10.03.11 | UCSD Guardian

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VOLUME 45, ISSUE 4

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MOnday, October 03, 2011

university of california

Academics

business minor now available to students Rady School of Management’s Business Minor Has Launched. By Sarah Kang Staff Writer

R ebekah D yer /G uardian

UC-Level Classes to be Offered Online in January By Javier Armstrong Contributing Writer

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he UC Online Instruction Pilot Project (OIPP) — launching in January 2012 — will offer 29 interactive courses through its online program. “Digital Music Creation and Production” and “Acoustics” — which will be taught by music professor Shlomo Dubnov — are UCSD’s only planned online course offerings at this time. In April, a 10-member review committee composed of nine UC faculty members and UC Office of the President (UCOP) Provost Lawrence Pitts selected 29 out of 70 UC faculty proposed classes. The 29 selected course proposals are now in the implementation phase of the OIPP. The courses are designed to be interactive rather than podcast and text-based and will utilize various online chat features to maintain interaction between teaching assistants and students. “A lot of the faculty is testing the effectiveness of different approaches to online teaching,” said Vice Provost of Academic Planning, Programs and

Coordination Daniel Greenstein. According to the program’s website, the online classes will be available for registration alongside regular classes. The program is being referred to as a ‘research project.’ Its initial stage — starting from its inception in January until around June 2013 — will serve as a research tool to gauge its success. If faculty members, students and administrators determine the program to be a success, it may be made available to more undergraduates and potentially to community college students and high school students. A course catalog for the online program has not been released yet. According to the program’s website, only some of the 29 classes will be available across campuses. Vice Chair of the UC Academic Senate Robert Anderson says that while the Academic Senate supports the 29 faculty members who are developing the courses, there have been concerns about the intended scope of the project. The Academic Senate originally received a proposal in 2010 for an eleventh UC cyber campus that would be entirely electronic. That plan has been scaled down due to funding and planning issues.

“We have had concerns about the planning that has gone in to this,” Anderson said. The cost of the classes has yet to be finalized. UC students taking online courses will receive the same amount of financial aid as if they were taking regular courses. No financial aid is planned for non-UC students at this time. The Academic Senate backed the proposal for the program based on the claim that the program would raise $30 million from private funds. However, the program has only raised $780,000 — courtesy of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation — at which point the UCOP offered the project an interest-free $6.9 million loan. “I’m not sure that we should be in the business of offering online courses to large numbers of non-UC students,” Anderson said. “It’s something that needs to be thought through carefully.” UC intends to repay the loan by reserving online classes for non-UC students and international students, Greenstein said. See Online, page 3

A business minor is now available to all undergraduate students through the Rady School of Management. An information session on the business minor will be held on Oct. 5 by the Rady School and the prebusiness fraternity, Delta Sigma Pi. UCSD currently has no business major — the most comparable major is management science, which has an economic focus. Until this year, the Rady School of Management only offered an accounting minor. Delta Sigma Pi Vice President of Professional Activities Joshua Cheng said the minor could allow students to explore aspects of business without having prerequisites in economics. “It’s not something for only the econ majors or the management science majors,” Cheng said. “It’s something that’s universal. Everyone can be an entrepreneur. Anyone can learn these work ethics and business ethics.” The minor is hoped to further satisfy the Rady School of Management’s goal to provide business education to UCSD students. Students can take courses in areas such as management, communication, math and psychology. “The Rady faculty as well as faculty from at least six supporting departments believe that students from a wide range of academic pursuits can benefit from some knowledge of business principles and practices,” Jordan Clark, Assistant Dean of the Rady School of Management, said in an email. Clark emphasized that Rady is not See Business, page 3

Art

New Stuart Art Piece to be Installed in Fall By Javier Armstrong Contrubting Writer UCSD’s Stuart Collection will add its 18th piece this fall — a 15-by-18-foot house called “Fallen Star” by Korean artist Do Ho Suh. The structure will be placed on top of EBU-1 in the Jacobs School of Engineering on Nov. 3. “It’s probably the most complex

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[piece] we’ve ever undertaken,” director of the Stuart Collection Mary Beebe said in a Sept. 26 UCSD press release. “It is fitting that it will be in the residence at the Jacobs School [of Engineering], not far from another of the Stuart Collection’s engineering feat, Tim Hawkinson’s ‘Bear.’” “Fallen Star” is designed at one-third the scale of a small house in Providence,

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NIGHT NIGHTWATCH WATCH

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R.I. The house, complete with cement slab and steel framing, is currently under construction at Warren Mall and will be raised to the seventh floor of EBU-1. It will be built in to the side of the building at an angle with half of the house floating in the air. Suh — who moved from Seoul, South Korea in 1991 to attend the Rhode Island School of Design and Yale University — is expected to attend the hoisting of the house on Nov. 3 at Warren Mall. The interior decoration of the house and yard of “Fallen Star” will be decorated by Suh and will be open to

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INSIDE Comics.................................... 2 Currents............................... 2 Talking to machines....... 4 Letter to the Editor....... 5 Focus...................................... 6 Classifieds............................ 9 Sports................................... 12


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THE UCSD GUARDIAN | Monday, October 03 2011 | www.Ucsdguardian.org

BIRDLAND By Rebekah Dyer Angela Chen

Editor in Chief

Arielle Sallai Margaret Yau

Managing Editors

Laira Martin Nicole Chan Rebecca Horwitz Margaret Yau Madeline Mann Rachel Uda Mina Nilchian

right on time By Isa Verendia

News Editor Associate News Editors Opinion Editor Associate Opinion Editor Sports Editor Associate Focus/Leisure Editor

Ren Ebel

Hiatus Editor

Monica Haider Emily Pham

Copy Editors

Andrew Oh

Photo Editor

Praneet Kolluru Rebekah Hwang

Associate Design Editor Art Editor

Page Layout Praneet Kolluru, Arielle Sallai Hayley Bisceglia-Martin Melody Chern

Development Editor Design Program Director

Business Manager Emily Ku Marketing & Advertising Director Brandon Katzer

CURRENTS UCSD ▶ Biomedical engineering professor Shu Chien

COMPILED BY NICOLE CHAN | associate news editor

SAN DIEGO

was awarded the National Medal of Science by President Obama for his work in cardiovascular physiology and bioengineering. Chien is the eighth faculty member to receive the prestigious award. Chancellor Marye Anne Fox received the award last year for her work in chemistry.

