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administration
Administration
Patents little help for budget woes
Assistance for children of faculty discussed By Betsy Vincent | Staff bvincent@dailycal.org
Agricultural and Resource Economics. Instead, the campus focuses on “socially responsible” licensing. “If our main reason for patenting is basically to force everybody to pay us to use our technology, we could make more money,” Katz said. “But that’s not what universities are about in general, and that’s certainly not what we do at Berkeley.” Beyond the philosophy behind patenting practices at the campus, increasing revenues would also not be a cure-all for tight budgets, according to William Tucker, executive director of Innovation Alliances and Services at the UC Office of the President. “If we grew our royalty income 10 times, that is still only a small percentage of the cost of running the university,” he said. “There is a
Due to the fear of losing important faculty members to competitor universities, UC Berkeley deans have discussed the possibility of offering college tuition assistance to faculty members’ children. At the Sept. 6 meeting of the campus’s Council of Deans — comprising campus administrators and deans of the various schools and colleges on campus — Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost George Breslauer raised the issue of whether the campus, which does not offer college tuition assistance to its faculty’s children, should change its practices in order to better compete with peer institutions. College tuition assistance received by faculty members at UC Berkeley’s various comparator institutions — eight public and private institutions against which the UC benchmarks itself — varies by institution, with some schools offering generous benefits. Stanford University provides taxexempt payments toward the cost of employees’ children’s tuition at accredited colleges and universities for up to $20,025, according to a May 2011 report produced by the university. University of Southern California — not one of the comparator institutions, but a school to which the UC has lost several faculty over the last decade, according to a UC Office of the President report on faculty competitiveness — provides full tuition assistance to faculty children who are able to gain admissions to the university. The University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana — one of the UC’s public comparator institutions — provides a 50 percent tuition waiver for the children of all employees who have been
patents: PAGE 2
assistance: PAGE 5
Mingxi Zheng and jill wong/staff
By Alisha Azevedo | Staff aazevedo@dailycal.org Despite negotiating a patent royalties monetization that will bring millions in revenue to the campus this year, UC Berkeley officials do not see patent revenue as a longterm financial solution to budget woes. Even though an $87.5 million patent monetization deal will fund campus research facilities and biological sciences in 2012, patenting inventions is not considered a reliable funding source to combat the campus’s — and on a larger scale, the UC system’s — financial crisis. On March 11, 2011, the campus finalized an agreement to monetize a patent for the antibody to the immune-regulating molecule CTLA-4, which former campus professor of immunology James Allison
and his research team discovered in 1995 and showed promise in clinical trials for treating melanoma. The administration has chosen to use the $62.5 million campus share of the revenue — which goes into campus discretionary funds, distributed at the chancellor’s discretion, and research funding — to support the Cancer Research Laboratory, where the molecule was discovered, finance equipment for the Office of Laboratory Animal Care and fund recruitment, retention, new hires and infrastructure for the Department of Molecular and Cell Biology and College of Letters and Science’s Division of Biological Science, said Carol Mimura, assistant vice chancellor for Intellectual Property & Industry Research Alliances, in an email. The funds will also provide research equipment and pay debt service for neuroscience labs in the
police
New program to improve campus area crime analysis By Mary Susman | Staff msusman@dailycal.org UC Berkeley students will soon have the opportunity to analyze crime statistics and patterns in the campus area through a new program run jointly by the Berkeley Police Department and UCPD, which could be implemented as soon as October. The Berkeley City Council is expected to accept a $36,000 grant from the Chancellor’s Community Partnership Fund, allowing BPD and UCPD to hire at least one paid student intern and purchase equipment for the two-year program, according to UCPD Lt. Adan Tejada. The program will bring both departments’ data together to assess crime
patterns in the areas where they share jurisdiction. The intern, who will work a maximum of 20 hours a week and earn a majority of the $36,000 grant over two years, will focus on tracking trends for “nuanced” crimes in the area, Tejada said. “Things like laptop and bike thefts and some large-value crimes, we don’t get to explore some of those nuances without dedicated staff on it,” he said. “We don’t get a chance to do some of that nitty-gritty analysis without someone trained to do it and with the time to analyze it.” The intern will also geocode certain locations on campus to more specifically identify where crimes occur. With specific codes, the departments will be able to track certain
program: PAGE 2
Li Ka Shing Center for Biomedical and Health Sciences, scheduled to open in January. The inventors received about $25 million, according to Mimura. Biopharmaceutical company Bristol-Myers Squibb paid $87.5 million up front, and the campus could earn an additional $40 million in the next few years if sales of the patented drug exceed projections, according to Michael Katz, director of the campus Office of Intellectual Property & Industry Research Alliances. Because of the limitations on funding distribution, lack of profitable biomedical patents and the relatively small amount of income patents produced compared to the overall campus operating budget, “prospects are not huge” that patent revenue will be a solution to budget difficulties, according to Brian Wright, professor and chair of the UC Berkeley Department of
Moore Makes magic
eugene w. lau/staff
Michael Moore entranced his audience at Wheeler Hall Saturday with stories from his new book ‘Here Comes Trouble.’
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Monday, September 19, 2011
program: Goals include solving existing crimes and preventing future crimes From front high-crime locations to the exact hall or area on campus. “It’s fighting crime in a non-traditional sense,� Tejada said. “Then we can see where trends are.� Councilmember Kriss Worthington said he will be glad to have this new program, especially because of its involvement with student interns. “Since the campus area has the highest number of crimes in the city of Berkeley, it’s really important to do crime analysis,� Worthington said. “They’re going to be able to hire students to do the work doing the research on crime analysis and the benefit is going to be to people in the campus area.� UCPD does not currently have a crime analyst and instead depends on analysis by patrol teams that focuses on “larger, more obvious things over a shorter period of time,� Tejada said.
The crime analyst intern program is one of 15 programs chosen out of 68 applicants for the 2011-2012 fiscal year, according to UC Berkeley graduate student Ben Krupicka, student assistant in the campus’s office of government and community relations. The programs are recommended by an advisory committee to the chancellor, who ultimately approves the funding, Krupicka said. Although there are no limits regarding reapplying for funds after a program ends, the advisory board will only consider programs with significant expansion. “I’m hoping that we’ll see some real benefits out of it by either solving existing crimes or preventing crimes,� Tejada said. “If it proves its value, both the city and the university may find a way to fund it in the future.�
Kelly fang/staff
The gathering celebrated the independence of several Latin American countries.
