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05:0+, MONDAY Height: 4-5 ft. Wind: 4-9 mph Water Temp: 62 F TUESDAY Height: 5-6 ft. Wind: 6-8 mph Water Temp: 62 F WEDNESDAY Height: 6-7 ft. Wind: 6-11 mph Water Temp: 62 F THURSDAY Height: 4-6 ft. Wind: 3-10 mph Water Temp: 62 F LOW $2.89 Arco, Chula Vista 407 E St. & 4th Ave. HIGH $3.89 76, Point Loma 1704 Rosecrans St. & Nimitz Blvd. MONDAY H 62 L 48 TUESDAY H 68 L 50 MONDAY TUESDAY .(: 7,9 .(3365 :<9- 9,769; 50./; >(;*/ -69,*(:; >,) 7633 :<590:, :<5:,; 6:30 A.M. 7:13 P.M. WEDNESDAY H 78 L 51 THURSDAY H 79 L 53 THURSDAY WEDNESDAY WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG 7VVYS` +YH^U 3PULZ 3PNO[Z :PYLUZ ,SLJ[PVU ,UKVYZLTLU[Z *HUKPKH[L 7YVÄSLZ *SHZZPÄLKZ ;YHJR HUK -PLSK >VTLU»Z >H[LY 7VSV ARE YOU HAPPY WITH THE SUN GOD LINEUP? Yes No I don’t know <PM +W[\ WN .ZMM 8ZM[[ WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG MONDAY, APRIL 5, 2010 VOLUME XLII, ISSUE XLIII By Andrew Tieu Staff Writer F ive candidates attended the A.S. presidential debates last Friday, including two on brand- new slates that grew out of Student Voice! — which swept most election seats in recent years — and a three-person slate called NOW! Candidates present were current A.S. President Utsav Gupta, on NOW!, Campuswide Senator Wafa Ben Hassine on Students First, Marshall College Senator Brian McEuen on Tritons First and independent candidates Thurgood Marshall College Chair Tan Dhillon and Muir College junior Joe Virgilio. Independent candidates Sixth College senator John Condello and Muir College senior August Ryan Brenner did not attend. The debates focused on the failed transportation referendum — which proposed raising student fees $40 per quarter, in order to maintain all campus shuttle lines — and the Winter Quarter student- media funding freeze enacted by Gupta in response to Koala Editor in Chief Kris Gregorian’s use of a racial slur on SRTV. Gupta defended the A.S. Transportation Committee’s recommendation to abandon the con- tentious referendum, and said he formed a Defense of Public Transportation Committee to save the Blue and White shuttles without raising student fees. “We’ve recommended proposals and other sorts of cuts,” Gupta said. “We wanted to explore other refer- endums so that any referendums that do come before Transportation referendum, media freeze dominate discussionss. Candidates Face Off for Presidency (: ,3,*;065: By Neda Salamat Staff Writer A fter an unexpected surge in requests from stu- dent-media organizations for more money, the A.S. Council is searching for a way to fund UCSD’s 13 active student-run publications for Spring Quarter. Media orgs requested $62,511.31 in funding this quarter, nearly double that of the 29,897.48 requested last quarter. According to Vice President of Finance and Resources Peter Benesch, the A.S. Council allotted $45,000 to media organizations this year, estimating that $15,000 would be used each quarter. Instead, $23,114 was allocated in Fall Quarter and $25,912 was allocated in Winter Quarter. This quarter, $39,393 is being allocated to media organiza- tions — leaving the council with a large deficit. KEEP UP Watch the vice- presidential candidates debate on Monday at 12 p.m. in Price Center Plaza. See MEDIA page 2 See DEBATES page 6 B.o.B. to Play Main Stage By Janani Sridharan Senior Staff Writer After teasing students a week ago with bookmarks listing a partial lineup of this year’s Sun God Festival, Associate Vice President of Concerts & Events Alex Bramwell has named B.o.B., Crash Kings and The Parson Redheads as the remaining Sun God acts. They will join Drake, Relient K, Thrice and Michelle Branch on the main stage. Deejay acts Designer Drugs, Skeet Skeet, Robbed By Robots and Shark Attack will perform in the festi- val’s dance tent, leading up to a set by headlininger DJ Z-Trip. The idway stage will host perfor- mance by student organizations Donald Glover, Joe Mande and Dan Mintz. Cirque Berzerk, a troupe of gothic tra- peze artists from Los Angeles, will take to the stage periodically throughout the day. Bramwell said students’ reactions to the lineup released a week ago have been mixed. “The general reaction has been very positive,” Bramwell said. “Of course, there are going to be complaints and some people are upset. ... We definitely don’t just choose whoever we feel like booking. Any name you could throw out as a suggestion for a headliner, we’ve likely checked [to see] if they are avail- able or not, and if they’re an option.” The festival’s total budget, which is drawn from student fees guest ticket sales, is roughly $690,000. Bramwell said security for the festival — including UC A.S. Council forced to compensate for spike in student-publication requests. THE LINEUP MAIN STAGE Diversion Sound Crash Kings B.o.B Michelle Branch The Parson Redheads Thrice Relient K Drake DANCE TENT DVC Shark Attack Robbed by Robots DJ Battle winner Skeet Skeet Designer Drugs Z-Trip See LINEUP page 2 ;6;(33@ ;9(:/,+ TIMOTHY WONG/GUARDIAN Students kicked off Spring Quarter at Sigma Chi’s fourth annual Eurobash on April 2. The event ended early when police asked organizers to vacate, due to hospitalized students and failure to provide a noise permit. FALL 2009 2,257 REQUESTED 2,257 ALLOCATED 37,879 REQUESTED 23,114 ALLOCATED WINTER 2010 2,669 REQUESTED 2,300 ALLOCATED 29,897 REQUESTED 25,912 ALLOCATED MEDIA-ORG FUNDING ALLOCATIONS TOTAL THE KOALA SPRING 2010 3,471 REQUESTED 3,471 ALLOCATED 62,511 REQUESTED 39,393 ALLOCATED NEXT YEAR’S A.S. COUNCIL $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ WHO YOU SHOULD VOTE FOR PAGE 4 EVERYBODY ELSE PAGE 7 PHILIP RHIE/GUARDIAN :<5 .6+

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A.S. Council forced to compensate for spike in student-publication requests. WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG MONDAY, APRIL 5, 2010 VOLUME XLII, ISSUE XLIII Diversion Sound Crash Kings B.o.B Michelle Branch The Parson Redheads Thrice Relient K Drake DVC Shark Attack Robbed by Robots DJ Battle winner Skeet Skeet Designer Drugs Z-Trip THE KOALA DANCE TENT TOTAL MAIN STAGE NEXT YEAR’S A.S. COUNCIL ARE YOU HAPPY WITH THE SUN GOD LINEUP? KEEP UP By Neda Salamat By Andrew Tieu By Janani Sridharan WINTER 2010

TRANSCRIPT

MONDAYHeight: 4-5 ft.Wind: 4-9 mph

Water Temp: 62 F

TUESDAYHeight: 5-6 ft.Wind: 6-8 mph

Water Temp: 62 F

WEDNESDAYHeight: 6-7 ft.

Wind: 6-11 mph Water Temp: 62 F

THURSDAYHeight: 4-6 ft.

Wind: 3-10 mph Water Temp: 62 F

LOW

$2.89Arco, Chula Vista407 E St. & 4th Ave.HIGH

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

THURSDAY FRIDAYMONDAYH 62 L 48

TUESDAYH 68 L 50 MONDAY TUESDAY

6:30 A.M.

7:13 P.M.WEDNESDAYH 78 L 51

THURSDAYH 79 L 53 THURSDAYWEDNESDAYWWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG

ARE YOU HAPPY WITH THE SUN GOD LINEUP?√ Yes√ No√ I don’t know

WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORGMONDAY, APRIL 5, 2010VOLUME XLII, ISSUE XLIII

By Andrew TieuStaff Writer

Five candidates attended the A.S. presidential debates last Friday, including two on brand-new slates that grew out of Student Voice!

— which swept most election seats in recent years — and a three-person slate called NOW!

Candidates present were current A.S. President Utsav Gupta, on NOW!, Campuswide Senator Wafa Ben Hassine on Students First, Marshall College

Senator Brian McEuen on Tritons First and independent candidates Thurgood Marshall College Chair Tan Dhillon and Muir College junior Joe Virgilio.

Independent candidates Sixth College senator John Condello and Muir College senior August Ryan Brenner did not attend.

The debates focused on the failed transportation referendum — which proposed raising student fees $40 per quarter, in order to maintain all campus shuttle lines — and the Winter Quarter student-media funding freeze enacted by Gupta in response to Koala Editor in Chief Kris Gregorian’s use of a racial slur on SRTV.

Gupta defended the A.S. Transportation Committee’s recommendation to abandon the con-tentious referendum, and said he formed a Defense of Public Transportation Committee to save the Blue and White shuttles without raising student fees.

“We’ve recommended proposals and other sorts of cuts,” Gupta said. “We wanted to explore other refer-endums so that any referendums that do come before

Transportation referendum, media freeze dominate discussionss.

Candidates Face Off for Presidency

By Neda SalamatStaff Writer

After an unexpected surge in requests from stu-dent-media organizations for more money, the A.S. Council is searching for a way to fund UCSD’s 13

active student-run publications for Spring Quarter. Media orgs requested $62,511.31 in funding this quarter, nearly double that of the 29,897.48 requested last quarter.

According to Vice President of Finance and Resources Peter Benesch, the A.S. Council allotted $45,000 to media organizations this year, estimating that $15,000 would be used each quarter. Instead, $23,114 was allocated in Fall Quarter and $25,912 was allocated in Winter Quarter.

This quarter, $39,393 is being allocated to media organiza-tions — leaving the council with a large deficit.

KEEP UPWatch the vice-presidentialcandidatesdebate onMonday at 12 p.m. in Price Center Plaza.

See MEDIA page 2See DEBATES page 6

B.o.B. to Play Main StageBy Janani SridharanSenior Staff Writer

After teasing students a week ago with bookmarks listing a partial lineup of this year’s Sun God Festival, Associate Vice President of Concerts & Events Alex Bramwell has named B.o.B., Crash Kings and The Parson Redheads as the remaining Sun God acts.

They will join Drake, Relient K, Thrice and Michelle Branch on the main stage. Deejay acts Designer Drugs, Skeet Skeet, Robbed By Robots and Shark Attack will perform in the festi-val’s dance tent, leading up to a set by headlininger DJ Z-Trip.

The idway stage will host perfor-mance by student organizations Donald Glover, Joe Mande and Dan Mintz. Cirque Berzerk, a troupe of gothic tra-

peze artists from Los Angeles, will take to the stage periodically throughout the day.

Bramwell said students’ reactions to the lineup released a week ago have been mixed. 

“The general reaction has been very positive,” Bramwell said. “Of course, there are going to be complaints and some people are upset. ... We definitely don’t just choose whoever we feel like booking. Any name you could throw out as a suggestion for a headliner, we’ve likely checked [to see] if they are avail-able or not, and if they’re an option.”

The festival’s total budget, which is drawn from student fees guest ticket sales, is roughly $690,000. Bramwell said security for the festival — including UC

A.S. Council forced to compensate for spike in student-publication requests.