▶ San Diego police officer Jason Prokop was killed

▶UCSD School of Medicine professor Kumar

death and robbery of 68-year-old Mir Najibullah Sadat Sahou, a La Jolla cab driver whose body was found on La Jolla Scenic Drive North late Wednesday night.

Sharma was awarded a $5.9 million grant from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases to study kidney complications related to Type I and Type II Diabetes.

around 3:10 Saturday morning in a traffic collision on the I-15, just south of Mira Mesa Blvd. A 21-year-old female motorist was also killed in the same pileup that involved four separate crashes.

▶ San Diego police are investigating the shooting

CALIFORNIA ▶ Andre Pineda, Democratic pollster and

communications strategist, died Tuesday after jumping off Colorado Street Bridge in Pasadena. He was 46. Pineda was involved in the 2008 campaigns of Bill Richardson and current president Barack Obama. His recent research focused on increasing Latinos’ political support.

▶ California will spend approximately 8 percent of

its general fund budget towards paying off its debt. According to the Sacramento Bee, the state owes $2,542 per person, compared with the national median of $1,066.

Webmaster Bryan Smith Marketing Assistant Christine Alabastro Advertising Design & Layout Alfredo H. Vilano Jr. A.S. Graphic Studio Distributor Amanda Ku The UCSD Guardian is published Mondays and Thursdays during the academic year by UCSD students and for the UCSD community. Reproduction of this newspaper in any form, whether in whole or in part, without permission is strictly prohibited. © 2011, all rights reserved. The UCSD Guardian is not responsible for the return of unsolicited manuscripts or art. The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent the opinions of the UCSD Guardian, the University of California or Associated Students. The UCSD Guardian is funded by advertising.Geoduck.

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THE UCSD GUARDIAN | Monday, October 03, 2011 | www.Ucsdguardian.org

University of California Takes out $6.9 Million Loan to Fund Online System

LIGHTS & SIRENS Friday, Sept. 23 12:02 a.m.: Information ▶ Residents in Village East 1 were smoking hookah. Checks OK. 2:52 p.m.: Medical aid ▶ Someone got cramps and could not walk. Went to Student Health Services. 11:20 p.m.: Alcohol contact ▶ An underage female was arrested for disorderly conduct at Porter’s Pub. Closed by adult arrest. Saturday, Sept. 24 1:07 a.m.: Information ▶ There was a small snake near the bike rack at Miramar Building 2. Information only. 1:08 a.m.: Citizen contact ▶ The subject was urinating in public at The Village Building 1. Information only. 1:09 a.m.: Medical aid ▶ The subject at Muir Apartments suffered burns on the right thigh. Transported to Kaiser Hospital. 2:10 p.m.: Petty theft ▶ A male in his thirties was caught stealing $340 worth of goods from the Bookstore. Closed by citation. Sunday, Sept. 25 1:02 a.m.: Alcohol contact ▶ The subject consumed excessive amounts of alcohol at Asante Hall in International House. Transported to hospital. 12:20 p.m.: Animal call ▶ A coyote was injured on the road at the intersection of Athena Circle and Health Sciences Drive. Checks OK. 1:05 p.m.: Welfare check ▶ The subject attempted to hurt herself at Brennan Hall. Checks OK. 8:48 p.m.: Information ▶ A group of eight people were jumping off the SIO Pier. Information only. Monday, Sept. 26 12:12 a.m.: Information ▶ The subject received text messages

from a friend stating that she is suicidal. Checks OK. 2:27 a.m.: Welfare check ▶ The subject was lying on a bus station bench by the dumpsters at Scholars Lane. Gone on arrival. 4:41 p.m.: Medical aid ▶ A male who was drifting in and out of consciousness at Canyonview Pool refused treatment. Information only. Tuesday, Sept. 27 12:29 a.m.: Bicyclist/skateboard stop ▶ Minors were consuming alcohol in a private place by the intersection of Voigt Drive and Gilman Drive. One juvenile citation and three adult citations. Wednesday, Sept. 28 1:26 p.m.: Citizen contact ▶ There was a request to use replica guns on campus at the UCSD Police Department. Referred to Risk Management. 1:30 p.m.: Collision ▶ A UCSD shuttle bus crashed into a parked vehicle at Peterson Hall. Report taken. 3:14 p.m.: Citizen contact ▶ The subject was receiving annoying calls from someone trying to contact the previous owner of the phone number. Checks OK. 10:20 p.m.: Citizen contact ▶ Two males were urinating together in public at Lot 705. Closed by citation, adult. Thursday, Sept. 29 3:25 a.m.: Suspicious person ▶ A possible bike robber was caught at Matthews Apartments with burglary tools and stolen property. Closed by citation, adult. 8:52 p.m.: Medical aid ▶ A male was on the floor at Price Center with vomit on and around him. Unable to Locate. — Compiled by Sarah Kang

▶ Online, from page 1

According to “UC seeks outside students to pay for cyber courses,” published Sept. 12 in the San Francisco Chronicle, Greenstein visited UC study centers in Beijing and Shanghai to recruit Chinese students. According to “UC investing millions in new cyber program,” published Sept. 12 in the San Francisco Chronicle, Greenstein is also in talks with Fidelis, a San Francisco organization that offers online courses for military personnel. UC Berkeley political science professor and co-chair of the Berkeley Faculty Association Wendy Brown is not sure about the projected success or

the intentions of the online education program. Brown disagrees with UC Berkeley Dean of Law Christopher Edley’s (the program’s leading proponent) argument that the project will bring money into campuses. “So far, high quality online education programs have gone bankrupt,” Brown said, pointing to examples of Columbia University and the University of Illinois, where failures in online education have been attributed to high attrition rates. Brown is concerned that the UC program won’t be able to compete with the affordability of online courses offered at community colleges. “I’m not against online education

or the use of technology,” Brown said. “[But Edley] is taking a different approach, a new innovative method. This is why they weren’t able to get private funding for the project.” Private companies have not shown interest in financially supporting the program, Anderson said. “The foundations expressed interest in other types of online education such as courses for remedial high school education and GED completion,” Anderson said. “There was much less interest in funding large universities.” Readers can contact Javier Armstrong at jtarmstr@ucsd.edu

Private Donations and $90,000 Grant Will Fund Art Installation ▶ StUART, from page 1

the public in January 2012. Beebe further stated that maintenance will have to be kept on the piece of art and encouraged students to volunteer. “I’m nervous about the experience of going up there but I think that is part of the point,” Beebe said.

