12
Independent Student Press Since 1971. 24/7 News Coverage at dailyCal.org Berkeley, Ca • Friday, august 26, 2011 Berkeley’s Newspaper siNce 1871 employee at UcsF file s a suit against Uc regents COURTS A racial discrimination lawsuit filed in San Francisco Superior Court against the Regents of the University of Califor- nia began jury selection Wednesday and will likely begin evidence presentation on Monday. The suit, filed by former UC San Fran- cisco employee Todd Senigar, alleges that, despite positive performance re- views and qualified credentials, he was passed over for promotion on the basis of his race. UCSF spokesperson Amy Pyle said the UC does not believe the claim has any merit. According to Pyle, the position in question was opened in accordance with university policy but was not filled by anyone due to budgetary constraints. Senigar’s complaint cites a litany of instances going back to 2001, alleging racial discrimination in the workplace, including alleged inadequate pay for his position and racial harassment by col- leagues that was not adequately dealt with by UCSF. Furthermore, Senigar, a black man, alleges that his manager, Jef- frey Fritz, did not promote him based on his race. By Jordan Bach-Lombardo Senior Staff [email protected] LABOR 9.1 % 12 % California 34.2 % California 16-19 Year Olds Nationwide According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Unemployment Rate for July 2011 of people ages 16 to 24 were employed or looking for work in July 2011 — the lowest rate on record. were employed in July 2011 — the lowest rate on record. 48.8 % 59.5 % YOUTH UNEMPLOYMENT joy chen/ staff CheCk Online www.dailycal.org Watch students download and try out the ntro app Thursday on Sproul Plaza. CAMPUS EVENTS students experiment with new app uC Berkeley students try out ntro, a new social networking app, on sproul Plaza. michael gethers/staff Students strolling through Sproul Plaza Thursday — many en- ticed by the free hot dogs — stopped to explore a new social networking app, which allows students to meet people in the university community with similar interests. Ntro — created and promoted by the company nProgress, Inc. — connects people based on us- ers’ expressed interests, linking students to other students, as well as to student groups they could be interested in. The app launched Sunday at Cal- topia, but the company used Thurs- day as its main day to publicize the product. It already has over 1,000 subscribers, according to Rosie O’Neill, vice president of marketing. While some used the promotional download event as a crime of oppor- tunity to snag a Top Dog — offered in return for downloading the free app — other students said they would use the app for practical purposes. “The number one reason to use it is because you can find a study bud- dy really easily,” said Joseph Baietti, a UC Berkeley senior working with the project. Molly Roth, a UC Berkeley junior and music major, said the app could make it easier to find other musi- cians for jam sessions. It could also make putting a band together much smoother, she said. Josh Resnick, CEO and founder of nProgress, said the idea for the app was borne out of the many hours he spent in airports watching hundreds of fellow travelers pass by By Jordan Bach-Lombardo Senior Staff [email protected] without any contact. “I (thought) there must be some- thing I have in common with these other people, but there’s no way for me to figure that out,” he said. “I’m way too gun-shy to walk up and say, ‘Hi, my name is Josh, I used to make video games, are you into that?’ And so I started thinking about this app.” Resnick began developing the app over a year ago, raising “millions of dollars” in the process. He decided to focus on marketing to students be- cause he thought the college environ- ment appeared similar to his experi- ence in the airport — lots of people in a relatively compressed space, run- ning past each other without a word. The program, which requires a UC Berkeley email address to join, is exclusive to the campus. UC Berkeley’s schedule of classes and an entire database of campus stu- dent groups are programmed into the app to facilitate finding people and scheduling a time to meet. Security was a main focus in de- signing the app, Resnick said. Unlike other social networking programs, such as Facebook or Foursquare, ntro — which he termed an “opt- in network” — does not give out a user’s last name or location and does not allow users to search for other people. The only way to ac- cess another person is based on an expressed common interest. The app makes it easier for student groups to reach potential members, O’Neill said. Groups can send out news feeds to all registered students who identify a certain interest. While it is currently operating only at UC Berkeley and the University of Southern California — Berkeley is the first city the app has expanded into from nProgress’ home city of Los An- geles — Resnick has big plans for his program. He hopes it will be in use at 50 of the largest colleges across the United States by 2012. “In a weird way, we’re using tech- nology to get people to look up from their phones and actually walk up to someone and introduce them- selves,” said Resnick. “Serendipity strikes so rarely, (so) we want to make that process a lot more effi- cient. There’s so many great missed opportunities out there.” Jordan Bach-Lombardo is the university news editor. percentage of students passing exit exam rises disCriminatiOn: PaGe 6 The percentage of high school stu- dents passing the California High School Exit Exam continued to increase statewide for the sixth consecutive year, according to data released by the state Department of Education Wednesday. Despite heavy cuts to K-12 education over the last decade from the state, the percentage of students in the graduating class of 2011 that passed the exam rose from 94.4 percent to 94.6 percent. In 2006, that number was 90.4 percent. “We’ve been making the curriculum tougher, when you ask kids to do more, they will do more, and when you ask more of children, they will do better,” said Tina Jung, a department spokesperson. The first exit exam — required to graduate from California high schools — was held in 2001 as part of a package of educational reforms, including revamp- ing teaching and curriculum standards. The exam has been widely criticized as some allege teachers forgo education by teaching to the test and argue it does By Mihir Zaveri | Senior Staff [email protected] readiness: PaGe 6 Report says youth nationwide struggle to find employment and many have stopped trying With the continuing nationwide economic slump, youth are not only struggling to find jobs, but many may have stopped trying al- together, according to federal data released Wednesday. A mere 59.5 percent of youth between 16 and 24 were working or actively looking for work in July, marking the lowest rate on re- cord — since 1948 — according to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. However, Delfina Geiken, Berkeley’s em- ployment programs administrator, said the city’s youth employment initiative, Youth- Works, did not see a decrease in applicants this summer, receiving an usual number of ap- plications — nearly 1,000. Funded by the city, YouthWorks is a program that finds jobs for people between the ages of 14 and 25. Typically, the youth labor force, which in- cludes those with jobs or seeking jobs, sky- rockets between April and July each year, as students finish the school year and search for work. This year, the labor force jumped by 11.8 percent between those months, with the youth labor force growing by 2.4 million. While there is no data about youth employ- ment rates in Berkeley, the national youth em- By Soumya Karlamangla | Senior Staff [email protected] ployment rate in July was 48.5 percent, also the lowest rate on record, according to the data. “Youth are competing with adults for jobs that typically youth would expect to get,” she said. “I’m not surprised that the data shows that at all.” Geiken added that in the past few years, she has seen that many of the city’s youth looking for jobs are doing so to support their families rather than to earn cash for their own use. She also said that while the program tries to target youth from South and West Berkeley, histori- cally poorer areas, YouthWorks is willing to find jobs for anyone who applies. The city’s overall unemployment rate was 10.5 percent in July, according to an analysis by the Cali- fornia Employment Development Depart- ment. “In our mind, all youth are at risk regardless of their income level,” Geiken said. The situation in California is already worse than in the rest of the country, since the state’s July unemployment rate — 12 percent — was higher than the national rate that month, 9.1 UnemPlOyment: PaGe 6 CheCk Online www.dailycal.org Souyma Karlamangla talks about the numbers behind the unemployment rate for teens and minorities nationwide. EDUCATION ENCORE: The Cal volleyball team looks to return to the national title match and win it this time.

Daily Cal - Friday, August 26, 2011

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Full issue of Berkeley's Daily Californian

Citation preview

Independent Student Press Since 1971

See P5

247 News Coverage at dailyCal orgBerkeley Ca bull Friday august 26 2011Berkeleyrsquos Newspaper siNce 1871

employee at UcsF files a suit against Uc regents

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

courts

A racial discrimination lawsuit filed in San Francisco Superior Court against the Regents of the University of Califor-nia began jury selection Wednesday and will likely begin evidence presentation on Monday

The suit filed by former UC San Fran-cisco employee Todd Senigar alleges that despite positive performance re-views and qualified credentials he was passed over for promotion on the basis of his race

UCSF spokesperson Amy Pyle said the UC does not believe the claim has any merit According to Pyle the position in question was opened in accordance with university policy but was not filled by anyone due to budgetary constraints

Senigarrsquos complaint cites a litany of instances going back to 2001 alleging racial discrimination in the workplace including alleged inadequate pay for his position and racial harassment by col-leagues that was not adequately dealt with by UCSF Furthermore Senigar a black man alleges that his manager Jef-frey Fritz did not promote him based on his race

By Jordan Bach-LombardoSenior Staffjbachlombardodailycalorg

Labor

91 12

California

342 California 16-19 Year Olds

Nationwide

According to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics

Unemployment Rate for July 2011

of people ages 16 to 24 were employed or looking for work in July 2011 mdash the lowest rate on record

were employed in July 2011 mdash the lowest rate on record

488 595

YOUTH UNEMPLOYMENT

joy

chen

sta

ff

CheCk Onlinewwwdailycalorg

Watch students download and try out the ntro appThursday on Sproul Plaza

campus events

students experiment with new app

uC Berkeley students try out ntro a new social networking app on sproul Plazamichael gethersstaff

Students strolling through Sproul Plaza Thursday mdash many en-ticed by the free hot dogs mdash stopped to explore a new social networking app which allows students to meet people in the university community with similar interests

Ntro mdash created and promoted by the company nProgress Inc mdash connects people based on us-ersrsquo expressed interests linking students to other students as well as to student groups they could be interested in

The app launched Sunday at Cal-topia but the company used Thurs-day as its main day to publicize the product It already has over 1000 subscribers according to Rosie OrsquoNeill vice president of marketing

While some used the promotional download event as a crime of oppor-tunity to snag a Top Dog mdash offered in return for downloading the free app mdash other students said they would use the app for practical purposes

ldquoThe number one reason to use it is because you can find a study bud-dy really easilyrdquo said Joseph Baietti a UC Berkeley senior working with the project

Molly Roth a UC Berkeley junior and music major said the app could make it easier to find other musi-cians for jam sessions It could also make putting a band together much smoother she said

Josh Resnick CEO and founder of nProgress said the idea for the app was borne out of the many hours he spent in airports watching hundreds of fellow travelers pass by

By Jordan Bach-LombardoSenior Staffjbachlombardodailycalorg

without any contactldquoI (thought) there must be some-

thing I have in common with these other people but therersquos no way for me to figure that outrdquo he said ldquoIrsquom way too gun-shy to walk up and say lsquoHi my name is Josh I used to make video games are you into thatrsquo And so I started thinking about this apprdquo

Resnick began developing the app over a year ago raising ldquomillions of dollarsrdquo in the process He decided to focus on marketing to students be-cause he thought the college environ-ment appeared similar to his experi-ence in the airport mdash lots of people in a relatively compressed space run-ning past each other without a word

The program which requires a UC Berkeley email address to join is exclusive to the campus UC Berkeleyrsquos schedule of classes and an entire database of campus stu-dent groups are programmed into the app to facilitate finding people and scheduling a time to meet

Security was a main focus in de-signing the app Resnick said Unlike other social networking programs such as Facebook or Foursquare ntro mdash which he termed an ldquoopt-in networkrdquo mdash does not give out a userrsquos last name or location and does not allow users to search for other people The only way to ac-cess another person is based on an expressed common interest

The app makes it easier for student groups to reach potential members OrsquoNeill said Groups can send out news feeds to all registered students who identify a certain interest

While it is currently operating only at UC Berkeley and the University of Southern California mdash Berkeley is the first city the app has expanded into from nProgressrsquo home city of Los An-geles mdash Resnick has big plans for his program He hopes it will be in use at 50 of the largest colleges across the United States by 2012

ldquoIn a weird way wersquore using tech-

nology to get people to look up from their phones and actually walk up to someone and introduce them-selvesrdquo said Resnick ldquoSerendipity strikes so rarely (so) we want to make that process a lot more effi-cient Therersquos so many great missed opportunities out thererdquo

Jordan Bach-Lombardo is the university news editor

percentage of students passing exit exam rises

disCriminatiOn PaGe 6

The percentage of high school stu-dents passing the California High School Exit Exam continued to increase statewide for the sixth consecutive year according to data released by the state Department of Education Wednesday

Despite heavy cuts to K-12 education over the last decade from the state the percentage of students in the graduating class of 2011 that passed the exam rose from 944 percent to 946 percent In 2006 that number was 904 percent

ldquoWersquove been making the curriculum tougher when you ask kids to do more they will do more and when you ask more of children they will do betterrdquo said Tina Jung a department spokesperson

The first exit exam mdash required to graduate from California high schools mdash was held in 2001 as part of a package of educational reforms including revamp-ing teaching and curriculum standards

The exam has been widely criticized as some allege teachers forgo education by teaching to the test and argue it does

By Mihir Zaveri | Senior Staffmzaveridailycalorg

readiness PaGe 6

Report says youth nationwide struggle to find employment and many have stopped trying

With the continuing nationwide economic slump youth are not only struggling to find jobs but many may have stopped trying al-together according to federal data released Wednesday

A mere 595 percent of youth between 16 and 24 were working or actively looking for work in July marking the lowest rate on re-cord mdash since 1948 mdash according to data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics

However Delfina Geiken Berkeleyrsquos em-ployment programs administrator said the cityrsquos youth employment initiative Youth-Works did not see a decrease in applicants this summer receiving an usual number of ap-plications mdash nearly 1000 Funded by the city YouthWorks is a program that finds jobs for people between the ages of 14 and 25

Typically the youth labor force which in-cludes those with jobs or seeking jobs sky-rockets between April and July each year as students finish the school year and search for work This year the labor force jumped by 118 percent between those months with the youth labor force growing by 24 million

While there is no data about youth employ-ment rates in Berkeley the national youth em-

By Soumya Karlamangla | Senior Staffskarlamangladailycalorg

ployment rate in July was 485 percent also the lowest rate on record according to the data

ldquoYouth are competing with adults for jobs that typically youth would expect to getrdquo she said ldquoIrsquom not surprised that the data shows that at allrdquo

Geiken added that in the past few years she has seen that many of the cityrsquos youth looking for jobs are doing so to support their families rather than to earn cash for their own use She also said that while the program tries to target youth from South and West Berkeley histori-cally poorer areas YouthWorks is willing to find jobs for anyone who applies The cityrsquos overall unemployment rate was 105 percent in July according to an analysis by the Cali-fornia Employment Development Depart-ment

ldquoIn our mind all youth are at risk regardless of their income levelrdquo Geiken said

The situation in California is already worse than in the rest of the country since the statersquos July unemployment rate mdash 12 percent mdash was higher than the national rate that month 91

UnemPlOyment PaGe 6

CheCk Onlinewwwdailycalorg

Souyma Karlamangla talks about the numbers behind the unemployment rate for teens and minorities nationwide

education

encore The Cal volleyball team looks

to return to the national title match and win it this time

2 News The Daily Californian

Online coverage 247

Dailycalorgonline exclusives

on the blogsThe Daily ClogFALL 2011 CLASSES YOU WONrsquoT WANT TO SLEEP THROUGH Sick of chemistry statistics and R1B courses already Get out while you can Therersquos still time to switch things up so read through this list of entertaining classes that will keep you interested or at the very least awake

