am against forming the foot-ball team right now, because I don’t

Bicycle CommuteChallenge

Get Earth Week rolling! Commute by bike April 21 – May 21.

Sign up and log commute miles online.

Compete individually or as a team.

Visit www.ucsd.edu/go/bike and click Bicycle Commute Challenge.

Commute Challenge 2010

BicycleC

word on the streetA&PS Marketing & Communications

TWO COKES SHORT By Sam Pelle

AS PER USUAL By Dami Lee

▶ FOOTBALL, from page 1

CORRECTIONAn article published on April 5

titled "The Race Is On" incor-

rectly stated that A.S. President

Utsav Gupta is the first president

to run for reelection. Carla

Tesak ran for reelection in 1994,

and Coleen Sabatini did the

same in 1997. Both won.

The Guardian corrects all errors

brought to the attention of the

editors. Corrections can be sent to

[email protected].

See CONSULTANT page 7“I am against forming the football team right now, because I don’t believe it is fiscally responsible at the moment.”WAFA BEN HASSINE

A.S. PRESIDENT-ELECT

NEWS MONDAY, APRIL 19, 2010 THE UCSD GUARDIAN 3

EarthWeek.ucsd.edu

Trash sortE-waste disposal

Bike Commute ChallengeGreen Job Fair

“Tapped” movie screeningClean Car Show

Tree planting

Take the SustainabiliTWEET Challenge! Follow Twitter.com/SustainUCSD and Facebook: UC San Diego

Sustainability to receive daily Earth Week challenges. You could win a new bike!

Get details at earthweek.ucsd.edu.

Celebrate UC San Diego Earth Week! April 19-23

SustainabiliTweet it!

AND

By Jerry ToContributing Writer

A new study shows sleep depriva-tion in humans can reduce the effects of clinical depression. The study sug-gests that there may be an upside to the overworked, under-rested lifestyle so common among college students.

Clinical depression is a medical condition that affects nearly 6 percent of the U.S. population. Symptoms include a decrease in self-esteem, liveliness and the ability to carry out daily tasks. 

According to various cases — ana-lyzed in more than 75 papers over the last 40 years, if a victim of depression stays up all night, or even just half the night, symptoms of depression tend to disappear for the rest of the day.

In particular, mothers who have forgone a day of sleep have reported that the symptoms of postpartum depression — a common condition that develops during the first few months after childbirth — are dimin-ished. 

The late UCSD professor J. Christian Gillin used brain-imaging technology to search for the sleep-depression link.

By studying brain scans of patients before and after being deprived of sleep, he found that an area of the brain in the cerebral cortex called the anterior cingulate cortex was over-active in depressed patients. After being deprived of sleep, however, the patients demonstrated normal levels of activity in the ACC.

Helen Mayberg, a researcher at

Emory University, furthered Gillin’s research by electronically stimulat-ing the anterior cingulate cortex in a group of patients. When the patients were sleeping, the stimulation inter-rupts normal brain activity by discon-necting the cortex from the sensory input. This reduced the symptoms of depression among test subjects. 

Electrical stimulation may provide those patients with the treatment they need.

“For some people, the benefits are miraculous,” Sejnowski said.

According to Gillin, sleep depriva-tion is relatively safe. It’s side effects are similar to those of other antide-pressant treatments, like medication or bright light. However, more major risks of overnight sleep deprivation are mania in bipolar patients and seizures in patients with a history of convulsions.

In addition, patients cannot be deprived of sleep on a regular basis, as that could create hazardous situa-tions. Accoridng to Gillin, operating a vehicle without having slept is as dangerous as driving drunk.

Although sleep deprivation may seem like a quick home remedy for depression, long-term side effects can include irritability, hallucinations and memory lapses.

“Long-term deprivation of sleep is really a dangerous thing,” Terry Sejnowski, principle investigator for the Computational Neurobiology Laboratory at the Salk Institute, said.

“Although we don’t understand why we sleep, we know for sure that it is essential, in that sleep deprivation [has] led to serious accidents,” he said.

Many questions about sleep — such as why some animals sleep less than others, or why we sleep a certain amount each day — are still unknown to researchers. 

“The biggest surprise is that we still don’t know why we sleep,” Sejnowski said.

He added that he hopes technol-ogy will advance to allow depressed patients to be treated with electrical stimulation in the future.

Readers can contact Jerry To at [email protected].

LIGHTS AND SIRENSFriday, April 91:40 a.m.: Suspicious person▶ A male student was seen “vomit-ing out the window” at the Village Building 1. Field interview adminis-tered.2:35 p.m.: Citizen contact▶ A white male was seen holding a sign that read “I need physical inter-action” with a box of matches next to him. Checks OK. 5:26 p.m.: Welfare check▶ A student reported someone yelling that “they wanted to kill someone” on the sixth floor of Tenaya Hall. Quiet on arrival. 11:54 p.m.: Grand theft▶ Two white males were reported as stealing lab equipment — specifically a “small water bath” — at the Medical Teaching Facility. Report taken.

Saturday, April 1012 p.m.: Missing person▶ A five-year-old girl with short brown hair was reported missing while “taking a gymnastics class [and] walking to use the drinking fountain.” Checks OK. 1:36 p.m.: Chemical spill▶ A virus had been spilled at the Johns Hopkins lab, but was “wiped off the floor with bleach.” Referred.

Monday, April 111:01 a.m.: Disturbance▶ A student reported hearing loud screams of “I’m going to fucking kill you” in the parking lot by Brennan Hall. Unable to locate.12:48 p.m.: Suspicious person▶ A person wearing a purple shirt was reported as on the roof and trying to hide. Checks OK.

Tuesday, April 131:03 a.m.: Suspicious person▶ An officer reported someone liv-ing in a van at Lot 104 in La Jolla. Information only.t

11:55 a.m.: Citizen Contact ▶ A male was reported as playing guitar on the edge of the roof of the Humanities and Social Sciences building. Checks OK.4:06 p.m.: Medical aid▶ An unconscious female who did not speak English was reported as seizur-ing, with blood coming out of her mouth, at Price Center. Referred to other agency.8:10 p.m.: Welfare check▶ A woman and baby were reported as screaming outside a building near the Regents Pool. Gone on arrival.9:53 p.m.: Suspicious person▶ An approximately 40-year-old Hispanic male in beige clothing was reported talking to females at Center Hall. Gone on arrival.

Wednesday, April 147:40 a.m.: Suspicious person▶ A homeless white male in his 50s, wearing a blue shirt and jeans, was reported as possibly lighting fire-crackers at the School of Medicine. Gone on arrival.2:27 p.m.: Citizen contact▶ Three males were reported as hand-ing out Koala issues with racist mate-rial at Geisel Library. Information only.

Thursday, April 159:43 a.m.: Suspicious person▶ A white 28-year-old male was reported as wearing a large, black backpack and looking “out of place” at Expedition Way. Information only.2:44 p.m.: Citizen contact▶ A male at the Matthews Apartments was reported as “being passive aggres-sive,” sending the reporting party Facebook messages and having prob-lems with her friends. Information only.

— Compiled by Connie QianSenior Staff Writer

Researchers investigate electric stimulation of patients’ brains asan alternative.

RONNIE STEINITZ/GUARDIAN

4 THE UCSD GUARDIAN WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG/OPINIONMONDAY, APRIL 19, 2010

[email protected]

OUT OF CONTEXT Props to the AP Stylebook — the grammar bible for print media — for finally entering the 21st century and changing “Web site” to “website.”

Flops to Spirit Airlines for now charging up to $45 for carry-ons — but props to American, Delta, US Airways,

JetBlue and United for vowing not to follow suit. “ There is no limit, and that could be dangerous.”

WAFA BEN HASSINEA.S. President-elect

TALKING POINTS

After a com-petitive

Associated Students cam-paign season, A.S. President Utsav Gupta and A.S. President-elect

Wafa Ben Hassine sat down with the Guardian to discuss some major issues and controversies the council faced this year, and those it may face in 2010-11.

The two also commented on what they think the responsibili-ties of councilmembers — in par-ticular, the president — should be. Ben Hassine said she envisions a council with a greater focus on external efforts, such as lobbying Sacramento to fight student-fee increases. Gupta, however, said he believes the council should concentrate primarily on internal efforts — ensuring the $3 million that students pay into the council ends up serving their best interests.