THE LINEUPMAIN STAGEDiversion SoundCrash KingsB.o.BMichelle BranchThe Parson RedheadsThriceRelient KDrake

DANCE TENTDVCShark AttackRobbed by RobotsDJ Battle winnerSkeet SkeetDesigner DrugsZ-Trip

See LINEUP page 2

TIMOTHY WONG/GUARDIAN

Students kicked off Spring Quarter at Sigma Chi’s fourth annual Eurobash on April 2. The event ended early when police asked organizers to vacate, due to hospitalized students and failure to provide a noise permit.

FALL 2009

2,257REQUESTED

2,257ALLOCATED

37,879REQUESTED

23,114ALLOCATED

WINTER 2010

2,669REQUESTED

2,300ALLOCATED

29,897REQUESTED

25,912ALLOCATED

MEDIA-ORG FUNDING ALLOCATIONS

TOTA

L T

HE K

OALA

SPRING 2010

3,471REQUESTED

3,471ALLOCATED

62,511REQUESTED

39,393ALLOCATED

NEXT YEAR’S A.S. COUNCIL

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

WHO YOU SHOULD VOTE FOR PAGE 4EVERYBODY ELSE PAGE 7

PHILIP RHIE/GUARDIAN

2 THE UCSD GUARDIAN MONDAY, APRIL 5, 2010 NEWS

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POORLY DRAWN LINES By Reza Farazmand

police officers and Staff Pro personnel — is approximately $50,000. 

“We spend less than half of our budget on booking acts, because of production and security costs that limit the money that we can spend on artists,” Bramwell said.

Last year, according to 2008-09 AVP Concerts & Events Garret Berg, ASCE spent about $550,000 on Sun God Festival, $40,000 of which went to security and about $120,000 of which went toward the talent budget.

Twenty thousand wristbands will be created for the event. Of these, 3,500 will be set aside for guests and sold for

▶ LINEUP, from page 1

See SUN GOD, page 3

At an A.S. meeting on March 31, councilmembers debated whether to pull the money from mandate reserves — the council’s surplus from previous years — or from money intended to fund non-media student orgs.

Benesch said the council has not made an official decision on where the media funds will be pulled from.

“I was the only one who suggest-ed that we actually need to reallocate money so we can have some sort of sense of how much money we have left in other accounts,” Benesch said.

According to Benesch, 12 coun-cilmembers abstained from the vote last Wednesday on where the fund-ing should be drawn from, claiming they didn’t want to be responsible for making the decision. The council will vote again at this week’s meeting.

Additionally, Transfer Senator Adam Powers has reopened the media-org committee created by A.S. President Utsav Gupta during Winter Quarter to reexamine the funding guidelines. According to Powers, the committee aims to ease current guidelines with changes such as cre-ating an emergency reserve for last-minute issues.

Associate Vice President of Student Organizations Andrew Ang said he supports the committee’s goals.

“I think that we should allo-cate more money, and I don’t think $45,000 is enough,” Ang said.

Benesch said he is concerned that such lax standards will open the floodgates for requests in the future, forcing the council to spend its funds unwisely.

“It’s the most ludicrous thing I’ve ever heard,” he said, “You need some sort of fiscal discipline. If you believe that this is a one-time occurrence, then maybe that would be appropri-ate. But it’s my opinion that it’s only going to get larger.”

Out of the 13 media organiza-tions that requested money, three were brought in for a council inter-view because they either submitted a request for an overly large sum of money, or because they represented a new publication.

One major funding request came from No. 15, a newly established fash-ion and arts magazine that requested $8,693 — the entirety of which was approved. In addition, the A.S. Council fully approved humor newspaper the

▶ MEDIA, from page 1

See FUNDING, page 6

from your studies

and classes

NEWS MONDAY, APRIL 5, 2010 THE UCSD GUARDIAN 3

SUN GOD FESTIVAL wristbands may be reserved for guaranteed admission to the festival by a limited number of Society 60 members starting Thursday, April 15.

Reserve your wristband, learn more about Society 60 and join at alumni.ucsd.edu/society60

ATTENTION SOCIETY 60 MEMBERS!

Friday, March 268:56 a.m.: Welfare check▶ A veteran in his 30s with post-traumatic stress disorder reported “feeling down” and reacting unpre-dictably to “loud noises.”

Saturday, March 278:05 a.m.: Welfare check ▶ A 15-year-old male wearing a blue T-shirt and a black jacket was reported as missing at Lot 103.

Sunday, March 288:41 p.m.: Incomplete phone call▶ A female was heard saying “What the heck” before getting disconnect-ed while making a 911 emergency call. Unable to locate.

Monday, March 299:12 a.m.: Vandalism▶ A hole was punched in the wall where a sign was once posted at the Cognitive Sciences Building.12:44 p.m.: Reckless driving▶ A female driver with “possible medical problems” was seen driv-ing erratically in the “wrong lane” at Campus Point Drive. Unable to locate.1:38 p.m.: Incomplete phone call▶ “Laughing” was heard through a Thurgood Marshall College call box. 1:44 p.m.: Fire▶ A trashcan was set on fire at Gilman Drive.7:22 p.m.: Suspicious person▶ A 20-year-old male wearing a white sweater with yellow stains was seen “holding a syringe” and walking toward the Student Center. Gone on arrival.

Tuesday, March 309:12 a.m.: Suspicious person▶ A bald white male wearing beige clothing was reported as “yelling at people” and “shouting some-thing about being a prophet” at the Center for Molecular Medicine

Building.10:43 a.m.: General disturbance▶ A homeless black male wearing a red sweater and blue beanie was reported as cursing, “yelling at staff ” and saying “You might not live that long” to customers at the Mobile gas station.3:32 p.m.: Burglary▶ A laptop was stolen through a broken window at the Sixth College apartments.

Wednesday, March 313:35 a.m.: Report of rape▶ A Thornton Hospital nurse report-ed that a rape had occurred at the UCSD campus.3:10 p.m.: Animal call▶ A student reported being “bit” by a 64-pound black dog in front of the Student Health Building.3:29 p.m.: Suspicious person▶ A female magazine solicitor in her 20s was reported as “aggressive[ly] cursing” at someone on Library Walk. Unable to locate.3:32 p.m.: Animal call▶ A white dog without a leash was reported as “growling” at Foodworx.

Thursday, April 13:13 p.m.: Noise disturbance▶ “Bands” were reported as caus-ing noise disturbance at the Revelle Plaza.10:08 p.m.: Alcohol contact▶ An intoxicated 20-year-old female was seen “passed out” at Lot 705.11:08 p.m.: Suicide attempt▶ A female student texted that she had “taken 15 pills and [was] over-dosing.”11:39 p.m.: Drunk in public▶ A female reported that her intoxi-cated friend was “trying to strike” her at the Matthews apartments.

— Compiled by Sonia MindenSenior Staff Writer

LIGHTS AND SIRENS

$40 each. This year, wristbands will be available on the Thursday before the festival, in addition to the day of the event. They can be retrieved from Marshall Field on Thursday, May 13 from noon to 6 p.m., and on Friday, May 14 starting at 9 a.m.

“If students have class on Thursday and Friday, they can decide which classes are more important and pick up their wristbands on the best day,” Bramwell said. 

Last year, student wristbands could only be picked up on the day of the festival. Many concertgoers — worried by the fact that Sun God 2008 had run out of student tickets — crowded the lines Friday morning and spent up to four hours waiting to pick up their wristbands. According to Bramwell, there were roughly 1,000 wristbands left over after the 2009 festival. 

“Last year, we didn’t sell out,” he said. “I’m not concerned [about run-ning out of tickets], and I would advise students that they don’t neces-sarily need to be concerned and they can come on Friday to pick it up. Of course, no promises can be made.” 

Bramwell said he hoped that mov-ing the distribution to Marshall Field will help keep the line more con-tained and easier to regulate by cam-pus police. 

Following the annual Battle of the Bands and the first-ever DJ Battle Dance Party — which took place over the weekend at the Loft — student act Diversion Sound and deejays J-Sharp and Barons of Bass will also perform at the festival. 

Readers can contact Janani Sridharan at [email protected].

▶ SUN GOD, from page 2

OUT OF CONTEXTThe only thing I like about football is that, on the Super Bowl, no one’s shopping. So that’s when I go shopping.”

JOE VIRGILIOCANDIDATE, A.S. PRESIDENT“

4 THE UCSD GUARDIAN WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG/OPINION

[email protected]

MONDAY, APRIL 5, 2010

WEBPOLL

SHOULD THE UNIVERSITY

PROVIDE HEALTH CARE

FOR STATE PRISONERS?

80%

15% 5%Yes.

I don’t know.

No.

Out of 41 votesYes.

T he Guardian editorial board has been skeptical of a Condello candidacy ever since he tried to melt the student-media freeze with his

bare hands last quarter.After a series of tipsy committee

meetings with campus-newspaper leaders that ballooned his head to epic proportions, that cocky son of a gun sauntered into the A.S. Council meeting with nothing to show for hours of “deliberation” (read: chair swivelation, ball bustation). It was an overconfidence that allowed Vice President of Finance and Resources Peter Benesch to come dangerously close to pushing a well-prepared, content-biased funding model through council.

Then there’s the fact that Condello has an absence record like a battlefield, two untouched sena-tor projects and one of the hottest tempers in the room. Last Friday, he missed the presidential debates in Price Center Plaza, and has proven five times less likely to answer our phone calls than current A.S. President Utsav Gupta.

But do we really want Gupta

answering our calls when all we can get out of him is the same old dodgy press release? What sets Condello apart from Gupta is that he wears his heart on his sleeve. He’s completely unscripted — often to a fault — but we’d rather know what our president is thinking than watch him whisper it among his office entourage.

Unlike the current president, Condello has his priorities straight. Sloppy and angry as his performance may have been, the Sixth College senator was one of the only council-members during the funding freeze to sacrifice his poker face for the absolute protection of student rights. Gupta and Benesch’s proposal would have given self-important A.S. kids the right to choose which newspa-pers could thrive on campus. Not only would that be a fucking snore, it would be downright unconstitutional.

In a way, it will break our hearts to see the current president go. Gupta is one of the hardest-working student politicians we’ve ever encountered on the council — even if he has estranged half his govern-ing body and entered annoying legal battles like making the council into a 501(c)(3) organization and trying to shut down the Koala. Yeah, he would probably get a lot more paperwork done than Condello. But at this point, no affinity for gruntwork can make up for the skewed, isolated ide-ologies Gupta has revealed himself to hold over the last couple months.

Of the other candidates, no one beats Condello in consistency and likability. Tritons First frontman Brian McEuen says all the right things, but his goals are lackluster, his contributions are impossible to

track and he makes us feel like we’re talking to a teleprompter. Students First figurehead Wafa Ben Hassine is a doer and a dreamer, but her dev-astating political correctness is off-putting to the average student, and her record of emotional investment in certain issues could make for toxic council relations.

Independent candidate Tan Dhillon also shows promise, but he could use a year on council to understand the hot mess he’d be dealing with, and his presidential swagger is in dire thirst of some Obamafication. As for independents August Brenner and Joseph Virgilio — hope you guys at least got laid on the “I’m a presidential candidate” pitch.

If this was high school, Condello would be the candidate with “cool kid” syndrome, but we think there’s just enough UCSD nerd in him to fuel the late-night Excel binges and student-org visits. He did completely change the direction of the shady nonaffiliate speech policy commit-tee last year, and has proven he can wake up at 4 a.m. for crew practice. Plus, in the end, Condello knows the ultimate peacekeeper is a nice, cold beer. It’d be refreshing if the A.S. Council could finally earn a little cred with its constituency by doing what college students are supposed to do.