INSPIRATION ONE OUTFIT AT A TIME The Clog catches up with Berkeley student and style guru Kathleen Murillo on fashion advice blogging and how on earth she manages to juggle so many things at once (and look good doing it)

Friday August 26 2011

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

The city of Berkeleyrsquos Mental Health Division is planning a $15 million project to create affordable permanent housing in Berkeley for mentally-ill adults who are homeless or at risk of homelessness

The project mdash overseen by the divi-sion in conjunction with the California Department of Mental Health and the California Housing Finance Agency mdash will involve renovating an existing 74-unit apartment complex at 1040 University Ave so that it can accom-modate and provide services for home-less individuals

ldquoThe long-term goal is to provide peo-ple who have been without housing for a long time with an opportunity to live fuller lives in a cleaner environmentrdquo said Amy Moore the divisionrsquos supervisor

The city is holding a 30-day com-ment period to gather input from the public until Sept 21 at which point

By Adelyn Baxter | Staffabaxterdailycalorg

Gov Brown appoints local resident as special advisor

Gov Jerry Brown has appointed Berkeley resident Jeanne Clinton as special advisor to the California Pub-lic Utilities Com-mission the gov-ernorrsquos office said Tuesday

Clinton 60 has been a manager of the commissionrsquos Climate Strategies Branch since 2009 and was an advisor on clean energy

News iN Brief

This publication is not an official publication of the University of California but is published by an independent corporation using the name The Daily Californian pursuant to a license granted by the Regents of the University of California Advertisements appearing in The Daily Californian reflect the views of the advertisers

only They are not an expression of editorial opinion or of the views of the staff Opinions expressed in The Daily Californian by editors or columnists regarding candidates for political office or legislation are those of the editors or columnists and are not those of the Independent Berkeley Student Publishing Co Inc Unsigned editorials are the collective opinion of the Senior Editorial Board Reproduction in any form whether in whole or in part without written permission

from the editor is strictly prohibited Copyright 2011 All rights reserved Published Monday through Friday by The Independent Berkeley Student Publishing Co Inc The nonprofit IBSPC serves to support an editorially independent newsroom run by UC Berkeley students

administration

Matt Wilson Publisher

John Zsenai Finance Manager Brad Aldridge Production Manager

Tom Ott Tech Manager Shweta Doshi Staff Representative Karoun Kasraie Online Manager

Berkeleyrsquos Independent Student Press Since 1971

contactsoffice 600 Eshleman Hall

mail PO Box 1949 Berkeley CA 94701-0949

phone (510) 548-8300fax (510) 849-2803

e-mail dailycaldailycalorgonline httpwwwdailycalorg

Division plans to create affordable housing for some mentally-ill adults

and policy planning to the commis-sion from 2006 to 2009 according to a press release from the governorrsquos office Prior to that she served as a consultant to former California En-ergy Commissioner Jackalyne Pfan-nenstiel an international energy efficiency advisor for the Vietnam Ministry of Industry as well as deputy director for the California Consumer Power and Conservation Financing Authority

As special advisor for the commis-sion Clinton will help coordinate development and implementation of energy efficiency programs and poli-cies including financing mechanisms and other incentives mdash program de-sign and implementation program evaluation and other matters mdash ac-cording to the governorrsquos office She

also may work on related distribution generation and demand reduction programs

Clintonrsquos new position does not re-quire senate confirmation Her com-pensation is $130236

In addition to Clintonrsquos appoint-ment Brown announced the appoint-ment of San Francisco resident Bar-bara Emley 69 to the Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission Emley has fished commercially for more than 20 years and has served as the strategy team leader for the Pacific Coast Fed-eration of Fishermanrsquos Associations since 1995 according to the press re-lease

Her newly appointed position requires state Senate confirmation and provides compensation of $100 per diem

mdash Stephanie BaerJeanne clinton

an application will be submitted to the Berkeley City Council which will then vote on the project

Funding for the housing project will come mainly from the state and other yet-to-be-determined sources accord-ing to Moore An additional sum of $758600 in leftover funds allocated by the Mental Health Services Act will also be used in the renovations

The property on University Avenue is owned by Berkeley-based Resources for Community Development an or-ganization dedicated to providing low-income housing for Bay Area families which will work with the division to operate the site once it opens

Jessica Sheldon associate project manager for Resources for Community Development said they hope to com-plete all administrative and funding steps by the end 2011 but that construc-tion will probably not begin until next year Renovations will mainly consist of interior improvements mdash plumbing ventilation as well as installing energy-efficient lighting

Seven units will be set aside for oc-cupants who are both homeless and certified mentally-ill All occupants must have an income lower than 30 to 50 percent of the arearsquos median in-come Rent will be subsidized to 30 percent of each occupantrsquos income

The site will also provide occupants with medical screenings social work services counseling vocational train-ing mental health assessments as well as individual and group therapy

Severely mentally-ill homeless people in Alameda County comprise 20 percent of its total homeless population as of January 2011 according to a report from the group EveryOne Home released in June The number of mentally-ill home-less individuals has decreased almost 19 percent since 2009 The report also states that ldquoabout 60 percent of severely mentally-ill homeless people are shel-teredrdquo mdash meaning they currently live in emergency shelter programs mdash ldquowhile about 40 percent are unshelteredrdquo

Adelyn Baxter covers city govern-ment

Photo essay Hundreds flock to Calapalooza

meNtal health

How much weight can Lower Sproul Plaza take

anna ViGnetsenior staff

Four months ago UC Berkeley engineers and administrators mdash fearing that excessive weight could cause damage to the garage below mdash refused to allow any vehicle larger than a golf cart drive across Lower Sproul Plaza Monday night approximately 1500 Greek-curious students mdash whose com-bined weight far outstrips that of a laden golf cart mdash reveled on that same plaza at the annual Greek carnival

While holding events on the plaza that attract large volumes of students may seem counterintuitive and in direct opposition to the point of the weight restrictions Christine Shaff communications director of the campusrsquos Facilities Services Department said that big cranes are more of a concern than big crowds

Hundreds of students flocked to Lower Sproul Plaza for Calapalooza Thursday evening to learn more about the clubs organizations and activities on campus

michael Gethersstaff

CorreCtioNsThe caption for the photograph accompanying Thursdayrsquos article ldquoQues-

tions surround offense as fall camp wraps uprdquo incorrectly identified the featured player as Kaelin Clay In fact it was Avery Walls

The Aug 10 2009 editorial ldquoSpeaking Uprdquo incorrectly identified all three UC Berkeley alumni and hikers detained in Iran as UC Berkeley graduates-turned-journalists In fact only Shane Bauer was a journalist

The Daily Californian regrets the errors

BANCROFT CLOTHING CO

Near Sather Gate at 2530 Bancroft Way Berkeley Open Mon - Sat 10 ndash 630 Sat 10 -6 Sun 11- 6 (510) 841-0762

Visit our Clinique Counter for a free makeover

Back To School Sale All Jeans

and Free People 25 OFF

3OPINION amp News The Daily Californian

Jordan Bach-Lombardo jbachlombardodailycalorg

Bleary-eyed and carrying a slight headache from jet lag I stumbled up a concrete stair-

case to a second-story shopIt was my second day in Amman

Jordan and I found myself accompa-nying our Palestinian study-abroad program director as he ran errands To a sweet shop then an office sup-ply store afterwards a bread shop and then for our final stop to the tailorrsquos to pick up a pair of pants

In the shoprsquos cluttered lobby Abboud the tailor met us with the slacks After the flurry of introduc-tions Abboud asked me the tradi-tional second question ldquoWhatrsquos your religionrdquo

ldquoI donrsquot have onerdquo I answered utterly unaware of the rabbit hole I had just plunged myself down and equally unprepared for the vehe-mence of his response

Ten minutes later mdash a period dur-ing which I struggled to cobble together in Arabic a defense of my life philosophy as Abboud blazed through the finer points of Muhammadrsquos words and actions mdash I retraced my steps down the stair-case head reeling worse than before

This dialogue repeated itself many times across the country in taxi cabs and coffee shops libraries and kiosks Each conversation reinforced the absolute difference between me and the majority of the Jordanian people

As a non-believer a fundamental distinction separates me from the Muslim Jordanians mdash who constitute 92 percent of the countryrsquos popula-tion mdash I encountered every day Belief in God plays such an integral role in their everyday life mdash a hefty percentage of expressions of hope are greeted with the phrase ldquoIf God wills itrdquo mdash that many simply cannot under-stand how anyone can live without it

The moment many people I spoke with learned of my areligious convic-tion I instantly perceived a slight change in the way they viewed me In their eyes without God I had no moral compass As one zealous defender of the monotheistic philoso-phy lectured me without the supreme deity dictating my thoughts and actions there is nothing to stop me from killing people on the street

So while I was always treated with respect and kindness I felt sepa-

rated from the people around me There exists no bigger division between people than the trenches dug by religion

I relentlessly tried to breach this gulf I sipped tea with a street-side bookseller debated economic policy with Jordanian communists rolled balls of traditional mansaf in a fam-ilyrsquos home mdash all to no avail Always eluding me was the answer to that essential question How do I con-nect with the Jordanian people at a fundamental level

The answer came during the holi-est month of the Muslim calendar

Ramadan is the month of fasting that requires Muslims to abstain from eating and drinking from sunup to sundown Beyond the introspec-tion and religious reflection that tra-ditionally accompanies fasting it also strengthens ties between people as they collectively undertake the task

Considering the societal implica-tions of this practice I decided to fast Immediately I felt a change in my relationship with the people around me

On the first day about 10 min-utes before the call to prayer

that announced sundown and the end of the fast I brought a box of dates ndash a food traditionally used to break the fast ndash to the lobby of the hotel in which I was staying Yusuf a manager with whom I had always been on very good terms looked at the gift and understanding the sym-bolic significance of the dried fruit asked me ldquoAre you fastingrdquo

ldquoYesrdquo I respondedA bright smile appeared on his

face and he quickly stood up to shake my hand The dialogue repeated itself innumerous times as the question quickly supplanted any investigation into my religion

Each time I answered my new friend smiled shook my hand and after forcing me to sit down brought tea or coffee or some food to share

Fasting opened doors into the society to which I had previously not even had access Every night of Ramadan I went downtown with a friend from the program mdash he also fasted mdash and stayed there for hours less an intruder on the community there than a part of the group

We broke fast in restaurants sur-rounded by locals expectantly await-ing the call to prayer alongside them and as one digging into the food in front of us when the time came

After fast we sat for hours on the broad round concrete columns near a three-way intersection whiling away the time until suhoor ndash the meal eaten before beginning the dayrsquos fast ndash by talking and laughing with our friends and passersby The barriers between us were dimin-ished because we shared something special mdash I became a part of the local community

Ramadan kareem

Fellowship through fastingoff the Beat

Friday August 26 2011

Office of President releases payroll report

The UC Office of the President released the University of Califor-niarsquos annual payroll report for 2010 Wednesday revealing a recent trend of declining state funding for employee compensation

The report which outlines both the sources funding payroll and the groups receiving compensation pinpoints the two major sources for funding of the pay-roll as state general funds which includes educational fees and teaching hospitals

State funding for payroll declined by $174 million to 267 percent in 2010 making up 2 percent less of the total payroll than in 2009 Total pay from teaching hospitals increased by $76 million 4 percent higher than the fraction of total compensation it made up in 2009 according to the report

In 2008 however state general funds and educational fees made up over 30 percent of payroll funding ac-cording to the 2008 payroll report

ldquo(The decline) makes it harder to pay our staff and faculty makes it harder to keep tuition levels stable makes it harder to keep our buildings runningrdquo said Leslie Sepuka a spokes-person for the UC Office of the Presi-dent in an email

Sepuka added that the decline in

By Damian Ortellado | Staffdortelladodailycalorg

state funding especially affects the uni-versity because state funds are flexible whereas grants for instance are not

ldquoI think the key point is that the funds from the state are unrestricted mdash so the university has the flexibility to use them where it sees a needrdquo Sepuka said in the email ldquoIf the university gets a grant for a specific purpose (mela-noma research) you canrsquot use it to keep the library open for extended hours during finalsrdquo

Although funding from federal gov-ernment sources increased by $80 million the increase was due primarily to increased funding for research ac-cording to a press release from the UC Office of the President Sepuka said the increased funding is a step in the right direction for the university

ldquoThe medical centers have been growingrdquo Sepuka said ldquoThey also help support the medical schools and stu-dents mdash so that is a positive for the universityrdquo said Sepuka in an email

The growth in research expenditures also explains the total payroll increase to just under $1 billion in 2010 a 1 per-cent increase from 2009 However the rise is smaller compared to previous years according to the press release

Sepuka said the increase in research spending shows the importance of the university mdash which develops more pat-ents than any university in the nation mdash in the scientific community

Health care personnel made up

the largest percentage of payroll for any single group academic or non-academic with 216 percent of com-pensation funding going to the group mdash almost 5 percent higher than their fraction of the total payroll in 2009 Health care personnel have made up the largest percentage of payroll since 2007 according to calendar year pay-roll reports from previous years

In the 2005-2006 fiscal year health care personnel made up a little more than half of the payroll percentage they made up in total 2010 UC employee compensation according to a 2005-2006 fiscal year payroll report

Health sciences faculty members remain among the top 10 earning em-ployees at the university along with athletic coaches who mdash unlike faculty mdash are paid from non-state funds ac-cording to the press release These faculty members are often well-known in the medical community and receive much of their income from their clini-cal practices at UC medical centers

According to the report about 40 percent of payroll went to academic personnel such as professors lectur-ers student assistants and librarians

In fiscal year 2005-06 academic personnel made up almost 80 percent of total compensation nearly double what they did in 2010 according to the 2005-06 fiscal year report

Damian Ortellado covers higher education

HIGHER EDUCATION

PRESSPASSDAILYCALORG

Use your Press Pass at these locations and save moneyThe Press Pass is Berkeleyrsquos FREE discount card

FREE 16 oz SodaWhen You Order a

Large Super Burrito

North amp South Side

Any Slice amp Sodafor $319 plus tax

www

How can I make my Berkeley business more successfulWe can helpberkeleychambercom

This publication is not an official publication of the University of California but is published by an independent corporation using the name The Daily Californian pursuant to a license granted by the Regents of the University of California Advertisements appearing in The Daily Californian

reflect the views of the advertisers only They are not an expression of editorial opinion or of the views of the staff Opinions expressed in The Daily Californian by editors or columnists regarding candidates for political office or legislation are those of the editors or columnists and are not those of the Independent Berkeley Student Publishing Co Inc Unsigned editorials are the collective opinion of the Senior Editorial Board Reproduction

in any form whether in whole or in part without written permission from the editor is strictly prohibited Copyright 2011 All rights reserved

Mailing AddressPO Box 1949

Berkeley CA 94701-0949

Fax(510) 849-2803

Emailopiniondailycalorg

Letters to the Editor and Op-edsLetters and Op-eds may be sent via email Letters sent via US mail should be typed and must include

signature daytime phone number and place of residence All letters are edited for space and clarityOp-eds must be no longer than 700 words Letters must be no longer than 350 words