Other topics included the possi-bility of opening an A.S. store in Price Center East, which Ben Hassine said would allow students to sell items such as “sweatshirts with Greek letters, organi-zational T-shirts, sustainable pens [and] sustainable bottles.”

Gupta was more wary of the financial burden such an undertak-ing would present. He pointed out that the initial investment might be as much as $100,000.

For two councilmembers who, only one week prior, were compet-ing in a hotly contested race for the same post, Gupta and Ben Hassine remained calm and collected throughout the discussion. Gupta insisted his primary focus — now that he’s a lame duck — is to make the transition as smooth as possible for next year’s councilmembers.

WAFA BEN HASSINE

UTSAV GUPTA

STUDENT COUNCIL

Guardian: I’d like to start this discussion by address-ing the office of the president specifically. Utsav, every A.S. president has a different idea in mind for what role the council should play. In your mind, what should the role of an A.S. president be here on campus?Utsav Gupta: I think the primary role for the A.S. president is to represent the undergraduate interests to the best of his or her ability to the general campus. In a lot of ways, we represent a funnel where we have the administration here at the top, students here at the bot-tom. The only real connection they have is the Associated Students, and it’s primarily a position where you refer information back and forth and try to move the student interest forward. Wafa Ben Hassine: I also believe that the office of the president, in particular, is kind of a channel between students and the administration. It holds responsibil-ity to council that’s ensuring that council is on the same page, and that we have good working relations with outside relations besides Associated Students. It’s showing the general population of students working together and having fun on this campus. G: Utsav, you have taken a bit of criticism for alleg-edly going around the council and pursuing your own agenda — maybe going around the council, via your own staff that you built up around you within the office of the president. How do you respond to that kind of criticism? UG: In regard to the staff of the president, I think that this is the first year where we’ve actually had a real staff working on specific projects and goals within the office of the president. In terms of going around council, there is no real way to go around council. I would ask for a specific example where we’ve been able to move around council in some way or another. The staff was working mostly on policy shifts and how to reach out to administrators, bringing policies forward to council,

doing background research work, driving policies with approval from council, researching policies to ensure we bring the best-educated decisions to council.G: Are there any projects started this year in particu-lar that you would like to pursue next year?WBH: There are quite a few. One of the ones that was recently brought up by Tobias Haglund was the A.S. store. I personally have not worked on it, but this year

he’s been doing a lot of research on it. It’s an exciting idea, where students can share what they have and sell to the general public if they want — sweat-shirts with Greek letters, organizational T-shirts, sustainable pens, sustainable bottles. It’s something I’m definitely excited about. We went over the brief business plan that he made up, and I’m looking forward to that. UG: A.S. store would be an investment, and an investment that the council has to decide whether to make. Next council will decide, given appropriate research and consideration. I would recommend

to council next year to really take a close look at the numbers and ensure that if we are creating an enter-prise that it is profitable, and — if we don’t expect it to be profitable — whether it’s worth creating a new ser-vice in form of a retail place. A.S. store would represent at least [a] three- to five-year commitment, and the one-time cost would be the largest form of cost, in the tens of thousands of dollars — potentially $100,000. G: While we’re on financial issues, let’s talk about the A.S. budget. Wafa: During your campaign, you discussed the idea of cutting wasteful spending. What are the things you currently want to address in put-ting together your budget for next year?WBH: I don’t know what could be wasteful at this point. I haven’t formed a committee yet, but particular attention is to the Sun God Festival budget because it’s really big, and that’s a very big chunk of our $3 million.

Last week, after a long day of work, I came home with scalded toes.

That’s right, scalded toes. It’s a sen-sation I never thought I would experi-ence during my undergraduate career, but the life of a dining-hall employee is full of painful little surprises.

It goes without saying that my line of work isn’t very glamorous, but it can be amusing. Unfortunately, most students don’t know what dining-hall employees must endure to bring you the clean plate on which the vaguely Asian-style daily special is served.

You’d never guess, but that spotless porcelain tray beneath your sandwich all started with an e-mail from my boss over spring break. It is a testa-

ment to my social life that — along with checking my grades — learning my work schedule for next quarter consumed my thoughts over vacation. All it took was a foray into my ACS mailbox to reveal my frightening fate: In the lottery of dining-hall assign-ments, I had drawn the dish room.

I know, I know: Life is really what you make of it, and all that glass-half-full crap. But after a long day of classes, it’s pretty much impossible to walk into a small room containing nothing but a swamp of greasy food scraps with a smile on your face.

At the sight of the dish room, whatever shred of optimism I’d clung to before suddenly disintegrated. I trudged through the mustard-yellow doorway with head hung low, clad in a heavy hairnet. I couldn’t help it. All I could think about was the likelihood of one of my coworkers accidently gunning me with the wayward pres-surized hose or me dousing myself in rancid hamburger water.

But there was no time to waste: The constant flow of dirty dishes waits for no one. Not rain nor sleet nor apocalyptic earthquake can stop the gustatory flow of thousands of hungry college students. So I sucked it up and approached the most stubborn of dish room challenges: cleaning the pans of white rice. After a couple of hours in the cooker, the chemical structure of rice apparently forms a bond with

“I don’t know what [council spending] could be wasteful at this point.

WAFA BEN HASSINEA.S. PRESIDENT-ELECT

THIS INTERVIEW HAS BEEN ABRIDGED FOR PRINT. FOR THE COMPLETE TRANSCRIPT, VISIT WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG/OPINION.

Behind the

[email protected]

Counter

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

See COUNTER page 5

Dear Editor,

According to a recent study, the U.S. — which makes up 5 percent of the world’s population — houses 25 percent of the world’s inmates. Our incarceration rate (714 per 100,000 residents) is almost 40-per-cent greater than that of our nearest competitors; it is 6.2 times that of Canada, 7.8 times that of France and 12.3 times that of Japan.

Of all the 50 states, California leads the way in incarceration, in large part due to its Three Strikes Law. There are still thousands of men and women serving life sen-tences in California for petty, non-

violent drug-related crimes. Never before has a state denied

basic liberty to so many of its citi-zens. Two-thirds of the inmates in California’s prisons are there for property and drug-related offenses. The incarceration of nonviolent offenders continues to grow to this present day.

Until the 1970s, the corrections system was commonly seen as a way to prepare offenders to rejoin society. But since then, the focus has shifted from rehabilitation to punishment.

The new system of punitive ide-als is aided by a new relationship between the media, politicians and the public. A handful of cases in which a predator does an awful thing to an innocent person receive exces-sive media attention and engender

public outrage. The attention typically bears

no relation to the frequency of the particular type of crime, yet laws — such as California’s Three Strikes Law, which can give a mandatory life sentence to a nonviolent offender — are born, and political careers are made on the basis of the public’s reaction to media coverage of such crimes.

California’s incarceration rates are out of control. The state prison system should not be allowed to con-tinue to drain state assets for politi-cal gains or ideologies while break-ing the backs of the state’s education system and other human-resource organizations.

—Larry WallaceInmate, Folsom State Prison

Dear Editor,Recently, an article was published

by UCLA English professor Robert N. Watson about the profitability of the humanities. Watson demonstrates that the humanities do, in fact, turn a profit through student fees, which is possible through low operating costs.

The myth that the sciences typically bail out the humanities has been a recurring debate during the University of California’s current budget crisis, mentioned not only in public forums but also on television by UC President Mark G. Yudof. This is an important article Watson has written, and I think that it could

only benefit the public discussion to bring this to light.

The original article may be found at www.today.ucla.edu/portal/ut/bottom-line-shows-humanities-real-ly-155771.aspx.

—Matthew Brooks Senior, Sixth College

▶ The Guardian welcomes letters from its readers. All letters must be no longer than 500 words, typed, double-spaced and signed with a name and applicable title. Letters must also contain a phone number. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity. Letters may be dropped off at the Guardian office on the second floor of the Student Center or e-mailed. Send all letters to:

The UCSD GuardianOpinion Editor

9500 Gilman Dr. 0316La Jolla, CA 92093-0316

e-mail: [email protected]

ANDREW OH/GUARDIAN

See A.S. PRESIDENCY page 6

ALLISON GAUSS

OPINION MONDAY, APRIL 19, 2010 THE UCSD GUARDIAN 5

Financial Aid Offi ce 2010–2011

To be considered for the best fi nancial aid package, you must have submitted your FAFSA by March 2 and submit all missing documents and/or clear all processing holds by the May 1 deadline. Applications completed after the deadline WILL NOT be considered for University grants, SEOG, Federal Work Study, University or Perkins Loans.