Photo gallery: Old time musicians perform
patents: Some say large monetization deals likely to be ‘rare events’ in future From front
research & ideas
Study could help improve the efficiency of solar cells Check Online
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By Jonathan Tam | Staff jtam@dailycal.org UC Berkeley researchers laid the groundwork for potentially developing more energy-efficient solar cells in a new study published Sept. 15 in the journal Physical Review Letters. In the past, researchers have focused on looking at domains — the crystal surface of a solar cell that can convert sunlight into energy — as a source of electric energy. However, UC Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory researchers discovered that the walls between the domains — and not just the domains themselves — can also increase energy efficiency. When sunlight hits a domain, it knocks an electron to a higher energy state, which can then be stored and power a device, said Ramamoorthy Ramesh, a professor in the campus Department of Materials Science and Engineering and co-author of the study. But between each domain is a wall that until now has been casually disregarded in terms of research, he added. Ramesh compared domain walls to the walls of an apartment, where
misperception out in the public and said. for legislators as well that we can The campus pulled in about $5.5 solve our (financial) woes by being million in patent licensing revenue better at technology transfer â&#x20AC;&#x201D; that in fiscal year 2011 in addition to the will never happen.â&#x20AC;? patent monetization deal. Under the A royalties monetization agree- current UC Patent Policy, 35 percent ment â&#x20AC;&#x201D; this is the first of this scale of patent income goes to the invennegotiated by a UC campus â&#x20AC;&#x201D; allows tors, 15 percent to the inventorsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; a company to pay a lump sum of campus department for research and projected sales royalty revenues at 50 percent to the campus as discreonce instead of periodically, accord- tionary funds, a quarter of which go ing to Tucker. back to the UC Office of the President The campus could make similar and are redistributed as general deals in the future, but â&#x20AC;&#x153;large mone- funds, Tucker said. Alisha Azevedo is the lead academtization deals have been and likely Ma^ =Zber <Zeb_hkgbZg reporter. will continue to be rare events,â&#x20AC;? Katz ics and administration ;460;B 2><82B ?DII;4B
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Corrections Reporter Anjuli Sastryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s name was misspelled in the byline of Thursdayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s story, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Mixed-use building to be erected in vacant lot on Telegraph Avenue.â&#x20AC;? The Thursday, Sept. 8 staff box misspelled Publisher Michael J. Wagnerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s name. The Daily Californian regrets the errors.
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RANDOM ROCK â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;N ROLL: An impromptu rock concert on Lower Sproul Plaza raised a few questions ... and eyebrows. If you missed the musical stylings of Will Crum, donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t worry, because the Clog got the inside scoop on the musicians and what they call a â&#x20AC;&#x153;guerilla show.â&#x20AC;?
administration
solar cells: PAGE 5
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Buck dancer Thomas Maupin came to the Berkeley Old Time Music Convention held this weekend. Maupin is regarded as one of the worldâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s best buck dancers.
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Jonathan Tam breaks down the science behind the recent study on bismuth feral oxides.
NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: JUANITA JOHNSON CASE NO. RP11587816 To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both of Juanita Johnson. A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been filed by Melvin Lofton, aka Melvin Lofton, Sr. in the Superior Court of California, County of ALAMEDA. THE PETITION FOR PROBATE requests that Melvlin Lofton, aka Melvin Lofton, Sr. be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. THE PETITION requests the decedentâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for examination in the file kept by the court. THE PETITION requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted
unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A HEARING on the petition will be held in this court as follows Oct. 14, 2011 at 9:30AM in Dept. 201 located at 2120 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Berkeley, CA 94704. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within four months from the date of first issuance of letters as provided in Probate Code section 9100. The time for filing claims will not expire before four months from the hearing date noticed above. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code Section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for Petitioner
Robert K. Lane 3657 Grand Avenue Oakland, CA 94610-2009 Publish: 9/16/11, 9/19/11, 9/20/11 Notice is hereby given that sealed competitive bids will be accepted in the Alameda County Sheriff's Office, 5325 Broder Blvd., Dublin, CA 94568 NETWORKING/NORTH COUNTY BIDDERS CONFERENCE RFP #900914 for Alameda County Sheriff's Office Jail Management System, Tuesday, September 27, 2011, 2:00 p.m. â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Glenn E. Dyer Detention Facility, 550 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 6th Street, Oakland, CA NETWORKING/ SOUTH COUNTY BIDDERS CONFERENCE RFP #900914 for Alameda County Sheriff's Office Jail Management System, Wednesday, September 28, 2011, 10:00 a.m. â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Santa Rita Jail, 5325 Broder Boulevard, Dublin, CA Responses Due by 2:00 p.m. on October 19, 2011 County Contact: Lieutenant Garrett Holmes at (925) 551-6553 or via email: gholmes@acgov.org Attendance at Networking Conference is Non-mandatory. Specifications regarding the above may be obtained at the Alameda County GSA Current Contracting Opportunities Internet website at www.acgov.org. 9/19/11 CNS-2174511# DAILY CALIFORNIAN
Monday, September 19, 2011
The Daily Californian
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News in Brief
Biting with freethought
Man allegedly demands money from Safeway two weeks ago
I
get flipped off every Tuesday afternoon on Sproul Plaza. Why, you might ask, does such an irregular event occur to me on such a regular basis? The answer, dear reader, is that I am a libertarian at one of the most notoriously liberal universities in the nation: our beloved UC Berkeley. Fear not, this isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t a universal event that occurs to every â&#x20AC;&#x153;conservativeâ&#x20AC;? at Cal. Rather, I am a particular case since I founded Calâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s current libertarian student organization, Students for Liberty, as a sophomore. Thus, while tabling over the past two years with my clubâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s showy signs, some dissenters have taken a liking to channeling their disagreement through a middle-fingered drive by. I usually respond with a smile, wave and invitation for my spontaneous opponent to explain why he or she flipped me the bird, hoping it could progress into a political discussion. Unfortunately, my calls for civility are usually never met. Justifying my political beliefs in words, they must think, how inconceivable! Indeed, when your political ideology aligns with that of the majority at Berkeley, it must seem unnecessary to call into question the logical grounding of your opinions. After all, everyone agrees! However, students such as myself with views that deviate from the liberal norm are not in such a position of privilege, having to be constantly on the defensive. The primary front for such an intellectual attack is indubitably in the classroom. It is no secret that many courses in the humanities and social sciences are heavily politicized, causing discussion sections to be loaded with partisan discourse. This can be rather difficult for freethinkers, as oneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s participation grade often conflicts with oneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s political principles. ersonally, I have found that the best antidote to this ailment is to be an especially good student, paying close attention to the philosophical substance behind every argument. In this manner, I can appear to be an attentive pupil without clinging to the unfavorable libertarian label. Most importantly, being attentive to the arguments propagated in the classroom helps develop the intellectual ammunition to explain why you believe something is incorrect. In fact, the nineteenth century philosopher John Stuart Mill shared a similar view about the importance of persistent intellectual re-evaluation, famously claiming that â&#x20AC;&#x153;No wise man ever acquired his wisdom in any mode but ... The steady habit of correcting and completing his own opinion by collating it with those of others.â&#x20AC;? According to Mill, who we would doubtlessly label a libertarian today, only two results could emerge from discoursing with dissenting views â&#x20AC;&#x201D; both of which
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After allegedly demanding money from an Oakland Safeway supermarket about two weeks ago, a Richmond man is being held in lieu of $100,000 bail on suspicions of second degree robbery. Philip Taylor, 26, allegedly pointed a gun Sept. 3 at an employee behind the register at around 4:50 a.m. at the Safeway at 6310 College Ave., according to the Bay City News. The suspect, who fled on foot from the establishment after being approached by a security guard in the area, fired a gunshot and was eventually arrested by police, said Oakland police Sgt. Holly Joshi, spokesperson for the Oakland Police Department. No one was injured in the whole incident. Investigators were able to identify the suspect using surveillance cameras and community tips, according to the Bay City News. Richmond Police Department and Oakland Police Department officers worked together to arrest Taylor at his Richmond home Sept. 6, according to Bay City News. Police declined to reveal how many officers were called to