EDITORIALS

ldquoOpinion Many people seem to think that California is in a death spiral This is not true mdash California is extremely resilient wersquove managed to keep Berkeleyrsquos very high standingrdquo

mdashUC Berkeley Chancellor Robert Birgeneau

Editorial Cartoon By Anna Vignet

Berkeleyrsquos Independent Student Press mdash Celebrating 140 years

Senior Editorial BoardTomer Ovadia Editor in Chief and President

Leslie Toy Managing Editor

Emma Anderson Opnion Page EditorJordan Bach-Lombardo University News Editor

Stephanie Baer City News EditorTaryn Erhardt Photo Editor

Kelly Fang Multimedia Editor

Jonathan Kuperberg Sports Editor Gopal Lalchandani Night Editor

David Liu Arts amp Entertainment EditorMatthew Putzulu Development Editor

Ashley Villanueva Design Editor

First came the dreaded fur-lough program Then came fewer graduate student

instructors due to a lack of fund-ing continued competitive offers from big-budget private schools and the layoffs of colleagues and friends all while salaries for many UC faculty and staff members remained well below market rate

And yet across UC Berkeley and the entire UC many professors and staff members have chosen to stay For this we commend them and believe that the UC merit pro-gram announced last Wednesday is a step in the right direction

However we also hope that the university sees the bigger picture It is not only the level of pay that keeps these professors supervi-sors financial analysts and others from fleeing to Harvard Stanford or other private prestigious uni-versities but also the caliber of the schoolrsquos research students and educational atmosphere

Under this merit plan faculty and non-union staff members will be eligible to receive raises based on performance evaluations The raises mdash set at 3 percent of overall base pay mdash will be a much-needed reprieve especially for non-repre-sented staff who have not received pay increases for four years and

who have had to take pay-cuts during the furlough program

Through all the hurt that the university has experienced mdash with the slashing of $650 million in state funding this year alone the elimination of phones from many campus departments two years ago the dwindling budgets of aca-demic units mdash faculty and staff members have certainly shoul-dered a good share of the impacts In discussions of budget cuts the fear of loss in scholarly quality repeatedly surfaces But the cam-pus maintains high rankings because our outstanding instruc-tors and role models stick around

This new plan demonstrates that the UC acknowledges the need to retain these academics shows that those at the top value academic excellence and suggests the UC is aware of the ramifica-tions of potential brain drain

At the same time the UC needs to pursue more than just fiscal incentives We realize that money is tight but we hope that the UC will seek to support other pro-grams that make employees want to stay mdash the space for innovative and thorough research students eager to learn and grow and a community that lives and breathes academic excellence

UNIVERSITY ISSUESThe University of Californiarsquos new merit raise plan is a first step but other factors affect employee rentention

More than monetary

For more than two years they sat together in an Iranian prison For more

than two years they fended off sickness and depression watch-ing as their comrade showed signs of sickness so serious that she was allowed to return home without them And now the two UC Berkeley alumni may face eight more years of the same hei-nous conditions after they were sentenced

Though the verdict was read the campus community cannot consider this case closed

In the summer of 2009 Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal were hik-ing near the Iran-Iraq border with Bauerrsquos fiance Sarah Shourd when the three were seized by Iranian authorities accused of trespassing and spying mdash claims which those close to them have vehemently denied

The drawn-out legal process came to somewhat of a resolution last Saturday with an eight-year sentence But the evidence against them is extremely shaky if at all existent

With a brand new freshman class finding their way around UC Berkeley this week it is the campus communityrsquos duty to not let Bauer and Fattal become irrel-

evant These men walked through the same doorways to get to class and were taught by some of the same professors that many of us engage with today

We as students cannot exe-cute a plan to solve this situation The relations between the United States and Iran are beyond our reach We cannot offer diplomat-ic solutions or economic resourc-es We can however offer a resounding voice with the UC Berkeley community in unison with the friends and families of Bauer and Fattal We must call on others within the campus mdash stu-dent government officials admin-istrators students and professors mdash to renew the call for Bauer and Fattalrsquos and release And we must remain steadfast in our determi-nation to keep Bauer and Fattal alive in the campus conscious-ness and discourse

No matter how much time passes we should not and cannot forget these alumni who have captured the attention of the nation and the world As Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said ldquoIt is time for them to return home and be reunited with their fami-liesrdquo

We must stand behind our fel-low Golden Bears

CAMPUS AFFAIRSUC Berkeley must continue to acknowledge two campus alumni sentenced to eight years in prison by Iran

Supporting the hikers

Friday August 26 2011

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

Jillian Wertheim Blog Editor

Op-ED

I want to welcome everyone back to campus and share some reflections on what I think makes this campus so special

It is no secret that UC Berkeley is going through challenging times and that the statersquos persistent dis-investment in higher education forces us to make unhappy choices such as tuition increases

I am often asked how we deal with these challenges The answer is that everything we do is filtered through our commitment to access and excellence We are committed to maintaining and enhancing UC Berkeleyrsquos ranking as one of the top research universities in the world Forty-six new faculty will join our ranks this year 156 of our entering graduate students are winners of prestigious National Science Foundation multi-year fel-lowships and our entering under-graduate class is the product of the most competitive admissions pro-cess in our history We continue to launch cutting-edge interdisci-plinary research initiatives in the sciences humanities and social sciences such as the Berkeley Energy and Climate Change Institute the Haas Diversity Research Center and the Berkeley Institute for Jewish Law and Israeli Law Economy and Society

We are committed to maintain-ing broad social access to this excellence Our financial aid poli-cies and our private fundraising for scholarships have made it pos-sible for us to cushion the effects of tuition increases on all students who come from households that have a total annual income of less than $80000 These financial aid policies have allowed UC Berkeley to serve as an engine of upward

By George BreslauerSpecial to the Daily Calopiniondailycalorg

mobility for huge numbers of low-income students Now that tuition increases have raised the stakes our challenge will be to develop strategies for better supporting students from households earning $80000 to $120000

Of course all our students deserve access to a first-rate cur-riculum as well Toward that end we have invested some of the funds from tuition increases and nonresident tuition into expanding access to required Reading and Composition courses to large introductory classes in physics chemistry mathematics and statis-tics and to foreign language cours-es Next on this agenda is the con-struction of two new biology teaching laboratories made possi-ble by funds from an external source which will then make it possible for us to add sections in introductory biology classes

Improvement of the campusrsquos infrastructure is always on our radar screen One cannot deliver 21st century research and teaching in antiquated laboratories librar-ies classrooms and facilities At least a half-dozen new buildings have been completed and opened in recent years and another four will come on line in the next year and a half Most of these buildings have been paid for predominantly from private fundraising and seis-mic funds from the state

We also aspire to excellence in our administrative operations and services mdash areas in which Berkeley has historically lagged That is one of the principal purposes of Operational Excellence

Access and excellence are expensive to maintain but that is our determined goal Funds from the State of California for operat-ing Berkeley now constitute only 11 to 12 percent of our total reve-nues While we will continue to lobby vigorously for state funding

we must plan for and are actively pursuing alternative sources of funds In addition to tuition increases and larger nonresident undergraduate enrollments (shift-ing the ratio from 90 percent Californians to 80 percent Californians) we have raised $22 billion in private fundraising dur-ing the past six years and antici-pate completing our $3 billion campaign within 30 months We are also exploring entrepreneurial initiatives that will provide new income streams for departments within the university

We have a lot going for us an all-star faculty a global reputation strong support from a large alumni base the Bay Area as an attractive place to live connections to Silicon Valley and to Asia a committed workforce and a lock on the status of being the preeminent public uni-versity in the world Moreover wersquove been through very hard times before the Great Depression the political controversies of the 1950s and 1960s and the slashing of our state allocations in the late 1970rsquos the early 1990rsquos the early 2000rsquos and again in the late 2000rsquos Yet historically we have always bounced back and retained our pre-eminence as a public universi-ty There is something intangible that has kept UC Berkeley resilient through all these trials Surely our commitment to maintaining both access and excellence mdash and to serving the public good mdash has been an inspiration to students staff and faculty attracting them to this remarkable institution

We would value your thoughts on what makes UC Berkeley so special and resilient You can post your comments on our Facebook page at wwwfacebookcomucberkeley

George Breslauer is the Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost at UC Berkeley

Our campus has a commitment to both access and excellence

5opinionThe Daily CalifornianFriday August 26 2011

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

d

ailyc

alo

pin

ion

is o

n tw

itter

op-ed

This week marks the fortieth anni-versary of Chez Panisse the legendary Berkeley restaurant that pioneered the Slow Food movement that has now prompted Americans to desire seasonal local organic whole foods The ldquomotherrdquo of Chez Panisse Alice Waters credits her student experienc-es at UC Berkeley as inspiration She was among a group of countercultural activists who found their vision for sustainable agriculture on Sproul Plaza in the heady days of the Free Speech Movement

What might have seemed at the time an idealistic impractical pipe dream became four decades later a popular widespread economically viable movement The rise of farmersrsquo markets community gardens and Edible Schoolyards in public schools can be traced in part to UC Berkeley and its studentsrsquo capacity for inven-tion There is much to learn by revisit-ing this history not just as a nostalgic walk down memory lane This history is a reminder that paradigm shifts happen through creativity and collec-tive invention with protest and rejec-tion of a status quo only part of a much larger process

We begin the 2011-12 academic year with the inauspicious news that for the first time in the University of Californiarsquos history students are con-tributing more than the public to the cost of their education With the spec-ter of continuing budgetary shortfalls and tuition hikes looming students are likely to be paying even more by yearrsquos end UC Berkeley and UCLA are admitting unprecedented numbers of out-of-state students their full tuition payments backfilling the statersquos fiscal withdrawal What exactly is it that makes the University of California ldquopublicrdquo And how is our university ldquoof rdquo California when campuses now receive so little of their overall operat-ing expenses from the state mdash at Berkeley as low as 12 percent

These are big fundamental long-range questions We ask them in a cli-mate of instability and duress It appears that higher education mdash not just in California but also nationally and globally mdash is undergoing a pro-found paradigm shift the likes of which we have not seen for at least 50 years The simultaneous emergence of higher educationrsquos first great techno-logical change in five centuries mdash the digital revolution mdash only compounds

our instability for this is yet one more mobile tectonic plate

The 2011-12 year is likely to see many political flashpoints tuition increases layoffs organizational restructuring a rise of ldquopermatemprdquo lecturers challenges to shared gover-nance a further erosion of the ties that once bound UCrsquos world renowned sys-tem Students may have difficulty get-ting classes the wheels of Operational Excellence will roll along to a destina-tion widely proclaimed yet remarkably ill-defined (ie how will we know when we are ldquoexcellentrdquo) Protest actions with their attendant Twitter feeds will inevitably pull us into a myopic fixa-tion on the present The battlegrounds will be multiple and dynamic

Yet protests wonrsquot make a future Neither will managerial exercises in efficiency Our needs far transcend what either the flash mob or organi-zational restructuring can produce

We need a big rethink about the future of higher education The last great paradigm shift in higher educa-tion happened half a century ago with the University of California its epicen-ter Can we once again be a leader

The scale of our current challenges is formidable its contours complex its inner workings opaque Unlike the last great period of innovation in higher education the signs are not auspicious The present has neither unprecedented prosperity nor the expansive vision that marked former UC President Clark Kerrrsquos era and the 1960 California Master Plan for Higher Education

Today a new design for higher edu-cation is unlikely to come from on high and itrsquos unlikely to come from one man The future of higher educa-tion mdash if it is to be bright mdash may well require collective invention It may require the very sort of collaborative ingenuity and original thinking that

gave rise to the Slow Food movement a product of Berkeleyrsquos soil

If you have walked by the Berkeley Art Museum this week you may have noticed corn growing outside Yes corn This is a sign that the artistsrsquo collective OPENrestaurant has taken up residence with their new project ldquoOPENed Education as Experiencerdquo On Saturday Aug 27 from 11 am to 5 pm they will transform the muse-um into an open classroom and living kitchen tracing the history of Chez Panisse and pointing to alternative strategies new and historical for the future of education They invite us to inaugurate the new academic year by looking into our past in order to envi-sion our future They invite us to cul-tivate not just corn but also the art of the long view

Catherine Cole is a professor in the Department of Theater Dance and Performance Studies at UC Berkeley

deanne chenstaff

The art of the long view seeing UC futuresBy Catherine ColeSpecial to the Daily Calopiniondailycalorg

Follow us on Twitter

Tweet your responses and letters to the editor they may be published

6 news Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

From Front

readiness Some say test does not gauge college preparedness

BERKELEY BREAKDOWN

Caleb Dardick the UC Berkeley director of local government and communityrelations has been an important part of the community for the past 16 years

eugene w laustaff

The surface of a material is usually as far as scientists have delved when exploring the objectrsquos chemistry be-cause it is where the most important reactions happen

But with relatively unexplored ma-terials such as semiconductors and superconductors looking past the surface has become increasingly im-portant which Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory scientists have accomplished in recent research

In a study published Aug 14 in the

After being a part of the Berkeley community for 16 years working for the city and the campus Caleb Dardick UC Berkeley director of local government and community relations is returning to his river roots to take up a new posi-tion at home in Nevada County

Dardick mdash who has been instrumen-tal to town-gown relations since immers-ing himself in Berkeley politics as former Mayor Shirley Deanrsquos legislative aid mdash will be moving to Nevada City to serve as executive director for the South Yuba River Citizens League In June Dardick applied for the position and was chosen earlier after a nationwide search

ldquoHe brings incredibly strong com-munication skills expertise in strate-gic planning mdash certainly in coalition building and program managementrdquo said Kim Milligan interim executive director for SYRCL

In his new position Dardick will lead the organization in its mission to protect the Yuba River and Watershed while working on statewide issues such as the recovery of salmon in the Yuba River mdash named one of Americarsquos Most Endangered Rivers in May by the conservation group American Rivers

ldquoWe went to the Yuba River all the time the older kids who could drive would drive through the neighbor-hood honk the horn and all the little kids would come running out and jump in the back of the truck and wersquod go to the river for the dayrdquo Dardick said ldquoWe just grew up lounging on the rocks and swimming in the beautiful clear water itrsquos part of my DNArdquo

After managing his fatherrsquos cam-paign for county supervisor in 1994 mdash his first foray into politics mdash Dardick worked on several more campaigns including Deanrsquos run-off campaign in December 1994 and then served as Deanrsquos legislative aid for four years

ldquoI became immersed in Berkeley

By Claire Perlman | Senior Staffcperlmandailycalorg

By Stephanie Baer | Senior Staffsbaerdailycalorg

CheCk Onlinewwwdailycalorg

Claire Perlman explains how Berkeley lab scientists have studied electronic structures

CheCk Onlinewwwdailycalorg

Listen to an interview of Caleb Dardick about his experiences serving the campus and the city

bull The percentage of Berkeley Unified School District stu-dents that took and passed the exit exam for math decreased from 82 percent for the class of 2010 to 81 per-cent in the class of 2011 and for English and language arts decreased from 84 to 81 percent

bull Passing black BUSD students decreased from 63 percent for the class of 2010 to 57 percent for the class of 2011 for the math portion of the exit exam and from 68 percent to 57 percent for the English portion Statewide the numbers increased from 66 to 68 percent and 71 to 72 percent respectively

bull Passing Latino BUSD students increased from 73 percent for 2010 to 75 percent for 2011 for the math portion of the exit exam and from 74 percent to 78 percent for the English portion Statewide the numbers increased from 74 to 77 percent and 73 to 76 percent respectively

bull Passing white BUSD students increased from 97 percent for 2010 to 99 percent for 2011 for both portions of the exam Statewide the numbers stayed constant at 91 per-cent for both