Most importantly, whether or not Condello hits the grindstone as hard as he says he will, at least he won’t do more harm. He’s far more cau-tious about the idea of a D-I football team, and won’t waste any more time trying to defund the Koala. Sorry, Gupta — it was good while it lasted.

I n the past, the vice president of student life might as well have been called the VP Sun God. Year after year, diversity and

athletics have been thrown to the wayside by a bubble event planner who loves fliers, music and parties. If elected, Desiree Prevo, who’s running on the Students First slate, will change all that.

As a board member on the Black Student Union and a cur-rent A.S. campuswide senator, she played an instrumental role in drafting the BSU’s list of demands and sustaining resistance in the aftermath of Winter Quarter’s rac-ist events. Her close ties with the Students for Affirmative Action Committee will ensure outreach and retention won’t be ignored in favor of a few annual concerts.

Prevo — a calm, rational think-er — also believes that defund-ing the Koala isn’t the answer to improving UCSD’s campus climate.

Incumbent VP Student Life Ricsie Hernandez has, to put it lightly, taken a hands-off leader-ship role this year — especially in ensuring AVP Concerts & Events Alex Bramwell didn’t completely ruin Sun God with another under-whelming lineup.

Prevo’s plan to have weekly check-ins and improve communi-cation within her office may seem an easier-said-than-done response to the current lack of supervision, and it’s a bit concerning that she lacks a specific vision for what she’d like to see each of her three associ-ates accomplish. But her greatest strength as a candidate lies not so much in her specific plans for the three sectors of Student Life — Diversity, Concerts & Events and Athletics — as in her demonstrated passion for reform. Her commit-ment to diversity is an especially strong indicator that she’d expand the office to become more than a sideline Sun God cheerleader.

It’s worth noting that Prevo’s opponent, Kristina Pham of the NOW! slate, has a host of awesome ideas — such as restoring after-noon concerts at Price Center in the week leading up to Sun God. But unlike Pham and Tritons First candidate Nicole Metildi, Prevo has already proven herself both a competent leader and an honest, sensible strategist — two qualities to value in a VP who promises to pump new life into those two neglected parts of Student Life.

EDITOR IN CHIEF

MANAGING EDITORS

The UCSD Guardian Editorial Board conducted hour-long interviews with all presidentiai candidates, 45-minute interviews with all vice presidential candidates and 30-minute interviews with all campus sentaor candidates. The board based its endorsements on these interviews, as well as the experience of each candidate. Views expressed herein represent the majority vote of the editorial board and are not necessarily those of the UC

Board of Regents, the ASUCSD or the members of the Guardian staff.

NEWS EDITORS

OPINION EDITOR

ILLUSTRATIONS BY CHRISTINA AUSHANA/GUARDIAN

DESIREEPREVO

VICE PRESIDENT OF STUDENT LIFE

DON’ T FORGET TO VOTE. The A.S. Council is responsible for roughly $3 million instudent fees. Vote on TritonLink before 4 p.m. on Friday.

RESPONSIBILITIESActs as the student body’s official

representative, and chief executive

officer of the A.S. Council

SALARY & BENEFITS$10,000 per year

A-spot parking upgrade

WHY WE ENDORSE HIMHe’s got the right ideas — and the

popular support to make them

happen.

RESPONSIBILITIESServes as interim A.S. president in

event of office vacancy

Appoints and dismisses council-

members on A.S. committees

SALARY & BENEFITS$5,250 per year

A-spot parking upgrade

WHY WE ENDORSE HERShe knows Student Life is about

more than event planning.

PRESIDENT

JOHNCONDELLO

2010-11 A.S. COUNCIL

ENDORSEMENTS

OPINION MONDAY, APRIL 5, 2010 THE UCSD GUARDIAN 5

O ur long-deliberated choice to endorse Josh Grossman for Vice President of Finance and

Resources comes with quite a few reservations. His intention to use thinly veiled media-org funding rules to pursue the shutdown of the Koala, for example, demonstrates that he is just another sketchy Peter Benesch character.

Not only would such an endeavor be a waste of the VP Finance’s time and poten-tially cost the university a lot of money in legal battles, it’s also extremely divisive and harmful toward other media that might get caught in the crossfire. The convictions expressed in his interviews, furthermore, show that he is dangerously out of touch with student opinion.

It’s not unreasonable to assume that, if both Gupta and

Grossman are elected, they will make the most toxic com-bination since vodka met Red Bull. Except instead of a lethal hangover, they would cause a divided council and a whole lot of wasted time and money.

But Grossman’s edge over competitor Andrew Ang is his fiscal responsibility. With student fees at an all-time high, reducing unnecessary spending within the council’s budget should be a top priority. Grossman has said he’ll scru-tinize every item in the budget before it’s approved ,and is ready and willing to place limits and on A.S. spending — some-thing Ang, having been burned for his non-content-neutral attempt earlier this year, is now too cautious to feel comfortable doing.

Given the likelihood that administrators try to dip into

the A.S. funding pool next year, we need a VP who will hold his ground against outside interests. Ang seems to crumble to anybody’s will if it’s strong enough, while Grossman’s position in the A.S. committee to review the Transportation Referendum shows an ability to put in the research and resist administrative blackmailing.

As proposals like the Transportation Referendum have shown, we are going to need someone with concrete plans for the budget, and the backbone to stay the course — we just wish Grossman’s commendable financial policy didn’t come in such a poten-tially disastrous package. It’s going to be Grossman’s job to be a “watchdog of student fees” — not shut down the Koala. Hopefully he’ll learn early on to stick to his job description.

Abubbly Eleanor Roosevelt College sophomore with a Justin Bieber haircut, Michael Raimondi has chosen his senatorial goals wisely:

He wants to help students understand how to navigate administrative roadblocks and partake in campus sustainability.

As an Econaut working with Housing, Dining and Hospitality Services, Raimondi’s administrative know-how has generated some refreshing proposals. He plans to educate students about RAs and petitioning classes, reduce superfluous A.S. printing and recruit more trash cans and student art. He may not have the strongest grasp on how to help failing enterprises like the Grove Cafe, but he knows that something needs to change — even if it’s something as simple as add-ing a more visible sign. RAIMONDI

MICHAEL

VICE PRESIDENT OF FINANCE AND RESOURCES

FACUNDO RAMOSVICE PRESIDENT OF EXTERNAL AFFAIRS

OK, we’ll admit Roberson isn’t very experienced when it comes to A.S. Council politics. But anyone who drops by a four-hour coun-

cil meeting because she thinks it’s “interesting” would be an asset to our council. Plus, there’s something to be said for a senator as engag-ing and amiable as Roberson. She’s a BSU member with a talent for informing those who don’t understand; her welcoming personality and reasonable demeanor will help her reach out to a large variety of stu-dents and help them see why diversity should be a campus priority.

Being a longtime runner on the track team, she’s also valuable as a representative of the athlete’s perspective on council matters — which

will hopefully result in more coordination with the Athletics Department.

Our only worry is that Roberson will be so busy studying for chemistry and jumping hurdles next year that she’ll let her senatorial obligations fall to the way-side. But considering her success in time management thus far, we’re betting she won’t let us down.

ROBERSONDEYNA

Every platform supports increasing the number of on-campus events, but Eleanor Roosevelt College

sophomore Zoe Seher’s intense involvement with the student-org system proves she has the skills and connec-tions — not just the ideas — to get the job done. 

Seher has structured plans for putting on cultural events and art fairs, thanks to her time at the Center for Student Involvement. Hopefully, she can even impart this know-how onto her more clueless peers. She wants to teach students about event finance and how to fill out paperwork; about how to rent space in Price Center for free, so there is more speech about controversial issues; about org delega-tion and retention. She wants to host more events on campus, and she actually knows how to do it. Imagine that.

SEHERZOE

Though generally inexperienced in the way of administrative bureau-cracy, Marshall’s main appeal lies in his levelheaded approach to issues

he’s passionate about: athletics and student outreach. Unlike most pro-football councilmembers, Marshall has personally

gauged student opinion on the subject, and constructed a solution that considers alternative funding. His opinion that the A.S. Council must find a way to defund the Koala may compromise free-speech ideals, but a dissenting opinion would still benefit discussions on the topic next year.

Though Marshall is most passionate about football, his well-played actions during the “Compton Cookout” fiasco impressed us most. While many sacrificed diplomacy for easy-to-shout slogans, Marshall kept communicating his viewpoints rationally in public forums and rallies, encouraging dialogue between upset and frustrated groups of students. His mature level of involvement will be an invaluable asset for the A.S. Council next year.

CODY

MARSHALL

UCSD’s tornado of student leaders — A.S. hotheads, SAAC activists, student-media diehards — often become so wrapped up in themselves

that they forget to take into account the sentiments of the remaining 80 percent: the students who would rather their fees go toward stock-ing essential lab equipment than the Sun God lineup. Jason Caffrey will always err on the side of conserving the council’s $3 million, and funnel-ing it back, wherever possible, into the academic experience.

More than your average Geisel geek, Caffrey also has a grasp on which documents he would need to present to which departments to make headway in cutting costs. Sure, he might stick out like a Ticonderoga in a room of bleeding ballpoints. But his cynicism — and indifference to luxu-ries like a D-I football team — is refreshing, and, unlike most average-Joe candidates before him, Caffrey has stumbled through enough dron-ing A.S. minutes to know a referendum from a resolution from a First Amendment lawsuit.

CAFFREYJASON

V ague buzzwords like “outreach” and “diversity” have been choice vocabulary on the campaign trail this year. One of the few senato-

rial candidates to present a clear idea of how she’d actually pursue those grand ideals, though, Chua plans to encourage activism both on campus and in Sacramento. She’s passionate about fighting fee increases and pushing for the D.R.E.A.M. Act, which would make undocumented immigrant students eligible for financial aid.

They’re goals that are, granted, pretty lofty for a lowly senator with three short quarters to push an agenda. But unlike most of her opponents, Chua has experience lobbying the capital and has spent two years as an intern in the A.S. External Affairs office — which, along with a fleshed-out agenda, sets her apart from this year’s crop of inexperi-enced slate puppets.

CHUARUBY

Don’t let her cute little freckles fool you: As the most qualified campuswide senator candidate this spring,

Elman means business. A superstar member of the Student Sustainability Collective, Elman is experienced in navigating administrative bureaucracy.

In other words, when she says she wants to make Sun God Festival more sustainable and encourage the use of public transpor-tation next year, we believe she’s got the know-how and drive to make it happen.

She’s also well-informed about a slew of other issues sure to plague the council next year. She’s a tree-hugger who understands the impor-tance of the California Democracy Act and doesn’t think students should foot the bill for the Loft or a football team when tuition is shooting through the roof. And, in regard to the media freeze, she said she wants to increase access to funds rather than add regulations. Right answer.

Now, if only she’d try and run this entire mess of a council.

ELMANELIZABETH

A fter the eye-opening racially charged events last quarter, it’s difficult to deny the importance of enacting some well-orchestrated efforts to

educate our campus about cultural diversity. Like many others in the Students First slate, Elizabeth Garcia has

staked her candidacy on this hot issue. Though only a Muir College freshman — and a generally uninformed one at that — Garcia shows potential of becoming an effective leader for her cause.