Casey Given cgiven@dailycal.org are intellectually profitable. In one case, we could discover that our beliefs are incorrect and abandon them for those of superior reasoning. In the other, we could emerge with greater confidence that our beliefs are correct â&#x20AC;&#x153;having taken up (the) position against all gainsayers.â&#x20AC;? I confess that I came to Berkeley as a fairly ignorant libertarian with some strong opinions and weak justifications. However, after three years of constant exposure to dissenting opinions through classes and the club I founded, I feel that this â&#x20AC;&#x153;steady habit of correcting and completingâ&#x20AC;? has given greater strength to my beliefs. If only more people would follow suit. ndeed, if anything, I would like my column to function as a call for my fellow Berkeleyans to challenge the underlying assumptions of their political beliefs. Fear not, I wonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t abuse this space as a soapbox for libertarian evangelizing. If youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d like to â&#x20AC;&#x153;see the lightâ&#x20AC;? in that sense, you can find Preacher Given on Sproul during my Tuesday tabling sessions (but please use words, not middle fingers). Instead, I will take a unique approach of exploring campus and national politics through exposing the larger philosophical debates inherent in each issue, while delicately dropping my two cents. Granted, my radical skepticism coupled with my libertarian sentiments will likely prove to be a contentious combination. After all, I will be questioning everything from whether our university should be publicly funded at all â&#x20AC;&#x201D; seriously â&#x20AC;&#x201D; to whether the ASUC should even exist (this is not hyperbole, people). However, at the end of each article, Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d ultimately like you to lay the paper down with a stronger understanding of your position, even if itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s discordant with mine. The ancient Greek philosopher Socrates once described himself as the â&#x20AC;&#x153;gadflyâ&#x20AC;? of Athens, rousing the metaphorical horse of the state from intellectual sloth. Essentially, I hope my column can serve the same function for Berkeley students pertaining to politics, challenging us all to think critically about issues that we too often oversimplify. So watch out, Golden Bears, this gadfly is about the bite!
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Whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s It Like to Work at Box, the #2 Fastest-Growing Start-Up in Silicon Valley? Find out! Come to the Box Info Session Sept. 20th 7:30-9pm @ Wozniak Lounge, Soda Hall Hear Box VP of Technology Sam Ghods speak while you meet Cal Boxers and chomp on Chipotle chips, guac, burritos, and more. Get a free Box tee and swag, then get the chance to win a new hoodie, Cheese Board gift certificate or iPad 2!
the scene. Safeway made no comment on the amount of money taken from the register. The suspect was booked at Santa Rita Jail in Dublin and began his arraignment Thursday at the Wiley W. Manuel Courthouse in Oakland. A continuation of the arraignment Friday yielded no plea from Taylor and his public defender, according to the Alameda County Superior Courtâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s criminal division. Taylorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s arraignment will continue Thursday at the Wiley W. Manuel Courthouse. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Geena Cova
Berkeleyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s unemployment rate in August is less than Julyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s The city of Berkeleyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s unemployment rate decreased to 10. 2 percent in August â&#x20AC;&#x201D; 0.3 percent less than Julyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s rate â&#x20AC;&#x201D; according to data released Friday by the California Employment Development Department. Berkeleyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s labor force in August was 57,800, of which 5,900 were unemployed, according to the department. Unemployment in the city most recently peaked at 11.1 percent in July and August 2010. The rate has slightly fluctuated throughout 2011 so far, dipping as low
OPINION & News
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as 9.7 percent in May and reaching a high rate of 10.5 percent in January and July. The departmentâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s data shows that the cityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s August unemployment rate is 0.9 percent lower than last yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s rate, which was 11.1 percent, and 0.6 percent lower than the August 2009 rate of 10.8 percent. Neighboring cities such as Concord, Emeryville and Richmond saw rates of 11.4 percent, 7.7 percent and 16.9 percent respectively. Oakland saw an unemployment rate of 16.1 percent. Alameda County also experienced a decrease in its unemployment rate, declining to 10.7 percent in August â&#x20AC;&#x201D; 0.3 percent lower than the July rate. Californiaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s unemployment rate increased to 12.1 percent in August, which is 0.1 percent higher than the July rate and 0.3 percent lower last yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s August rate of 12.4 percent, according to the data. California was one of 26 states and the District of Columbia to report an increase in the rate, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Twelve states reported a decrease in the rate, while 12 noted no change. California also had the second highest rate in the nation, according to a media release from the department. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Yeji Lee
Go online at dailycal.org 10=:8=6 5>A BCD34=CB 1H BCD34=CB
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If I drive for you, you give me a time and a place. I give you a five-minute window. Anything happens in that five minutes, and I’m yours no matter what. I don’t sit in while you’re running it down; I don’t carry a gun. I drive.”
Monday, September 19, 2011
— Ryan Gosling, ‘Drive’
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YIAN SHANG/STAFF
By Carlos Monterrey | Staff cmonterrey@dailycal.org
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n eclectic arrangement of Hollywood action, poetic passions and innovative filmmaking makes “Drive” an off-centered pleasure in all respects. With clockwork precision, “Drive” eloquently juggles the world of art-house film and mainstream blockbuster without allowing the pitfalls of self-indulgence to detract from its streamlined joy ride. “Drive” makes it clear that director Nicolas Winding Refn knows how to infuse a film with cinematic glamour under the confines of the action genre. “Drive” opens with neon pink titles reminiscent of “Miami Vice” as Ryan Gosling drives along a cosmic Los Angeles with the electro-synth sounds of French artist Kavinsky’s “Nightcall.” The opening brings about an ’80s cinematic style with contemporary sophistication. “Drive” is sure to be categorized alongside films like “Bullitt” and “The Driver” as one witnesses Gosling resurrect the allure and thematic nuances of such notables as the “King of Cool,” Steve McQueen. Deep within the dreamy streets of Los Angeles lies a dark underworld of crime; an unnamed
driver for hire is the only barrier between freedom and incarceration. Obsessed with order and with a knack to extract understanding from others, Gosling’s character is essentially a man who speaks through action. Stunt driver by day, heist driver by moonlight, the protagonist finds comfort behind the wheel. Taken aback by his neighbor Irene (Carey Mulligan), the Driver quickly grows infatuated with the girl across the hall. With the unexpected return of Irene’s incarcerated husband, Driver finds himself in a crossroads. After Irene and her son are put in danger due to her husband’s shady dealings, the Driver must protect her, ultimately embarking in a hostile mission of passion and vendetta. The Driver’s past is never truly revealed, making his actions and motives that much more unsettling. Backed by a strong supporting cast (Bryan Cranston, Christina Hendricks) “Drive” is essentially the story of a man whose inner demons drive him to commit acts of great violence, as well as great humility and compassion. With plentiful action scenes, the film does not
cease to deliver moments of calm and appropriately moody scenes between Gosling and Mulligan. The film’s sentimental and melodic playlist adequately compliments Gosling’s ability to portray large amounts of emotion with a simple grin. Personal moments between the couple are stretched out to uncomfortable levels as depicted in a scene where Gosling and Mulligan simply smile back and forth at each other, properly infecting the audience with the awkwardness that comes with the initial stages of a relationship. In a time where driving has become a chore, “Drive” reminds us of the tranquility that comes with cruising in a beautiful city listening to pop music. Adapted from James Sallis’ novel of the same name, “Drive” is a love letter to the city of
FILM
Los Angeles; we drive through everything from the recognizable boulevards all the way to the sands of the beautiful Pacific shore. With its moody colors and expressive angles, “Drive” pays tribute to car loving heist films of the past. Refn has acknowledged that the film is a tribute to filmmaker Alejandro Jodorowsky, which is a major source of the film’s existential inclinations. The cinematography is reminiscent of a Jean-Pierre Melville film, as exemplified by the way cinematographer Newton Sigel composes clean and efficiently smooth shots. Overflowing with references to past classics, “Drive” is a familiar genre picture done better. Refn has managed to make the muscle car cool again, bringing us back to a time where driving was king.