All numbers are from the exit exam administered in the 10th grade the first time the exit exam is administered and when most students take the exam

Research uses new technique to study the electronic structure of materials

Director of community relations to leave post

politics and I loved it It was the most interesting and exciting job I ever hadrdquo Dardick said ldquoYou could be dealing with potholes in the morning and the cityrsquos position on divestment in Nigeria in the afternoonrdquo

In 1998 Dardick was hired by UC Berkeleyrsquos department of community re-lations as interim director of the Berkeley Alliance mdash a collaboration between UC Berkeley and Berkeley Unified School District that still exists today which aims to build community partnerships to ef-fect change on critical social and eco-nomic equity issues in Berkeley

Two years later he decided to work for himself as a community relations consultant working on projects like the Ed Roberts Campus at the Ashby BART station and the David Brower Center

When Ed Roberts a UC Berkeley alum and leader in the local disabili-ties rights movement passed away in 1995 Dardick mdash under the direction of Dean mdash put together a task force of local activists disability rights leaders and campus community members to honor Robertsrsquo memory

ldquoMayor Dean asked me to represent the office at his memorial and I was hon-ored to do that because I grew up in the disability rights movement my father was a person with a disabilityrdquo he said

After 10 years of working for him-self Dardick returned to the campusrsquo community relations office where he continued to work on projects to con-nect the campus and city communities through community service projects and partnerships like the Joint South-side Safety Patrol program

ldquoHe knew the community He knew the various stakeholders and he had a manner or an ability to bring people to the table and work out solutionsrdquo said Councilmember Laurie Capitelli ldquoTheyrsquoll be big shoes to fillrdquo

Stephanie Baer is the city news editor

journal Nature Materials lab researchers explored the concept of using a high-en-ergy version of the technique of angle-re-solved photoemission mdash HARPES mdash to study the electronic structure of materi-als Though HARPES and its less intense counterpart ARPES have been around since 1905 when Albert Einstein first ex-plained the photoelectric effect mdash the ba-sis for these techniques mdash scientists have only recently been able to make use of the techniques

The photoelectric effect an impor-tant part of the foundation of quantum mechanics means that light behaves like a quantum of energy or a photon which can give all of its energy to an electron and liberate it as a photoelec-tron which then flies away explained Chuck Fadley mdash a distinguished profes-sor of physics at UC Davis an Advanced Light Source professor at Berkeley Lab and co-author of the paper

ldquoOne then measures the energy of the electron and its direction as pre-cisely as possible and from these measurements can deduce exquisite detail about how the electron was moving in the material before it was

ejected how the atoms are bound to one another whether they are magnet-ic or not how the material will conduct electricityrdquo he said

Without a sufficiently bright light source mdash and therefore sufficiently pow-erful beams of hard x-rays mdash scientists were unable to penetrate the materials on the atomic level that was necessary to observe interactions of photons and elec-trons beyond the surface

Because HARPES uses higher en-ergy it can reveal interactions signifi-cantly past the scope of what the less powerful ARPES can do According to Fadley ARPES uses ultraviolet and soft x-ray photons and therefore can-

not penetrate much past one nanome-ter whereas with HARPES scientists can measure photoelectrons and elec-tronic properties at depths anywhere between 6 and 10 nanometers

ldquoYou really give them a kickrdquo said Alexander Gray a graduate student at UC Davis and Berkeley Lab and a co-author of the study ldquoThis way even with electrons that are deep deep inside of the material you can really get the information about the elec-tronic properties of the material You can seek them out you can catch them and you can analyze themrdquo

Claire Perlman is the assistant uni-versity news editor

From Front

unemplOyment Rates in state higher than in rest of country

From Front

disCriminatiOn Initial complaint was filed in June 2009

Pyle in dismissing the merit of Senigarrsquos claims said that ldquoUCSF has an historic commitment to diversity in the work forcerdquo

ldquo(Fritz) had a very strong record of hiring retaining and promoting Afri-can-American employeesrdquo she added

A judge dismissed a wage discrimi-nation complaint that had originally been part of Senigarrsquos claim accord-ing to Pyle However Senigar is still claiming damages for wages he alleges he should have been paid because he was passed over for promotion

Senigar is claiming damages for that amount of money for the amount of money necessary to cover his medi-cal expenses and for the amount of money to compensate for among other things a ldquogeneral loss of self-

esteem and well-beingrdquo according to the second amended complaint The claim does not specify an exact amount for these damages

ldquoThis case is not about the moneyrdquo said Pamela Price Senigarrsquos attorney ldquoHe should have been given the op-portunity to succeed The denial of that opportunity is the issuerdquo

Senigar began to work for the uni-versity in October 1999 Over the seven years leading up to the first incident Price said that Senigar received posi-tive reviews from his superiors Senigar was fired by UCSF prior to the case go-ing to trial but it is not part of the cur-rent complaint according to Price

Pyle said that Fritz was ultimately laid off in 2009 for the same budget-ary reasons that the position in ques-

tion was never filledSenigar filed his initial complaint

on June 23 2009 A first amended complaint was filed on Aug 20 2009 and a second amended complaint mdash the complaint that forms the basis for the trial currently underway mdash was filed on Aug 16 2009

Because the complaint was not settled out of court it is now going to trial mdash an outcome that Senigar did not want to happen Price said

ldquoHe spent a lot of time trying to resolve it internally (so) a trial is totally a last resortrdquo she said ldquoHe never imagined he would have to go through the ordeal of filing the law-suit or going to trialrdquo

Jordan Bach-Lombardo is the uni-versity news editor

not gauge college preparedness says Mary Perry deputy director of Ed-Source a nonprofit organization that researches education in California

A separate report released earlier this month from the not-for-profit organization ACT mdash which admin-isters a test of the same name de-signed to measure college prepared-ness mdash seemingly contradicts the exit exam numbers showing college pre-paredness levels declining across the state from 31 percent meeting ACTrsquos benchmarks to 30 percent a decrease of roughly 1500 students

Perry says the ACT reportrsquos num-bersrsquo discrepancy may only be superfi-cial She said ACT test takers are self-selecting college-bound students whereas every California high school student must take the exit exam

ldquoYou donrsquot know whether the de-cline yoursquore seeing is a reduction of the skill set of California students or is because the group taking the test changedrdquo she added

State department spokesperson Jung says the two tests shouldnrsquot be compared because the exit exam measures math skills through sev-enth grade and English and language arts through the 10th grade while the ACT tests a studentrsquos ability to take college level courses

UC spokesperson Ricardo Vazquez said most UC admits take the SAT mdash a college-readiness test administered by the not-for-profit College Board mdash and a growing number are taking both the ACT and the SAT though few take the ACT exclusively Exact numbers for university were not im-mediately available as of press time

According to Perry 50 percent of graduating seniors in California took

the SAT while 22 percent took the ACT in 2010

She said the state is working on new standards that will better incorporate

college preparedness into high school requirements like the exit exam

Mihir Zaveri is the lead develop-ment and capital projects reporter

percent Since at least 2002 the state unemployment rate has been consis-tently higher than the national rate according to the statersquos analysis

In a press conference Thursday morning Gov Jerry Brown unveiled a three-part strategy called Califor-nia Jobs First plan aimed at lowering the statersquos unemployment rate The plan which will require a two-thirds vote from the state legislature for ap-proval would provide a tax credit for

businesses that hire more employees and also remove sales tax on manu-facturing equipment for startup com-panies during their first three years of business

ldquoBoosting job growth in California is a top priority and this proposal is a critical step in making sure the state does everything it can to support lo-cal job creationrdquo Brown said at the conference

Although Brown did not say specif-

ically how many jobs he estimates the plan will create he seemed confident that it would help lower the statersquos un-employment rate mdash the second high-est in the nation last month

ldquoWe know the future depends on growing our way out of this economic morassrdquo Assembly Speaker John Per-ez D-Los Angeles said at the confer-ence

Soumya Karlamangla is the assis-tant city news editor

CAMPUS FIGURES

RESEARCh amp IDEAS

7The Daily Californian PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011

TEXT ldquoNEDSVIPrdquo TO 22022

TO GET UP TO $20 OFF

Get up to 50 off flashdrives school supplies starting at $50 and more

NEDrsquoS BERKELYBOOKSTORE

2480 Bancroft Waynedsbookscomucb

8 paid advertisement Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

Catholics

Newman Hall amp Dwight Way

wwwcalnewmanorg

Monday 822 Ice Cream Social 8pm Tuesday 823 Newman Orientation Event (includes dinner) 6pm

Cal

College Ave

Wednesday 824 Rosary Group 8pm

Sunday 828 Mass 5pm Student Dinner 6pm Candlelight Mass 10pm

(across from unit 2)

Monday 829 Newman Orientation Event Part II 6pm

Saturday 827 Kayaking at Berkeley Marina Meet at Newman Hall 930am

Holy Spirit Parish

All events are ADA Accessible

Catholics Cal

Newman Hall Holy Spirit Parish

Monday 822 Ice Cream Social 8pmTuesday 823 Newman Orientation Event (includes dinner) 6pm

Wednesday 824 Rosary Group 8pm Saturday 827 Kayaking at Berkeley Marina Meet at Newman Hall 930amSunday 828 Mass 5pm Student Dinner 6pm Candlelight Mass 10pm

Monday 829 Newman Orientation Event Part II 6pm

All events are ADA Accessible

College Ave ampDwight Way

(across from unit 2)wwwcalnewmanorg

You beg your members to table on Sproul People walk right by You post hundreds of flyers in the hall and they get removed or covered up hours later Face it flyering is a costly labor-intensive process But therersquos a better way

Post your flyer in the most visible spot on

campus The Daily Cal

HEY STUDENT GROUPS

Take advantage of this savings now advertisingdailycalorg | 510-280-2452THE RULES Ads must run in four consecutive issues in AugustSeptember 2011 Student groups must pre-pay for ads This offer is only valid to UC Berkeley student groups officially registered with the ASUC or Campus Life amp Leadership

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLACK)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLUE)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (white)

LEVELS OF SERVICE AT A STEEP DISCOUNT TO STUDENT GROUPS ALL PLANS INCLUDE AD DESIGN AND APPEARANCES ON DAILYCALORG THIS IS A LIMITED OFFER ONLY FOR STUDENT GROUPS

SIXTEENTH OF A PAGE QUARTER OF A PAGE HALF OF A PAGE

But I started my dream of being a reporter by working in Eshleman Hall at the Daily Cal

Mark Summers REPORTER AT THE WALL STREET JOURNAL DAILY CAL ALUM rsquo

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLACK)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLUE)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (white)

Wersquove been a starting place for thousands of professionals who lead extraordinary careers in media advertising anad business If yoursquore ready to start your career now go to applydailycalorg

JOIN THE DAILY CALRECRUITMENT MEETINGS

Friday Aug 26 4pmTuesday Aug 31 5pm

600 Eshleman Hall

We are hiringWeb Developers Marketers Multimedia producers News Sports and Arts amp Entertainment reporters Photographers Copy Editors Designers Bloggers Illustrators Ads Representatives and more

SportSFriday august 26 2011 bull dailycal orgsports

AtCalwearemorethanfamiliarwith the aftermath of losing anincrediblequarterbackPerhapscur-rent students only know AaronRodgers as the alumnus that wonthe Super Bowl last season but Irememberhimas the savior ofCalfootball that brought us somerespectability AfterRodgersboltedfortheNFLcoachJeffTedfordhasyettotrotouta competent let alone comparablequarterbackWersquovejusthadaflurryofdisappointments In volleyball the setter is essen-tially the quarterback of the teamShersquostheonethatdeliverstheballtoattackers which requires remark-ablerapportandtimingwithhittersquickdecision-makingandtheabil-itytoreaddefenses TheCalvolleyballteamlosesitsquarterback this season in CarliLloydButdonrsquotexpect it tomeanthedemiseoftheBearsasRodgersrsquodepartureprovedtobe Lloyd probably meant more toherteamthanRodgersThenationalPlayer of the Year Lloyd institutedthenewup-tempooffensethatledtothe squadrsquos incredible run to theconference title and debut in thenationaltitlegame More importantly she was theheart and soul of the team Therewasnodoubtshewastheleaderonthe court keeping her teammatestogether and hitters focused Shesimplyrefusedto letherteamloseandhadawayofkillingopponentsrsquomomentumwithbigplays HerintensitywasinfectiousanditrsquoshardtoimaginetheBearsgoing

Bearsrsquo new quarterback

wonrsquot stop surging Cal

Christina Jones cjonesdailycalorg

ldquoIt sounds demeaning to say tune-up but I would say these

games are more of a way to get momentum going for our teamrdquo mdash Volleyball coach Rich Feller on the preseason

Bears open 2011 season with barren Riverside club

Eightmonthsafterdropping theNCAAchampi-onshipmatchtoPennStatelastDecembertheNo3Cal volleyball team will see itsfirstactionofthe2011seasonthisweekend

The Bears will host the CalMoltenClassictodayandSaturdayat Haas Pavillion inviting UCRiverside Fairfield and FloridaInternational University intoBerkeley

Calwillbelookingtorepeatitsperformance from 2010when itwon both of its matches of thepreseason tournament tallyingvictories over UC Santa Barbara(25-1825-1528-26)andManhattanCollege(25-825-1525-7)

Outside hitterTarahMurreywho returns to theBears as the lone senior was named the tourna-mentrsquosmost valuable player after leading the teamwith11killsand14digsTheBearsrsquooffensewassolidlogging a 341 attack percentage across the twogames

Calshouldbepoisedtoseesimilarresultstonightwhen it opens its seasonagainstUCRiversideat 5pmTheHighlandershadlittletocelebratein2010postinga2-30recordincludinga0-16markintheBigWestRiversidewaspicked to finish last in theBigWestin2011

ldquoItsoundsdemeaningtosaytune-upbutIwouldsaythesegamesaremoreofawaytogetmomentumgoing for our teamrdquo coach Rich Feller said ldquoThethreeweeksofpreseasonaremeanttoestablishsomesortoflineupandmomentumrdquo

Though theBearsmightbepusheda littlemoreonSaturdaywhentheysquareoffwithFairfieldat11amandFIUat7pmCallikelywonrsquotseeanyseri-ous competition Still the squadknows it needs togetofftoaquickstarttotheseason

ldquoYouplayeverygame likes itrsquos thenational titlerdquoMurreysaidldquoYoursquorenevergoingtoplayperfectvol-leyball but you always have to respect your oppo-nentrdquo

TheBearswillalsobeusingthisweekendaswellasthematchesintheupcomingweekstosolidifyitsstartinglineupThoughtheteamreturnssixstartersfrom2010 itwillneedto findawaytoreplacethepresenceofCarliLloydtheAVCANationalPlayerofthe Year in 2010 Lloyd finished her career with5697assistsmdashgoodenough for secondall time inCalhistory