Most of all, Garcia demonstrates the kind of eloquence necessary to ensure both cooperation between colleagues and a rational mindset in answering the controversial questions now facing the A.S. Council.

Seeing as she hasn’t even been here a year, it’s hard to predict whether Garcia will follow through. If she catches on quick, though, she has the potential to become one of the council’s most effective senators.

GARCIAELIZABETH

CAMPUSWIDE SENATORS

RESPONSIBILITIESAdvises president and council on

all fiscal issues

Oversees activity-fee distribution

SALARY & BENEFITS$5,250 per year

A-spot parking upgrade

WHY WE ENDORSE HIMHe has concrete plans to reduce

superfluous spending.

RESPONSIBILITIESEducates student body on issues

affecting UCSD at city, state and

national levels

Lobbies officials and legislators

on behalf of student body

Serves as UC Student Association

rep for UCSD

SALARY & BENEFITS$5,250 per year

A-spot parking upgrade

WHY WE ENDORSE HIMHis experience in the External

Affairs office ensures he’ll get

things done in Sacramento.

I t’s been a busy year for student activists. A mas-sive tuition increase, a contentious debate

over racial sensitivity and minority retention on cam-pus, student-loan reform and an ongoing statewide dialogue about the contro-versial D.R.E.A.M. Act have meant a packed schedule for the A.S. Office of External Affairs.

Next year will no doubt prove just as critical for student mobilization as the last seven months. With that in mind, it’s clear the candidate most qualified to take the reigns of such efforts is Facundo Ramos.

Nearly three years of experience in the external office have given Ramos

the knowledge, the back-ground and the ideas necessary to head up a new year of student-led political activism.

He intends to rein-vigorate efforts to directly engage with lawmakers, and has plans to join up with the United States Student Association and take his activism to the national stage — a much-needed step toward letting those who can make a difference hear what we have to say.

Under the mentorship of current Vice President of External Affairs Gracelynn West, Ramos has been schooled in the ways of effective organizing and dedication to the student cause.

Despite his qualifica-tions, however, there are certain points of concern about Ramos. As the brother of immigrant rights activist Matias Ramos, he seems likely to focus the bulk of his efforts on mobi-lizing students in favor of the D.R.E.A.M. Act.

He should keep in mind that as an elected official, he will be responsible for representing all students — which means making tuition costs and increased state funding for the uni-versity a primary goal.

It wouldn’t hurt if also practiced his public-speak-ing skills. While his experi-ence is invaluable, it could all be wasted if no one is listening.

RESPONSIBILITIESComplete at least two

projects each year, one of

which must benefit the

entire campus

Serve on at least two

campuswide committees

Vote on the council floor

JOSH GROSSMAN

MONDAY, APRIL 5, 2010

you are as small as possible.”In contrast, McEuen, Dhillon and Ben

Hassine agreed that the decision to fail the referendum will result in cuts to shuttle services and therefore negatively affect students.

Dhillon said the funding issues now facing Transportation and Parking and Services could be remedied by creating more “S” spots that students could buy to fund the shuttles.

In regard to the media freeze, Gupta claimed he never actively tried to defund controversial newspaper the Koala, or stop their distribution.

“My concern has always been regarding our sponsorship of their publication, and I would defend their right to distribute their publication across the campus, as I have done,” Gupta said.

He added that he had been willing to explore the “government speech model” suggested by Vice President of Finance and Resources Peter Benesch, which would give the council discre-tionary power to fund certain media organiza-tions through advertisements.

McEuen, who also ran with the Student Voice! slate last year, said he would have edu-cated groups such as the Koala about diversity instead of targeting the publication because of its beliefs.

McEuen said his slate aims to fund more student orgs and lobby externally.

“We want to lobby not just the regents, but we want to go to the state level and the local legislatures, and lobby them to make sure that they understand that students are not going to stand for these drastic fee increases,” he said.

Ben Hassine said all students should be given the right to issue their publications if they are constitutionally protected.

“If media orgs don’t fall under such protec-tion, we should take publications off campus through legal channels,” she said.

Ben Hassine said that, as a member of the media funding committee, she boycotted meet-ings that she believed falsely pitted the Black Student Union and the media organizations against each other.

“If we wanted to make our guidelines bet-ter, let’s make a committee to find what’s illegal not go out there specifically for one org,” Ben Hassine said.

Ben Hassine added that, although her slate is geared strongly toward Students for Affirmative Action Committee  organizations, it will reach out to other constituents because of the social and ethnic diversity of her running mates.

Virgilio, who is running on a platform cen-tered on improving student life, said he wants to bring more fun to UCSD, but is unsure about how to do so.

“[Creating fun] step by step, that’s not some-thing that we can do,” Virgilio said.

The vice-presidential debates will take place on Monday, April 5, in Price Center Plaza at noon. Voting will begin the same day and con-tinue until 4 p.m. on Friday. At 5:30 p.m., elec-tion results will be announced at Round Table Pizza in Price Center. Students can vote both on TritonLink and Library Walk.

Readers can contact Andrew Tieu at [email protected].

NEWS MONDAY, APRIL 5, 2010 THE UCSD GUARDIAN 6

LA

BSLANGUAGES

LECT

URES

SUMMERSE

SSION.UCSD.EDU

UC SAN DIEGO2010

SUMMERS E S S I O NCOMING

SOON!

ENROLLMENT BEGINSMONDAY, APRIL 12

* * * * * *

APPOINTMENT TIMES POSTED AT TRITONLINK

APRIL 5FEES DUEJUNE 21

SESSION I BEGINSJUNE 28

For more info contact the Summer Session Office

(858) 534-5258 or e-mail

[email protected]

NOW WHAT?

▶ DEBATES, from page 1

Koala’s $3,471 request to print its issue in full color.According to Benesch, the allocation caused

a divide amongst the councilmembers.“[No. 15] was allocated more than I’ve heard

of any media organization ever being allocated — ever,” Benesch said. “$9,000 approximately for one media organization to publish for one quarter — that’s one-fifth of what we’re supposed allocate out per year to one media organization.”

Ang believes the sum is a non-issue.

“They requested a lot because of the nature of their magazine,” he said. “It’s a fashion maga-zine, and they wanted to develop a publication that was also a work of art. We have a memo-randum of understanding where they will never request that much again.”

The council will revote on the issue at the April 7 meeting this week.

Readers can contact Neda Salamat at [email protected].

▶ FUNDING, from page 2

A . S . P R E S I D E N T I A L C A N D I D A T E S 2 0 1 0

2 0 1 0 A . S . E L E C T I O N P R E V I E W

A P R I L 5 , 2 0 1 0 | P A G E S 8 - 1 2

8 THE UCSD GUARDIAN MONDAY, APP

Gunning for re-election isn’t exactly what most A.S. Presidents plan for. Which isn’t to say last year’s indepen-dent underdog, Sixth College senior Utsav Gupta, did either. Especially after he froze media org funding and, in turn, turned many students against him.

“I looked at the candidates running for president this year and honestly I was a little distressed,” said Gupta. “None of them had cabinet level experience, most were only in [the A.S. Council] for one year, and most didn’t do much while they were there.”

Since securing the A.S. presidency last year as an independent candidate, Gupta has spent his fourth year as a bioengineering major balancing his course load with lofty goals. As result, he’s had to cut down the usual five to six classes he takes a quarter — forcing him to stay another year.

The largest criticism of Gupta’s presidency is likely that he hasn’t quite finished much of what he’s started.

Take, for instance, Koala editor in chief Kris Gregorian calling the BSU members protesting the

B R I A N J O H N W A F A B E N

In two short years on the heated A.S. Council floor, Thurgood Marshall College sophomore Brian McEuen has almost never slipped out of line. His words are few and carefully chosen, avoiding the emotional charge that often divides his fellow council-members and drags meetings on.

In fact, McEuen’s place at the table might go unnoticed by a student unfamiliar with the council — if not for his stature. He’s a born politician, with kind eyes and a dash-ing jawline. (The spitting image of current Vice President of Finance and Resources Peter Benesch — also known for his serene, sometimes slippery presence on the council).

You’d think McEuen was born for this. But when he was first recruited to UCSD by the men’s volleyball coach, the high-school senior never expected to end up in student government. However, he was cut after three short weeks as a Triton, and McEuen was soon hot on the hunt for a new team.

That’s when he headed to the fourth floor of Price Center East. He served as an A.S. freshman senator his first year, and has since moved into the position of Marshall College senator and senate vice chair.

All this, while juggling a Lambda Chi Alpha membership, UCSD club volleyball and a brewing den of homemade beer back home. (He is currently in the process of brewing his second batch, a red oak amber.)

McEuen has also taken an extremely active role in presenting student con-cerns to administrators: He sits on the Campus Affairs Committee, the Advisory Committee on Sustainability and the Registration Fee Advisory Committee.

Still, the senator’s decision to run for the council’s most powerful position — especially on a brand-new slate — was somewhat unexpected, considering he’s only a college senator going into his junior year. (Sixth College junior and fellow presidential candidate John Condello, a close friend of McEuen, is taking a similarly premature leap toward the top spot.)

The Student Voice! slate, which car-ried McEuen into senatorship last year, was doomed to disintegrate after independent candidate and current A.S. President Utsav Gupta won by a landslide last spring, leav-ing SV! candidate Erin Brodwin with only a few hundred votes.

Revelle College junCampuswide Senator Walways flying into A.S. from somewhere else —College Council, the StAction Committee, theAssociation, KSDT RadResource Center or UCSolutions.

Ben Hassine said shhyper-involvement in slent her an edge over thcandidates: a “wholesowhat UCSD has to offe

But in the eyes of smembers, Ben Hassine— and the packed schecompromises her abilitsibilities of a seat on th

According to Assocof Student OrganizatioBen Hassine was part oOrganization Funding which Ang chairs, fromspring to early Fall Quaally stepped down aftermissed meetings.

“As a campuswide ssents a huge communi— and by being part ofmaybe she thinks she’s those committees,” Anvery noble and that’s veto do, but if she can’t fothem, then how is she entire student body?”

However, A.S. TranPowers disagrees with

“I think if it’s a validcriticism of all of us,” Pthink there’s a single stuning who is not complwith commitments. I thof a good candidate: hounder that pressure thafrom what I’ve seen, shattention to all of her cwell by them.”

Powers worked witCalifornia Democracy petitioned to allow statthe budget with a simpthe statewide ballot iniUCSD chapter — foun

Last February, after A.S. president Utsav Gupta made a split-second decision to freeze funds for all student newspapers, one senator in particular took the spotlight. Sixth College sophomore John Condello became the posterboy for Gupta’s opposing army, aggressively vocal about the absolute preservation of free speech on campus — in this case, free speech in the form of access to content-neutral press funding.

Condello’s impassioned participation in the debate — which at times became very personal at public forums and meetings, as well as over the A.S. e-mail listserv — was a testament to his commitment against a shady, over-bureaucratic council.

“My whole rule is just to take the bullshit out of A.S. and reconnect with the students, rather than this extension of high-school ASB and being the patsy for the administration,” Condello said.

The Sixth College senator argued that Gupta’s move to re-evaluate media funding guidelines was a thinly veiled attempt to defund controversial humor newspaper the Koala, which was contributing to racial ten-sions on campus.

“[It was] about shutting down the Koala,” Condello said. “Just be honest about it — if you’re going to fuck someone over, just tell them you’re going to fuck them over.”