If you haven’t completed the 2010–2011 FAFSA yet, you should do so as soon as possible. You may use the online application at www.fafsa.ed.gov. You should also meet the May 1 deadline for missing documents and/or clear all processing holds in the event funds become available for late FAFSA fi lers.

complete and submit your verifi cation worksheet, 2009 federal tax returns,

If you have been selected for verifi cation,

and/or other information by the MAY 1 deadline.

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FINANCIAL AID DEADLINEMAY 1, 2010,GET YOURS.

A DROP FROM THE INKWELL By Priscilla Lázaro

the metal pan. Something about the nature of the atoms involved. Being a literature major, I don’t quite under-stand the logistics of this process, but hours of grimy, wet research on the subject have me convinced that the rice can only be removed from the pan by blowtorch. Or, of course, 10 to 15 minutes of miserable manual labor.

After diligently scraping away the superhuman sludge on a number of pots, pans, dishes and cups, I sent them through the dish machine. To awaken the dish machine every morn-ing, one must push several buttons, pull a lever and plead for 20 minutes. The dish machine is a fickle mistress — and she must be kept happy. If you don’t load the dishes in properly,

she will spit them into the gutter, and they will clog the conveyor belt. If you don’t pick up the clean dishes, the trays will pile up until she’s jammed and refuses to work any longer. And if you don’t keep your queen stocked with detergent, she’ll screech at you in pained hunger. The machine — even on good days — emits a cacophony of clanks, hums and buzzes.

My only hope for sanity was blast-ing AC/DC. At the end of the convey-or belt is a shelf supporting my only form of refuge: a trusty boom box. So, as long as my coworkers aren’t look-ing, I bang my head to Rise Against or practice my glide to R. Kelly.

Sadly, this very same dance therapy was the cause of my poor little scalded toes. Apparently, steaming hot

water was draining out of a spigot at the end of the dish machine, and had formed a steaming puddle right in the middle of my dance floor. As I slid my sneakered foot across the tile, hot water soaked through my shoe and seared my piggies.

You’d think a machine spewing hot water on the floor would be proper cause for concern; my manager, how-ever, insists it’s supposed to do that. To prevent future burns, she said, I should keep a bucket there. Sure thing, boss.

Eventually, the clock struck 10 p.m. I took one last look at the dish room and tossed my dirty apron in its proper pile. I was done fighting chemical bonds and busting embar-rassing moves in the dish room — at least for the day.

▶ COUNTER,

QUICKTAKES

Last week, the U.S. Library of Congress officially Tweeted

its plan to archive all Twitter.com records dating back to the site’s inception in 2006. Despite its hon-orable intention to capture and preserve American culture as it is made, the records would infringe on personal privacy.

In the past, the Library of Congress has cataloged media like the first draft of the Declaration of Independence and historically sig-nificant films and literature. Its move to permanently archive millions of personal updates — often detailing trivial daily thoughts — also debases the significance of other, more his-torical holdings.

Whether Tweets regarding one’s personal life are involved or not, the potential litigation that could result from dissatisfied users should be enough for the Library of Congress to at least open up the issue to a public forum.

Archiving the posts in the Library of Congress unjustly strips the site’s users of their ability to make posts visible only to users they’ve chosen, and to delete their accounts alto-gether — instead making every last 100-character rant indelible public property.

The announcement underscores the huge impact Twitter has had on American culture and communica-tion. But having only just celebrated its fourth anniversary, Twitter has not stood the test of time and could eventually end up being just a passing fad — which the Library of Congress has no business in archiving.

—Andrew KimStaff Writer

The new plan to archive all Tweets is borderline ridiculous. The word

“tweet” alone drags a nail-on-chalk-board scratch across an institution of historical prestige.

However, as useless as the project seems, it poses no real invasion of privacy. Whether publicizing their

opinions on health-care reform or the number of times they can burp the ABCs, Twitter junk-ies have full knowledge they’re hand-ing over

the rights to their daily musings to Twitter.com.

If Tweeters are willing to expose their innermost thoughts online, the Library isn’t crossing any new lines by using their stream of consciousness for good old-fashioned research.

It goes without saying that, most of the time, the grammatically obscene words of wisdom posted to the website — especially by our celebrity friends — fall in the category of meaningless gibberish. But, however superficial, the Twitter database is a telling chronicle of contemporary culture. There’s no harm in dusting off a corner in the country’s most highbrow library for the world’s least formal news outlet, especially when it comes to Internet phenomenons like the reaction to the Iranian election protests. Even if that also means constituting smart-phone bathroom updates as history.

—Kelsey MarrujoSenior Staff Writer

There’s no harm in dusting off a corner in the country’s most highbrow library for the world’s least formal news outlet.

6 THE UCSD GUARDIAN MONDAY, APRIL 19, 2010 OPINION

A.S. PRESIDENCY CONTINUED FROM PAGE 4

One of the first things as president I will do is charge a committee to look at the budget and make sure we’re allocating our money, and where it’s going is where it’s being spent — like the Student Promoted Access Center for Education and Service, the Sustainability Resource Center, what have you — with programs that are being carried out. I want to make sure money’s being allocated wisely and appropriately to these different constituencies. G: So when you said you were going to cut wasteful spending throughout your campaign and endorsement interview, you weren’t referring to any specific line item or any specific spending? You were being general? WBH: I believe that we should look into if there is wasteful spending and eliminate it, because I do believe it’s part of institutionalizing activism, which is ensuring that the students’ fees are going to things and programs that benefit them — that we aren’t putting it to things that aren’t being carried out, or programs that look good on paper and don’t have general results coming out. I’ll charter a com-mittee to look into that and see what in the budget might be useful. G: You mentioned responsible over-allocation. In your mind, has there been any irresponsible over-alloca-tion? How should the council fund

media organizations, and should the council’s re-examination of the existing guidelines continue? Are media orgs being funded too much? For example, No. 15 magazine is getting $9,000 for one 3,000-print run. UG: When I talked about responsible over-allocation, I meant considering

how much we’re going to over-allocate by sticking with the num-bers through-out the year. A.S. Council decided not to stick with the numbers we decided on, and that’s

irresponsible over-allocation when you take line items such as the media orgs’ funding at $45,000 per year and decide to allocate an additional $20,000 over that.

That is going to strip even more into the carryforward, and because of those specific actions, we may go into the negative for next year and dip into our reserve. I think that’s a dan-gerous precedent to set — to continu-ously over-allocate line items — and it’s one that’s going to come back and bite the council. If they want to allo-cate $65,000 worth of media funding

next year, where is that $20,000 going to come from? G: Wafa, you’ve voted on many of these allocations. In your mind, has there been any irresponsible over-allocation?WBH: Whatever the students pay into [the A.S. Council] should go back to them the year that they’re here at UCSD. I think it’s really important that we keep our level of mandate reserves and level of car-ryforward in the minimum. Right now, it’s around $1 million, which is a third of our budget and quite a bit of money that’s not really necessary at this point. A lot of student orgs, multicultural orgs, what have you, all want more funding, and I do believe that we could allocate a little differ-ently this year. The Vice President of Finance-elect Andrew Ang and I are thinking about increasing the stu-dent-org operating funds from $400 to maybe $600 or $800 — and this also depends on how we fit every-thing else into the budget as well. G: What kind of financial planning goes into determining whether there’s going to be too much alloca-tion taking place, to the point where you have to run another student referendum?WBH: Doing the budget is — from what I know — it’s a balance of hav-ing enough of mandate reserves and carryforward and a balance of not

spending too much. And you want to try to avoid running referenda at all costs, but we’re actually in really good shape right now because our source of funding is guaranteed. And it’s quite a bit of money, so we have to make that distinction.

You brought up media orgs — there are media-org guidelines that we aren’t really paying attention to, certain things like you have to fund 20 percent of your printing through advertising, and I feel like we should look into those more in order to determine how media orgs are funded and how we allocate media funding. G: Would you be a proponent of putting a cap on media-org fund-ing?WBH: Not a cap, though it’s a possi-bility. We should look into the guide-lines more to ensure that we don’t overspend. G: The guidelines seem kind of arbi-trary. It seems like it’s kind of up to the Student Org Funding Advisory Board and the associate vice presi-dent of student organizations to determine what those recommenda-tions are. WBH: The guidelines aren’t really arbitrary. They’re there, they’re just not being followed. I’ve talked to the VP finance now and VP finance-elect, and there were mistakes that happened last year that we’ll try to avoid. If we’re obliged to put a cap on

media orgs, we have to make sure we fund different orgs fairly, but maybe that’s an option we could consider. We need to revisit guidelines and ensure that we’re following them, which could mean that there’s a lot of research to be done into that before we formulate the budget this year. As president-elect, I’m meeting with people, discussing what they’d like to see in the budget, any recommenda-tions — but that’s one thing in par-ticular we should look into more than anything. There is no limit and that could be dangerous. G: I’d like to end on a slightly lighter note. Who are you looking forward to most at the Sun God Festival?UG: Definitely Drake.WBH: Michelle Branch.