By Connor Byrne | Staffcbyrnedailycalorg

All-American Tarah Murrey (middle) returns to lead the Bears as the biggest offensive threat Shannon hamiltonfile

when tonight at 7 pmwhere haaS pavilion

Quick LookCal v UC riverSide Bears slightly modify the

recipe for success in 2011

TheCal volleyball team is coming off itsbest season in program history The Bearstook their first Pac-10 title andmade theirdebutinthenationalchampionship One school of thought would be not tomesswithsuccessandsimplyplugplayersinto fill the twovacantpositionsat setteranddefensivespecialistinthestartinglineup Reigning AVCA Coach of the Year RichFeller is taking a slightly different routeWhile the overall offensive and defensiveschemeswillremaininplaceFellersaidheismixing things up in the lineup beginningwithtonightrsquosopeneragainstUCRiverside ldquoI donrsquot think yoursquoll see any sweepingchangesrdquo Feller said ldquoWe have a lotmoreweaponsnowMinusCarli(Lloyd)whowasthesetterweincreasedouroffensivethreatsbythreeorfournewplayersrdquo Last season the starters were solidifiedearly in the preseason and didnrsquot changemuchThisseasoneventhoseaccomplishedstarters thatwerekey contributors last yearhavetofightfortheirpositions MostnotablyCorreyJohnsonwhogar-neredAll-Pac10andAVCAhonorablemen-tionaccoladesasarightsidehitterlastsea-sonisdukingitoutwithtwooftheconfer-encersquos top blockers Shannon Hawari andKatBrownforaspotinthemiddle ldquoMostlyweneedoneof themiddleposi-tionstobeabletohitbehindthesetterexcep-tionally wellrdquo Feller said ldquoCorrey does that

By Christina Jones | Senior Staffcjonesdailycalorg

Setter PAGe 11 SeASon Preview PAGe 11 volleybAll PAGe 11

better than anyone We may continue tobounceherbetweenmiddleandrightsiderdquo IfJohnsondoesnrsquotwinamiddlespotshersquollbattle highly regarded freshman ChristinaHigginsforapositionontherightside As Feller experimentswith rotations thesetterpositionisforeseeablylocked After two years as Lloydrsquos understudyEllyBarrettwilltakethehelmTheuntestedjuniorhassomehugeshoestofillmdashLloydearnedNational Player of the Year honorslast yearmdashbut benefits from two years ofexperiencesettingtheB-team Barrett will be surrounded by powerfulattackers tohelpher ease into the roleAll-AmericanTarahMurrey returns as the lonesenior on the team coming off a breakoutjuniorcampaigninwhichsheemergedasoneof the countryrsquos top outside hittersMurreywillstepintoLloydrsquosroleasthevocalleaderinadditiontothestrongestoffensivethreat WhileMurreywillcertainlybeheardshenotes that the team has a more reservedtemperamentthisyear ldquoMe and Carli last year we could get alittlerowdyrdquoMurreysaidldquoButIthinkthatonce we get more comfortable with eachotherallofourtruepersonalitiesaregoingto come out and itrsquos going to be a lot offunrdquo The ability to keep energy updown the

CheCk onlinewwwdailycalorg

Volleyball beat writer christina Jones discusses the Bearsrsquo outlook for the season ahead in a daily cal podcast

Last year

the Cal volleyball team was one win away from a

national title The Bears are set on seizing

the crown in 2011

volleyball | Season Preview

ChriStopher mCdermUtfile

10 sports Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

W soccer

Bison are question mark for CalBy Seung Y Lee | Staffsyleedailycalorg

LastyeartheCalwomenrsquossoccerteamhad its biggest victory of the seasonagainstHawaiiatEdwardsStadiumpil-ingeightgoalsfromsixdifferentplayers ButastheBearspreparetoflydowntoHonolulufortherematchcoachNeilMcGuiredoesnotexpectanotherrompovertheRainbowWahine ldquoHawaii has a new coach and theplayerswillbemoremotivatedrdquoMcGuiresaid ldquoWe are also playing in front ofabout 3000 people I donrsquot anticipateanysortofsimilarperformancesrdquo ParticipatinginthelsquoOhanaHotelsNoKai lsquoOi tournament Cal (1-1) will firstplayNorthDakotaState (1-0)onFridaynightat10pmbeforebattlingthetour-nament host Hawaii (0-1) on Sundaynightat8pmBothmatchesareat theWaipirsquooPeninsulaSoccerStadium NeithertheBisonnortheWahinehaveclose to the talent the Bears haveAlthoughNorthDakotaStatewonmore

thanhalfitsmatcheslastseasonmostofits opponentswere tiny obscure schoolsscattered across theDakotasWith suchobscurity Cal players and coaches arereadyingtoplaytheBisonknowingnearlynothing about the team The one thingthesquaddoesknowaboutNorthDakotaState is that it plays a 4-4-2 lineup themostcommonformationinsoccer Unlike with North Dakota State theBears have experience playing againstHawaiiLedbystarstrikerAlexMorganrsquoshattrickCalbatteredtheWahinedefenseinthesecondhalfscoringfivegoals HoweverSundayrsquosmatchwilllikelybeconsiderably different since theWahinehiredanewcoachMicheleNagamine LikeHawaiiCalisalsoinatransitionmode adjusting to the void left by theseniorMorganInthelasttwomatchestheBearshavestruggledtoscoregoalslosingtoPepperdine2-1andthreadingpastSanDiegoState2-1thankstotwolategoalsbyseniorJulieBenzandjuniorLaurenBattung ldquoWehavebeenpracticinghowtopen-etratethroughthedefensebacklineand

creating scoring chancesrdquo Benz saidldquoWeneedtobemorefearlessinfrontofthenetrdquo For the Bears the ghost of Morganmdash who scored nearly a third of thesquadrsquos totalgoals last seasonmdash loomslargeovertheteamdemandingalterna-tivewaysfortheteamtoscoreandwingames One of the solutions that McGuireand the coaches are hoping for is thereturn of injured forwards MirandaWhiteandRachelMercik Mercik a sophomore has shownpromiseinherfirstyearwiththeteamstarting four games and scoring twogoals White a utility player for bothdefense and offense mdash will be able toprovide experience alongside Benz andBattungintheattackinglines ldquoWhite and Mercik are two playersthatsufferedfromlong-termandshort-term injuries that have come backrdquoMcGuire said ldquoWe havenrsquot had themenough of the field so I want to givethesetwosomequalityplayingtimethisweekendrdquo

Lauren Battung scored Calrsquos first goal in its 2-1 overtime win over San Diego State on Sunday It was her second goal of the year sean goebelfile

M soccer

Bears cross the bay to open their seasonBy Camellia Senemar | Staffcsenemardailycalorg

Season openers always havetheirjittersespeciallywhenteamsare away from the comforts oftheirhomefield WiththesetwoforcesworkingagainsttheNo7Calmenrsquossoccerteam this Friday evening theBears travel across the bridge toface the University of SanFranciscoatNegoescoStadiumat7pm Thedisparityinthetwoteamsrsquostandings mdash the Dons areunrankedmdashmightprovideahinttowards thegamersquos resultbutonpaper the Bearsrsquo all-time seriesrecord against USF stands at14-21-2EventhoughCalshutouttheDonsintheirlastfourencoun-ters the matchup still stands atrickytest ldquoUSF is a strong and talentedteamrdquo junior co-captain StevenBirnbaumsaidldquoWearejustlook-ing to play our game and get agoodstarttotheseasonrdquo Last yearrsquos tilt at GoldmanField produced then-sophomoreJohn Fitzpatrickrsquos game winninggoal in overtime It was then-sophomoreAnthonySalcicciawhofound Birnbaumrsquos head for theassistonthelastcornerkickofthematch The goal gave his squadthe1-0leadandashareoftheBayAreaClassicwithStanford Those three lethal juniors arethe only players to return to theBearsrsquo 11-man lineup from 2010All posted career highs in goalsassistsandpoints in their sopho-moreyearsandwillbelookingtoadd to their tallies Birnbaum isthesolereturningstarterfromthebacklineandisjoinedbySalciccia

as a fellow co-captain The cur-rentmemberswillhavebigshoesto fill after last seasonrsquos highlysuccessful campaign saw fiveseniors and one junior head toMajorLeagueSoccer CoachKevinGrimeswill havehis optionsopenwith this youngteammdashmorethanhalfareenter-ing their freshmen and sopho-more yearsThe five timePac-10Coach of the Yearmost recentlyawarded in 2010 also has twoexperienced forwards redshirtjuniors Kyle Lunt and MichaelMunozathisdisposal ldquoWe are confident with ourteamrdquo Birnbaum said ldquoAll theunderclassmen are very talentedandwillbeabigpartofourteamthisyearrdquo Calhasbeenpreparingappro-priately and avoiding any majorinjury concerns during the pastmonthofpreseasonTheultimategoal is to retain the conferencechampionshipTheyarepredictedto finish second while UCLAwhich claimed the second spotlast season is projected to takethe title Nonetheless the Bearsare feeling optimistic about theseason opener after honing theirtechniquesinthesummer ldquoWe are ready for tomorrowrdquojunior goalkeeper Robby Gogatzsaid ldquoWe just want to keep onimproving one game at a timeandbuildonourstrengthsrdquo Cal will have three gamesremainingintheBayAreaClassicAlthough the jitters of a seasonopenerwill have diminished theBearswillstillbeplayinginunfa-miliar territory in Illinois andConnecticut It wonrsquot be untilSept 16 that the club returnshometoEdwardsStadiumtofin-ishoffagainstSantaClara

11sportsFriday August 26 2011 The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

field hockeyFrom Page 9

SeaSon preview Bears will face a stacked Pac-12 schedule

From Page 9

Setter Barrett will build her own legacy after Lloydrsquos exit

stretch will be crucial as the Bears face a stacked conference slate that includes three other teams ranked in the top-10 nationally After a weak preseason Cal will have to be on top of its game to host perennial power No 6 Stanford to open conference play on Sept 13 The addition of Colorado and Utah extend

the Pac-12 season by four matches forcing the first leg of the Big Spike to take place on a Tuesday night No 2 USC picked to win the Pac-12 will pose the greatest challenge for the Bears who are predicted to finish sec-ond The Trojans return all of their starters from the team that lost to Cal in the Final Four but defeated the

Bears twice in the regular seasonCalrsquos not quite ready to face the likes to Stanford and USC yet but are putting the work in to get to that pointldquoWe played some hard volleyball in practice so conditioning-wise wersquore right thererdquo Murrey said ldquoMentally wersquore getting ready every single dayrdquoldquoWersquore ready to playrdquo

nearly as far last season without her This year however it seems plausible that Cal will achieve similar heights without the setter extraordinaire Lloyd had a lot of help with the meteoric rise of Tarah Murrey as one of the premier outside hitters in the nation So long as Lloydrsquos successor Elly Barrett can find Murrey on the outside the Bears will be in great shape It has yet to be seen if Barrett will contribute the same kind of dynamic play that Lloyd did or if she will have as well-rounded a game But frankly the team doesnrsquot need her to be Lloyd She doesnrsquot need to be the most vocal player on the court or fire her team up That responsibility will be left to Murrey the lone senior

on the team who was clearly part of the leadership core last year Barrett doesnrsquot have to try to learn a new offense like Lloyd did or guide her teammates through such adjust-ments to their timing The system is already in place The Austin Texas native just needs to be a competent setter Given that she was an even more highly-sought after recruit than Lloyd itrsquos safe to assume Barrett has that ability With two years waiting in the wings Barrett amassed a significant amount of reps in practice with her attackers Coach Rich Feller said shersquos tightly bonded with her fellow juniors many of whom shersquoll be setting in the middle and right side so chemistry shouldnrsquot

be an issue Last year the Bears lost Pac-10 Player of the Year in outside hitter Hana Cutura and the preseason talk was focused mainly on how Cal would compensate for such a huge loss It only took a few weeks for Tarah Murrey to rise from the ashes of a dis-appointing sophomore campaign to emerge as one of the countryrsquos best Suddenly no one was mentioning Cutura anymore It would be foolish to assume that Barrett who has not had experience starting will have a similar breakout year However once she proves herself to be a capable setter Lloydrsquos name will start to fade and Barrett can begin building her own legacy

From Page 9

volleyball Cal hopes to repeat success of 2010 tournament

By Eric Lee | Staffetleedailycalorg

After an undefeated exhibition schedule which included two con-vincing wins and a tie with Stanford the Cal field hockey team will visit No 16 Louisville at 3 pm at Trager Stadium for its first official game of the 2011 season

Coming off last yearrsquos disappoint-ing finish mdash a loss to Stanford in the NorPac Tournament final mdash the Bears hope to start the season strong as they embark on a mini-roadtrip to Louisville Ky for games against the Cardinals and No 13 Michigan State

Louisville enters this season with some new faces Justine Sowry is the new head coach and a number of senior leaders from last season have since graduated

The squad however returns three All-Big East preseason selec-tions along with a number of expe-rienced players to fill out the rest of the roster

The Cardinals finished the 2010 season with a 13-7 record and a 5-1 conference record good enough for second in the strong Big East confer-ence

Louisvillersquos season ended in the semifinals of the Big East Tournament a 2-1 loss to No 4 Connecticut

Last year the Cardinals defeated the Bears 2-0 in Louisville under then-head coach Pam Bustin who later took on head coaching duties at Duke

Returning sophomore Erin

Scheidtmiller provided one of Louisvillersquos goals in that game while the other score came from Tuli Lim who has since graduated

One thing the Bears have going for them is an extremely strong preseason which began with a dominating 10-2 victory over UC Davis

Sophomore Jordan OrsquoReilly started the contest off with a pair of goals and the Aggies never recov-ered

Sophomore Andrea Earle fresh-man Marcia Venter and senior Erin Magill each provided two goals in the offensive barrage

Cal then went to No 20 Stanford and tied a tough Cardinal squad 1-1 due to strong goalkeeping from senior Maddie Hand and sophomore Courtney Hendrickson Senior Megan Shimojima provided the Bearrsquos lone goal

In its final preseason scrimmage Cal defeated the University of Alberta 4-1 with another fine offensive performance from Shimojima who netted two goals in the match

The road does not get any easier after Louisville as the Bears face No 13 Michigan State the following day The Spartans who finished with an 15-6 record last season figure to be one of Calrsquos toughest matchups this upcoming season

Last year the Bears fell to Michigan State 3-4 in their second game of that season The match saw seven different lead changes before the Spartans scored the game-winning goal in the 69th minute to close out the Bears

Cal looks to build upon successful preseason

ldquoWersquoll use the games to find out which starting lineups will work the best and some of those may include the younger playersrdquo Feller said

ldquoIf therersquos an opportunity to play more people this is the chance to do

itrdquoJunior setter Elly Barrett will be the

one to pick up where Lloyd left off In 2010 Barrett logged only 27 sets through 13 games of work behind Lloyd and will look to establish herself

as a leader of the 2011 version of the Bears

ldquoIt will be good practice to stay focused on our side of the court regard-less of whorsquos on the other siderdquo Barrett said