According to Beebe, Suh often focuses on themes of displacement and the feeling of home in his work. Suh’s “Fallen Star” piece also explores the cultural meaning of space, especially in the context of increased globalization. Hodges and Hodges, one of San Diego’s leading design firms, is heading

the architecture for this project. The Stuart Collection is funding the piece solely through private donations and a $90,000 grant from the National Endowment of the Arts. Readers can contact Javier Armstrong at jtarmstr@ucsd.edu

Rady Expects 600 Business Minors by 2013, 100 Already Declared ▶ BUSINESS, from page 1

planning on launching a business major in the future as it believes that business insight coupled with a nonbusiness major is the ideal combination for undergraduates. “I like to use the example of an art student who would like to not only paint great works, but also have his or her own gallery to display and sell those works,” Clark said. “That entails knowing how to market the gallery and its works, raising and budgeting financial resources, managing operational details and knowing how to work with the public and employees just as a start. The same could be said of most other career options.” Rady has been providing undergraduate business courses for

over four years — with over 2,500 students enrolled in classes last year. “I have had hundreds of inquires from students over those four years asking when the business minor would be in place,” Clark said. “Strong support was also voiced by the advising groups at each of the six colleges who understand best the educational and career interests of our undergraduate population since they work directly with this group daily.” Clark said that the business minor was only added this year because Rady had to build up faculty and administrative resources before it could take on the task, explaining that launching both minors at once would have put a strain on the department. Plans for the business minor were

conceived of around the same time as the accounting minor. Rady launched its accounting minor two and a half years ago, and it is now the largest minor on campus with nearly 500 enrolled students. “We had to be assured of the success of the accounting minor before we could move on to the business minor,” Clark said. “To have launched both minors at once would have put too big a strain on what was then more limited resources.” Currently, 104 students have declared a business minor. Rady expects to have 500 to 600 business minors by the end of June 2013. Readers can contact Sarah Kang at sak019@ucsd.edu

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THE UCSD GUARDIAN | Modnday, October 03, 2011 | www.Ucsdguardian.org

Yau CONTACT THE EDITOR Margaret opinion@ucsdguardian.org

OPINION How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Twitter

An Online Education

E

very night, after Facebook stalking but before Rosetta Stone exercises, I sit in front of my laptop and try to find something meaningful to tweet about. I think about the news. I think about lunch. I think about my 26 entire followers. I stress. Then I give up.

Online coursework may be cost efficient for the UC system, but concerns about quality control and sustainability must be addressed before flipping the switch.

A

fter wading through the shallow waters of online extension courses, the University of California is ready to make the leap into the deep end, beginning with the UC Online Instruction Pilot Project in January 2012. The project plans to offer up to 29 for-credit courses with the long-term end goal of expanding online instruction, allowing students to earn a UC degree exclusively online. The University of California’s planned large-scale entry into online education is an acknowledgement of online education’s potential merit, though its cost effectiveness is tempered by administrative fears of educational quality control and financial sustainability. The cost-effectiveness of online programs versus traditional education is a definite plus in the eyes of the UC administration. In an interview with the Sacramento Bee, Dean of Berkeley School of Law and program creator Christopher Edley believes that the “bricks-and-mortar model” is no longer sustainable due to the decrease in state funding and the increase in demand for education — factors that make it more difficult to provide access to a UC quality education. Provost and Executive Vice President Lawrence Pitts emphasized the program’s ability to accommodate underrepresented students whose job and family roles might not allow them to be physically present and benefit from an education on a UC campus. Overall, online courses are cheaper than traditional courses, but good online courses require significant financial resources and time, so whether the UC pilot program can succeed financially remains to be seen. Similarly priced

Talking to Machines Angela Chen shchen@ucsd.edu

That kind of self-induced pressure can wear a girl down, and so for years I hated Twitter, the service that’s been suggested as a Nobel Peace Prize nominee and credited with everything from aiding the Green Revolution to rescuing an injured woman lost in the woods. I’m no social media Luddite, but I didn’t see a program that toppled regimes. I saw lots of people who love Justin Bieber too much. Thankfully, I had Malcolm Gladwell on my side, in the guise of his muchdiscussed article “Why the Revolution Will Not Be Tweeted.” Gladwell argues that activism of the revolution-rabbling, Arab Spring kind — in other words, real change — is high-risk and depends on networks of strong ties (your real friends). Sure, your Twitter followers will keep an eye out for your stolen iPhone, but they won’t be flanking you in front of a police squad. Initially, this seemed about right. But after spending a summer in Beijing, a few conversations with my language tutor made me realize that in other countries, Twitter-like services are more than their current trending topic (which, are, last time I checked, Latin Girl in Brazil and Demi Made Us Strong.) Since Twitter is accessible only by proxy in China, there’s Weibo, which, my tutor said, is the real news source. In a country where the media is state-controlled and a woman was arrested for tweeting “Change, angry youth!,” eyewitnesses use Weibo to spread the word about everything that won’t be covered in the mainstream media. When Liu Xiaobo won the Nobel Prize against the wishes of the Chinese government, all variations of his name were blocked by the censors. The Chinese turned to Twitter. In the U.S., citizens mostly leave the reporting to the papers, but in China, Twitter-like services help take the place of our free press. Back in America, the service has been used to inaugurate a new kind of cyberactivism. Last year, feminist Sady Doyle launched a Twitter protest in response to director Michael Moore’s comments blaming the rape victim in the case of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange’s extradition. Doyle and her followers bombarded Moore with tweets, calling for him to retract his statement. She was harassed, her personal information made public and even stalked — but Moore listened, and he responded. Digital evangelists heralding Twitter as a dictator-killer aren’t all correct, but neither are the people (read: myself) who hate Twitter mostly because they’re not so great at using it. Gladwell may be right that Twitter didn’t directly drive protesters to the streets of Cairo’s Tahrir Square, but as a new mode of communication, it could create a domino effect that may, eventually, turn to the real change he is so skeptical of seeing.