“We may go into the negative for next year.”

UTSAV GUPTAA.S. PRESIDENT

ANDREW OH/GUARDIAN

NEWS MONDAY, APRIL 19, 2010 THE UCSD GUARDIAN 7

For more information,call 858.405.6677

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impacting their progress and ability to serve students.

“They had concerns that the funds they were paying the university was money that they could otherwise be putting back into the co-ops, to make the co-ops better,” James said.

Representatives at the meeting from the co-ops, the university, the A.S. Council and the GSA agreed to create a committee charged with drafting the new Master Space Agreement, which would dictate rent for the next two years.

The committee will be comprised of two representatives from each organization except for the university, which will be repre-sented solely by Terzino.

Until the committee drafts and finalizes the new MSA, the co-ops will continue to abide by the terms of their 2006 MSA. This agreement — which should have been rene-gotiated in the 2008-09 school year, but was defaulted upon when the co-ops refused to sign an amendment to the contract — has two sets of guidelines built in.

The first set allows for a two-year lease, but is defined to only apply as long as the co-ops continue their payment plan and agree to a new lease after the two years are up. Because the co-ops did not agree to the 2008-

09 contract, they fell back onto the second set of guidelines.

Under these secondary rules, the co-ops abide by a month-to-month pay plan — which they will continue to do until the new space agreement is drafted.

However, one of Terzino’s suggestions at the meeting was a pay-as-you-can policy, which would lessen the financial burden on the co-ops until a new agreement is worked out. According to Rubens, this means that if the co-ops do not have the funds to com-pletely cover their rent, they will not be repri-manded or evicted by the university.

The committee will continue to meet throughout Spring Quarter. James said the meeting on Friday did not produce a finite consensus about what would be done in response to the co-ops’ requests.

“The only official agreement that I heard in the last meeting was that we all agreed to have another meeting,” James said. “I hope we can get it done by the end of the year, because the whole constituency of the committee will change if it had to continue into next year — and that will complicate things a lot.”

The next meeting will take place on Friday, April 24.

Readers can contact Sarah Smith at [email protected].

▶ CO-OPS, from page 1

believe it is fiscally responsible at the moment,” Ben Hassine said. “Regardless, a football team involves student fees. There is no way that there could be a football team created without stu-dent fees, and I don’t agree with that.”

Ben Hassine added that the university should prioritize lowering the cost of education over acquiring a football team. However, she said she was in favor of moving current teams to D-I because it wouldn’t require as much money.

“We need to be investing in other things like scholarship programs and ensuring that students with UCSD degrees are able to find jobs later on,” she said. “I love football, and I’m not opposed to having a football team ever, I

just don’t think it is the right time now. As for Division-I sports, I think it is great to have a consultant helping us see if that’s possible.”

Despite Ben Hassine’s reluctance to pursue a football team, Gupta said McAloose’s work is still valuable, because it will provide concrete financial projections for the university to review.

“I hope that [Ben Hassine will] at least give students a choice,” he said. “It’s an issue students care about, and it’s the role of the president to be flexible and not push personal opinions.”

McAloose will submit a proposal by the end of the summer.

Readers can contact Megha Ram at [email protected].

▶ CONSULTANT, from page 2

“The Black Book is an African-American resource guide,” Prevo said. “We want to show them they have a community, rather than just the 1.3 percent everyone publicizes.”

Prevo said the BSU also organized a Black Senior Weekend to coincide with admit day, allow-ing black admits to spend more time exploring the campus, and experiencing life at UCSD firsthand.

This marks the first year UCSD implemented a waitlist in its admissions process, offering 1,165 students the opportunity to remain on the list. According to Brown, the number of those students granted admission will depend on how many cur-rent admits choose to enroll.

Brown said the waitlist will help the university more effectively control enrollment levels, allow-ing for more students to be admitted should fewer enroll than originally projected.

“At this point, we are satisfied with the waitlist process,” Brown said. “From all indications, the UC system will continue to use the waitlist process for fall 2011.”

Last quarter, the BSU called for the university to change its admissions process from the traditional comprehensive review system — which evaluates

applicants by assigning points to each compo-nent of their application — to the holistic review process used by UC Berkeley and UCLA. The holistic review process evaluates an application in its entirety. Brown said the UCSD Committee on Admissions is responsible for investigating the new program.

“The faculty is responsible for developing and approving any changes in the admission policy,” Brown said. “At this point, the committee is cur-rently conducting research and analysis on holistic review. In addition, several meetings are being planned to familiarize various faculty committees, student groups and staff with both holistic and comprehensive review processes.”

Brown said she is uncertain when a holistic review process would be implemented, but said both forms of evaluating applications are effective.

“Both holistic review and comprehensive review adhere to the guidelines approved by the Board of Admissions & Relations with Schools,” Brown said. “Our analysis shows significant agree-ment in outcomes between both processes.”

Readers can contact Ayelet Bitton at [email protected].

▶ ADMISSIONS, from page 1

PARTY FOR HAITI

ANDREW OH/GUARDIAN

MONDAY, APRIL 19, 2010

[email protected]

8 THE UCSD GUARDIAN

becomes d inne r ][ so tha t l e t t e r

Armantrout first began working at UCSD in 1981 as a part-time lecturer. Nearly 30 years later — a staple professor for LTWR 8B: Writing Poetry — she insists her appreciation for the written word has only increased.

“I always knew that I wanted to write poetry,” she said. Her mother would often read poetry aloud when she was a child, fostering a respect of the written word that bloomed as she got older. Down the line, Armantrout found herself most drawn to prehensile poets like Emily Dickinson, whose cerebral conceits and economical approach had a heavy influence on Armantrout’s own poetry.

In the preface to “Veil” — a 2001 selection of Armantrout’s poems — fellow poet and critic Ron Silliman described her poetry as “the lit-erature of the anti-lyric, those poems that at first glance appear contained and perhaps even simple, but which upon the slightest examination rapidly provoke a sort of vertigo effect as element after element begins to spin wildly toward more radical ... possibilities.”

After transferring from San Diego State to UC Berkeley in 1969, Armantrout found herself sur-rounded by a gyre of Vietnam War protests and social activism. It was there that fellow students noticed her budding poetic prowess and encour-

U N C O M M O N F O L K

2008PULITZER PRIZE

in Poetry

2009The Shadow

of SiriusW.S. MERWIN

Time andMaterials

ROBERT HASS

FailurePHILIP

SCHULTZ

2007Native Guard

NATASHA TRETHEWEY

2010

VersedRAE ARMANTROUT

2006Late Wife

CLAUDIA EMERSON&

After a long career in poetry, literature professor R A E A R M A N T R O U T recently won a Pulitzer and $10,000, clearly situating herself

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ARMANTROUT , from page 1

The ghosts swarm.They speak as oneperson. Eachloves you. Eachhas left somethingundone.

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B Y N E D A S A L A M A T / A S S O C I A T E F O C U S E D I T O R P H O T O B Y E R I K J E P S E N /GUARD IAN

FOCUS MONDAY, APRIL 19, 2010 THE UCSD GUARDIAN 9

A free staged reading of OBAMANATION by Lou-Lou Igbokwe

858.534.4574

EVERYTHING NICE by Stephanie TImmOYSTER by Ronald McCants

PHANTOM BAND by Krista Knight One Acts: IN A WORD by Lauren Yee MUZUNGU by David Myers

INFOCUS MUIR MUSICAL WELCOMES THE LORAX TROLLEY

Last Friday, about 15 to 20 cast members from the student organization Muir Musical performed the opening number from their “Seussical the

Musical” production, “Oh, the Thinks You Can Think” — but this time it wasn’t in the safety of their Mandeville Auditorium set. Instead, they ushered the unveiling of the San Diego Metropolitan Transit System’s new trolley.