DUMMY

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

1 Ridicule4 Magna __9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried folded and lled18 Squelch19 Opposite of cominrsquo20 Fruit-topped dessert22 Persons23 Prex for marketing or communication24 Egyptrsquos loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Tried39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation systems

1 Crawling bug2 Small veggies3 Engrave4 Regal home5 Mrs Ralph Kramden6 __ Hayworth7 Snatched8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebrsquos wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement

31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space ight agcy44 One of a pair45 British bishopsrsquo items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartlettrsquos book abbr53 Repulsive54 Green fruit55 Satanrsquos specialty59 Pauserrsquos words

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

Keep Berkeley Unique Shop LocallySupporting locally-owned independently operated businesses keeps our city unique creates more jobs and makes our economy stronger Look for this icon the next time yoursquore shopping for something special

Find a local business near you at buylocalberkeleycom All contributions are tax deductible dailycalorgdonate

Support independent student journalismDonate to the Daily Californian

Support independent student journalism Donate to the Daily CalAll contributions are tax deductible

dailycalorgdonate

12 PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

  • 0826_dailycal01
  • 0826_dailycal02
  • 0826_dailycal03
  • 0826_dailycal04
  • 0826_dailycal05
  • 0826_dailycal06
  • 0826_dailycal07
  • 0826_dailycal08
  • 0826_dailycal09
  • 0826_dailycal10
  • 0826_dailycal11
  • 0826_dailycal12

2 News The Daily Californian

Online coverage 247

Dailycalorgonline exclusives

on the blogsThe Daily ClogFALL 2011 CLASSES YOU WONrsquoT WANT TO SLEEP THROUGH Sick of chemistry statistics and R1B courses already Get out while you can Therersquos still time to switch things up so read through this list of entertaining classes that will keep you interested or at the very least awake

INSPIRATION ONE OUTFIT AT A TIME The Clog catches up with Berkeley student and style guru Kathleen Murillo on fashion advice blogging and how on earth she manages to juggle so many things at once (and look good doing it)

Friday August 26 2011

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

The city of Berkeleyrsquos Mental Health Division is planning a $15 million project to create affordable permanent housing in Berkeley for mentally-ill adults who are homeless or at risk of homelessness

The project mdash overseen by the divi-sion in conjunction with the California Department of Mental Health and the California Housing Finance Agency mdash will involve renovating an existing 74-unit apartment complex at 1040 University Ave so that it can accom-modate and provide services for home-less individuals

ldquoThe long-term goal is to provide peo-ple who have been without housing for a long time with an opportunity to live fuller lives in a cleaner environmentrdquo said Amy Moore the divisionrsquos supervisor

The city is holding a 30-day com-ment period to gather input from the public until Sept 21 at which point

By Adelyn Baxter | Staffabaxterdailycalorg

Gov Brown appoints local resident as special advisor

Gov Jerry Brown has appointed Berkeley resident Jeanne Clinton as special advisor to the California Pub-lic Utilities Com-mission the gov-ernorrsquos office said Tuesday

Clinton 60 has been a manager of the commissionrsquos Climate Strategies Branch since 2009 and was an advisor on clean energy

News iN Brief

This publication is not an official publication of the University of California but is published by an independent corporation using the name The Daily Californian pursuant to a license granted by the Regents of the University of California Advertisements appearing in The Daily Californian reflect the views of the advertisers

only They are not an expression of editorial opinion or of the views of the staff Opinions expressed in The Daily Californian by editors or columnists regarding candidates for political office or legislation are those of the editors or columnists and are not those of the Independent Berkeley Student Publishing Co Inc Unsigned editorials are the collective opinion of the Senior Editorial Board Reproduction in any form whether in whole or in part without written permission

from the editor is strictly prohibited Copyright 2011 All rights reserved Published Monday through Friday by The Independent Berkeley Student Publishing Co Inc The nonprofit IBSPC serves to support an editorially independent newsroom run by UC Berkeley students

administration

Matt Wilson Publisher

John Zsenai Finance Manager Brad Aldridge Production Manager

Tom Ott Tech Manager Shweta Doshi Staff Representative Karoun Kasraie Online Manager

Berkeleyrsquos Independent Student Press Since 1971

contactsoffice 600 Eshleman Hall

mail PO Box 1949 Berkeley CA 94701-0949

phone (510) 548-8300fax (510) 849-2803

e-mail dailycaldailycalorgonline httpwwwdailycalorg

Division plans to create affordable housing for some mentally-ill adults

and policy planning to the commis-sion from 2006 to 2009 according to a press release from the governorrsquos office Prior to that she served as a consultant to former California En-ergy Commissioner Jackalyne Pfan-nenstiel an international energy efficiency advisor for the Vietnam Ministry of Industry as well as deputy director for the California Consumer Power and Conservation Financing Authority

As special advisor for the commis-sion Clinton will help coordinate development and implementation of energy efficiency programs and poli-cies including financing mechanisms and other incentives mdash program de-sign and implementation program evaluation and other matters mdash ac-cording to the governorrsquos office She

also may work on related distribution generation and demand reduction programs

Clintonrsquos new position does not re-quire senate confirmation Her com-pensation is $130236

In addition to Clintonrsquos appoint-ment Brown announced the appoint-ment of San Francisco resident Bar-bara Emley 69 to the Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission Emley has fished commercially for more than 20 years and has served as the strategy team leader for the Pacific Coast Fed-eration of Fishermanrsquos Associations since 1995 according to the press re-lease

Her newly appointed position requires state Senate confirmation and provides compensation of $100 per diem

mdash Stephanie BaerJeanne clinton

an application will be submitted to the Berkeley City Council which will then vote on the project

Funding for the housing project will come mainly from the state and other yet-to-be-determined sources accord-ing to Moore An additional sum of $758600 in leftover funds allocated by the Mental Health Services Act will also be used in the renovations

The property on University Avenue is owned by Berkeley-based Resources for Community Development an or-ganization dedicated to providing low-income housing for Bay Area families which will work with the division to operate the site once it opens

Jessica Sheldon associate project manager for Resources for Community Development said they hope to com-plete all administrative and funding steps by the end 2011 but that construc-tion will probably not begin until next year Renovations will mainly consist of interior improvements mdash plumbing ventilation as well as installing energy-efficient lighting

Seven units will be set aside for oc-cupants who are both homeless and certified mentally-ill All occupants must have an income lower than 30 to 50 percent of the arearsquos median in-come Rent will be subsidized to 30 percent of each occupantrsquos income

The site will also provide occupants with medical screenings social work services counseling vocational train-ing mental health assessments as well as individual and group therapy

Severely mentally-ill homeless people in Alameda County comprise 20 percent of its total homeless population as of January 2011 according to a report from the group EveryOne Home released in June The number of mentally-ill home-less individuals has decreased almost 19 percent since 2009 The report also states that ldquoabout 60 percent of severely mentally-ill homeless people are shel-teredrdquo mdash meaning they currently live in emergency shelter programs mdash ldquowhile about 40 percent are unshelteredrdquo

Adelyn Baxter covers city govern-ment

Photo essay Hundreds flock to Calapalooza

meNtal health

How much weight can Lower Sproul Plaza take

anna ViGnetsenior staff

Four months ago UC Berkeley engineers and administrators mdash fearing that excessive weight could cause damage to the garage below mdash refused to allow any vehicle larger than a golf cart drive across Lower Sproul Plaza Monday night approximately 1500 Greek-curious students mdash whose com-bined weight far outstrips that of a laden golf cart mdash reveled on that same plaza at the annual Greek carnival

While holding events on the plaza that attract large volumes of students may seem counterintuitive and in direct opposition to the point of the weight restrictions Christine Shaff communications director of the campusrsquos Facilities Services Department said that big cranes are more of a concern than big crowds

Hundreds of students flocked to Lower Sproul Plaza for Calapalooza Thursday evening to learn more about the clubs organizations and activities on campus

michael Gethersstaff

CorreCtioNsThe caption for the photograph accompanying Thursdayrsquos article ldquoQues-

tions surround offense as fall camp wraps uprdquo incorrectly identified the featured player as Kaelin Clay In fact it was Avery Walls

The Aug 10 2009 editorial ldquoSpeaking Uprdquo incorrectly identified all three UC Berkeley alumni and hikers detained in Iran as UC Berkeley graduates-turned-journalists In fact only Shane Bauer was a journalist

The Daily Californian regrets the errors

BANCROFT CLOTHING CO

Near Sather Gate at 2530 Bancroft Way Berkeley Open Mon - Sat 10 ndash 630 Sat 10 -6 Sun 11- 6 (510) 841-0762

Visit our Clinique Counter for a free makeover

Back To School Sale All Jeans

and Free People 25 OFF

3OPINION amp News The Daily Californian

Jordan Bach-Lombardo jbachlombardodailycalorg

Bleary-eyed and carrying a slight headache from jet lag I stumbled up a concrete stair-

case to a second-story shopIt was my second day in Amman

Jordan and I found myself accompa-nying our Palestinian study-abroad program director as he ran errands To a sweet shop then an office sup-ply store afterwards a bread shop and then for our final stop to the tailorrsquos to pick up a pair of pants

In the shoprsquos cluttered lobby Abboud the tailor met us with the slacks After the flurry of introduc-tions Abboud asked me the tradi-tional second question ldquoWhatrsquos your religionrdquo

ldquoI donrsquot have onerdquo I answered utterly unaware of the rabbit hole I had just plunged myself down and equally unprepared for the vehe-mence of his response

Ten minutes later mdash a period dur-ing which I struggled to cobble together in Arabic a defense of my life philosophy as Abboud blazed through the finer points of Muhammadrsquos words and actions mdash I retraced my steps down the stair-case head reeling worse than before

This dialogue repeated itself many times across the country in taxi cabs and coffee shops libraries and kiosks Each conversation reinforced the absolute difference between me and the majority of the Jordanian people

As a non-believer a fundamental distinction separates me from the Muslim Jordanians mdash who constitute 92 percent of the countryrsquos popula-tion mdash I encountered every day Belief in God plays such an integral role in their everyday life mdash a hefty percentage of expressions of hope are greeted with the phrase ldquoIf God wills itrdquo mdash that many simply cannot under-stand how anyone can live without it

The moment many people I spoke with learned of my areligious convic-tion I instantly perceived a slight change in the way they viewed me In their eyes without God I had no moral compass As one zealous defender of the monotheistic philoso-phy lectured me without the supreme deity dictating my thoughts and actions there is nothing to stop me from killing people on the street

So while I was always treated with respect and kindness I felt sepa-

rated from the people around me There exists no bigger division between people than the trenches dug by religion

I relentlessly tried to breach this gulf I sipped tea with a street-side bookseller debated economic policy with Jordanian communists rolled balls of traditional mansaf in a fam-ilyrsquos home mdash all to no avail Always eluding me was the answer to that essential question How do I con-nect with the Jordanian people at a fundamental level

The answer came during the holi-est month of the Muslim calendar

Ramadan is the month of fasting that requires Muslims to abstain from eating and drinking from sunup to sundown Beyond the introspec-tion and religious reflection that tra-ditionally accompanies fasting it also strengthens ties between people as they collectively undertake the task

Considering the societal implica-tions of this practice I decided to fast Immediately I felt a change in my relationship with the people around me

On the first day about 10 min-utes before the call to prayer

that announced sundown and the end of the fast I brought a box of dates ndash a food traditionally used to break the fast ndash to the lobby of the hotel in which I was staying Yusuf a manager with whom I had always been on very good terms looked at the gift and understanding the sym-bolic significance of the dried fruit asked me ldquoAre you fastingrdquo

ldquoYesrdquo I respondedA bright smile appeared on his

face and he quickly stood up to shake my hand The dialogue repeated itself innumerous times as the question quickly supplanted any investigation into my religion

Each time I answered my new friend smiled shook my hand and after forcing me to sit down brought tea or coffee or some food to share

Fasting opened doors into the society to which I had previously not even had access Every night of Ramadan I went downtown with a friend from the program mdash he also fasted mdash and stayed there for hours less an intruder on the community there than a part of the group

We broke fast in restaurants sur-rounded by locals expectantly await-ing the call to prayer alongside them and as one digging into the food in front of us when the time came

After fast we sat for hours on the broad round concrete columns near a three-way intersection whiling away the time until suhoor ndash the meal eaten before beginning the dayrsquos fast ndash by talking and laughing with our friends and passersby The barriers between us were dimin-ished because we shared something special mdash I became a part of the local community

Ramadan kareem

Fellowship through fastingoff the Beat

Friday August 26 2011

Office of President releases payroll report

The UC Office of the President released the University of Califor-niarsquos annual payroll report for 2010 Wednesday revealing a recent trend of declining state funding for employee compensation

The report which outlines both the sources funding payroll and the groups receiving compensation pinpoints the two major sources for funding of the pay-roll as state general funds which includes educational fees and teaching hospitals

State funding for payroll declined by $174 million to 267 percent in 2010 making up 2 percent less of the total payroll than in 2009 Total pay from teaching hospitals increased by $76 million 4 percent higher than the fraction of total compensation it made up in 2009 according to the report

In 2008 however state general funds and educational fees made up over 30 percent of payroll funding ac-cording to the 2008 payroll report

ldquo(The decline) makes it harder to pay our staff and faculty makes it harder to keep tuition levels stable makes it harder to keep our buildings runningrdquo said Leslie Sepuka a spokes-person for the UC Office of the Presi-dent in an email

Sepuka added that the decline in

By Damian Ortellado | Staffdortelladodailycalorg

state funding especially affects the uni-versity because state funds are flexible whereas grants for instance are not

ldquoI think the key point is that the funds from the state are unrestricted mdash so the university has the flexibility to use them where it sees a needrdquo Sepuka said in the email ldquoIf the university gets a grant for a specific purpose (mela-noma research) you canrsquot use it to keep the library open for extended hours during finalsrdquo

Although funding from federal gov-ernment sources increased by $80 million the increase was due primarily to increased funding for research ac-cording to a press release from the UC Office of the President Sepuka said the increased funding is a step in the right direction for the university

ldquoThe medical centers have been growingrdquo Sepuka said ldquoThey also help support the medical schools and stu-dents mdash so that is a positive for the universityrdquo said Sepuka in an email

The growth in research expenditures also explains the total payroll increase to just under $1 billion in 2010 a 1 per-cent increase from 2009 However the rise is smaller compared to previous years according to the press release

Sepuka said the increase in research spending shows the importance of the university mdash which develops more pat-ents than any university in the nation mdash in the scientific community

Health care personnel made up

the largest percentage of payroll for any single group academic or non-academic with 216 percent of com-pensation funding going to the group mdash almost 5 percent higher than their fraction of the total payroll in 2009 Health care personnel have made up the largest percentage of payroll since 2007 according to calendar year pay-roll reports from previous years

In the 2005-2006 fiscal year health care personnel made up a little more than half of the payroll percentage they made up in total 2010 UC employee compensation according to a 2005-2006 fiscal year payroll report

Health sciences faculty members remain among the top 10 earning em-ployees at the university along with athletic coaches who mdash unlike faculty mdash are paid from non-state funds ac-cording to the press release These faculty members are often well-known in the medical community and receive much of their income from their clini-cal practices at UC medical centers

According to the report about 40 percent of payroll went to academic personnel such as professors lectur-ers student assistants and librarians