By ALEKS LEVIN • STAFF WRITER ventures have proven unfruitful in the past. Inside Higher Education described how the University of Illinois Global Campus “crashed and burned” in 2009 after it failed to attract a global audience — becoming a proverbial “cash cow.” Though the University of California Office of the President has shown support by giving a $6.9-million interest-free loan to the project, private investors and grants have only contributed a single $748,000 grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation — far short of an expected $6 million in private revenue. There is also the question of whether students will be interested in UC online courses, considering the plethora of cheaper, readily available online classes in community colleges. According to Vice-Provost Daniel Greenstein, the program plans to pay back the UCOP loan and increase student interest by selling 5,000 of the 7,000 projected spots to out-of-state students and students in China. A heavy reliance on financial support from non-Californian students begs the question of whether this will be utilized for California students or will end up being just another budget stopgap. Additionally, there was a poor show of support for an online program among UC faculty. Only 70 UC professors out of thousands submitted proposals by December 2010 to teach a course, even with a promise of $30,000 in development funds for each course. UC Davis law professor and Vice Chair of the statewide Academic Senate Dan Simmons questioned the notion that educational quality would remain uncompromising in the move to online education. Simmons flatly stated that, “People have created a set of expectations

See ONLINE, page 5

illustration by J effrey L au /G uardian /G uardian

QUICK TAKES

Racist Protest Crosses Satirical Line

Satire is Meant to Push Buttons

Speech is Free but Cupcakes Are Not

ollege Republicans at the University of California at Berkeley held an inherently racist bake sale last Tuesday, where priced baked goods were sold at different prices for different ethnicities. The primary purpose was to mock Senate Bill 185, a bill that would allow California’s university systems to consider gender, race and ethnicity in admission decisions. While the bill is undoubtedly contentious, the bake sale’s intended racism went over the top, muddling the organizer’s intended message of promoting critical thought. SB 185’s attempt to increase diversity in California’s university systems is an obvious subject of debate. But simplifying the concept of affirmative action into a bake sale with differential pricing is not comparable to the issue at hand. The mission of SB 185 — which is surely debatable — is to make the student bodies of California state universities more representative of the state’s population in terms of gender, race and ethnicity — not to charge students varying tuition prices or to impose value judgments on others. A cupcake is not an apt comparison to an entire university campus — the entire community benefits from a diverse peer group while the price of a dessert only affects one person. Therefore, the bake sale seems to eliminate the most important aspect of the bill — it’s not about individuals. There’s a thin line between comedy and bigotry when it comes to satire, and Berkeley’s College Republican Club crossed it with the bake sale. — Arik Burakovsky Senior Staff Writer

olitical controversy is once more cooking up at UC Berkeley — this time as a result of a College Republican Club bake sale that offers discounted prices to women and minorities. However, the group’s actions were not in poor taste — their primary motive was to satirize parts of Senate Bill 185. SB 185 calls for the UC and CSU systems to consider race, gender, ethnicity, national origin and other relevant factors in their undergraduate and graduate admissions. If passed, the bill would create gray areas that arguably allow for abuse in admissions selectivity without liability. The bill does not connect these factors to the college applicant’s socioeconomic status. In theory, it only authorizes the universities to use race alone as a factor. The cupcake prices — higher for Caucasians and lower for minorities — mock the bill’s intentions to demonstrate that race cannot be used in substitution for socioeconomic status. President of Berkeley’s College Republicans, Shawn Lewis stated the group was aware that the public display was inherently racist. Their main point was that if everyone is to be treated as equals, scholarships and admission tickets should not be offered at different “prices” for different races. It’s political satire, it’s button-pushing and it’s intentionally racist to drive a point home. If a group of college students can fashion a display that attracts notice within an endless stream of demonstrations, then it has succeeded in its purpose. — Hilary Lee Staff Writer

C Berkeley College Republican Club recently held a satirical “Increase Diversity Bake Sale” to discourage the signing of Senate Bill 185, which supports the inclusion of race as a factor in the California college admissions process. Baked goods were controversially sold to individuals at varying prices based on race and gender to illustrate the unfair nature of the bill. Regardless of how radical and offensive the bake sale may have been, the club was still entitled to its first amendment right of free speech. The Supreme Court has recognized that free speech rights may only be limited where speech “may cause a breach of the peace or cause violence.” According to the Cal republican president and various participants, the bake sale was peaceful and stirred up discussion amongst students without leading to violence. These students had every right to legally voice their opinions and peacefully make a statement about the way the state functions. Furthermore, protests of this nature are not uncommon on the UC Berkeley campus. The free speech movement was started at Berkeley nearly 5 decades ago featuring nearly 10,000 students and police car damage. The selling of baked goods pales in comparison to the security-filled protests of the university’s past. This bake sale at UC Berkeley is justified purely on the basis of free speech and the media is simply over-publicizing insignificant news. — Revathy Sampath-Kumar Staff Writer

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THE UCSD GUARDIAN | Monday, October 03, 2011 | www.Ucsdguardian.org