ALBUM REVIEW
Romanian ‘Aurora’ mystifies, bores By Ryan Lattanzio | Senior Staff rlattanzio@dailycal.org
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he Romanian New Wave has yielded its share of stark, clinical masterpieces (“4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days” for one) and also a few loosely metaphysical mind-bogglers (“Police, Adjective” for another). Chalk up Cristi Puiu’s “Aurora” somewhere between the two. It is the latter-day answer to Chantal Akerman’s “Jeanne Dielman” (1975) as an exercise in testing the audience’s patience through objective experience. Puiu seeks to refute all our expectations of crime cinema and to remind us how inadequate that genre‘s structure is. In doing so, “Aurora” becomes unsolvable. Be warned: It is a slow, sometimes excruciating three hours. The monotony of the film’s first hour primes us for everything it will contradict in the remaining two. There are no doubt glimmers, but glimmers only, of a plot in “Aurora.” Factoryworker Viorel (played by Puiu himself), whose name we don’t learn until halfway through, carries out a premeditated crime. He purchases firing pins, loads a gun, waits furtively at a stoplight as the turn signal clicks. Soon, four people are killed. More shots than that are fired. His motivation seems to come from somewhere within. But Puiu’s camera is so committed to remaining objective that the rationale is never revealed. “Aurora” kind of makes us feel as if we don’t deserve that satisfaction anyway. Puiu understands the power of allusion, and not just allusion to his countrymen but also to cinematic tradition. He shares Antonioni’s interest in industrial wastelands as a metonym for the soul. Yet these stark landscapes are also a metonym for this sort of cold, calculated film, even as it so ambitiously attempts to dodge calculations. Though “Aurora” occasionally achieves greatness, something is missing here: that
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magical feeling of everything coming into place that makes cinephiles’ hearts beat, that arresting undertow of narrative structure that compels us, no matter how slowly events unfold onscreen. There is a good deal of minutia on display in “Aurora,” and whether it’s simply intended as part of the background or as a distracting red herring is unclear. In focusing on so many little details — potato-peeling, tenant troubles, a strange trip to a clothing store left unexplained — Puiu begs our scrutiny, our utmost attention yet he never delivers or follows through with what he seems to be foreshadowing. Two abrupt moments of cold violence, among equally phlegmatic settings, puncture the calm waters of “Aurora.” Yes, they are shocking. They command our attention like a heavy book dropped in a sleepy lecture hall. Like Cristian Mungiu’s “4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days,” Puiu frames Romania in a dystopian milieu, an over-industrialized trash heap where man is forced to act on his
own to assert his individuality amid a world still ravaged by post-totalitarian dregs. Viorel lives in a tenement-like flat, with stripped walls and exposed drywall. The film has no soundtrack save the industrial whir of engines, machines, cars, Muzak — the sounds of industry pumping in. Such nimble production effectively places us in a displaced, depressed place. Puiu directed “The Death of Mr. Lazarescu” in 2005 and it is the blackest of black comedies, but it has a winning sense of humor nonetheless. “Aurora” does not share this disposition and is, instead, gravely serious. Puiu is a better actor than he is a director, lending Viorel a muted sociopathy and also a sense of the everyman. Ultimately, “Aurora” is as half-baked as any of the crime movies it attempts to debunk. Paradoxically, there is some inexplicable wonder in it that I can’t explain. It is a feeling from within, but a feeling as unmotivated and unresolved as Viorel’s own. Ryan Lattanzio is the lead film critic.
Erin Donaldson discusses tracks off Clap Your Hands Say Yeah’s Hysterical, the latest studio effort from the Brooklyn and Philadelphia-based indie rock collective.