In fiscal year 2005-06 academic personnel made up almost 80 percent of total compensation nearly double what they did in 2010 according to the 2005-06 fiscal year report

Damian Ortellado covers higher education

HIGHER EDUCATION

PRESSPASSDAILYCALORG

Use your Press Pass at these locations and save moneyThe Press Pass is Berkeleyrsquos FREE discount card

FREE 16 oz SodaWhen You Order a

Large Super Burrito

North amp South Side

Any Slice amp Sodafor $319 plus tax

www

How can I make my Berkeley business more successfulWe can helpberkeleychambercom

This publication is not an official publication of the University of California but is published by an independent corporation using the name The Daily Californian pursuant to a license granted by the Regents of the University of California Advertisements appearing in The Daily Californian

reflect the views of the advertisers only They are not an expression of editorial opinion or of the views of the staff Opinions expressed in The Daily Californian by editors or columnists regarding candidates for political office or legislation are those of the editors or columnists and are not those of the Independent Berkeley Student Publishing Co Inc Unsigned editorials are the collective opinion of the Senior Editorial Board Reproduction

in any form whether in whole or in part without written permission from the editor is strictly prohibited Copyright 2011 All rights reserved

Mailing AddressPO Box 1949

Berkeley CA 94701-0949

Fax(510) 849-2803

Emailopiniondailycalorg

Letters to the Editor and Op-edsLetters and Op-eds may be sent via email Letters sent via US mail should be typed and must include

signature daytime phone number and place of residence All letters are edited for space and clarityOp-eds must be no longer than 700 words Letters must be no longer than 350 words

EDITORIALS

ldquoOpinion Many people seem to think that California is in a death spiral This is not true mdash California is extremely resilient wersquove managed to keep Berkeleyrsquos very high standingrdquo

mdashUC Berkeley Chancellor Robert Birgeneau

Editorial Cartoon By Anna Vignet

Berkeleyrsquos Independent Student Press mdash Celebrating 140 years

Senior Editorial BoardTomer Ovadia Editor in Chief and President

Leslie Toy Managing Editor

Emma Anderson Opnion Page EditorJordan Bach-Lombardo University News Editor

Stephanie Baer City News EditorTaryn Erhardt Photo Editor

Kelly Fang Multimedia Editor

Jonathan Kuperberg Sports Editor Gopal Lalchandani Night Editor

David Liu Arts amp Entertainment EditorMatthew Putzulu Development Editor

Ashley Villanueva Design Editor

First came the dreaded fur-lough program Then came fewer graduate student

instructors due to a lack of fund-ing continued competitive offers from big-budget private schools and the layoffs of colleagues and friends all while salaries for many UC faculty and staff members remained well below market rate

And yet across UC Berkeley and the entire UC many professors and staff members have chosen to stay For this we commend them and believe that the UC merit pro-gram announced last Wednesday is a step in the right direction

However we also hope that the university sees the bigger picture It is not only the level of pay that keeps these professors supervi-sors financial analysts and others from fleeing to Harvard Stanford or other private prestigious uni-versities but also the caliber of the schoolrsquos research students and educational atmosphere

Under this merit plan faculty and non-union staff members will be eligible to receive raises based on performance evaluations The raises mdash set at 3 percent of overall base pay mdash will be a much-needed reprieve especially for non-repre-sented staff who have not received pay increases for four years and

who have had to take pay-cuts during the furlough program

Through all the hurt that the university has experienced mdash with the slashing of $650 million in state funding this year alone the elimination of phones from many campus departments two years ago the dwindling budgets of aca-demic units mdash faculty and staff members have certainly shoul-dered a good share of the impacts In discussions of budget cuts the fear of loss in scholarly quality repeatedly surfaces But the cam-pus maintains high rankings because our outstanding instruc-tors and role models stick around

This new plan demonstrates that the UC acknowledges the need to retain these academics shows that those at the top value academic excellence and suggests the UC is aware of the ramifica-tions of potential brain drain

At the same time the UC needs to pursue more than just fiscal incentives We realize that money is tight but we hope that the UC will seek to support other pro-grams that make employees want to stay mdash the space for innovative and thorough research students eager to learn and grow and a community that lives and breathes academic excellence

UNIVERSITY ISSUESThe University of Californiarsquos new merit raise plan is a first step but other factors affect employee rentention

More than monetary

For more than two years they sat together in an Iranian prison For more

than two years they fended off sickness and depression watch-ing as their comrade showed signs of sickness so serious that she was allowed to return home without them And now the two UC Berkeley alumni may face eight more years of the same hei-nous conditions after they were sentenced

Though the verdict was read the campus community cannot consider this case closed

In the summer of 2009 Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal were hik-ing near the Iran-Iraq border with Bauerrsquos fiance Sarah Shourd when the three were seized by Iranian authorities accused of trespassing and spying mdash claims which those close to them have vehemently denied

The drawn-out legal process came to somewhat of a resolution last Saturday with an eight-year sentence But the evidence against them is extremely shaky if at all existent

With a brand new freshman class finding their way around UC Berkeley this week it is the campus communityrsquos duty to not let Bauer and Fattal become irrel-

evant These men walked through the same doorways to get to class and were taught by some of the same professors that many of us engage with today

We as students cannot exe-cute a plan to solve this situation The relations between the United States and Iran are beyond our reach We cannot offer diplomat-ic solutions or economic resourc-es We can however offer a resounding voice with the UC Berkeley community in unison with the friends and families of Bauer and Fattal We must call on others within the campus mdash stu-dent government officials admin-istrators students and professors mdash to renew the call for Bauer and Fattalrsquos and release And we must remain steadfast in our determi-nation to keep Bauer and Fattal alive in the campus conscious-ness and discourse

No matter how much time passes we should not and cannot forget these alumni who have captured the attention of the nation and the world As Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said ldquoIt is time for them to return home and be reunited with their fami-liesrdquo

We must stand behind our fel-low Golden Bears

CAMPUS AFFAIRSUC Berkeley must continue to acknowledge two campus alumni sentenced to eight years in prison by Iran

Supporting the hikers

Friday August 26 2011

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

Jillian Wertheim Blog Editor

Op-ED

I want to welcome everyone back to campus and share some reflections on what I think makes this campus so special

It is no secret that UC Berkeley is going through challenging times and that the statersquos persistent dis-investment in higher education forces us to make unhappy choices such as tuition increases

I am often asked how we deal with these challenges The answer is that everything we do is filtered through our commitment to access and excellence We are committed to maintaining and enhancing UC Berkeleyrsquos ranking as one of the top research universities in the world Forty-six new faculty will join our ranks this year 156 of our entering graduate students are winners of prestigious National Science Foundation multi-year fel-lowships and our entering under-graduate class is the product of the most competitive admissions pro-cess in our history We continue to launch cutting-edge interdisci-plinary research initiatives in the sciences humanities and social sciences such as the Berkeley Energy and Climate Change Institute the Haas Diversity Research Center and the Berkeley Institute for Jewish Law and Israeli Law Economy and Society

We are committed to maintain-ing broad social access to this excellence Our financial aid poli-cies and our private fundraising for scholarships have made it pos-sible for us to cushion the effects of tuition increases on all students who come from households that have a total annual income of less than $80000 These financial aid policies have allowed UC Berkeley to serve as an engine of upward

By George BreslauerSpecial to the Daily Calopiniondailycalorg

mobility for huge numbers of low-income students Now that tuition increases have raised the stakes our challenge will be to develop strategies for better supporting students from households earning $80000 to $120000

Of course all our students deserve access to a first-rate cur-riculum as well Toward that end we have invested some of the funds from tuition increases and nonresident tuition into expanding access to required Reading and Composition courses to large introductory classes in physics chemistry mathematics and statis-tics and to foreign language cours-es Next on this agenda is the con-struction of two new biology teaching laboratories made possi-ble by funds from an external source which will then make it possible for us to add sections in introductory biology classes

Improvement of the campusrsquos infrastructure is always on our radar screen One cannot deliver 21st century research and teaching in antiquated laboratories librar-ies classrooms and facilities At least a half-dozen new buildings have been completed and opened in recent years and another four will come on line in the next year and a half Most of these buildings have been paid for predominantly from private fundraising and seis-mic funds from the state

We also aspire to excellence in our administrative operations and services mdash areas in which Berkeley has historically lagged That is one of the principal purposes of Operational Excellence

Access and excellence are expensive to maintain but that is our determined goal Funds from the State of California for operat-ing Berkeley now constitute only 11 to 12 percent of our total reve-nues While we will continue to lobby vigorously for state funding

we must plan for and are actively pursuing alternative sources of funds In addition to tuition increases and larger nonresident undergraduate enrollments (shift-ing the ratio from 90 percent Californians to 80 percent Californians) we have raised $22 billion in private fundraising dur-ing the past six years and antici-pate completing our $3 billion campaign within 30 months We are also exploring entrepreneurial initiatives that will provide new income streams for departments within the university

We have a lot going for us an all-star faculty a global reputation strong support from a large alumni base the Bay Area as an attractive place to live connections to Silicon Valley and to Asia a committed workforce and a lock on the status of being the preeminent public uni-versity in the world Moreover wersquove been through very hard times before the Great Depression the political controversies of the 1950s and 1960s and the slashing of our state allocations in the late 1970rsquos the early 1990rsquos the early 2000rsquos and again in the late 2000rsquos Yet historically we have always bounced back and retained our pre-eminence as a public universi-ty There is something intangible that has kept UC Berkeley resilient through all these trials Surely our commitment to maintaining both access and excellence mdash and to serving the public good mdash has been an inspiration to students staff and faculty attracting them to this remarkable institution

We would value your thoughts on what makes UC Berkeley so special and resilient You can post your comments on our Facebook page at wwwfacebookcomucberkeley

George Breslauer is the Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost at UC Berkeley

Our campus has a commitment to both access and excellence

5opinionThe Daily CalifornianFriday August 26 2011

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

d

ailyc

alo

pin

ion

is o

n tw

itter

op-ed

This week marks the fortieth anni-versary of Chez Panisse the legendary Berkeley restaurant that pioneered the Slow Food movement that has now prompted Americans to desire seasonal local organic whole foods The ldquomotherrdquo of Chez Panisse Alice Waters credits her student experienc-es at UC Berkeley as inspiration She was among a group of countercultural activists who found their vision for sustainable agriculture on Sproul Plaza in the heady days of the Free Speech Movement

What might have seemed at the time an idealistic impractical pipe dream became four decades later a popular widespread economically viable movement The rise of farmersrsquo markets community gardens and Edible Schoolyards in public schools can be traced in part to UC Berkeley and its studentsrsquo capacity for inven-tion There is much to learn by revisit-ing this history not just as a nostalgic walk down memory lane This history is a reminder that paradigm shifts happen through creativity and collec-tive invention with protest and rejec-tion of a status quo only part of a much larger process

We begin the 2011-12 academic year with the inauspicious news that for the first time in the University of Californiarsquos history students are con-tributing more than the public to the cost of their education With the spec-ter of continuing budgetary shortfalls and tuition hikes looming students are likely to be paying even more by yearrsquos end UC Berkeley and UCLA are admitting unprecedented numbers of out-of-state students their full tuition payments backfilling the statersquos fiscal withdrawal What exactly is it that makes the University of California ldquopublicrdquo And how is our university ldquoof rdquo California when campuses now receive so little of their overall operat-ing expenses from the state mdash at Berkeley as low as 12 percent

These are big fundamental long-range questions We ask them in a cli-mate of instability and duress It appears that higher education mdash not just in California but also nationally and globally mdash is undergoing a pro-found paradigm shift the likes of which we have not seen for at least 50 years The simultaneous emergence of higher educationrsquos first great techno-logical change in five centuries mdash the digital revolution mdash only compounds

our instability for this is yet one more mobile tectonic plate

The 2011-12 year is likely to see many political flashpoints tuition increases layoffs organizational restructuring a rise of ldquopermatemprdquo lecturers challenges to shared gover-nance a further erosion of the ties that once bound UCrsquos world renowned sys-tem Students may have difficulty get-ting classes the wheels of Operational Excellence will roll along to a destina-tion widely proclaimed yet remarkably ill-defined (ie how will we know when we are ldquoexcellentrdquo) Protest actions with their attendant Twitter feeds will inevitably pull us into a myopic fixa-tion on the present The battlegrounds will be multiple and dynamic

Yet protests wonrsquot make a future Neither will managerial exercises in efficiency Our needs far transcend what either the flash mob or organi-zational restructuring can produce

We need a big rethink about the future of higher education The last great paradigm shift in higher educa-tion happened half a century ago with the University of California its epicen-ter Can we once again be a leader

The scale of our current challenges is formidable its contours complex its inner workings opaque Unlike the last great period of innovation in higher education the signs are not auspicious The present has neither unprecedented prosperity nor the expansive vision that marked former UC President Clark Kerrrsquos era and the 1960 California Master Plan for Higher Education

Today a new design for higher edu-cation is unlikely to come from on high and itrsquos unlikely to come from one man The future of higher educa-tion mdash if it is to be bright mdash may well require collective invention It may require the very sort of collaborative ingenuity and original thinking that

gave rise to the Slow Food movement a product of Berkeleyrsquos soil

If you have walked by the Berkeley Art Museum this week you may have noticed corn growing outside Yes corn This is a sign that the artistsrsquo collective OPENrestaurant has taken up residence with their new project ldquoOPENed Education as Experiencerdquo On Saturday Aug 27 from 11 am to 5 pm they will transform the muse-um into an open classroom and living kitchen tracing the history of Chez Panisse and pointing to alternative strategies new and historical for the future of education They invite us to inaugurate the new academic year by looking into our past in order to envi-sion our future They invite us to cul-tivate not just corn but also the art of the long view

Catherine Cole is a professor in the Department of Theater Dance and Performance Studies at UC Berkeley

deanne chenstaff

The art of the long view seeing UC futuresBy Catherine ColeSpecial to the Daily Calopiniondailycalorg

Follow us on Twitter

Tweet your responses and letters to the editor they may be published

6 news Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

From Front

readiness Some say test does not gauge college preparedness

BERKELEY BREAKDOWN

Caleb Dardick the UC Berkeley director of local government and communityrelations has been an important part of the community for the past 16 years

eugene w laustaff

The surface of a material is usually as far as scientists have delved when exploring the objectrsquos chemistry be-cause it is where the most important reactions happen

But with relatively unexplored ma-terials such as semiconductors and superconductors looking past the surface has become increasingly im-portant which Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory scientists have accomplished in recent research

In a study published Aug 14 in the

After being a part of the Berkeley community for 16 years working for the city and the campus Caleb Dardick UC Berkeley director of local government and community relations is returning to his river roots to take up a new posi-tion at home in Nevada County

Dardick mdash who has been instrumen-tal to town-gown relations since immers-ing himself in Berkeley politics as former Mayor Shirley Deanrsquos legislative aid mdash will be moving to Nevada City to serve as executive director for the South Yuba River Citizens League In June Dardick applied for the position and was chosen earlier after a nationwide search

ldquoHe brings incredibly strong com-munication skills expertise in strate-gic planning mdash certainly in coalition building and program managementrdquo said Kim Milligan interim executive director for SYRCL