Linear speech By Robert Kim

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

It’s Time for an Educational Revolution

Hybrid Classes Worthy Alternative to Purely Online Classes ▶ ONLINE, from page 4

about the potential for online education that is not really there.” The UC system needs to win its faculty over with the program, lest it go the way of the Global Campus. While these problems do exist, there is definite demand for online classes. Enrollment for online classes increased from 700,000 in 1998 to 5 million in 2007. On the other hand, the success rate for students in online courses is about 50 percent, while the success rate for face-to-face classes is 70- to- 75-percent. Reasons for the low success rate should be addressed by the Pilot Program, as should issues such as a lack of physical presence, accountability and even instructors. Some of these issues are solved by hybrid classes, which use components of in-person and online classes and maintain steady success rates. Part of the reason for stability in hybrid courses is a face-to-face factor — students can attend office hours and interact in discussions. To address the high failure rates, some professors such

as Associate Professor at Georgia Perimeter College Rob Jenkins believe that schools should put students through an online compatibility test before enrollment to see if they would work well under such an environment. It is arguable that some majors are better suited for an online forum than others. For instance, science classes and classes in the humanities are markedly different in both structure and testing. While there have been technological measures created to combat cheating for papers in humanities classes, no one has fully taken on the challenge of addressing potential cheating on science and math-based exams. A lack of student oversight could be detrimental to the learning process and degrade the quality of instruction. There is no denying the potential usefulness of an online component in education if done properly. All that remains to be seen is if the UC system is indeed able to address many concerns surrounding online education this coming January. Readers can contact Aleks Levin at alevin@ucsd.edu.

Dear Editor, We are in a revolutionary time. Mass occupations in Tunisia and Egypt led to the fall of U.S.-supported decades-long dictators. In nine months, these actions have swept through the Arab world to Europe to Madison and Wall Street and now. 117 other U.S. Cities, including 16 cities in California and back across the world to Tijuana, Tokyo and throughout Europe. The fightback is global because the cutbacks are global. Following an economic crisis that created the greatest transfer of wealth from the 99 percent to the richest 1 percent in history, UCSD students and working-class Americans are told we need to “share the cuts” or what the ruling class calls “austerity.” Enough is enough! Make Wall Street pay for their crisis, not the students and workers! Let’s fight together this fall for future students, staff and ourselves! Every Monday at 8 p.m. in SSB 101, UCSD’s Public Education Coalition will meet. We call on all community members, faculty, students, workers and their unions and organizations to join us. We’re building solidarity for actions from Occupy San Diego on Oct. 7 to the International Day of Action Against Austerity on the 10th Anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan on Oct. 15 where people will take the streets to express outrage at how our rights are being undermined by the alliance between politicians and big corporations, and their commitment to make workers pay for their wars and the economic crisis they created. The global fightback does not happen in a vacuum, so we combine

analysis, theory and history at our meetings and at a Nov. 12 Regional Conference on “Marxism and the Fight Against Austerity: Why the Working Class Can Change Society.” As record numbers of Americans are struggling to find work, housing and healthcare, the largest corporations are experiencing record-breaking profits and CEOs are receiving record-breaking bonuses. As public education is slashed, the U.S. military has spent over 1.2 trillion in Iraq and Afghanistan, 3 billion is going annually to military aid for Israel and its illegal occupation of Palestine and predator drones (designed at UCSD with public subsidies) are being used to terrorize Pakistanis, Somalis, and a host of other countries, including U.S. citizens abroad. All of this while the Regents has a multi-year plan for tuition increases that will have irreversible impact for the UC’s public mission. Undergraduate and graduate tuition increased 67 percent since 2009, raising the price of a UC undergraduate education above $12,000. With the new plan, undergraduate tuition could reach $22,000 in 2016! Both the California legislature and the UC Regents want to balance the budget. on the backs of students, instead of increasing the taxes on the rich and slashing the thick layers of high-paid UC administrators. — Nikolai Smith Grad Student, Dept. of Sociology ▶ The Guardian welcomes letters from its readers. All letters must be addressed, and written, to the editor of the Guardian. Letters are limited to 500 words, and all letters must include the writer’s name, college and year (undergraduates), department (graduate students or professors) or city of residence (local residents). A maximum of three signatories per letter is permitted. The Guardian Editorial Board reserves the right to edit for length, accuracy, clarity and civility. The Editorial Board reserves the right to reject letters for publication. Due to the volume of mail we receive, we do not confirm receipt or publication of a letter.


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T H E U C S D G UA R D I A N | M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 26, 2011 | w w w.U csdguardian.org

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VIVA MEXICO! A FILM BY NICOLAS DEFOSSE Institute of the Americas Building

6pm SIXTH COLLEGE BLOCK PARTY: WELCOMING MATTHEWS TO SIXTH - Sixth Lane/lodge Quad

It is Sixth College's 10-year anniversary, and we want to celebrate it right! Now that Matthews Apts are a part of Sixth College, we want to welcome them the right way! So come out to Sixth Lane/Lodge Quad on October 4th to get food and BBQ provided by Foodworx. DJ Pancho will be playing and there will be an OPEN MIC night available for whoever wants to perform starting at 7 PM! You'll have a chance to take aim at our lovely RAs with an RA dunk tank. There will be a massive game of Twister, Ringtoss, arts and crafts, as well as AWESOME PRIZES for all. Come out, have fun and make new friends! Get to know your amazing Sixth College community!

In a journey from the mountains of the south-eastern Mexico to the northern border with the United States, Subcommander Marcos and the people of Mexico trace the forgotten face of a country, a celebration of the struggle for land and dignity.

WED10.5 2pm 8pm

EXTREME GOOGLING - Biomedical Library

Explore beyond the basic Google search screen and Google’s searching secrets.

Siblings Without Borders Info Session Multipurpose Room

11am FFOG STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS INFORMATION FAIR Library Walk

We help underprivileged children living in low-income residences of southern california. Our main goal is to provide an opportunity for these children to socialize, form lifelong fraternal bonds, and receive educational assistance. Basically, we mentor them to receive higher goals in life while becoming their "Big Brother or Big Sister".

Representatives from over 150 student organizations will be on hand with information, exhibits, performances, food, music, and more! Come on out and meet the student org members and find out how you can GET INVOLVED! getinvolved.ucsd.edu. 11:00 AM-3:00 PM

THU10.6 3:30 pm

SUSTAINABILITY NETWORKING MIXER - Sustainability Resource Center, PC

5:30 Arrhythmias of pm Counter-Production University Art Gallery

Rock the Stage, Rock the World - Porter's Pub

8pm Fleus du Mal - The Loft at UC San Diego

All students, faculty, and staff interested in environmental sustainability are invited to join the UC San Diego Sustainability Solutions Institute and the Sustainability Resource Center for a sustainability networking mixer on Thursday, October 6.