The trolley — a collaboration between MTS and Dr. Seuss Enterprises — is painted with scenes from The Lorax, a children’s book written by Theodor Geisel — of UCSD’s famous spaceship library.

The words “Go Green!” are also painted on the car, along with the warning: “Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. It’s not” — a line from Theodor Geisel’s well-known story.

The event kicked off a series of events in honor of Earth Day on April 22, including an appearance by the Lorax-themed trolley at UCSD’s Clean Car Show this upcoming Thursday. It will also be running on the Orange and Green lines over the next few months.

Audrey Geisel — Theodor’s widow and president of Dr. Seuss Enterprises — and a guy in a Lorax suit were also present for the trolley unveiling, which was geared toward promoting the conservation of resources and encouraging children to be more envi-ronmentally conscious.

— APRILLE MUSCARAASSOCIATE FOCUS EDITOR

CLUBHOPPING

R ising from a campus full of mediocre shower singers and American Idol wannabes, the

competitively selected singers in the UCSD Tritones are a breath of fresh talent. Don’t believe us? If world-famous pop star Taylor Swift chose the a capella group to sing backup for her nationally televised Academy of Country Music Awards concert in Las Vegas, they’ve got to be doing some-thing right.

The Tritones spotted their chance when producers from the CBS network contacted a handful of collegiate a cappella groups in search of a backup choir for Swift.

After sending in their rendition of Swift’s “You Belong With Me” — which they performed in Ledden Hall — the Tritones received a call informing them that Swift had handpicked them to accompany her onstage.

Revelle College senior Teresa Souto — the Tritones’ assistant director, and one of the four sopranos of the group — said she was ecstatic to have beat out national competition for the chance to sing with Swift.

“Through opportunities like this, the more our name will get out there and people will not only know who we are but who UCSD is,” Souto said. “We hope to have more of a reach out

THE TRITONES

PHOTOS COURTESY OF FRANCES TANG

JOHN HANACEK/GUARDIAN FILE

PHOTOS BY ERIK JEPSEN/GUARDIAN See TRITONES, page 10

10 THE UCSD GUARDIAN MONDAY, APRIL 19, 2010 FOCUS

1

2

3

side of UCSD and San Diego.”Founded in 1996 by a group of

high-school choir friends searching for an artistic outlet, the Tritones were the first of UCSD’s a cappella groups. Comprised of 16 members — four soprano, four alto, four tenor and four bass — the group rehearses twice a week to perfect their collective harmony.

These days, Tritones auditions are the most cutthroat on campus. Every Fall Quarter, prospective members are asked to memorize “The Star Spangled Banner” and perform an additional one-minute song excerpt that highlighted their particular vocal skills.

Candidates must also pass a series of tests determining their ability to sight-read, clap to complex rhythms

and memorize tones. Last fall, over 100 students auditioned for a only 10

open spots. Souto

said that — although each mem-ber of the Tritones has a unique set of inter-ests — it’s the thrill of group perfor-mance that brings them together.

“Some members of

the group are on sports teams, some are in musical theater; our majors

range from pre-med, political science to economics,” Souto said. “We are all really different, but we do have one thing in common — and that’s where we love to sing.”

This March, for the first time ever in UCSD history, the Tritones won first place in the International Championship of A Cappella quar-terfinals at UC Berkeley, advanc-ing them to the semifinals at the University of Southern California.

Their winning sets included Lady Gaga’s “Speechless,” Michael Buble’s “Haven’t Met You Yet” and Queen’s “Don’t Stop Me Now.” Although they did not advance to the finals, the Swift performance is sure to meet their quota for limelight — at least for the time being.

— Kelly KimStaff Writer

▶ TRITONES, JOHN HANACEK/GUARDIAN FILE

APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE ONLINE AT WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORGQUESTIONS? E-MAIL [email protected]

OFFICES LOCATED ON THE SECOND FLOOROF THE OLD STUDENT CENTER

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“We are all really different, but we do have one thing in common — and that’s where we love to sing.”

TERESA SOUTOASSISTANT DIRECTOR,

TRITONES

FOCUS MONDAY, APRIL 19, 2010 THE UCSD GUARDIAN 11

EL SALVADOREÑO

SITESEEN

H oused in the Grant Hill neigh-borhood near downtown, El Salvadoreño serves authentic,

filling and — most importantly — inexpensive Latin American grub.

Well worth a 20-minute caravan from campus, El Salvadoreño exists in a world apart from the high prices and cramped bustle of the Gaslamp District; instead, the eatery’s nearest neighbors are empty lots of dirt adorned with chain-link fencing and dingy corner-stores. But unless you’d rather stick to Los Primos’ antiseptic burritos, your expedition will be generously rewarded with some pretty tasty eats.

El Salvadoreño is homey and underembellished — your classic fam-ily sit-down restaurant. Aside from a colorful ceiling mural, decorations are sparse. Tables and chairs are scat-tered throughout the restaurant’s single

room, and a large open kitchen pro-vides for a view of your meal’s

preparation.Service is prompt — even at peak

hours — and the menu is overflowing with Central-American dishes like the crisp baleadas (bean and cheese que-sadillas) and hearty caldo de res (beef soup). The finest goods in the house, though, are El Salvadoreño’s homemade pupusas, which — at just $2 a pop — are a godsend for both your budget and your hangover. The corn disks are served piping hot, stuffed with melting cheese and any combination of chick-en, pork, loroco, jalapeños or beans — then topped with spicy red-pepper salsa and cabbage salad.

If you’re not already expecting a baby after the main course, the des-sert menu is a worthy adventure. Skip the soggy empanadas con crema (deep fried bananas and cream) and opt for a dish of smooth, caramel flan — sure to put to shame that store-bought ver-sion that’s been sitting in your fridge all month.

— Caitlin FitzpatrickContributing Writer

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aged her to pursue the written word more seriously.

“It was very exciting. Having people take my poetry seriously — taking poetry seriously at all was exciting,” Armantrout said.

In the late 1960s, Armantrout and some friends formed a community of poets who sought to investigate the struc-ture of language — not unlike master modernist Louis Zukofsky, a poetic pre-cursor — with a conversational tone. They were later dubbed the Language Poets, and included the likes of Ron Silliman, Bob Perelman, Steve Benson and Lyn Hejinian.

“It was intense, because all of those people were very smart and took them-selves very seriously,” Armantrout said.

After earning her master’s in creative writing at San Francisco University, Armantrout moved back to San Diego in 1978. Initially, she felt alienated from her former home. But after spending the next couple years raising son Aaron, with her husband Chuck Korkegian, Armantrout finally landed a job at UCSD. Colleagues like Michael Davidson, she said, helped to ease the transition from Northern California — where Armantrout was sur-rounded with like-minded modernists — to Southern California.

Still, she faced some opposition from staunch academics when she began almost two decades ago.

“When I first taught poetry here, people tended to be resistant to modern poetry.” Armantrout said. “They tended to feel that poetry should rhyme and look like romantic poetry or Shakespearean sonnets. Now, they seem much less resis-tant.”

Marshall College senior Thomas Trudgeon — who’s currently working with Armantrout on his honors thesis — said he admires Armantrout for her modern approach to language.

“She’s a total sweetheart and makes

you engage with language in ways you had never thought of before,” Trudgeon said. “She’s always been the sturdy backbone to the program and one of the more alluring attractions. In fact, she’s one of the rea-sons why I came to UCSD when I was in high school.”

After she was diagnosed with cancer in 2006, Armantrout underwent surgery and chemotherapy. It was largely her ability to investigate her own mortality from an objective standpoint in “Dark Matter” that raked in such great acclaim.

According to Armantrout, her poetry involves introspective reasoning — an activity that helps her unravel her thoughts more clearly.

“Often, I start when I feel puzzled about something and I don’t know why,” she said.

Though “Versed” has received more media attention than any of her previous collections — and, according to the pro-fessor, reacquainted her many old friends — Armantrout said she is unsure if her latest collection is indeed her best work, let alone her favorite.

“I don’t know,” she said. “I think that it’s a good book — as good as the last book. It’s amazing how winning some-thing seems to make everyone think that you’re better than you were before.”

And as far as the future, this 2008 Guggenheim Fellow in poetry has no plans to stop writing or teaching anytime soon. In fact, Armantrout said she plans to release another collection of poems next spring. It’s called “Money Shot,” and it explores the furrows of the recent finan-cial crisis.