Though Condello — who became close friends with Koala members during the controversy — acknowledged that the publication’s content is often extremely offensive, he maintained that its purpose on campus is to ensure the right to express ideas freely.

“I agree with none of the content of the Koala,” Condello said. “What I do agree with [is] some of the ideas behind it, which is the idea behind any media organization, and that’s to broaden people’s horizon.”

Gupta appointed Condello to a commit-tee composed mainly of student-media rep-resentatives, tasked with examining alterna-tives to open funding of all publications. At the pinnacle of the controversy — a March 10 A.S. Council meeting at which council-members were to vote on the committee’s findings — Vice President of Finance and Resources Peter Benesch showed up with a PowerPoint unfamiliar to the rest of the

GUPTA/DHILLON/HASSINE BY JOHN HANACEK/ G UA R D I A N

MCEUEN/VIRGIL IO BY ER IC WANG/G UA R D I A N

CONDELLO BY ERIK JEPSEN/G UA R D I A N

BRENNER BY T IMOTHY WONG/ G UA R D I A N

COVER PAGE BY ERIK JEPSEN/G UA R D I A N

CENTERSPREAD BY EMILY KU & JOHN HANACEK/ G UA R D I A N

campus climate, more

students than ever seem

to want a vote on A.S.

Council. In total, 39

candidates ran for

campuswide positions,

many of whom helped

form four new student

slates. Student Voice! —

a slate riddled with dirty

politics and uncooperative

figureheads by its third

year in existence —

split into Students First,

headed by Wafa Ben

Hassine and Tritons

First, led by Brian

McEuen. Meanwhile,

the special-interest

Students for Football

slate popped up, along

with a suspiciously thin

Gupta-sponsored NOW!

slate. With the fresh-faced

group will come new

issues and new problems

for 2010-11. This year,

it’s anyone’s game.

A . S . P R E S I D E N T I A L R A C E 2 0 1 0

Gunning for re-election isn’t exactly whaPresidents plan for Which isn’t to say last ye

U T S A V

Gupta is the first president in A.S. Councilhistory to run for re-election.

FOCUS 9PRIL 5, 2010

Compton Cookout “ungrateful niggers” on air. Though SRTV’s contract had only been renewed a mere weeks before the event, Gupta pulled the station’s plug nearly an hour after the violation. After that, he put a freeze on all media organization funding.

The maneuver, Gupta says, was under his jurisdiction according to Section II of the A.S. Constitution which stipulates that the role of the council is “to create and execute programs which serve the collective interests of the undergraduate population.” According the Gupta, the cur-rent media organization funding system was not serving the “collective interests.” Still, if he could do it again, he’d have done it differently.

“If I were to go back with the knowledge I have now, I probably wouldn’t have had such an extensive freeze on media-org funding,” said Gupta. “I wouldn’t have let it go on for so long.”

According to presidential candidate and Sixth College Senator John Condello, who is a vocal supporter of free speech, the media freeze was a well-intentioned reflex.

“He’s a smart guy,” said Condello. “He doesn’t do any-thing without knowing months in advance. The only reac-tionary move that I’ve seen him take is the media freeze.”

After the media freeze caused additional uproar, Gupta

hosted a public forum that was largely attended by mem-bers of the A.S. Council, the Black Student Union and vari-ous media organizations. The forum resulted in the cre-ation of two committees (the second replacing the first) to discuss media funding and free speech. In the end, because the second committee voted 5-13-5 against a government speech model proposed by VP Finance Peter Benesch, the media freeze was mandatorily lifted at the end of the A.S. Council’s last meeting, as stipulated by the council’s stand-ing rules.

“There should be some discretion involved in funding media organizations beyond a fixed set, if that makes sense, which is why I was advocating for the hybrid [government speech model] approach,” Gupta said.

Still, for many media organizations, Gupta’s misstep damaged their confidence in the A.S. President to make decisions on behalf of the student body.

“I’m hoping I can work to rebuild some of that trust again,” said Gupta. “I didn’t do some sort of backhanded committee process to try and get specific legislation passed — everything was out in the open; I wanted media orgs to be part of the process. I’m hoping as the emotionality of the situation dies down, people will be able to see the specific realities of what happened versus what’s being presented or

misrepresented.”After deciding to run again for re-election, he’s focusing

much of his campaign on continuing the projects he start-ed this year — namely returning Sun God Festival to its all-campus format and bringing Division-I football to UCSD. He’s also added collectivizing high education in San Diego in order to educate regional politicians about UCSD’s eco-nomic benefits (so as to prevent tuition-increasing legisla-tion), protect Shuttle Services from coercing council into a student fee referendum, keeping Geisel Library open late and looking into Greek and student leadership housing in his new campaign.

According to Gupta, uncaging Sun God Festival has been a gradual process that — as expected — has met a lot of opposition. Though he’s brought back the Junkyard Derby to Library Walk as well as college council events during the day, he says he was prevented from bringing back student organization booths to Library Walk by the VP Student Life, AVP Concert & Events and AVP Student Organizations as well as Vice Chancellor of Student Life Gary Ratcliff “who waited until it was too late to change the direction of the booths.”

N R Y A N T A N J O S E P H

Marshall College junior Tan Dhillon is quick to describe himself as “the Indian guy who isn’t Utsav.” And with a collection of campaign promises aimed at rewiring how student government works at UCSD, he apparently aims to make this distinction very clear.

Both Dhillon and Utsav Gupta — the current A.S. president now making a bid for a second term — have a year of experience as executives. As chair of the Thurgood Marshall College Student Council, however, Dhillon finds himself at the head of a con-siderably smaller governing body. While TMCSC’s budget is $90,000 a year, the A.S. President oversees roughly $3 million in student fees.

But the frightening prospect of cam-puswide governance hasn’t slowed Dhillon down at all. In his independent run for the council’s top position, he has worked to define himself from his pack of opponents — several of them seasoned A.S. insiders — by preaching empowerment, administrative accountability and unity. He’s even taking a few well-aimed shots at Gupta — an easy target, but an effective one nonetheless.

“Utsav hasn’t been working on unifying the council,” Dhillon said. “There’s a lot of division that hasn’t been addressed.”

Dhillon’s vision takes him far beyond the confines of the council’s internal har-mony as ell. As president, he pledges to combat the unfortunate nature of “campus monopolies” such as dining-dollar require-ments, which Dhillon said lock students into paying dramatically inflated prices for food on campus. He said wants to end the abuse and play the empowerment card by overhauling dining package options and changing all dining dollars to Triton Cash — a move that would allow students greater spending flexibility and more eateries to choose from.

Though the promise is enticing, Dhillon has yet to work out the details with Housing, Dining and Hospitality Services. Given that the department could lose a substantial chunk of income by adopting the plan, Dhillon would face a rough battle if elected.

“I do understand there is a strong oppo-sition,” he said. “But what is the university here for? The university is here for the

nior and A.S. Wafa Ben Hassine is Council meetings

— from the Revelle tudent Affirmative e Muslim Student dio, the Sustainability CSD Commute

he considers this student life to have he other presidential

ome appreciation of er.”ome fellow council-e’s heap of interests edule they create — ty to fufill the respon-

he A.S. Council.ciate Vice President

ons Andrew Ang, of the Student Advisory Board,

m the end of last arter — but eventu-r she continually

senator, she repre-ity on this campus f those committees, representing them in g said. “I think that’s ery honest of her ollow through with going to represent the

nsfer Senator Adam Ang’s argument.d criticism, it’s a valid

Powers said. “I don’t udent leader run-letely overburdened hink that the mark ow well you function at all of us have. And he’s been able to pay commitments and do

th Ben Hassine on the Act Coalition, which

te legislators to pass ple majority. Although itiative failed, the nded by Ben Hassine

Last year, Muir College senior August Ryan Brenner held a Seder for his friends — complete with matza and karpas — to “raise cultural awareness” as his friend Doug Rosen put it. Brenner isn’t Jewish. The point of the party was just to bring people together.

Brenner, a San Mateo native who goes by Ryan, started his college career at UC Santa Cruz but transferred to UCSD because it was better for his chemical engi-neering major. Now in his second year at UCSD, this Village resident has taken a new interest in campus politics — albeit in the most lighthearted sense possible.

According to Brenner, most of the other candidates for A.S. president are far more qualified, and he doesn’t have much chance of winning.

“I talked to my friend in class and he said, ‘You should run for president,’” Brenner said. “I woke up the next day, had a research meeting, got out at 9 a.m., picked up a candidate packet, got 150 signatures and turned in the packet by 11 a.m.” 

Brenner’s only political experience to date is an office aide position he held dur-ing his senior year of high school. But he abused those privileges, and — as punish-ment for getting students out of class with office passes — Brenner was forced to read the school announcements. He was then kicked out of that position a week before graduation, after he badmouthed a certain teacher over the loudspeaker.

If elected, Brenner said his top priorities will be allowing students to start organiza-tions at any time of the year and improving UCSD’s parking nightmare.

According to Brenner, faculty ‘A’ spots should be moved across campus and more ‘B’ spots should be changed to ‘S’ spots to benefit students. He’s also angered by the fact that campus employees have to buy their own parking permits.

“They’re employed by the campus and spend 500 of their hard-earned dollars every year to work here,” Brenner said. “If I could do something about changing that, I would. I’d find out about it from a qualified person — if I’m somehow able to win.”

A firm advocate of free speech, Brenner said he doesn’t agree with current A.S. President Utsav Gupta’s Winter Quarter

Almost every year, the A.S. presiden-tial election has its maverick. Either he’s a Koala affiliate advocating more beer and partying, or a highly uninformed sacrificial lamb looking to bitch about the system.

But Joe Virgilio falls somewhere in between. The Muir College senior believes the answer to accomplishing anything and everything is to get rid of all these goddamn committees and “just do it” — though he’s often clueless to what that something is. (He’s also been cited lurking around the Koala office once or twice.)

Accordingly, it’s often hard to tell if Virgilio’s joking. At the A.S. presidential debate in Price Center Plaza on Friday, he addressed the audience awkwardly, with squinty eyes and trailing anti-slogans. When asked about how he might go about improving student life, he struggled with a couple incomplete thoughts and eventually concluded: “The students tell you what they want, and then you just do it.” When the conversation entered the land of acronyms, he grabbed the micro-phone to say he was “sort of at a loss of what everybody’s talking about.”

Though Virgilio has never been to an A.S. Council meeting, he maintains that he hates it regardless. Too many commit-tees. Too much talking. Too many people. Not enough action.

He’s especially not a fan of A.S. President Utsav Gupta, who is currently running for re-election. Virgilio claimed Gupta has not done anything during his presidency this year.

“I voted for him last year, you know, and it [seemed] like this guy would actu-ally do things, and he didn’t — I mean, not that I [noticed],” Virgilio said in an interview. “Utsav just seems like a rich kid. He’s kind of smug. I don’t like him.”

Gupta, who was stifling laughter throughout the debate on Friday, did say later that Virgilio provides a valuable dia-logue about the perspective of the average student.

Among Virgilio’s goals are keeping the library open, giving shuttles more funding, giving the co-ops more money, building a giant radio tower atop of KSDT

10 THE UCSD GUARDIAN MONDAY, APRIL 5, 2010 FOCUS

decision to freeze the funds of student media organizations in response to the actions of humor newspaper the Koala. Though he said he finds much of the content published in the Koala to be vulgar, Brenner made it clear that the students involved have the right to say whatever they want.