here’s nothing special about the new Clap Your Hands Say Yeah album. After a five-year hiatus, one would expect the indie rockers to return with a bang. Instead, they have retreated to unrecognizable mediocrity on Hysterical. CYHSY’s self-released, self-titled debut album was all the rage in 2005. The lovably quirky record made its way around the blogosphere and garnered much critical acclaim, even before they had signed to a label. But perhaps the hype surrounding them was premature. Their sophomore LP was poorly received, and Hysterical is an even bigger disappointment. That is not to say that the album is bad. It is just fine — nothing more and nothing less. CYHSY’s debut championed an intriguing new brand of indie rock, a cacophonous blend of whimsy, romance and spontaneity. They should have expanded on this sound, and yet now fans are left wondering if it was merely an experimental fluke. Some Loud Thunder only embraced the cacophonous aspect of CYHSY (so much that it alienated its listeners). Now they have flopped to the opposite end of the melodic spectrum, abandoning their trademark edge for squeaky clean production. The record is more introspective than their previous efforts, which could be why they chose this new sound. Their attempt at sophistication feels a bit half-baked, though. The lyrics are personal but distant; the compositions are pretty but boring. CYHSY did not dig deep enough into the heart of their record. The emotional intent is there — there’s just not enough intensity or sincerity to really move listeners. The band is still as technically gifted as ever, and Hysterical will certainly make for some calming study music. But if you try actively listening to it, you probably won’t make it past the first three songs. — Erin Donaldson
The Daily Californian News & SporTs
Monday, September 19, 2011
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Professor emeritus dies at age 81 after devoting life to geology research By Sara Grossman | Staff sgrossman@dailycal.org UC Berkeley professor emeritus Ian Carmichael, who devoted his life to the research of volcanoes and other geological processes, died Aug. 26 after battling prostate cancer and kidney disease. He was 81. Carmichael’s research led him to all corners of the planet, from New Guinea to Africa, where he used groundbreaking geological methods to gain a better understanding of the volian canic processes that shape Carmichael the Earth. He studied the chemical composition of lava and minerals to reconstruct volcanic biographies, predict future eruptions and better understand planetary conditions far below the crust. Carmichael was an important contributor to the geological community, to the point that he had a mineral — carmichaelite, a hydroxyl-bearing titanate found in the southwestern United States — named after him. “He imprinted a very important signature on volcanic sciences,” said Hugo Delgado Granados, a professor at the Institute of Geophysics at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, who is currently on sabbatical at UC Berkeley. “Ian was one of the pillars of the current trends in geological science, specifically petrology.” Carmichael, who graduated with a B.A. in geol-
ogy from Cambridge University in 1954, twice served as chair of the UC Berkeley Department of Geology and Geophysics — now the Department of Earth and Planetary Science — and was acting director of the UC Botanical Garden at Berkeley from 1997 to 1998. He also served as editor in chief of the journal Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology from 1973 to 1990. Granados met Carmichael when the UC Berkeley professor was performing research in southwest Mexico. Carmichael was the first to notice the unparalleled diversity of rock in the region — known as the Jalisco Block — which challenged the theory of plate tectonics. The question of how this extraordinary variety of rock came to be dominated Carmichael’s work in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Some of Carmichael’s most notable contributions to UC Berkeley occurred during his time as director of the Lawrence Hall of Science, including the introduction of an outdoor exhibit, Forces That Shape the Bay, which allows visitors to experience the pressures and forces that have shaped the region’s geological history. Carmichael received a Berkeley Citation in 2003 after nearly 40 years at the campus, honoring his achievements and distinguishing him as an extraordinary member of the faculty. “He was a very good scientist,” Granados said of Carmichael’s legacy. “He was profound.” Carmichael is survived by his brother Keith, daughters Deborah and Anthea, son Graham and six grandchildren. His son, Alistair, preceded him in death. A public memorial service is planned for Oct. 21 at 6 p.m. at the Lawrence Hall of Science.
Solar Cells: Three campus groups collaborate and try using feral oxides for the domain walls From Page 2 the domain is the actual room of the apartment and the domain wall surrounds it, he said. Researchers have been focusing on the contents of the apartment, but they have been ignoring the potential energy that the materials of the walls could be yielding. The concept of investigating the wall of the domain is scientifically significant, because the walls that separate each domain are only a few nanometers thick but could change the course of energy research, Ramesh said. “Domain walls are a very interesting animal,” he said. “The wall itself can be doing something.” A collaboration of three campus research groups focused on using feral oxides — particularly bismuth feral oxide — as a material for the domain wall, which raised the maximum voltage to 15 volts, a dramatic increase from silicon — the material used for powering computers and many electronic devices — which only has a maximum output voltage of just one volt, according to Ramesh. Although bismuth feral oxide can excite more electrons to a higher energy state than silicon, silicon can produce more electrons and is therefore still more energy-efficient, said Junqiao Wu, a co-author of the study and professor
in the campus Department of Materials Science and Engineering. While bismuth feral oxide can produce a higher voltage capacity, silicon can produce so many more electrons — or a higher current — that the oxide is not likely to replace silicon in the near future as a material in solar cells. “(Bismuth feral oxide’s) efficiency is lower than silicon,” Wu said. “Even though consumers care about energy efficiency and cost, as a researcher, we need to look if there is another system that can offer a possible breakthrough.” Even though bismuth feral oxide is not likely to replace silicon in the near future as a semiconductor, studying the domain walls opens a new avenue of research that could eventually yield fruitful results and produce higher energy-efficient solar cells, Wu said. The discovery of the importance of domain walls not only brings new research topics, but also more questions, Ramesh said. “I don’t have to look at the domain as a unit. I can now also look at the wall,” he said. “What can we do with the wall? Can we store information? Can you make the wall electrically conductive? There are a lot of possibilities. We still have a whole bunch of research to do.”
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Kyle Lunt had an assist in the Cal men’s soccer team’s 4-2 loss to Santa Clara in the Bay Area Classic on Friday. The junior forward has started all six games for the Bears this season and has scored one goal.
Cal starts hot but finishes cold in loss to Santa Clara By Michael Rosen | Staff mrosen@dailycal.org A beautiful run up the left side of the field and a laser cross into the box found a sliding Connor Hallisey in perfect position at the far post to put away the easy goal. John Fitzpatrick’s precision dribbling and vision to set up the play that gave the Cal men’s soccer team a 1-0 lead a little after 20 minutes into Friday afternoon’s contest at Edwards Stadium. Unfortunately for the Bears, this was the last moment any Cal team member or fan would care to recall. The Bears went on to allow three unanswered goals in a 4-2 loss to Santa Clara, which concluded the Bay Area Classic, a regional derby that also featured USF and Stanford. The defeat marks Cal’s first-ever loss in the Classic, which began in 2009. Led by its tactful forward Erik Hurtado, the Santa Clara offense had an undeniable edge in experience as the Broncos led an attack primarily based on taking advantage of the young Bears’ defensive mishaps. Santa Clara (4-1-1) scored twice in the 10 minutes before the half to take a 2-1 lead. Although one would imagine an offensive resurgence after a disappointing conclusion to the half, the break did nothing to invigorate the Bears’ energy. Santa Clara demonstrated superior concentration in scoring their third goal of the match just three minutes into the second half. A goal by Fitzpatrick on an assist from freshman Seth Casiple in the 69th minute gave Cal (2-2-2) a glimmer of hope as it pulled the squad within one, but any practical chances for a comeback were squandered when the Broncos’
Quick Look: j. fitzpatrick: goal c. hallisey: goal r. gogatz: 9 saves freshman Glenn Vass took advantage of another Cal mistake to increase the score to 4-2 in the 83rd minute. Although Cal allowed four goals, which equaled the highest output this year for an opposing side, coach Kevin Grimes was quick to divert the blame from the defense specifically. “The defense wasn’t the problem in this match,” Grimes said. “Our problem is the lineup. Significant lineup changes need to be made.” One player that will not be scribbled onto Grimes’ next lineup card is Christian Dean. The freshman was handed a red card in the 75th minute after a hard sliding challenge. Although this particular challenge was only given a yellow card, Dean had acquired another yellow card previously in the match, granting him early access to the locker room and a suspension for the upcoming game. Dean wasn’t the only one misbehaving, however; the match was especially chippy, featuring 9 yellow cards and 37 fouls, including 4 yellow cards in the last 15 minutes alone. The silver lining on this cloud of a match was freshman midfielder Connor Hallisey. In addition to his goal, Hallisey also had a nifty run down the left side that led to a near-goal opportunity. “It felt good,” Hallisey said. “Being a freshman and just cracking the starting lineup, it was nice to play well and have this kind of performance.”
assistance: Two public comparator institutions do not provide faculty’s children with break on tuition From Front working for seven years. Like at UC Berkeley, children of faculty at the State University of New York, Buffalo and the University of Virginia — two more of the university’s public comparator institutions — do not receive a break on tuition. “It comes up periodically for discussion, but has never been implemented,” said Marian Anderfuren, media relations director at the University of Virginia, in an email. But with the UC currently facing a budget crisis, offering tuition assistance is unlikely to be implemented in the near future. “While many deans thought that some form of tuition-assistance would be a welcome addition to Berkeley’s array of ‘family-friendly’ options
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for faculty members, many wondered what the costs would be,” said Janet Broughton, campus vice provost for academic affairs and faculty welfare, in an email. “There was no consensus that funding a new faculty program for tuition assistance should be among the campus’s top priorities at this time.” In the 2010-11 school year, 48 new retention cases were reported, according to Broughton. The faculty member decided to leave UC Berkeley in four cases, to stay in 20 cases and had not made a decision by the end of the academic year in 24 cases. “All the signs are that our retention efforts continue to be highly successful,” Broughton said in the email.