“Poetry gets me high somehow,” Armantrout said. “I get a charge out of it — it keeps me engaged. It is its own reward. It’s great to get prizes, but I was enjoying it before that. I’m just doing what I love doing.”

Readers can contact Neda Salamat at [email protected].

▶ PULITZER,

12 THE UCSD GUARDIAN MONDAY, APRIL 19, 2010 SPORTS

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really hurt my chances of making it to regionals.”

The Tritons managed an eighth-place finish at the event, though the inclusion of Samra’s score would have moved UCSD into sixth-place overall.

After transferring from community college, Morris had trouble transi-tioning to the Division-II level during early season play. But after finish-ing in a tie for 13th place at the Grand Canyon Thunderbird Invitational, Morris said he believes he is in a good frame of mind going into the champion-ship this week.

“It has been a tough season, but this past month has been promis-ing,” he said. “This week is pretty important — it is the conference championships.”

The Tritons’ performance at the Grand Canyon Thunderbird Invitational was a glimpse of how Wydra and his squad had hoped to

play all season. Morris fired the best individual round all season for the Tritons with a four-under-par 68. UCSD also shot its lowest team round and overall score with an even-par 288 and eight-over-par 872, respec-

tively.While Okasaki, Samra

and Morris look to cement their positions at the Super Regionals, sophomore Justin Gabbert and fresh-man Anubhav Rastogi will look to gain valuable expe-rience for next season at the tournament.

Gabbert, who under-went significant swing changes in the middle of the season to help pro-vide more consistency to his game, has epitomized UCSD’s inconsistent play throughout the season.

“I never knew what was going to happen [in

my rounds],” Gabbert said. “Every tee shot was an adventure, and I was real streaky. I could be two-under-par for 14 holes and end up shooting [six-over-par]. A few bad holes ruined

rounds.”Rastogi earned his spot on the ros-

ter for the CCAA Championship with a stellar performance at the Hanny/Stanislaus Invitational. At the event, Rastogi shot rounds of 74 and 75 on Day One. Though the Tritons did poorly as a team, Rastogi’s rounds gave him an opportunity to experi-ence firsthand postseason golf.

“It’s an unknown going into this week,” he said. “ I don’t know what to expect as a freshman. I’m waiting to see how my game has improved and how far it has come.”

The Tritons have qualified at least one player for the NCAA Super Regionals every season during Wydra’s 33-year tenure. Okasaki is shooting to become the first individual in UCSD history to make the NCAA National Championships. But that won’t come easily, according to Wydra.

“To make nationals, a player must be the top finisher in a 110-player field from a team that doesn’t qualify,” he said. “The quality of players has gone up this year.”

Readers can contact Matt Croskey at [email protected].

By Liam RoseSenior Staff Writer

MEN’S TENNIS — UCSD entered a late-season showdown against Cal Poly Pomona on April 15 with one clear mission: to hold onto their No. 3 regional ranking. And with a post-season berth contingent on a top-four finish in the Division-II Western region, the Tritons brought enough strength and resolve to claim a 7-2 victory over the Broncos and sweep the season series.

“We just knew we had to take them out,” junior captain Vince Nguyen said. “Their team just got axed, so this was their last match, and they came out really emotional. They were fighting for their last moments and their last match ever, and we just came out to a slow start.”

Although the Tritons had already

beaten their opponent on March 2 by the same score, the Broncos were especially charged for their last home match of the season — taking to the court after pre-game festivities to honor their graduating seniors — which posed early problems for the Tritons.

Pomona sent an early statement of intent: The Broncos’ No. 2 doubles team easily toppled the Triton pairing of junior Armaun Emami and fresh-man Austin West 8-2.

“We started slow on doubles,” Nguyen said. “We weren’t firing all out, but we still pulled it together and came back strong.”

However, the Tritons recovered from their slow start, when their No. 3 doubles team — sophomores Sam Ling and Jake Fellow — fought out an 8-6 win against their Bronco counter-parts. Then, the newly formed pairing of junior Erik Elliot and sophomore Chapman Chan blew away Pomona’s No. 1 doubles team 8-0.

Elliot carried over his on-court domination into singles play, sealing victory in a tricky three-set match against Pomona’s No. 1 Joshua Lauon.

The Tritons registered wins in five of six total singles matches, more than sealing their victory.

The win marked the last of regional play for UCSD. The Tritons have only one more match against UC Riverside before they begin regional playoffs: Irrespective of the result against Riverside, they will compete in regionals as a three-seed in the Western region against Brigham Young University-Hawaii — a team they struggled against on March 24.

“We have one more game at Riverside,” Nguyen said. “Then we go to Hawaii. We have to practice really hard because we got smoked last time we played Brigham Young University-Hawaii. We have to give them more of a fight and prepare for them. We’ll probably focus more on practicing harder through our Riverside match and be sure to come out strong for regionals.”

The Tritons will play at Riverside this Wednesday before traveling to Hawaii for regionals on May 8.

Readers can contact Liam Rose at [email protected].

VICTORY OVER POMONA CLINCHES PLAYOFF SPOT

▶ M. GOLF,

After securing a No. 3 conference ranking, the Tritons head to regionalsin Hawaii on May 8.

“I neverknew what was going tohappen [in my rounds]. Every tee shot was an adventure, and I was real streaky.”

JUSTIN GABBERTSOPHOMORE,MEN’S GOLF

CAMPUS CALENDAR MoNDAy, APRIL 19, 2010 THE UCSD GUARDIAN 13

Monday Apr 19

C a r e e r

Discover Your Dream Career - Learn about the career decision-making process and get assistance with choosing a career path that is compatible with your skills, interests, values and personality type. **RSVP through Port Triton required. Round Room, Career Services Center / 2-4pm / Free

Dental School: How to Prepare and Apply - Get an edge on your applications by attending this informative session to learn about preparing for dentistry, the AADSAS app and the admission process. Horizon Room, Career Services Center / 3:30-4:45pm / Free

Tuesday Apr 20

Week of 4/19 - 4/25

C a r e e r

UCDC Info Session - Live and work in the nation’s capital while earning UC credit! All majors are invited to hear about requirements, deadlines, and the application process. Horizon Room, Career Services Center / 11am-12pm / Free

C u l t u r e

11th Annual Hate Free Campus Awareness Week - The Intergroup Relations Program is proud to present the 11th Annual Hate-Free Campus Week: Education. Action. Equality. Price Center Plaza / 12pm / Free

Discovering History: Holocaust Survivors in San Diego - Mrs Ehrenfried was born in Rakosliget, Hungary, and survived Muhldorf, Krakau-Plaslow and Ausburg concentration camps and Auschwitz II-Birkenau death camp. She will share the stories of her experiences in the Holocaust. Great Hall / 5-7pm / Free

A Conversation on Mia Mingus - Mia Mingus is a a queer disabled woman of color, South Korean transracial adoptee, organizer and one of the Co-Executive Directors

of SPARK Reproductive Justice Now in Atlanta, Georgia. Cross-Cultural Center Library / 3-4:30pm / Free

Pray the Devil Back to Hell - Come and view the award winning documentary on a group of Liberian women who organized together to help end the Liberian civil war. Women’s Center / 5-7pm / Free

H e a l t H

FITstop at RIMAC - Evaluate your relative fitness levels - Set goals & measure your progress Trained Student Health Advocates test your: Body Fat Composition, Grip Strength, Step Test Recovery Rate, Blood Pressure, Resting Heart Rate. RIMAC Wellness Room / 7-9pm / Free

r e C r e a t i o n

Bitchy Bingo - What do you get when you take a traditional game of chance and add fabulous drag queens with a fierce attitude? One hell of a night! The Loft / 9pm / Free

Henderson and Extraordinary Friends: Roma Nights - Espresso Roma / 8pm / Free

Managing Conflict Resolution with Chinese Managers - Gloria Sandvik, a specialist in global strategy and awareness, will speak. Robinson Building Complex / 5pm / Free

Find it Fast: Library Research for Busy People - Improve your research skills and save time by discovering how to identify the best sources for your information needs. Geisel Library / 2pm / Free

r e C r e a t i o n

The Spy Next Door - Price Center Theater / 6&9pm / $3 Student; $5 General

C a r e e r

Interview to Win - Preparing for an interview for a job or internship? An interview can make or break an employer’s decision to hire you. Learn how to start strong, anticipate the questions you’ll be asked, and follow up properly after your interviews. Horizon Room, Career Services Center / 11am-12:30pm / Free