8pm

A benefit concert to provide aid for children in developing countries. Featuring Viza, Palm of Granite and Tangent Transmission

The University Art Gallery is proud to present an exhibition of Argentine political art produced in the public sphere over the past fifteen years. Arrhythmias of Counter-Production: Engaged Art in Argentina. Through Friday, January 20, 2012

Directed by Hungarian Filmmaker David Dusa, this is a story about a young Iranian woman, sent to Paris by her parents to keep her safe from the violence that broke out in Iran following the bitterly contested election in 2009.

FRI10.7 12pm INTERNATIONAL CAFE International Center

Please join us for a Greek lunch on the patio of the International Center. This week's meal is sponsored by the Golden Triangle Rotary and for $5 includes: pastitsio, salad w/ feta and olives, black bean hummus w/ pita chips, and baklava. Lunch is served from noon until 1:15pm.

SAT10.8 8:30 pm

Liam Finn with Marques Toliver - The Loft

In support of his sophomore release FOMO–Liam Finn will be performing at The Loft as part of his national tour with support from Marques Toliver.

8pm AN EVENING WITH ABIGAIL WASHBURN The Loft

If American old-time music is about taking earlier, simpler ways of life and music-making as one's model, Abigail Washburn has proven herself to be a bracing revelation to that tradition. A singing, songwriting, Illinois-born, Nashville-based clawhammer banjo player, she is every bit as interested in the present and the future as she is in the past, and every bit as attuned to the global as she is to the local. She pairs venerable folk elements with far-flung sounds, and the results feel both strangely familiar and unlike anything anybody's ever heard before. To put it another way, she changes what seems possible. theloft.ucsd.edu

get listed... every monday in the guardian!

Submit your FALL events for FREE! Keep it brief. 30-60 words. Include the name of your event, time, location and contact info.

ucsdcalendar@yahoo.com


Level: 1 2 3 4 Need a roommate to share a master bedroom in LA JOLLA CROSSROADS. ‘m looking for a girl roommate who would like to share this spacious master bedroom (2 mirrored closets, a large bathroom with tub shower, a big space that would fit two queen size beds and desks). The rent is $1000 for the entire room so the break down is $500 each. This is a 2 bedroom apartment at the La Jolla crossroads complex. Utilities that we have to pay is water, gas. However, INTERNET IS FREE because we have great neighbors that allow us to use their internet code. Reply online at ucsdguardian. org/classifieds to Listing ID: 12533101 Single bedroom with own bath, females only. 14’ x 10’ unfurnished bedroom with your own bathroom in a 2bd/2ba 950-sq ft condo in the gated Pines of La Jolla complex. Can easily fit a queen bed, dresser, and two desks. Looking for someone to take over my lease as soon as possible. Available for move-in starting on September 20th. Lease will end in July 2012. $615/month as a single, or $737.50 as a double ($368.75 per person). $615 deposit. Reply online at ucsdguardian.org/classifieds to Listing ID: 12271036 Large Living Room for Rent. Living room for rent for $450 per month + utilities. The living room is as big as master bedroom. The Highest apartment rating near UCSD (-La-JollaVilla-La-Jolla.html). Location is crazy good. so you’ll have EVERYTHING right across the street. 2 blocks away from UCSD (10 min walking/ 5 min biking). The bus stop is in front of the house ( steps to the bus stop). 1 block away from the shopping center (5 min walk): Ralphs(24/7 open), CVS(24/7 open), Trader Joe’s, Movie Theatre, and a lot of food place. Perfect for UCSD students who don’t have a car. Full access to kitchen and dining room (refrigerator, stove, microwave oven, garbage disposal, utensils and cookware). Shared bathroom with another male. Both roommates are UCSD students. Reply online at ucsdguardian.org/classifieds to Listing ID: 12248818

SALE $175 - Leopard Gecko Pair. Up for rehoming is a pair of beautiful adult leos-- a super hypo and its high yellow partner. They are healthy, free from physical defects, and thrive on crickets and meal worms.They will come with an awesome enclosure that includes a coconut water bowl, a food dish, two hiding logs, a natural rock, and a decorative plant. The leopard gecko is probably the most popular pet reptile in captivity today-- with beautiful colors and patterns, simple care requirements, and docile natures, it’s easy to see why they are so widely accepted. In addition, because they are nocturnal, they have no special lighting requirements which are common for other lizards. These hardy, long-lived little lizards make an ideal reptilian pet. For the price of $175 OBO, don’t pass off on this wonderful deal! For more details, call/text me at seven-1-four-3-one-2eight-3-two-6. Reply online at ucsdguardian.org/classifieds to Listing ID: 12819175 $1000- Bear Eyed Cockatoo. Peaches

$500 — Tiny Tea Cup Yorkies. Tea-cup Yorkie Puppies. We have males and females available. They are 8 weeks old; up to date on shots and dewormed. Vet checked and come with a year great good health guarantee. Hypoallergenic (no shed). Very nice with kids and other pets. Start at $400-$750. Reply online at ucsdguardian.org/classifieds to Listing ID: 12385130

t surf. COMING SOON TO LIBRARY WALK...

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Level: 1 2 3 4 Level: 1 2 3 4

Single Room for rent. House in Clairemont. Males Only. 1 story House, 4 bed, 2 bath, 1560 sq ft. Room is 10X10 sq ft. Fully furnished except the room you will be renting out. Washer & dryer. Garage, driveway, street parking available.Quiet, clean neighborhood. Near Convoy which has many places to eat. Off the 805 and Balboa Ave. Down the street from many stores: Grocery stores, Target, Walmart, Home Depot. $480/ mo w/o utilities til Aug 2011. Parking spot is provided. Reply online at ucsdguardian.org/classifieds to Listing ID: 12533387

the Bear Eyed Cockatoo is a sweet and affectionate parrot who wants to snuggle and play all day! She is 1 1/2 years old and a very trusting bird once she gets to know you. I am looking for a good home where her owners can give her all the attention she needs! Reply online at ucsdguardian.org/classifieds to Listing ID: 12385133

Level: 1 2 3 4

HOUSING

Level: 1 2 3 4

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

9

Lev 1 3

Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit, 1 to 9. For strategies Complete on how to solve Sudoku, visit www.sudoku.org.uk

Level: 1 2 3 4

T H E U C S D G UA R D I A N | T H U R S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 2011 | w w w.U csdguardian.o rg

Level: 1 2 3 4

Level: 1 2 3 4

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

each row, 3-by-3 box borders) c every digit strategies solve Sudo www.sudo

SOLUT SATURDAY

© 2009 The Mepham Group. Distributed by Tribune Media Services. All rights reserved.