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Cal grinded out an overtime victory against Virginia on Saturday after losing to Northwestern on Friday.
Field hockey: Kruggel’s overtime goal seals win for Cal after disappointing showing on Friday From Page 6 The Bears quickly got off to a 1-0 lead in the match before the Cavaliers rallied back and scored two unanswered goals before halftime. In the second half, both teams’ defenses stepped up with more than 20 minutes of goalless play. At the 56-minute mark, Cal was finally able to tie the game up, 2-2, with a goal by freshman forward Lara Kruggel. Even with the Bears dominating control of the ball, Virginia forward Rachel Sumfest’s second goal of the game gave the Cavaliers a 3-2 nearly 10 minutes later. With only a few minutes remaining, the Bears saw themselves trailing, 3-2, and on the verge of losing back-to-back games after going undefeated heading into the weekend.
“When they scored, a lot of teams would have packed it in,” Onstead said. “I called a time out, everyone took a deep breath and they were awesome. We had an opportunity in the form of a penalty corner and executed it perfectly.” With 42 seconds remaining, forward Andrea Earle knocked in a shot off of the perfectly executed penalty corner for the nail-biting equalizer. With the momentum clearly in the Bears’ favor, the team wasted no time as forward Lara Kruggel’s second goal of the match capped off the comeback less than two minutes into the extra period. “The whole time there wasn’t any doubt that we would come back,” Shimojima said. “So we were definitely excited when it happened, but I wouldn’t say we were all that surprised.”
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2 4 Monday, September 7 2 6 5 19, 2011 FiELD Hockey 6 | v. W 4-3 (OT) 1 6 4suffer first loss 4 of season,3 Bears 1 2 3 rebound to split weekend tilts 8 9 7 8 Quick Look: By Eric Lee | Staff 3D<<H Ma^ =Zber <Zeb_hkgbZg5 6 etlee@dailycal.org 1 l. kruggel: 2 goals a. earle: goal 9 8 7 2 m. hand: 4 saves 3 1
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goal in the first seven minutes before UCLA pulled away in the second quarter to take the lead, 3-1. However, Rackov singlehandedly overcame the deficit with two goals in the third to bring the score back to a tie. The fourth quarter was a back-andforth rally, and Luka Saponjicâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s two
points werenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t enough to halt the Bruins. From there, the Bears played for third place against No. 4 Stanford on Sunday in their final match of the invitational. The Bears were down in the fourth quarter again but had learned their lesson. The team pulled through to win, 8-7.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;We are fortunate we have full and fit depth in the team. When you have depth, you will normally see more chances in the second half as we can keep the same tempo throughout the match.â&#x20AC;? In numbers alone, the Bears had a clear advantage over the Dons, who had only 16 fit players compared to # which 25 had its entire#roster 27 of 26 Cal, players available. The Bearsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; edge may not have been apparent in the first half, as USF controlled the pace but was unable to capitalize in the first 30 minutes.
When the second half started, however, the Dons could not keep up with the Bearsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; fresh legs. Between the 55th and the 58th minute, USF conceded two penalty kicks to forwards Lauren Battung and Katie Benz, both of which translated into goals to give McGuireâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s club a 3-1 lead. Midfielder V. EASY Christina Moberg scored the HARD Donsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; lone goal to break up the Bearsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; two penalty kicks, but the floodgates had opened for Cal and the Donsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; defense failed to find a solution to stop the bleeding.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;The 2-0 lead is the most dangerous lead in soccer because they were able to respond back immediately,â&#x20AC;? Battung said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve been working on putting the defensive pressure five minutes after the goals because the opposition still has faith on winning the game despite being down one or two goals.â&#x20AC;? After Einarsdottirâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s free kick, the Bearsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; 29. Statement # 26 San bench ran rampant on the exhausted 30. Curtain ho Francisco defense. Forwards Kory Lamet 31.81stRiver and Rachel Mercik scored in the and bank One who 83rd minute to little or no 33. challenges from the Dons to wrap up the 37. matchOn withthe wa a five-goal lead. 39. Sign of sp
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three quarters, and junior Justin Parsons blocked two key shots in the fourth to save the match for his team. Winning streak still intact, Cal prepared to face UCLA the next day. The first three quarters of the midday Sunday match were almost a mirror dance. Both teams notched a
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The Cal field hockey team upset four ranked teams before earning a ranking of its own heading into this weekendâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s matches. But just as the No. 11 Bears were rising to national prominence, the team fell back down to earth a bit with # 25 its first defeat of the season, 1-3, at the hands of unranked Northwestern on Friday in Evanston, Ill. However, Cal was able to salvage the weekend with a 4-3 comeback victory in overtime over No. 18 Virginia the next day at the same venue. At Lakeside Field on Friday, the Bears (6-1) started their match
give Northwestern a 1-0 lead in the 24th minute. Her second goal of the match came less than 10 minutes later off a perfectly executed penalty corner by forward Regan Mooney. The Bears began looking like themselves again in the second half. But by then, the deficit â&#x20AC;&#x201C; along with against Northwestern (7-2) unchar- Northwesternâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s strong play â&#x20AC;&#x201C; was too acteristically sluggish, attempting much for Cal to handle. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Every team has its phase where it only three shots to the Wildcatsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; HARD doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t perform to its potential,â&#x20AC;? senior seven in the first period. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We just werenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t ready to start the forward Megan Shimojima said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We game,â&#x20AC;? coach Shellie Onstead said. recovered in the second half but it was â&#x20AC;&#x153;It really took us a while to get into too little too late.â&#x20AC;? After their first loss of the season, the the flow of things.â&#x20AC;? Wildcat forward Chelsea Bears had to quickly recover to face off Armstrong started off her tremen- the next day against Virginia, which dous weekend with a sliding goal started the season ranked No. 3. past goalkeeper Maddie Hand to field hockey: PAGE 5
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The Daily Californian
m. polo |
Nonetheless, despite little rest between matches and tough MPSF opponents, the Bears (5-1) finished out the weekend in third place with a 3-1 tournament record. In its first match Saturday morning against Vanguard, Cal sent its third consecutive opponent into swift submission at Delta Collegeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s June Fergusson Pool. The Bears deftly overpowered the unranked Lions. Reigning National Player of the Year Ivan Rackov led the team with seven goals, including a third-quarter hat trick, with Luka Saponjic close behind with six points. Later that day, Cal hung on to an 8-7 win over Pepperdine despite going scoreless in the final quarter. The Bears outscored the Waves 8-5 in the first
By Annie Gerlach | Staff agerlach@dailycal.org
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The No. 2 menâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s water polo team started out the weekend on a note that was not only high but also familiar as it beat Vanguard, 27-3, on Saturday at the NorCal Invitational in Stockton, Calif. A day and a half later, a new pattern of season play was rapidly unfolding. In the Bearsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; first loss of the season, No. 3 UCLA broke a fourth-quarter tie to take the game, 6-5, Sunday afternoon at Pacificâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Chris Kjeldsen # 26 Pool. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Our defense was good, but we also made critical errors where we didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t finish out,â&#x20AC;? coach Kirk Everist said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Errors like our defense not getting out to a guy quickly enough when we could,
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little things UCLA was able to exploit.â&#x20AC;? Although both teams struggled offensively, UCLAâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s defense took the upper hand throughout the match by shutting down Cal attackers and handing them their lowest score of the season thus far. Even when the Bears held a 6-on-5 advantage they were unable to turn the tide in their favor. â&#x20AC;&#x153;There were moments there where we got a little anxious,â&#x20AC;? Everist said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We needed to slow down plays. We got a little quick, trying to make a play that wasnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t necessarily there.â&#x20AC;?