C u l t u r e

We Are Americans: Undocumented Students Pursuing the American Dream - We ARE Americans by Dr. William

Thursday Apr 22Perez, blends the inspirational stories of optimism and perseverance of undocumented students with the critical policy implications of the continuing neglect of comprehensive immigration reform. Reception and book signing to follow. Cross-Cultural Center Comunidad / 3:30-5pm / Free

r e C r e a t i o n

Daybreakers - Price Center Theater / 6&9pm / $3 Student; $5 General

Strength, Step Test Recovery Rate, Blood Pressure, Resting Heart Rate. RIMAC Wellness Room / 7-9pm / Free

Men’s Clinic @ Student Health - Routine male exams, STD checks, etc - available Wednesday mornings at 10:00am - NO visit fee - NO appt, walk-in welcome. Student Health Conference Room #207 / 10am / Free

l e C t u r e

North Korea Under Sanctions: The Question of Arms Exports - Dr. Daniel Pinkston, a Senior Analyst and Deputy Project Director with the International Crisis Group in

Seoul, will discuss North Korean sanctions and arms exports. Robinson Building Complex / 4pm / Free

The Politics of Booms and Crises- Evidence from Latin America - A research seminar with Princeton Professor Daniela Campello. Institute of the Americas Complex, Deutz Room / 5pm / Free

New Writing Series - Sarah Riggs is a poet, translator, and visual artist. She is the author of Waterwork. Monica de la Torre is a poet, translator and editor. She is the author of Talk Shows, and Public Domain. Visual Arts Facility Performance Space / 4:30pm / Free

Wednesday

C a r e e r

Industry Plaza Fest: Green Careers and Info - Network with non-profit & business organizations focusing on sustainability and environmentally conscious products and services. Learn about the industry, career positions part-time jobs, and internships. Career Services Center Plaza / 11am-1pm / Free

Environmental Careers Panel - Listen in as a panel of professionals gives you the inside scoop on environmentally conscious and sustainability-oriented careers. Horizon Room, Career Services Center / 2-3:30pm / Free

Peace Corps Info Session - Learn about the adventure of a lifetime in one of 70 countries for education, business, health, computer science, agriculture, and environmental projects. Horizon Room, Career

Services Center / 4-5:30pm / FreeC u l t u r e

The Myth of Europe: Whiteness (?) and Transnationalism - Leslie Quintanilla will be speaking on her study abroad & activism in Italy, including the Italian student movement and Migrant Rights movement in Europe. Cross-Cultural Center Art Space / 4-6pm / Free

Doin It: Disability, Sex and Violence - Hate-Free Campus Week film Screenings. Office for Students with Dissabilities, University Center 202 / 2-3pm / Free

H e a l t H

FITstop at RIMAC - Evaluate your relative fitness levels - Set goals & measure your progress Trained Student Health Advocates test your: Body Fat Composition, Grip

Wednesday Apr 21

continued

C u l t u r e

The Execution of Wanda Jean - Hate-Free Campus Week film Screenings. Office for Students with Disabilities, University Center 202 / 2-3pm / Free

Visual Arts Presents: Mike Toillions SUBversive - Visual Arts Dept presents Michael Toillions SUBversive, a showcase of incredible Visual Music Project, a perfect blend of eye-catching visuals and sounds, performed live in real time. Visual Arts Facility / 8pm / Free

Hate Speaking Seriously Funny - Issues around hate, discrimination

Friday Apr 23and bias are brought to life in this entertaining and educational performance! PC East Ballroom / 7-9pm / Free

r e C r e a t i o n

DJ Proper: The Jump Off - Round Table Patio / 1-4pm / Free

International Center Friday Café - Come join us for a lunch made up of recipes from the Silver Palate, a former food shop in Manhattan. Dishes will include: Chicken Marbella, rice, roasted vegetables, green salad, and a toffee cookie. International Center Patio / 12-1:30pm / $5

r e C r e a t i o n

Daedalus - Daedelus, aka Alfred Darlington, isn’t your average cookie-cutter musician. From his early Victorian looks, to the innovative ways he constructs music, Daedelus is no doubt a musical pioneer. The Loft / 8pm / $5 Students Advance, PAYC Door; $10 General

Celebrating 40 Years of Chicano Park - Enjoy the festivities at Chicano Park. Free transportation from UCSD plus lunch at the historic Las Cuatro Milpas Restaurant. More info: [email protected] or (858) 534-1585. Chicano Park / 11:30am / Free

Daybreakers - Price Center Theater / 6&9pm / $3 Student; $5 General

Saturday Apr 24Linguistics Dept. Heritage Language Program Film Festival - The second of five films in our 6th Film Festival,The King and the Clown takes place in 16th-century Korea and relates the story of a pair of street performers who mock the king and who are threatened with execution unless they can make the king laugh. AP&M 4301 / 11am / Free

The Great Campus Race - Move Fast, Think Faster! 1st place wins $200, 2nd place $100, 3rd place $50. All UCSD students are invited to compete for prizes using teamwork, brains and speed by solving clues and finding locations on campus. Are you up for the challenge? Geisel Library / 1:30-3:30pm / Free

Farm2U - Farm2U is a weekly event introducing campus residents to local farmers. The farm moves to a different college each Wednesday to present fresh and delicious seasonal produce and goods. Dining Dollars Accepted! Café Ventanas / 3:30pm / Free

Guardian Classifieds are placed online and are FREE for UCSD. Low cost classified placements for our print edition are also available to the UCSD campus and the public at ucsdguardian.campusave.com

Guardian Classifieds are placed online and are FREE for UCSD. Low cost classified placements for our print edition are also available to the UCSD campus and the public at ucsdguardian.campusave.com

CLASSIFIEDSMONDAY, APRIL 19, 201014 THE UCSD GUARDIAN

04/15 Sudoku Solutions Find the Crossword solution in this Thursday's Classifieds Page

Across1 Perform in a play4 Skilled8 Check signers14 1950 Edmond O’Brien suspense classic15 Sliding __16 Hide out17 49th state’s largest city20 Parking spot money taker21 Sly22 Grating sound23 1/60 of a min.25 “Was __ hard on him?”27 E.M. Forster classic set in fictional

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The Tritons improved to 34-5 overall and 24-4 against teams in the California Collegiate Athletic Association.

In Game One of the series, which took place on April 9 in Turlock, Calif., the Tritons rode an impres-sive performance by junior starting pitcher Tim Shibuya, who threw a complete game shutout allowing 10 hits with four strikeouts. The senior pitcher helped open the four-game series on a good note with a 7-0 win.

The Tritons and the Warriors con-tinued the series with a doubleheader on April 10, highlighted by a nailbiting end in the first game. Trailing 3-2 in the top of the ninth and down to their final outs, UCSD was left with only a glimmer of hope, until senior first-baseman Brandon Gregorich stepped up to the plate coolly and hit a home run to tie the game at 3-3. Junior third baseman Evan Kehoe followed the game-tying homer with one of his own, giving UCSD a 4-3 lead.

An unearned run put the Tritons up 5-3, and senior closer Daniel Simmons sealed the deal by striking out the side in the ninth.

“[Gregorich’s] game-tying home run was awesome, and it really fired up our team and gave us the momen-tum,” Kehoe said. “When I stepped up, I was just trying to hit the ball hard somewhere, get on base and put some more pressure on the defense and the pitcher. I just turned on a pitch and happened to hit it out. It was one of the most exciting games I’ve ever been a part of.”

Senior right-hander Matt Rossman started the opening game of the dou-ble header, and provided a solid effort throughout six innings: He allowed only two earned runs.

The Warriors, demoralized after losing Game One of the doubleheader, handed the Tritons the momentum they needed to take the last two games of the series. Junior righty Guido

Knudson led UCSD to a 10-2 win by allowing just two runs over seven innings, striking out eight and walk-ing none in the process.

On the offensive side, junior des-ignated hitter Blake Tagmeyer and senior catcher Kellen Lee both hit home runs, while Gregorich had a three-hit day and senior shortstop Vance Albitz tacked on a pair of hits and runs.

On Sunday, the Tritons set their sights on a sweep, exploding offen-sively for 20 hits and 18 runs in an 18-5 win. Leading the onslaught was CCAA Player of the Week, Kehoe, who was four-for-five with three runs and three runs batted in, including two doubles. Junior catcher Michael Benton was right behind him going two-for-two with a pair of doubles,

three runs and three RBIs.But it was junior infielder Grant

Bauer’s three-run shot that broke the camel’s back — he ended up going four-for-four with five RBIs and three runs. Six Tritons turned in multiple-hit games, and five had multiple-RBIs.

