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Back on Track: Men’s basketball sweeps weekend, evens up Big West record
Erik Chu @chu_erik
Behind a career night from junior forward Joel Awich, the Cal Poly men’s basketball team (10-8, 3-3 Big West Conference) was able to win a key conference matchup with a 68-49 victory over UC Riverside (9-11, 2-4) Saturday night. Awich finished the game with his first career double-double, 11 points on 5-for-6 shooting and a career-high 11 rebounds. Awich has been on a scoring tear lately — his 11 points Saturday night mark his fifth straight game scoring in double figures. “I feel good,” Awich said. “Every time I get the ball, I look to be aggressive, and even if
I don’t shoot the ball, I’m looking to pass to someone who is open.” However, the Mustangs started the game off with a scare. In Cal Poly’s second offensive possession, junior guard David Nwaba and senior guard Malik Love collided with each other while attempting a dribble handoff, resulting in a big collision. Nwaba took the worst of the collision and seemed to injure his left shoulder or wrist. Nwaba would quickly shake off the discomfort and shortly after slammed home a beautiful lob thrown by junior forward Brian Bennett.
see BASKETBALL, pg 9.
CHRISTA LAM | MUSTANG NE WS 0 TO 500
| Junior guard David Nwaba is averaging team-highs with 13.5 points per game and 24 steals on the season. His high-flying dunks have often been a spark of for the Cal Poly offense throughout the seaosn.
Trombone Shorty fills tall order
Brenna Swanston @brenna_swanston
Trombone Shorty in a nutshell: some of the best live music I’ve heard and most awkward oldwhite-people dancing I’ve ever seen, all under the same roof. It was the type of show that made me wish I’d been born cooler and took saxophone lessons as a rugrat so I might have had a shot at growing up to play in Trombone Shorty’s band, which looked like the most fun any human could ever have. Those guys danced and laughed and pulled off the fedora-and-sunglasses-inside look like there was no tomorrow — and on top of all that, they sounded phenomenal. But first, let’s back up: The Record Company — a Los Angeles-based, blues-rock three-piece — opened up Shorty’s Friday night show at the Christopher Cohan Performing Arts Center. They churned out a half-hour’s worth of Muddy Waters-inspired tunes — great for a road trip, but not so much for pumping up an auditorium full of people waiting for Trombone Shorty’s funky New Orleans jazz.
see SHORTY, pg 4.
PHOTO ILLUSTR ATION BY JOSEPH PACK | MUSTANG NE WS RE AD BET WEEN THE LINES
| Facial symmetry contributes to perceptions of attraction, as does smell, which comes from the immune system.
The science of attraction: How your body odor can get you more than a hug Savannah Sperry @SavannahJSperry
For human beings, there are few things more compelling than physical attraction. Cal Poly is regularly deemed an attractive campus, which creates a unique set of pressures on its student population. “Cal Poly has had that reputation for decades,” psychology professor Laura Freberg said. “Even in the ‘80s, when I started working here, there were ‘Poly Dollys.’ That reputation has built upon itself.”
What ultimately makes Cal Poly an attractive, and therefore socially competitive, campus is the student body being young, ethnically homogenous and increasingly affluent, Freberg said. “It’s much more affluent than it used to be, which is probably a result of the recession — a lot more wealthy families are choosing to send their kids to less expensive universities like Cal Poly,” she said.
see ATTRACTION, pg 2.
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