m. polo: PAGE 6
3 Pick up at 600 Eshleman Hall 3 today! 6 9 VOLLEYBALL: Barrettâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s other attackers come through for Cal 4 yoursPRESSPASS.DAILYCAL.ORG From back 3 2 8 66 9 2 2 1 4 81 9 77 Berkeleyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 83 newest 7 2 6 Indian sports 1 9 #4805 bar, serving delicious North and CROSSWORD PUZZLE 74 4 5 5 8 65 Southern Indian cuisine Answer to Previous Puzzle ACROSS 10. Certify a school 1. Trenches around castles 7 2 6 7 8 5 Football 3 11. Fleeceprogram hasA stability M P R A N G A G A I N 8 5Dinner and1Lunch4Special kuperberg: under Tedford 6. Flying insect O V A L E V I L D I S C O 12. Writer Bret 10. Arthur with a racket $5.00!14. Creek From back D A N A G I N A H A S O N 13. Organic 5 9 3TO4GO, only12 compound D I S C O R D A N C E A N O 15. Confidante 21. Stage direction HARD # 26 16. Father of Harry S L E E V E D A R N S 23. Object 6 4 78 9 1 75 and Wills, for short I T A L T E A S E R 25. Palmer 17. Sordid C H A R D B O N E M I C E 26. Catch Infamous ruler 4 6 6 4 3 18. 9 A E R O T E N O R E N C E 27. Flexible tube 19. Breath mint 28. Thought R A R A I T E M E D S E L Huey, Dewey and Louie F 9 20. 1 29. Reptile 15% OF 3 82 1 22. Robber afloat P R E S E T R E A D 32. Haley!s work 24. German number S T A L E D I A N E S 34. Redeem 25. Tailor, often6 97 2 6 5 ETHIOPIA 4 8 M A T G E N E R A T I O N S 35. Verve 26. Dryness 901 Gilman, Berkeley
more shots, and hopefully thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll come around in the next few weeks.â&#x20AC;? In Gehanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s absence, Barrettâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s other weapons made their presence felt, particularly in the first set, in which the Bears held the Utes to just nine points. Murrey helped the Bears get
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before pulling it together to complete the sweep. Murrey finished with a match-high 17 kills, while teammate Correy Johnson logged eight after sitting out most of Fridayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s match with a sore hip.
off to a fast start with a blazing eight kills in the first set, a number that only two of the Utesâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; attackers were able to top in three sets. Calâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s production waned in the following two sets, and Fellerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s squad was even pushed into extra points
Catering
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Sports
“
This is my first trip. It’s my first time flying ... I saw the Golden Gate Bridge and now have it as a background on my phone.” — Justin Bethel, Presbyterian cornerback
Monday, september 19, 2011 • dailycal.org/sports
Weekend Recap: Football |
v.
field Hockey: v. Virginia W 4 - 3 (OT)
M. soccer: v. Santa Clara
M. polo: v. UCLA
L 4-2
L 6-5
w. soccer: v. USF W 6-1
W, 63-12
Cal crushes Blue Hose in home opener Jeff Tedford becomes football program’s all-time winningest coach with his 75th victory.
Program’s winningest coach rebuilt program
By Jack Wang | Senior Staff jwang@dailycal.org SAN FRANCISCO — By the end of the first quarter, the Cal football team had scored two touchdowns and was in position for a third. Presbyterian, meanwhile, had zero yards of offense. So with what was almost certainly the easiest of his 75 career victories, Jeff Tedford became the winningest coach in program history. On paper, the Blue Hose looked like the weakest team Cal would play in 2011. After their 63-12 loss at AT&T Park, they made a strong case for being the weakest team Cal has played in its 125-year history. The Bears (3-0) totaled nine touchdowns — all in the first three quarters — and 581 yards of offense against a defense that offered little resistance. Quarterback Zach Maynard tossed three touchdowns. Although his statline was decent enough — 15-of-25 with 215 yards and three touchdowns — the junior sometimes overthrew receivers and had one particularly ugly pick six. “He still needs to be more consistent,” Tedford said. “He missed a couple of balls. He got fooled on the interception, thought it was zone and it was man. We just need to be more accurate and consistent.” Marvin Jones was the lefty’s primary target, snagging seven balls for 123 yards, scoring a touchdown on a 51-yard strike. Keenan Allen added 85 yards and a score of his own. On the ground, Isi Sofele and C.J. Anderson churned out career-high rushing totals of 110 and 45 yards, respectively. Sofele also tied a career high with two touchdowns, while Anderson, Dasarte Yarnway and Covaughn DeBoskie-Johnson each ran in one. Their performances, and Presbyterian’s ineptitude, helped mask a sloppy start by Cal. The Bears’ first drive fizzled quickly after a pair of penalties, bringing out Bryan Anger early for a 50-yard punt. The trend continued, as Cal handed the Blue Hose 89 yards with nine penalties before halftime. “That’s why I was so disappointed in the first half,” Tedford said. “It was about us, and we were shooting ourselves in the foot with penalties.” Cal safety Sean Cattouse was also a major beneficiary of the feeble competition, picking off Presbyterian quarterback Ryan Singer twice for his
w. soccer |
v.
Jonathan Kuperberg jkuperberg@dailycal.org
Jeffrey Joh/staff
The Bears totaled 581 offensive yards while holding Presbyterian to just 48 yards in Saturday’s victory.