THE UCSD GUARDIAN | Thursday, SEPTEMBER 29, 2011 | www.Ucsdguardian.org

Tritons Split Conference Away Matches

Doubles Wins Regionals ▶ M. Tennis, from page 12

11

“He made some adjustments at the end to give himself a chance to win, but it was just a little too late.” The championship pairing of West and Sousa have earned a spot at the ITA Small College National Championships, to take place Oct. 13-16 at the Copeland-Cox Tennis Center in Mobile, Alabama. Willing says the pair will be working hard in preparation for the tournament. “We go to Irvine for an invitation where we will be facing extremely high competition,” Willing said. “We will get in there and try and work on some specific things, and hopefully that tough competition and a couple weeks of practice will give us a little help before we get into the tournament.” The men’s tennis team will return to the court this weekend, Friday Oct. 7 - Oct. 9, at the UC Irvine Invitational. Readers can contact Rachel Uda at ruda@ucsd.edu.

UCSD Finishes Ninth ▶M. Water polo, from page 12 already beaten UCSD twice this season. The Tritons took a 2-0 lead into the second quarter, which they extended by recording four more goals in the third quarter. In the fourth quarter Loyola went on a 3-2 run, but with a five-point lead, the Tritons secured the win. UCSD played its last game of the tournament against No. 9 UC Davis, narrowly defeating the Aggies 11-10. In a back-and-forth contest, the Tritons went up 4-3 in the first quarter, while the two teams remained deadlocked at the end of the first half. With four minutes remaining in the third quarter, sophomore Josh Stiling scored his second goal of the game to put the Tritons ahead 8-6, while senior William Brown put two more away before the end of the period to push the game to 10-8. With one last push in the fourth quarter, UC Davis’ Russell Hampton scored two consecutive goals, but UCSD held onto the lead to take the game. The Tritons take ninth place in the 16-team tournament for the second year in a row. UCSD’s next match is slated for Sunday, Oct. 9 at noon against Cal – who took first place in the SoCal tournament this weekend. Readers can contact Tyler Nelson at tcnelson@ucsd.edu.

B rian Y ip /G uardian

The women’s volleyball team beat bottom of the conference Humboldt State in straight sets, before dropping to top of the conference Sonoma State 3-1 on Saturday, Oct. 1.

T

he women’s volleyball team kicked off its road trip up north on Friday with a game against Humboldt State. Despite suffering its first loss of the season against Chico State last week, UCSD rebounded against the Lumberjacks beating Humboldt in straight sets. For the sixth time this season, UCSD held opponents to under a .100 attack percentage, with Humboldt — 5-8 overall and 2-7 in the CCAA — hitting a mere .065 for the match. UCSD middles junior Julia Freidenberg and freshman Lauren Demos both had a hand in the success of the Triton defense, with four blocks combined in the game. The Tritons recorded 44 kills, as well as only 15 errors in 116 attempts for the match. Senior outside hitter Katie Condon totaled 10 kills, while senior setter Roxanne Brunsting achieved her eighth double-double of the season with 16 assists and 15 digs.

“I was pleased by the way we played,” head coach Ricci Luyties said. “We were definitely focused and ready to play that match, and I think we played pretty well.” On Saturday, the Tritons were upset 3-1 by the Sonoma State Seawolves. The loss dropped the team to 10-2 overall and 6-2 in the CCAA, where UCSD sits in fourth place. UCSD hit a paltry .162 — their secondlowest percentage of the season — while the Seawolves hit a .275, along with 59 kills and 17 errors in 153 attacks. “The ball control, serving and passing was won by them, and that makes a big difference in volleyball,” said Luyties. “I think that was the main difference in the match.” The Tritons began the match with a 0.31 hitting percentage, resulting in an easy set won 25-31 by the Seawolves. The Tritons pulled closer but narrowly dropped the second set 25-23, and then took the third set 19-25. Although the Tritons

dug themselves out of the deficit by forcing the fourth set, the Seawolves put it away at 25-18. Condon and Brunsting posted big numbers — with Condon picking up her fourth double-double of the season with 11 kills and 12 digs and Brunsting recording a match-high of 18 digs — though it wasn’t enough to pull out the win. The Tritons come back home this Wednesday, Oct. 5 to face undefeated 13-0 Cal State San Bernardino at 7 p.m. “We know that we have to keep working hard and that the games are all going to be tough, and every one we’re going to play in our conference is very good. We’re just trying to get better everyday, and I think if we do that we’ll be good,” said Luyties. Readers can contact Stephanie Monroy at smonroy@ucsd.edu.

Looking for a great pharmacy school? Meet some alumni of California universities who recently enrolled as University of Michigan PharmD students.

E

Look no further than the University of Michigan. very year, UCSD graduates choose the PharmD Program at the University of Michigan College of Pharmacy. In fact, nearly 20 percent of our

PharmD enrollment is comprised of alumni from California universities. What accounts for Michigan’s popularity among Golden Staters? First, we are consistently ranked among America’s top pharmacy schools. Secondly, we consider a lot more than GPA and PCAT scores when evaluating your application. Earn your bachelor’s degree at UCSD, and then earn your PharmD at U-M. That’s what many UCSD students do every year. To learn more about the PharmD Program at Michigan, visit our Web site at www.umich.edu/~pharmacy.

Or contact the College of Pharmacy at 734-764-7312 (mich.pharm.admissions@umich.edu).