“What’s the harm? If you don’t want to read it, don’t read it,” Brenner said. “If you don’t like what it says, start a news-paper and write anti-Koala stuff.”

According to Brenner, both his big-gest challenge and accomplishment at UCSD is waking up in the morning. A typical week for Brenner includes going to “80 percent” of his classes, hanging out with friends and doing his homework.

“He’s really everywhere on campus, having a good time, and bringing people together,” said Eleanor Roosevelt College senior Douglas Rosen, who is Brenner’s friend of four years.

Brenner’s strategy for victory is simple: make people smile. And as a ballsy conversationalist who likes out-

door adventures and collecting interest-ing facts (about everything from cider to Passover), every once in a while he succeeds.

“Ryan is a positive experience every time,” Rosen said. “He always makes everyone his friend. No one is upset meeting Ryan Brenner; he transcends his college. He makes six colleges one university.”

At UCSD, Brenner participates in the Tae Kwon Do Club and is a member of the Slavic Student Union.

After graduation, though, Brenner said he doesn’t want a lab job. Instead, he’s aiming to be James Bond or conduct research on aliens.

“I’m pretty 100-percent confident that aliens exist somewhere in the uni-verse,” Brenner said. “Whether they’re here on this planet is a very small pos-sibility.”

Brenner says he’s “pretty 100 percent confident” that aliens exits and that through more advanced, futuristic tech-nology, it might be possible to find other life forms similar to humans, or that

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students. HDH is not functioning in the students’ best interest, and that needs to be changed.”

Dhillon’s quest to stand up for the little guy — or, the student body — will take him to even greater heights. After spending a significant amount of time working with residential security officers during his time as a resident advisor, Dhillon is markedly disillu-sioned with how officers treat students.

“RSOs prey on the fact that stu-dents don’t know their rights, and just barge in,” he said. “They’re overly aggressive, and it’s unacceptable.”

To combat the perceived abuse, Dhillon said he aims to create a cam-puswide awareness campaign to edu-cate students about their on-campus rights from day one, and one to pro-vide feedback on RSOs. If they can write us up, we should be able to write them up, according to Dhillon. If he’s elected, RSOs may soon find them-selves subject to review by the students they are paid to keep an eye on.

This push for student rights is hardly a campaign tactic. Throughout

his term as TMCSC Chair, Dhillon has actively pursued new avenues for students to voice their opinions on campus matters. When he learned that Marshall’s main administrative com-mittees — the executive committee, the curriculum committee and the DOC committee — held no student positions, Dhillon wrote letters to the Marshall administration demanding that students be represented on the committees. He also insisted that rep-resentatives not be selected by admin-istrators.

Like many candidates, Dhillon has also jumped in line with supporters of a plan to extend Geisel Library’s oper-ating hours. But if that doesn’t work, he has a backup plan: convert Price Center East into a versatile, always-open study space by adding more power outlets to accommodate laptops.

But not everyone agrees that Dhillon’s experience and approach to leadership are what the university needs.

“I think Tan’s a nice guy,” said presidential candidate and Sixth College Senator John Condello. “But

I think he demonstrated last night [at the ERC debates] in one of his quotes that he’s not able to lead when he said, ‘Sometimes I think a leader needs to take a backseat role and know when to follow.’ I think that’d be great if he was running for a senator position.”

Gupta echoed Condello’s concerns.“He has experience being a college

council chair, but there’s no relation between being a college council chair and A.S. President.”

However, Dhillon said students can rely on his drive and selflessness. His passion for student life at UCSD, according to Dhillon, is directly influ-enced by the lessons he took away from his upbringing. After two of Dhillon’s family members passed away from heart failure, he said he realized how much he wanted to help people.

“It’s not about the prestige — it’s about helping people, having a direct interaction and seeing a change,” he said. “People always say you have to aim high to reach high, and I want to do both.”

— SENIOR STAFF WRITER

radio and installing more benches around campus.

“I want to see more benches. There’s a lot of walking and there’s no benches anywhere,” Virgilio said. “This really upsets me, actually. It might be my priority number one.”

The benches, Virgilio said, would allow him to avoid more public seat-ing areas. Needless to say, he isn’t much of a people person. Ever since he transferred to UCSD in Winter 2009, Virgilio said he’s had trouble adjust-ing. He’s uncomfortable around large crowds, and on-campus organizations aren’t really his thing.

“I had really bad anxiety, and I know a lot of other students that have anxiety when they come here as trans-fer students,” he said. “It’s like, crip-pling, almost; there are so many people and it’s just like, you don’t want to go to class, you don’t want to go to school even. I’ve overcome that.”

— STAFF WRITER

committee. It detailed a “government speech model,” which would allow the council to fund only the student press that reflected its own values. Condello had fire in his eyes.

“We should talk about why this is bad legislation,” Condello said at the meeting. “It is sketchy as hell — we agreed that there was going to be no PowerPoints.” [There is] a lot of back-stabbing through the whole thing.”

Stacy Sluys, editor in chief of Sixth College newspaper the Sixth Sense — formerly staffed by Gupta and Condello — said she sees Condello’s passion as an attribute. However, Sixth College President Brian Ng said the senator’s emotional investment in issues can some-times alienate other councilmembers.

“I think his passion — as much as it is his strength — can often sometimes be his weakness,” Ng said. “He can some-times be too impassioned in debates.”

Condello agreed that his debating style can be overly aggressive, but said that when it comes to collaboration, he remains level-headed.

“I’m OK with that as long you can work with people after,” Condello said. “Everybody makes mistakes.”

If elected, Condello said he hopes to make the A.S. Council more transparent by talking to students individually.

“Drink a coke with me, let’s get some pizza together and let’s talk about what you need to see changed,” Condello said. “Let’s work together and get it done. I don’t want to continue the self-imposed isolation that A.S. garnered over quite some time.”

According to Ng, Condello has proven his ability to make student gov-ernment more accessible while working on the college level this year.

“He can definitely, and will, listen to a lot of students,” Ng said. “And that’s probably one of his greatest strengths: He has a charisma about him that a lot of people find very approachable. He understands students’ needs without the baggage that comes with being a part of student government for several years. I feel like sometimes folks can be very involved in student government but then often lose sight of what students’ values are.”

Condello said he is equally invested

in standing up to UCSD administrators, who are often antagonistic toward stu-dent interests.

“I don’t think that they’re some kind of ultimate evil,” Condello said. “I just think that what they see as the right thing to do is often very disparate from what the student sees as the right thing to do.”

Last quarter, Condello was one of several councilmembers who faced prob-able impeachment due to 5.5 absences from council meetings, which are held every Wednesday night at 6 p.m. According to Gupta, that fact, along with his lack of experience, indicate that Condello isn’t prepared for the job.

“I think he made a lot of things personal against me, but I still really like him,” said Gupta. “Again, though, I’m worried about the experience issue: One year as senator, and he honestly hasn’t shown up to college meetings. He’s only started speaking up in the last bit of the year where elections are starting up.”

According to Condello, he collected a large amount of absences because of a class conflict. He added that he missed several more meetings because he was hospitalized due to a knee injury and respiratory distress from mono.

Last Friday, Condello did not attend the noontime A.S. presidential debate in Price Center Plaza. According to Condello, he didn’t attend the debate due to a migraine, a problem he’s had since he was a child.

As students vote on TritonLink this week, Condello said he plans to dive headfirst into his campaign, which was delayed by his recent recovery period from mono.

“It’s going to be a Blitzkrieg kind of campaign for [this] week,” Condello said. “[It’s] going to be a firestorm of me advertising.”

If elected, Condello said that, though his brutal honesty may make some uncomfortable, protecting his ideals and the interests of students will come first.

“Ultimately, I care more about the right thing than about making people like me happy,” Condello said. “That’s why I can never be a professional politi-cian — because I’d piss [off] too many people.”

— SENIOR STAFF WRITER

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Ben Hassine said she will drop all other commitments if she is voted into the presidency.

“I made a decision that if I get elected as president, I’m not doing anything else. And if I don’t [get elected], I’m going to focus on just one org.”

According to Ben Hassine, her big-gest priority as president would be to institutionalize student activism.

“I feel like activism, the word, [is taken] to mean somebody holding a pole or flier or something — but that’s not what it means to me,” she said. “It just means doing something with a purpose.”

For the candidates on Students First — the slate Ben Hassine created this year — this “purpose” is achieving access and affordability at UCSD.

“Usually, it’s always this fringe group of people that are protesting, that are talking to legislators,” Ben Hassine said. “Every person has a different role, and I feel like students need to utilize that unique role to collectively work for a more affordable education.”

Ben Hassine also considers campus sustainability a number one priority, evi-denced by her work with One Earth One Justice — which brought Fair Trade on campus and made steps toward taking the UCSD Bookstore sweatshop-free by convincing administrators to discontinue the sale of Russell sportswear.

Along with the habit of spreading herself too thin, councilmembers have said Ben Hassine has a tendency to rep-

resent and advocate for specific groups and issues — a potential detriment to representing the student body as a whole.

“Being opinionated is her hardest shortfall,” Vice President of Student Life Ricsie Hernandez said. “She doesn’t take time to talk to other people about their views. Being opinionated about one thing is completely detrimental to the whole student population.”

Hernandez appointed Ben Hassine to the Housing and Dining Committee, and said she performed well there (Ben Hassine was the only committee member to vote against the recent hike in housing and dining fees). However, Hernandez said she doubts the senator’s ability to adapt to the much broader role and reach of A.S. president.

“I think there are better choices for president who have good attendance records and are open to all ideas, and could represent the entire student popu-lation instead of focusing on specific groups,” Hernandez said.

UCSD College Democrats President Victor Lin — who worked with Ben Hassine on the CDAC — disagreed.

“She’s an all-campus senator,” Lin said. “And take a look at her work on the [CDAC] — that affects all students. … It’s good to see someone so passionate about non-trivial things. It’s refreshing.”

Ben Hassine stressed that her broad focus on access, affordability and sustain-ability does not mean she will ignore the more lighthearted aspects of student life.

“I want to personally assure everyone that I love to party and that I really, really do support student life on this campus,

and I do think it is the one answer to healing UCSD after all that happened with the protests and whatnot — bring-ing everyone together regardless of race or ethnicity,” Ben Hassine said. “Even if maybe I focus on the budget cuts too much or whatever, I feel that it’s well-placed because it’s about time students are aware of these issues, and it’s about time they also spend their money sus-tainably.”

Ben Hassine has been especially vocal about her opposition to pursuing a football team — one of current A.S. President Utsav Gupta’s key campaign promises.

“I understand football is cool, but it costs $1.5 million just to get it started,” Ben Hassine said. “Do you know what we could do with $1.5 million for our students other than just a football team? It’s not responsible to propose that right now.”

Ben Hassine defended her view of UCSD students as “global citizens.”

“I always hear things like, ‘Oh, you have an external edge,’ or, ‘You focus so much on the VP of External Affairs,’ or, ‘You care too much about people outside of UCSD, so you can’t work for UCSD students,’” Ben Hassine said. “But I feel like, as A.S. president, I would need to work for students at UCSD but not negatively affect the world around us. We can’t be completely ignorant of the outside world. We can’t. It’s completely irresponsible. We have such privilege to be here.”