A major key to the Tritons’ suc-cessful offense this season has been the team’s constant ability to hit the ball into to the opposite field. The coaching staff has preached this phi-losophy, and the players have worked to improve their swings in batting practice off the tee and in the cage — specifically for the outside pitch.

“I think the most important fac-tor to our success at the plate is the relentless attitude that we stress as an offense,” Lee said. “It is 100 percent a mentality of beating the pitcher. Every

single one of our players buys into this philosophy of competing and never letting up. If you go into every at-bat with the confidence in yourself, more times than not, you will put together a quality at-bat.”

UCSD returned to Triton Ballpark on April 15 with a four-game home series against Cal State Los Angeles. After dropping the first game 2-1, the Tritons won the next three with scores of 10-4, 13-6 and 5-4. UCSD improved to 37-6 overall with the win, and 27-5 in conference play.

The Tritons return to action at home on April 22, when they open a four-game series against Cal State Dominguez Hills.

Readers can contact Cameron Tillisch at [email protected].

junior Valerie Tang finished with an 8-5 victory.

Though they swept the doubles matches, the Tritons only managed to win half of the singles matches.

Sophomore Samantha Yeung said she was confident, but also nervous, in the buildup.

“After the doubles set, I felt a lot better,” Yeung said. “[LaPlante] said that we shouldn’t feel pressure — that we should just go out there, try hard and have fun.”

Yeung won her match 6-2 and 6-4, and Anthavale won her match 6-1 and 6-0. After junior Natalie Varney claimed the final singles match 6-4, 6-1, the Tritons had clinched their seventh straight CCAA victory with a score of 6-3.

The last time the two teams met, on Feb. 20, UCSD escaped with a narrow 5-4 victory.

“They are a really tough team,” LaPlante said. “I had a good feeling after Anita won. [Stanislaus] is really good. We had to play to win and not be afraid to lose. We just had fun with it.”

Even though it’s the team’s seventh straight title, LaPlante said it’s just as thrilling as the last six.

“It is just really exciting,” LaPlante said. “This is the second and third title for some of these girls, and everyone is developing really well. This win gave us a strong seed now as we continue on to regionals, with a good chance to go onto nationals.”

The Tritons will continue their regular season when they face non-conference opponent Azusa Pacific University on Wednesday, April 21.

Readers can contact Wesley Cox at [email protected].

▶ BASEBALL,

▶ W. TENNIS,

JOHN HANACEK/GUARDIAN

After splitting a two game series against Cal State Los Angeles at home from April 15 to April 16, the Tritos travelled to L.A. for a road doubleheader against the Golden Eagles on April 17. UCSD battered Golden Eagle pitching to take games three and four, and improve their season road record to 13-1.

MONDAY, APRIL 19, 2010

The junior middle blocker tallied 14 kills against Pepperdine University on April 17. The Tritons upset the Waves for the second time this season after a hard-fought five set match. Guthals totaled 183 kills for the [email protected]

HOTCORNER

16 THE UCSD GUARDIAN WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG/SPORTS

THIS DAY IN HISTORYOn April 19, 1897, New York native John McDermott won the first-ever Boston Marathon with a time of 2:55:10. In last year’s 113th annual running of the event, Deriba Merga of Ethiopia won with a time of 2:08:42.

ADRIAN GUTHALS | VOLLEYBALL

By Wesley CoxStaff Writer

No. 15 UCSD needed a championship-caliber performance against No. 19 Cal State Stanislaus if the Tritons were to make it to seven straight

regular-season titles. The Tritons and Warriors, tied atop league standings with eight wins and one loss, faced off on April 17 at the Northpoint Tennis Courts with the California Collegiate Athletic Association championship on the line.

In a season in which the Tritons lost their 53-match conference winning streak at Cal Poly Pomona, they

wouldn’t be denied their seventh straight title. After suffering an unfortunate 5-4 road loss to Point

Loma Nazarene University on April 15, UCSD rebound-ed to defeat Cal State Stanislaus 6-3, and claimed top conference honors.

After three doubles matches at Point Loma last Thursday, the Tritons found themselves behind 2-1, and only managed to break even in singles with three wins and three losses.

However, despite the loss to Point Loma, head coach Liz Laplante said the lady Tritons were confident going into the championship-deciding game against Cal State Stanislaus.

“The loss to Point Loma wasn’t that significant,” LaPlante said. “We didn’t have all our girls playing on Thursday. We knew we could win if everyone was healthy, came together and played well. And that is exactly what we did.”

UCSD got off to a running start, winning all three doubles matches to take a commanding early lead. No. 1 singles team Taskeen Bains and Natalie Varnay heated things up with an early 8-3 win. They were backed up by the No. 2 team of Anita Anthavale and Jacquelyn Davis, who won 8-5, while No. 3 doubles team Cindy Dao and

By Cameron TillischSenior Staff Writer

BASEBALL — Eager to return to their winning ways after a 19-game win streak was snapped by Cal State San Bernardino on April 3, the No. 3 Tritons went into a four-game series against Cal State Stanislaus set on restoring their elite status in the league.

The Tritons came through in a big way with a four game road sweep of the Warriors, notching important wins of 7-0, 5-3, 10-2 and 18-5 over the seventh-place team in the California Collegiate Athletic Association.

“We knew they would be a tough team to play, especially on a long road trip,” junior third baseman Evan Kehoe said. “They have good num-bers as a team and play a similar style of baseball to us, but we just out-played them all weekend. We played cleaner baseball than them, forced them to make mistakes and kept the pressure on them.”

Tritons Take Seven of Eight Games in Back-to-Back Series Victories

By Matt CroskeyAssociate sports editor

MEN’S GOLF — Over the past month, the Tritons have been busy preparing for California Collegiate Athletic Association Championship, set to take place later this week. And after closing the month of March with a pair of eighth-place finishes, the team had reason to believe it could make a strong postseason run — until a sloppy finish at the Hanny/Stanislaus Invitational on April 12 and 13 shattered the team’s shot at the NCAA postseason.

UCSD has struggled all season to find consistent play in the fourth and fifth spots on its roster. With each team counting its four best scores from five, the Tritons were too erratic to compete at the same level every week.

“By the time things got better, we were too far behind to make [the National Collegiate Athletic Association postseason],” head coach Mike Wydra said. “We’ve had flashes of brilliance, but no consis-tency this season. When people play well, we never get the fifth score. We usually have to eat that big fifth number.”

The 54-hole CCAA Championship will still be packed with pressure for three Triton golfers. According to Wydra, senior Keith Okasaki has all but

officially qualified for the NCAA Super Regionals on May 3 to May 5 with consistent play throughout the season. Senior Raj Samra and junior Richard Morris are within striking distance of a spot as well, the coach said.

Samra said he believes he needs a top-20 finish this week, and that he is confident that his game is in proper form to a make a run at the Super Regionals. (The NCAA selection committee has yet to release any official statistics.)

“I really want to make it,” Samra said. “I am really good at performing under pressure, and I have been getting my confidence back. Over the past month, I have really been changing how I think about golf. I wasn’t taking it as seriously, and realized it was affect-ing my ability to make Super Regionals.”

Samra’s chances for the postseason diminished when he was disqualified at the 60th Annual SoCal Intercollegiate from Mar. 22 to Mar. 23. According to league rules, players are required to have two signatures on their scorecard when turning it in. Samra failed to get his playing partner’s signature before submitting what would have been the Tritons’ second-best round on the day.

“I handed it to him to sign, and assumed that [my playing partner] did it, since the card was closed when I got it back,” Samra said. “Apparently, he was just checking his scores with his scorekeeper and never signed it. I shot 76 and bogeyed the last two holes. Not having that score count toward my average

See BASEBALL page 15 See M. GOLF page 12

JOHN HANACEK/GUARDIAN

Senior right-hander Matt Rossman allowed three earned runs on four hits in 6.1 innings against Cal State Los Angeles on April 16.

LUCKY NUMBER7

In a showdown between the top two women’s tennis teams in the conference, the No. 15 Tritonstoppled No. 19 Cal State Stanislaus to earn their seventh consecutive CCAA title.

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UCSD golf does not qualify for team postseason; individuals still in the hunt for NCAA Super Regionals.

See W. TENNIS page 15