Still looking for a reason to make Michigan your pharmacy school? Consider these: 1. Financial support unequalled by any other U.S. pharmacy school. 2. Outstanding pay. 3. Job security in economically uncertain times. 4. Unlimited opportunities to improve people’s lives. 5. Unparalleled career choices. 6. Continuous growth potential. 7. Life and career mobility. 8. The prestige of owning a degree from one of America’s top-ranked pharmacy schools. 9. Membership in an influential alumni network spanning the globe. 10. The power to apply medical knowledge at the forefront of technological innovation. 11. Small class size to maximize individualized educational experiences. 12. One-to-one learning with world-renowned faculty.

Your future never looked brighter.


12

THE UCSD GUARDIAN | Thursday, SEPTEMBER 29, 2011 | www.Ucsdguardian.org

UDA CONTACT THE EDITOR RACHEL sports@ucsdguardian.org

SPORTS

UPCOMING

WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALL 10/5 10/7 MEN’S TENNIS 10/7 10/8 10/9

UCSD

GAMES

VS CSU San Bernardino AT CSU Monterey Bay AT UC Irvine Invitational

Doubles Down For Win By rachel uda • sports editor Photo by nolan thomas • Guardian file

The Triton doubles pair of Austin West and Devon Sousa won the ITA Regionals this weekend, while Triton Max Jiganti took second place in singles.

A

fter defeating the Grand Canyon duo of Stephan Murray and Patrice Giraldi 8-4 in the semifinal bout, the UCSD doubles team of Austin West and Devon Sousa took down the Grand Canyon pairing of Ahmed Saleem and Bastien Tonus 8-2 to win the regional championships at the USTA/Intercollegiate Tennis Association on Saturday, Oct. 1. Three UCSD doubles teams and four singles competitors qualified for the ITA Regionals, beginning the tournament on Wednesday, Sept. 28. In the first round of the tournament, the Triton doubles team of Andrew Malkozsak and Maxence Dutreix were defeated 8-4 by Sonoma’s David Hutton and Greg Eckstadt, while UCSD duo Max Jiganti and Trevor Dell had a stronger showing, beating Sonoma State pair Garret Gooch and Robert Henry 8-1. Jiganti and Dell were met with UCSD opposition in the quarterfinals, dropping the game to West and Sousa 8-5 — the pair that would take the tournament championship after beating Grand Canyon doubles teams in the semifinal and final rounds.

“[West and Sousa] just played well,” assistant coach Timmer Willing said. “We had to play backto-back against two Grand Canyon teams that are very competitive and our guys just physically played really well and were mentally just up and ready for the challenge.” In the singles competition, the Tritons did not fair as well. Seven Tritons qualified for the second round of singles play but were whittled down to four by the quarterfinal round, until only sophomore Max Jiganti stood in the semifinals for UCSD. Jiganti faced off against Grand Canyon’s Ahmed Saleem in a hard-fought three-set battle, winning 6-2, 4-6 and 10-8. In the same day, Jiganti defeated Stephan Murray of Grand Canyon in straight sets, 6-2 and 7-6, to take the semifinal win. In the tournament decider Jiganti faced Brigham Young University-Hawaii’s Yevhen Zakharov, losing in straight sets. “[Jiganti] went down early, but was able to pull out the match against Grand Canyon and did the same thing against BYU in the finals,” said Willing.

See m. tennis, page 11

GAME SUMMARIES

Semifinals

1 6 Murray (Grand Canyon) 2

2 7 6

2 6

4 6

Jiganti (UCSD):

Finals

Jiganti (UCSD) Zakharov (BYU-Hawaii)

Semifinals

West & Sousa (UCSD): Murray & Giraldi (Grand Cayon)

Finals

West & Sousa (UCSD): Saleem & Tonus (Grand Canyon):

1 8 4

8 2

Tritons Go 3-1, Take Home Ninth Place Finish T he No. 12 UCSD men’s water polo team went away with a record 3-1 in this weekend’s SoCal Tournament, hosted by Cal State Long Beach, finishing ninth in the 16-team tournament. The Tritons began the tournament on Saturday against UC Santa Barbara. The No. 8 Gauchos rolled off the first five goals in the match before the Tritons could muster a response. With three minutes remaining, UCSD managed to take two back before the end of the period. At the start of the second the Gauchos scored another two quick goals, but the Tritons put away two more to keep the match within four after the first half. To start the second half, senior Graham Saber scored his fourth goal to bring the Tritons to within three, but it was the closest the Tritons would come, as the Gauchos scored the next two and held control of the game for the remainder of the quarter. Senior Lance Curtiss scored a goal in the final quarter with just over seven minutes remaining, with the game ending 14-8 in favor of the Gauchos.

After dropping its opening match, UCSD fell into the loser’s bracket of the SoCal Tournament. In their second match, the Tritons squared off against Air Force Academy, a team that the Tritons have already defeated 9-4 at home earlier in the year. The Tritons stormed out to a 2-0 lead, but UCSD gave up five of the next six goals and were looking at a 5-3 deficit early in the game. The Tritons managed to dig themselves out of the hole to tie the game at 7-7 at halftime. Air Force took a two-goal lead with a quarter left to play. With the clock winding down, Saber scored. The goal brought the Tritons to within one, as they mounted their comeback. With 50 seconds left junior John Butler scored to tie the match. 50 seconds later, with just five seconds left to play, Saber scored his fourth goal of the quarter to take the game. In the second day of the tournament, the Tritons faced No. 11 Loyola Marymount – a squad that had See m. Water polo, page 11

GAME SUMMARIES Oct. 1, 2011

Oct. 1, 2011 UCSD (NO. 12)

1 2

2 4

3 1

4 Total 2 9

UCsb (no. 8)

6

4

2

3

15

UCSD (NO. 12)

1 5

2 2

3 3

4 Total 2 12

AIR FORCE (no. 20)

3

4

1

3

11

Oct. 2, 2011

Oct. 2, 2011 UCSD (NO. 12)

2

4

1

2

9

UCSD (NO. 12)

3

3

4

1

11

loyola (no. 11)

0

1

1

3

5

UC Davis (no. 9)

4

2

2

2

10

M ichelle jaconette / guardian file

Despite going 3-1 this weekend at the Socal Tournament, the Tritons finished ninth in the sixteen team tournament.


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