— ASSOCIATE FOCUS EDITOR

The A.S. Presidency, Gupta says, can be time-devouring — consuming any-where from “30 hours on a good week to 80 hours a week on a bad week” — it’s something he’s worked his entire senior year to make the most of.

Though Gupta has been criticized by his fellow candidates for proposing to start a football team funded by student fees, he believes that the student body should be able to vote on the matter.

“He stuck to his promises — he has a large staff, he created a committee to look into all his campaign promises,” said

AVP of Student Organizations Andrew Ang. “But I believe that they were start-ed, and not fully completed in the term he said they would be completed in.”

The way Gupta sees it, aiming high shouldn’t be something candidates avoid.

“I think an advantage I’ve had is I’ve been able to specifically state what I want to do — I think it was something that differentiated me last year,” Gupta said. “My platforms have always been very ambitious and I think it was my largest criticism levied against me, but I think a lot of it can be achieved.”

Much of the reason Gupta has con-

crete ways to accomplish things, is due to his knowledge of the bureaucracy within A.S. Council and the administration, said VP Finance and friend Peter Benesch.

“Even if you ignore the fact that he was A.S. president for the last year, he literally has knowledge that no other candidate does — absolutely no other candidate,” Benesch said. “If you ask any other candidate, ‘How do you do x?’ They might give you an answer but it’ll probably be B.S. because, in all honesty, knowing how to do things is the most crucial thing to being a president in stu-dent government.”

12 THE UCSD GUARDIAN MONDAY, APRIL 5, 2010 FOCUS

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So, looking for a fresh (and hopefully more popular) pitch, McEuen talked with friend and Associate Vice President of Student Orgs Andrew Ang about creating the Tritons First slate. From there, they started recruiting running mates.

“We started picking people — what I think is the best of the best,” McEuen said. “Everyone on our slate has experience. They are not just random people who want to get involved.”

Even if he doesn’t win the presidential race this year, McEuen said he believes the Tritons First slate — his “biggest accomplishment” — will live on.

Indeed, McEuen runs the party like a machine: Every last campuswide senator recites the “Create! Empower! Restore!” catchphrase like it was mentally programmed, and it’s hard to traverse Library Walk without stumbling over a shiny Tritons First flier.

“I hope it’s not just a flash in the pan,” he said. “It’s supposed to be a lot more than that.”

Eleanor Roosevelt College Senior and fel-low Lambda Chi Alpha member Dan Driver said McEuen is “a breath of fresh air.”

“Brian always has a smile on his face, and is a good person to look to when you need a calm and levelheaded point of view,” Driver said.

McEuen said this affinity toward creating togeth-erness is what sets him apart from current A.S. President Gupta, who is running for a second term.

“Utsav is a very smart person,” McEuen said. “I would bet my bottom dollar that he knows more about the rest of this campus than the rest of the student body. But he hasn’t really brought the coun-cil together at all, and that’s one of the main things I want to work on.”

McEuen said his ability to facilitate constructive conversation — something the current president has not proven to be his strong point — is one of the

most important attributes of an executive in chief.“The president might not have the best ideas,

but he needs to be the best at getting people to come forward with those ideas,” he said.

Even independent candidate Condello recog-nized McEuen as one of the council’s most reliable mediators. Condello, who has a reputation for being confrontational during meetings, has expressed interest in appointing McEuen as his chief of staff, if elected, as a voice in his ear to keep him “in check.”

In response to McEuen’s candidacy, Gupta said he’s worried that McEuen has almost no track record of personal accomplishments on council.

“The main thing that worries me about [Brian] is that he hasn’t actually accomplished any projects over the two years that he’s been on A.S. — aside from the collaborative things like the A.S. referen-dum,” Gupta said. “But I can’t really tell you what he’s done throughout the year or what he stands for.”

Another one of McEuen’s main priorities, if elected, is to rein in A.S. spending.

“My biggest problem with the way A.S. is run, for the two years I’ve been on council, is that they waste money,” McEuen said. He said he will urge councilmembers to pay more attention to where their money’s going, and recruit more moneymak-ing events like concerts on campus and ultimately lower council dependence on student activity fees.

McEuen said he is also dissatisfied with the red tape involved in the process by which A.S. senators request A.S. funding for their individual projects.

“We have to beg council on our hands and knees,” McEuen said. “The way that the budget’s drafted — the way our system works right now — there are so many loops you have to jump through to get money. That shouldn’t be the case. It’s the students’ money, not A.S.’s money.”

Although he is a self-proclaimed Arizona Cardinals fan, McEuen’s stance on a potential UCSD football team aligns with his conservative views on spending (It’s a talking point that aligns almost identically with that of presidential candidate Wafa Ben Hassine, leader of Students First, the election’s only other large slate. )

“It’s a little bit of an insult to injury if we are asking our students to pay for a football team when students already have to leave the school because they can’t pay for an education,” McEuen said.

McEuen has called his exit from the UCSD vol-leyball team a “blessing in disguise.” Still, his intense involvement with the A.S. Council can sometimes become a strain alongside academics, he said.

“I wasn’t super involved in high school, so it’s hard for me to balance everything,” McEuen said. “It’s a challenge I still face.”

— STAFF WRITER

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Open Studios 2010 - The UC San Diego visual arts graduate student body invites the public into their creative space. Visitors will have the opportunity to view open studios, a group exhibit, ongoing film screenings, live performances, and symposia all in one day. Visual Arts Facility / 3-8pm

Saturday Apr 10C U L T U R E

UC San Diego’s 32nd Annual Cultural Celebration - Music, dance, food, and art from around the world. Children’s activities. Free parking. Info: marshall.ucsd.edu or (858) 534-4390. Thurgood Marshall College / 10am-4pm / Free

R E C R E A T I O N

Sherlock Holmes - Price Center Theatre / 6&9pm / Student $3; Regular $5

CAMPUS CALENDAR MONDAY, APRIL 5, 2010 THE UCSD GUARDIAN 13

Roma NightsRoma Nights

80’s Night saturday, April 10 • 8pmThe Loft • FREE

Wednesday, April 7 8:30pm • Porter’s Pub • Free

universitycenters.ucsd.edu

This Week

WEEK 2

Price Center and student Center

did you hEAR About thE moRgANs?tuesday, April 66 & 9pm • Price Center Theater$3 students / $5 general

dVC Friday, April 9 • 1 - 4pmRound Table Patio • FREE

Monday, April 5 ✴ 8pm

Espresso Roma ✴ Free

featuring Shoddy Sean & the Theocracy

AVAtAR thurs. & sat., April 8 & 106 & 9pm • Price Center Theater$3 students / $5 general

Monday Apr 5

C A R E E R

Job Fair Prep - Learn how to approach employers, what questions to ask and how to make a great first impression. Career Advisors will be available for resume critiques following the workshop. Career Services Center, Horizon Room / 12-1pm / Free

Resume Critiquing Marathon - Polish up your one-pager with our advisors. Learn how you can make your resume more effective in today’s job market. No sign-up needed, just bring your resume! Career Services Center, Horizon Room / 1:30-3:30pm / Free

Tuesday Apr 6

Week of 4/05 - 4/11

C A R E E R

PROSPECT Connect - Interested in international affairs? Featuring a lecture on the Impact of US Foreign Policy on Human Trafficking in India presented by Florence Middleton. Great Hall / 7:30-9pm / Free

Obtaining an Internship - Learn strategies for searching internship and part-time job listings to find positions that will meet your goals. Career Services Center, Horizon Room / 12-1:15pm / Free

Communicating Across Gender Differences - This workshop will explore the ways in which men and women communicate through the use of activities and dialogue. Presented by Brett Robertson,

Intergroup Relations Program. Price Center West Red Shoe Room / 1-2pm / Free

L E C T U R E

M2P (The Means to Protect): Understanding what Shortens Genocidal Violence - Within this lecture, Christian Davenport will examine what reduces the duration of large-scale, state-sponsored mass killing. ERC Room 115 / 12-1:30pm / Free

R E C R E A T I O N

You at the Loft: Open Mic Night - The Loft / 8pm / Free

Roma Nights presents Sean Gregory and Theo - Espresso Roma / 8pm / Free

Associated Students is preparing for the 2010-2011 school year with the upcoming A.S. Elections, where students will have a chance to shape the future of the UCSD community by voting for representatives for various positions within Associated Students. Vote this week!

C A R E E R

MBA: Preparing for and Applying to Business School - Learn how to prepare for an MBA program and what admissions committees require, and desire, in applicants. Find out about the GMAT and how to write your application essay. Career Services Center, Horizon Room / 3-4:30pm / Free

Effective Presentation Skills for International Students - Whether you are presenting research or preparing a poster session, this interactive session will provide you with the tools to speak confidently and prepare professional presentations. Ida and Cecil Green Faculty Club / 2-3pm / Free

C U L T U R E

Cesar E. Chavez Kickoff Luncheon - UC San Diego's opening event includes an award ceremony honoring a San Diego community member and a UCSD alum and staff member for furthering César Chávez's ideals in their lives. Suggested donation is $5; proceeds benefit MEChA's Raza Graduation. International Center / 11:30am-1:30pm

Peace Corps - Learn how to prepare for an MBA program and what admissions committees require, and desire, in applicants. Find out

Thursday Apr 8about the GMAT and how to write your application essay. Career Services Center, Horizon Room / 12-1:30pm / Free

L E C T U R E

New Writing Series Presents Alberto Blanco - Blanco is considered one of Latin America’s outstanding poets. Jerome Rothenberg is an internationally known poet. Both will be reading at UCSD. Geisel Library, Seuss Room / 4:30pm / Free

R E C R E A T I O N

Harvard Beats Yale 29-29 (2008) - The film intercuts original footage with the hilarious, suspenseful recollections of the 50 men who played in what has become one of college football’s most famous games. The Loft / 8pm / Student $5 Adv, PAYC Door; General $8

Avatar - Price Center Theatre / 6&9pm / Student $3; General $5

Muir Musical Ensemble Presents Seussical the Musical - Through April 10. Don’t miss this years Musical production of beloved Dr. Seuss characters Horton and all of Whoville! Mandeville Center / 8pm / Student $9; Faculty / Staff $10; General $11

C A R E E R

Obtaining an Internship - Learn strategies for searching internship and part-time job listings to find positions that will meet your goals. Career Services Center, Horizon Room / 12-1:15pm / Free

Career Peer Educator Program Info Session - Get extensive hands-on training and experience while developing advising, communication, and presentations skills, in addition to leadership and teamwork experience. Career Services Center, Horizon Room / 11am-12pm / Free

Friday Apr 9On-Camera Practice Interview - Respond to actual interview questions while being videotaped, receive immediate feedback, and build your confidence in this small group setting. *Sign-up required. Register through Port Triton. Round Room / 10am-12pm / Free

80’s Night - Come groove at the Loft. Bring all of your friends to have a great night out dancing to music from a decade that was so cool, you might have even been born during it. The Loft / 8pm / Free

Avatar - Price Center Theatre / 6&9pm / Student $3; General $5

Career Peer Educator Program Info Session - Get extensive hands-on training and experience while developing advising, communication, and presentations skills, in addition to leadership and teamwork experience. Career Services Center, Horizon Room / 11am-12pm / Free

R E C R E A T I O N

Did You Hear About the Morgans? - Price Center Theatre / 6&9pm / Student $3; General $5