Quick Look: Z. Maynard: 15-of-20, 215 yards, 3 TDs I. Sofele: 110 Yards, 18 carries, 2 TDS C. Anderson: 45 yards, 6 carries, TD M. Jones: 123 yards, 7 catches, TD
Check Online
www.dailycal.org
Our football beat writers break down Cal’s big win against Presbyterian on Saturday in an exclusive Daily Cal Sports podcast.
first two interceptions of the season. His second pick was followed three plays later by Maynard’s touchdown to Jones in the second quarter, and he nearly returned his first to the end zone before being pulled down eight yards short. “It was pretty disgusting, in my opinion, that I didn’t score,” said Cattouse. Singer finished with a 4-of-14 performance for 23 yards and a quarterback rating of 13.8. Senior Brandon Miley, who replaced Singer briefly, completed two of his six passes for five yards. And despite subbing in practically every uniformed player, the Bears had little trouble padding
W 6-1
No. 22 Bears power past exhausted Dons squad Quick Look: k. benz: goal l. battung: goal e. kruger: 5 saves By Seung Y. Lee | Staff sylee@dailycal.org SAN FRANCISCO — In the 75th minute of Sunday’s contest, freshman Thelma Bjork Einarsdottir took a free kick at an angle that seemed impossible to score from just outside the left side of the penalty box. But her powerful kick — which tailed off inside the net at the last second — bamboozled University of San Francisco goalkeeper Gabby Guaiumi to provide No. 22 Cal women’s soccer team its fourth of six goals of the afternoon’s 6-1 victory. “I was thinking of passing, but in the last minute, I decided to give it a try because I had a lot of space in front of me,” Einarsdottir said. “I have scored free kicks before but never from this kind of angle.” Like the free kick, it seemed every shot the Bears took in the second half went in. After starting with a whimper in the first half with only one goal, Cal (7-1) ended Sunday’s match at Negoesco Stadium with a big bang, putting away five goals in the second half to win the match. Coming out stronger after the break isn’t a new trend for the Bears. In seemingly every match, Cal has elevated its game to another level in the second half after a listless first half. The scoring line confirms the notion — the Bears have tallied eight goals in the opening stanza and 21 goals in the final frame in seven matches this season. “In the competitive environment in soccer, the first half will always be a closely contested match,” Cal coach Neil McGuire said.
w. soccer: PAGE 6
Volleyball |
a 42-12 first-half lead. On the opening kickoff of the second half, true freshman Brendan Bigelow weaved between defenders before finding daylight on the left side. Playing in his first collegiate game, he took the ball 88 yards into the end zone untouched. After missing his senior season of high school with two ACL tears, Bigelow — and his knee — looked just fine as he also toted two carries for 15 yards. “I was really happy to finally get to do something, after not being able to play for about a year and a half,” Bigelow said. “That was pretty special, and to get out there and really show what I can do, it was pretty fun.” That the Bears so thoroughly annihilated Presbyterian (1-2) isn’t all that surprising. The Blue Hose are transitioning into the FCS. Limiting an offense like that to 48 yards of offense, while laudable, isn’t anything to write home about. “With all due respect, that’s not a group that we’re going to see every week,” Tedford said. The lone bright spot for Presbyterian was senior cornerback Justin Bethel, who was responsible for all 12 of his team’s points. Bethel blocked a punt and picked off a Maynard throw, returning both for touchdowns in the second quarter. The Blue Hose missed the extra point on their first score, and couldn’t complete a two-point conversion on their second.
v.
SAN FRANCISCO — Jeff Tedford has been through a lot in his 10 years as Cal’s head football coach, but answering questions in front of reporters on Saturday nearly brought him to tears. Cal had just routed Presbyterian, 63-12, and the win was Tedford’s 75th, making him the winningest coach in Cal football history. He had trouble holding it together. “It’s very nice,” he said, before pausing to sniffle and regain his composure. “It has a lot to do with all the players and coaches over the last nine years and three games. That’s who really deserves the credit, all the players who have played the game.” Although he might not admit it, Tedford deserves at least a smidgen of credit. When he replaced Tom Holmoe as head coach in 2002, the Bears were coming off a 1-10 season in which they went winless in conference play. “It’s gone by quickly,” Tedford said. “I didn’t really think about it until this week.” Now, as a result of the expectations the squad has established under Tedford, a sub-.500 season like last year’s, is a travesty. No, he hasn’t led Cal to a Rose Bowl, but without him, would Cal fans even be discussing it? If you don’t think 75 wins is a lot,
kuperberg: PAGE 7
W, 3-0
No. 1 Cal loses Gehan, but win weekend matches By Christina Jones | Senior Staff cjones@dailycal.org Despite two wins this weekend, the No. 1 Cal volleyball team suffered its first major loss of the year. As the Bears (13-0, 3-0 in the Pac-12) and Colorado (5-6, 0-3) neared the end of Friday’s second set, Cal’s outside hitter Adrienne Gehan dislocated her ankle coming down from a block attempt. The sophomore, who was hitting .444 for the match with four kills in the match, had to be helped from the court. After Gehan’s departure, the Bears quickly took the next point on a Kat Brown block to seize the set en route to a 25-17, 26-24, 25-15 win over the Buffaloes at Haas Pavilion. Gehan, a 6-foot-3 native of Dallas, Texas, returned to the court for Cal’s Saturday match against Utah, but came in on crutches with her left foot in a boot. According to coach Rich Feller, an MRI on Sunday would determine the extent of Gehan’s injury, but she did not break anything. In Saturday’s straight set victory (25-9, 25-20, 26-24) over the Utes, Feller put freshman Christina Higgins in Gehan’s slot as the No. 2 outside hitter behind senior Tarah Murrey. Higgins had previously been seeing some time primarily on the right side. “I’m trying not to be too nervous about it, just trying to play steady and
Quick Look: E. barrett: 39 assists, 6 digs, ace R. Rostratter: 17 digs, 4 assists T. Murrey: 17 kills, 7 digs keep a level head,” Higgins said. “Obviously (Gehan’s) irreplaceable as a player, but I’m really honored to be next in line.” The Inglewood, Calif., product’s numbers were not stellar against Utah, which fell to 6-6 overall and 1-2 in the conference with the loss. Although she posted a meager .067 hitting percentage with four kills, but she showed flashes of brilliance. Higgins notched back-to-back kills in the second set to force set point and then clinch the frame for the Bears. She easily blocked Utah’s senior middle hitter Danielle Killpack as Cal raced out to a 9-4 lead in the third set. Overall, Feller was pleased with his freshman’s performance, especially considering her change in position. “I thought she did great,” Feller said. “We need to set her a little different than we set the other ones, so Elly (Barrett) has to adapt to that and realize what situation she needs to get her the right set, and I think when that happens, Christina will be even more effective. “She has to learn a little patience in attack, and make sure she can hit a few
Volleyball: PAGE 7
Eugene W. Lau/Staff
Freshman Lillian Schonewise put down three of her four swings in the Bears’ last set against Utah.