A R T

Curator Talk with Guillermo Santamarina - Chief Curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art (MuAC) at the National Autonomous University of Mexico will talk about his exhibition entitled Transurbaniac as well as the artists represented in the MuAC's collection. Center Hall Room 212 / 6:30 / Free

C A R E E R

The Triton Spring Job & Internship Fair - Exclusively for UC San Diego students and alumni career plus subscribers, meet top companies recruiting for full-time, part-time, and internship positions. Bring your student ID, polish up that resume and dress for success! (career.ucsd.edu) PC Ballroom West / 10:30am-2:30pm / Free

Presentation Skills for Graduate Students - This interactive session will provide you with the tools to speak confidently and prepare professional presentations. Price Center, Green Table Room / 1-2pm / Free

C U L T U R E

That Sh!t Aint Funny: Minority Comedians & the Stage of Protest - This program will explore the ways in which comedians like Margaret Cho and Chris Rock reconfigure stereotypes into tools of activism. Come with an open mind, and be ready to laugh - and to question

why you are laughing. Cross Cultural Center Comunidad / 6pm / Free

R E C R E A T I O N

Gretchen Parlato - Resembling Frank Sinatra in terms of dynamics and subtone, or Chet Baker when it comes to cool, the musical sensitivity of Gretchen Parlato pushes the boundaries of the traditional role of a jazz singer. The Loft / 8pm / Student $5 Adv, PAYC Door; $16 General

H E A L T H

Hare Krishna Weekly Lunch - Come to the Student Center for vegetarian all-you-can-eat Hare Krishna lunch. Student Center Patio / 11am-1pm / $4

Farm2U - The farm moves to a different college each Wednesday to present fresh and delicious seasonal produce and goods. Roger's Place and Market / 3:30-6:30pm

L E C T U R E

Building a Strong Legislature: The Opposition of the Provincial Deputation of Mexico to the Bicameral System, 1821-1823. Hosted with María José Garrido Asperó, Postdoctoral Fellow at the Center for U.S.-Mexican Studies. Open to the public. No admission fee. Institute of the Americas Complex, Deutz Room / 5pm / Free

Wednesday Apr 7

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CLASSIFIEDSMONDAY, APRIL 5, 201014 THE UCSD GUARDIAN

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SPORTS MONDAY, APRIL 5, 2010 THE UCSD GUARDIAN 15

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Anderson’s time is among the top in Division-II this year, and he said he hopes he can push through to first place at the conference and national championships.

“My ultimate goal is to win nation-als,” he said. “I haven’t taken a confer-ence title yet, and that’s something I’d really like to do.”

The Cal/Nevada meet was an over-all success for the Tritons: The women placed sixth and the men 10th, against some of the top programs on the West Coast. UCSD had the top Division-II squad for both men and women.

Most of the team will head to the highly competitive Pomona-Pitzer Invitational on April 10, although some runners will head to the UCLA Rafer Johnson/Jackie Joyner-Kersee Invitational on the same day.

Readers can contact Liam Rose at [email protected].

▶ TRACK & FIELD,

WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG/SPORTSMONDAY, APRIL 5, 2010

The freshman hit homeruns in both of UCSD’s wins in their series split with Cal State Dominguez Hills from April 2 to April 3. She finished five-for-twelve from the plate and knocked in 12 [email protected]

16 THE UCSD GUARDIAN

HOTCORNERQUOTABLE QUIPSI’m tired of hearing about money, money, money, money, money. I just want to play the game, drink Pepsi, wear Reebok.”

SHAQUILLE O’NEALNBA SUPERSTAR

KATIE BELANGER | SOFTBALL

By Liam RoseSenior Staff Writer

TRACK AND FIELD — Right in the thick of season play, the Tritons got the a perfect chance to test their depth and flexibility: a small, friendly invite close to home.

UCSD track and field competed in the second annual Mangrum Invitational on April 3, turn-ing in some impressive results at the non-scoring meet, which was held at Cal State San Marcos. No team scores were kept, allowing the Tritons to train in events that were not necessarily their best.

The meet was a welcome reprieve after the team’s outstanding performance at the high profile Cal/Nevada Championships the week before.

“It’s a great opportunity for us to rest people or move them around as we need to,” said women’s coach Darcy Ahner. “It allows us to qualify more people in the relay events, and it can give people a chance to try more events as well.”

Several nearby universities showed up to the meet — including the University of Southern California and UC Irvine — but none of the Tritons’ conference opponents participated. This gave UCSD a chance to experiment a little and fine tune for bigger meets later in the season.

On the women’s side, junior Kelly Fogarty blew by the competition in the 100-meter dash to clock a time of 11.90 seconds. The school-record holder also anchored the Tritons’ winning 4x100-meter relay team.

“Kelly has had so much fire this year, and its been really fun to watch,” Ahner said.

Senior Linda Rainwater won three events, recording the top marks in the shot put, javelin throw and high jump. A former All-American in the heptathlon, Rainwater will look to build on her success in the field events at the Mt. Sac heptathlon in Azusa on April 14.

The men’s team was lead by Fred Cook: The senior shot putter hit 52’ 2” to win the event and record a provisional NCAA Division-II champi-onships qualifier. Senior Daniel Anderson turned in a similarly magnificent performance, breaking four minutes in his first attempt at 1500 meters with a time of 3:54.40. He earned second place in the event, only a week after he broke a 17-year-old school record in the 800-meter race. Anderson recorded a time of 1:51.12 seconds in the pre-liminaries of the Cal/Nevada Championships, and bested Mark Yuen’s 1993 record by 0.14 seconds.

“That meant a lot to me,” Anderson said. “I’ve been dealing with injuries and I haven’t really had a strong healthy season in a while, so I’ve been waiting to break that record for a long time.”

Head Coach Tony Salerno emphasized the significance of Anderson’s performance.

“The record is a big one,” Salerno said. “We’re really happy to see him show that kind of talent.”

By Liam RoseSenior Staff Writer

With less than a month left in their regu-lar season, the Tritons held tight against Cal State San Bernardino and Brown University on April 4. And the No. 17 UCSD women’s water-polo team could not have picked a better juncture of the season to hit their stride.

Senior utility Stephanie Heinrich scored five goals and sophomore two-meter Kirsten Bates added two more, earning the team its sixth consecutive victory: a 11-7 win over No. 20 Brown University. Heinrich had also put in the go-ahead goal earlier in the day against San Bernardino, helping the Tritons to a 6-3 victory.

Heinrich scored four goals in the first four minutes of the game, and Brown was never able to recover.

“Stephanie Heinrich set the tone immedi-ately as the senior team captain,” head coach Brad Kreutzkamp said. “Four goals on four shots to start the game let everyone know that she meant business — and that attitude carries over to the rest of the team.”

UCSD led by as many as six goals in the

third period, but Brown netted three straight goals in the fourth to cut the Triton lead to 10-7 with six minutes remaining. However, the Triton defenders would not allow any-thing past them for the rest of the game, and Bates added her second goal with 36 seconds remaining as the Tritons held on for the win.

Seniors Sarah Glick and Lauren Presant led Brown with two goals apeice.

The Bears’ defeat leaves them at 18-7 over-all for the season.

Against San Bernardino, the Tritons fell behind 3-2 after the first period, but scored the final four goals of the match to seal the win.

“Our theory all year long has been that any team can beat anybody on any day,” Kreutzkamp said. “That game was an example of how we can end on the wrong end of that. But, thankfully, our defense kept us in the game until our offense woke up in the fourth quarter.”

The Tritons were unable to score for nearly 20 minutes before junior utility TC Coles scored her first goal at UCSD to tie the game with 1:20 remaining in the third period. Heinrich then scored with 6:58 remaining, and Bates and junior attacker Hanalei Crowell

added late insurance goals to finish off San Bernardino.

Redshirt freshman Misty Vu scored two goals for the Coyotes, who dropped to 13-16 on the season.

The Tritons have a busy weekend ahead of them in Northern California. The team will play Cal State East Bay on April 9, then com-pete in the Santa Clara Invitational on April 10 and April 11.

Readers can contact Liam Rose at [email protected].

Softball Team Slides into April With Series Split Against Dominguez HillsBy Vishal NatarajanSports Editor

SOFTBALL — UCSD launched into a four-game series against Cal State Dominguez Hills from April 2 to April 3, playing the best ball they’ve played all season — and possibly in program history.

The Tritons got April off to a good start, fresh out of an equally successful March that saw the team win 15 of their 18 games and rocket to third place in the California Collegiate Athletic Association.

Moreover, the team’s 23-11 March record marked the best start to a season in the pro-gram’s short history at the Division-II level. The Tritons achieved a 29-13 finish in 2000 during their final season competing in Division-III.

“We showed what were capable of, and what we expect to be doing,” senior captain Nicole Saari said. “We finally started hitting toward the end of the year. The end of the lineup started getting it together.”

Despite their superior NCAA regional rank-ing, however, the No. 4 Tritons were only able to manage a series split against the No. 10 ranked Toros — sharing the spoils in both Friday’s and

Saturday’s doubleheaders.On Friday, the Tritons picked up right where

they left off last month, pummeling the Toros 7-0 behind a career performance from sopho-more right-handed pitcher Camille Gaito.

Gaito was stingy on the mound for her 12th win of the season, striking out a personal best of nine Toro hitters. She allowed only two hits and walked none.

Gaito received ample run support from a fiery Triton lineup that poured in seven runs from 10 hits. Freshman infielder Katie Belanger launched a three-run shot to left field in the fifth inning to seal the UCSD win, and finished the game two-for-three at the plate with four runs-batted-in and one run scored.

In their second game, however, sloppy Triton defense allowed the Toros to mount a lopsided lead. The opposition capitalized on five Triton errors for a 9-1 victory to even the series.

Saturday’s play followed a similar pattern. In game three of the series, UCSD earned a hard-fought 4-2 victory over Dominguez Hills before losing 10-1 in the series finale.

In Saturday’s first game, Gaito was again dominant, throwing a complete game six-hitter

and allowing only two earned runs while strik-ing out two. The performance improved her personal season record to 13-6.

For the second straight day, Belanger pro-vided the big hits for the Triton offense. Her three-run homerun in the fifth inning broke a 1-1 tie, giving th team a 4-1 lead it would not relinquish.

However, in the series finale, the Toro offense rebounded from their Gaito beatdown to tag two Triton pitchers — senior Christine Zankich and sophomore Tess Granath — for nine runs in the first three innings, coming out with a 10-1 victory.

The Tritons, still in third place after the series split, now sit at 25-13 overall and 15-9 in conference, with three league series remain-ing. They return to action on the road against Humboldt State on March 9.

“We can’t take them lightly,” Saari said. “We know every team in our conference is capable of winning any given game, so we need to come out strong — play like we did in the first games of our last series.”

Readers can contact Vishal Natarajan at [email protected].

See TRACK & FIELD page 15

JOHN HANACEK/GUARDIAN FILE

In the series against Dominguez Hills from April 2 to April 3, freshman infielder Katie Belanger homered twice and knocked in seven RBIs.

DATE OPPONENT RESULT

APRIL 3

R O A D R U N N E R I N V I TAT I O N A L

CSU San Bernardino

Brown

R E G U L A R S E A S O N

MARCH 27 CSU Bakersfield

UC Davis

14-13

10-9

MARCH 28 Sonoma State

CSU San Bernardino

15-6

11-5

6-3

11-7

ERIK JEPSEN/GUARDIAN