In his new position Dardick will lead the organization in its mission to protect the Yuba River and Watershed while working on statewide issues such as the recovery of salmon in the Yuba River mdash named one of Americarsquos Most Endangered Rivers in May by the conservation group American Rivers

ldquoWe went to the Yuba River all the time the older kids who could drive would drive through the neighbor-hood honk the horn and all the little kids would come running out and jump in the back of the truck and wersquod go to the river for the dayrdquo Dardick said ldquoWe just grew up lounging on the rocks and swimming in the beautiful clear water itrsquos part of my DNArdquo

After managing his fatherrsquos cam-paign for county supervisor in 1994 mdash his first foray into politics mdash Dardick worked on several more campaigns including Deanrsquos run-off campaign in December 1994 and then served as Deanrsquos legislative aid for four years

ldquoI became immersed in Berkeley

By Claire Perlman | Senior Staffcperlmandailycalorg

By Stephanie Baer | Senior Staffsbaerdailycalorg

CheCk Onlinewwwdailycalorg

Claire Perlman explains how Berkeley lab scientists have studied electronic structures

CheCk Onlinewwwdailycalorg

Listen to an interview of Caleb Dardick about his experiences serving the campus and the city

bull The percentage of Berkeley Unified School District stu-dents that took and passed the exit exam for math decreased from 82 percent for the class of 2010 to 81 per-cent in the class of 2011 and for English and language arts decreased from 84 to 81 percent

bull Passing black BUSD students decreased from 63 percent for the class of 2010 to 57 percent for the class of 2011 for the math portion of the exit exam and from 68 percent to 57 percent for the English portion Statewide the numbers increased from 66 to 68 percent and 71 to 72 percent respectively

bull Passing Latino BUSD students increased from 73 percent for 2010 to 75 percent for 2011 for the math portion of the exit exam and from 74 percent to 78 percent for the English portion Statewide the numbers increased from 74 to 77 percent and 73 to 76 percent respectively

bull Passing white BUSD students increased from 97 percent for 2010 to 99 percent for 2011 for both portions of the exam Statewide the numbers stayed constant at 91 per-cent for both

All numbers are from the exit exam administered in the 10th grade the first time the exit exam is administered and when most students take the exam

Research uses new technique to study the electronic structure of materials

Director of community relations to leave post

politics and I loved it It was the most interesting and exciting job I ever hadrdquo Dardick said ldquoYou could be dealing with potholes in the morning and the cityrsquos position on divestment in Nigeria in the afternoonrdquo

In 1998 Dardick was hired by UC Berkeleyrsquos department of community re-lations as interim director of the Berkeley Alliance mdash a collaboration between UC Berkeley and Berkeley Unified School District that still exists today which aims to build community partnerships to ef-fect change on critical social and eco-nomic equity issues in Berkeley

Two years later he decided to work for himself as a community relations consultant working on projects like the Ed Roberts Campus at the Ashby BART station and the David Brower Center

When Ed Roberts a UC Berkeley alum and leader in the local disabili-ties rights movement passed away in 1995 Dardick mdash under the direction of Dean mdash put together a task force of local activists disability rights leaders and campus community members to honor Robertsrsquo memory

ldquoMayor Dean asked me to represent the office at his memorial and I was hon-ored to do that because I grew up in the disability rights movement my father was a person with a disabilityrdquo he said

After 10 years of working for him-self Dardick returned to the campusrsquo community relations office where he continued to work on projects to con-nect the campus and city communities through community service projects and partnerships like the Joint South-side Safety Patrol program

ldquoHe knew the community He knew the various stakeholders and he had a manner or an ability to bring people to the table and work out solutionsrdquo said Councilmember Laurie Capitelli ldquoTheyrsquoll be big shoes to fillrdquo

Stephanie Baer is the city news editor

journal Nature Materials lab researchers explored the concept of using a high-en-ergy version of the technique of angle-re-solved photoemission mdash HARPES mdash to study the electronic structure of materi-als Though HARPES and its less intense counterpart ARPES have been around since 1905 when Albert Einstein first ex-plained the photoelectric effect mdash the ba-sis for these techniques mdash scientists have only recently been able to make use of the techniques

The photoelectric effect an impor-tant part of the foundation of quantum mechanics means that light behaves like a quantum of energy or a photon which can give all of its energy to an electron and liberate it as a photoelec-tron which then flies away explained Chuck Fadley mdash a distinguished profes-sor of physics at UC Davis an Advanced Light Source professor at Berkeley Lab and co-author of the paper

ldquoOne then measures the energy of the electron and its direction as pre-cisely as possible and from these measurements can deduce exquisite detail about how the electron was moving in the material before it was

ejected how the atoms are bound to one another whether they are magnet-ic or not how the material will conduct electricityrdquo he said

Without a sufficiently bright light source mdash and therefore sufficiently pow-erful beams of hard x-rays mdash scientists were unable to penetrate the materials on the atomic level that was necessary to observe interactions of photons and elec-trons beyond the surface

Because HARPES uses higher en-ergy it can reveal interactions signifi-cantly past the scope of what the less powerful ARPES can do According to Fadley ARPES uses ultraviolet and soft x-ray photons and therefore can-

not penetrate much past one nanome-ter whereas with HARPES scientists can measure photoelectrons and elec-tronic properties at depths anywhere between 6 and 10 nanometers

ldquoYou really give them a kickrdquo said Alexander Gray a graduate student at UC Davis and Berkeley Lab and a co-author of the study ldquoThis way even with electrons that are deep deep inside of the material you can really get the information about the elec-tronic properties of the material You can seek them out you can catch them and you can analyze themrdquo

Claire Perlman is the assistant uni-versity news editor

From Front

unemplOyment Rates in state higher than in rest of country

From Front

disCriminatiOn Initial complaint was filed in June 2009

Pyle in dismissing the merit of Senigarrsquos claims said that ldquoUCSF has an historic commitment to diversity in the work forcerdquo

ldquo(Fritz) had a very strong record of hiring retaining and promoting Afri-can-American employeesrdquo she added

A judge dismissed a wage discrimi-nation complaint that had originally been part of Senigarrsquos claim accord-ing to Pyle However Senigar is still claiming damages for wages he alleges he should have been paid because he was passed over for promotion

Senigar is claiming damages for that amount of money for the amount of money necessary to cover his medi-cal expenses and for the amount of money to compensate for among other things a ldquogeneral loss of self-

esteem and well-beingrdquo according to the second amended complaint The claim does not specify an exact amount for these damages

ldquoThis case is not about the moneyrdquo said Pamela Price Senigarrsquos attorney ldquoHe should have been given the op-portunity to succeed The denial of that opportunity is the issuerdquo

Senigar began to work for the uni-versity in October 1999 Over the seven years leading up to the first incident Price said that Senigar received posi-tive reviews from his superiors Senigar was fired by UCSF prior to the case go-ing to trial but it is not part of the cur-rent complaint according to Price

Pyle said that Fritz was ultimately laid off in 2009 for the same budget-ary reasons that the position in ques-

tion was never filledSenigar filed his initial complaint

on June 23 2009 A first amended complaint was filed on Aug 20 2009 and a second amended complaint mdash the complaint that forms the basis for the trial currently underway mdash was filed on Aug 16 2009

Because the complaint was not settled out of court it is now going to trial mdash an outcome that Senigar did not want to happen Price said

ldquoHe spent a lot of time trying to resolve it internally (so) a trial is totally a last resortrdquo she said ldquoHe never imagined he would have to go through the ordeal of filing the law-suit or going to trialrdquo

Jordan Bach-Lombardo is the uni-versity news editor

not gauge college preparedness says Mary Perry deputy director of Ed-Source a nonprofit organization that researches education in California

A separate report released earlier this month from the not-for-profit organization ACT mdash which admin-isters a test of the same name de-signed to measure college prepared-ness mdash seemingly contradicts the exit exam numbers showing college pre-paredness levels declining across the state from 31 percent meeting ACTrsquos benchmarks to 30 percent a decrease of roughly 1500 students

Perry says the ACT reportrsquos num-bersrsquo discrepancy may only be superfi-cial She said ACT test takers are self-selecting college-bound students whereas every California high school student must take the exit exam

ldquoYou donrsquot know whether the de-cline yoursquore seeing is a reduction of the skill set of California students or is because the group taking the test changedrdquo she added

State department spokesperson Jung says the two tests shouldnrsquot be compared because the exit exam measures math skills through sev-enth grade and English and language arts through the 10th grade while the ACT tests a studentrsquos ability to take college level courses

UC spokesperson Ricardo Vazquez said most UC admits take the SAT mdash a college-readiness test administered by the not-for-profit College Board mdash and a growing number are taking both the ACT and the SAT though few take the ACT exclusively Exact numbers for university were not im-mediately available as of press time

According to Perry 50 percent of graduating seniors in California took

the SAT while 22 percent took the ACT in 2010

She said the state is working on new standards that will better incorporate

college preparedness into high school requirements like the exit exam

Mihir Zaveri is the lead develop-ment and capital projects reporter

percent Since at least 2002 the state unemployment rate has been consis-tently higher than the national rate according to the statersquos analysis

In a press conference Thursday morning Gov Jerry Brown unveiled a three-part strategy called Califor-nia Jobs First plan aimed at lowering the statersquos unemployment rate The plan which will require a two-thirds vote from the state legislature for ap-proval would provide a tax credit for

businesses that hire more employees and also remove sales tax on manu-facturing equipment for startup com-panies during their first three years of business

ldquoBoosting job growth in California is a top priority and this proposal is a critical step in making sure the state does everything it can to support lo-cal job creationrdquo Brown said at the conference

Although Brown did not say specif-

ically how many jobs he estimates the plan will create he seemed confident that it would help lower the statersquos un-employment rate mdash the second high-est in the nation last month

ldquoWe know the future depends on growing our way out of this economic morassrdquo Assembly Speaker John Per-ez D-Los Angeles said at the confer-ence

Soumya Karlamangla is the assis-tant city news editor

CAMPUS FIGURES

RESEARCh amp IDEAS

7The Daily Californian PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011

TEXT ldquoNEDSVIPrdquo TO 22022

TO GET UP TO $20 OFF

Get up to 50 off flashdrives school supplies starting at $50 and more

NEDrsquoS BERKELYBOOKSTORE

2480 Bancroft Waynedsbookscomucb

8 paid advertisement Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

Catholics

Newman Hall amp Dwight Way

wwwcalnewmanorg

Monday 822 Ice Cream Social 8pm Tuesday 823 Newman Orientation Event (includes dinner) 6pm

Cal

College Ave

Wednesday 824 Rosary Group 8pm

Sunday 828 Mass 5pm Student Dinner 6pm Candlelight Mass 10pm

(across from unit 2)

Monday 829 Newman Orientation Event Part II 6pm

Saturday 827 Kayaking at Berkeley Marina Meet at Newman Hall 930am

Holy Spirit Parish

All events are ADA Accessible

Catholics Cal

Newman Hall Holy Spirit Parish

Monday 822 Ice Cream Social 8pmTuesday 823 Newman Orientation Event (includes dinner) 6pm

Wednesday 824 Rosary Group 8pm Saturday 827 Kayaking at Berkeley Marina Meet at Newman Hall 930amSunday 828 Mass 5pm Student Dinner 6pm Candlelight Mass 10pm

Monday 829 Newman Orientation Event Part II 6pm

All events are ADA Accessible

College Ave ampDwight Way

(across from unit 2)wwwcalnewmanorg

You beg your members to table on Sproul People walk right by You post hundreds of flyers in the hall and they get removed or covered up hours later Face it flyering is a costly labor-intensive process But therersquos a better way

Post your flyer in the most visible spot on

campus The Daily Cal

HEY STUDENT GROUPS

Take advantage of this savings now advertisingdailycalorg | 510-280-2452THE RULES Ads must run in four consecutive issues in AugustSeptember 2011 Student groups must pre-pay for ads This offer is only valid to UC Berkeley student groups officially registered with the ASUC or Campus Life amp Leadership

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLACK)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLUE)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (white)

LEVELS OF SERVICE AT A STEEP DISCOUNT TO STUDENT GROUPS ALL PLANS INCLUDE AD DESIGN AND APPEARANCES ON DAILYCALORG THIS IS A LIMITED OFFER ONLY FOR STUDENT GROUPS

SIXTEENTH OF A PAGE QUARTER OF A PAGE HALF OF A PAGE

But I started my dream of being a reporter by working in Eshleman Hall at the Daily Cal

Mark Summers REPORTER AT THE WALL STREET JOURNAL DAILY CAL ALUM rsquo

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLACK)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLUE)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (white)

Wersquove been a starting place for thousands of professionals who lead extraordinary careers in media advertising anad business If yoursquore ready to start your career now go to applydailycalorg

JOIN THE DAILY CALRECRUITMENT MEETINGS

Friday Aug 26 4pmTuesday Aug 31 5pm

600 Eshleman Hall

We are hiringWeb Developers Marketers Multimedia producers News Sports and Arts amp Entertainment reporters Photographers Copy Editors Designers Bloggers Illustrators Ads Representatives and more

SportSFriday august 26 2011 bull dailycal orgsports

AtCalwearemorethanfamiliarwith the aftermath of losing anincrediblequarterbackPerhapscur-rent students only know AaronRodgers as the alumnus that wonthe Super Bowl last season but Irememberhimas the savior ofCalfootball that brought us somerespectability AfterRodgersboltedfortheNFLcoachJeffTedfordhasyettotrotouta competent let alone comparablequarterbackWersquovejusthadaflurryofdisappointments In volleyball the setter is essen-tially the quarterback of the teamShersquostheonethatdeliverstheballtoattackers which requires remark-ablerapportandtimingwithhittersquickdecision-makingandtheabil-itytoreaddefenses TheCalvolleyballteamlosesitsquarterback this season in CarliLloydButdonrsquotexpect it tomeanthedemiseoftheBearsasRodgersrsquodepartureprovedtobe Lloyd probably meant more toherteamthanRodgersThenationalPlayer of the Year Lloyd institutedthenewup-tempooffensethatledtothe squadrsquos incredible run to theconference title and debut in thenationaltitlegame More importantly she was theheart and soul of the team Therewasnodoubtshewastheleaderonthe court keeping her teammatestogether and hitters focused Shesimplyrefusedto letherteamloseandhadawayofkillingopponentsrsquomomentumwithbigplays HerintensitywasinfectiousanditrsquoshardtoimaginetheBearsgoing

Bearsrsquo new quarterback

wonrsquot stop surging Cal

Christina Jones cjonesdailycalorg

ldquoIt sounds demeaning to say tune-up but I would say these

games are more of a way to get momentum going for our teamrdquo mdash Volleyball coach Rich Feller on the preseason

Bears open 2011 season with barren Riverside club

Eightmonthsafterdropping theNCAAchampi-onshipmatchtoPennStatelastDecembertheNo3Cal volleyball team will see itsfirstactionofthe2011seasonthisweekend

The Bears will host the CalMoltenClassictodayandSaturdayat Haas Pavillion inviting UCRiverside Fairfield and FloridaInternational University intoBerkeley

Calwillbelookingtorepeatitsperformance from 2010when itwon both of its matches of thepreseason tournament tallyingvictories over UC Santa Barbara(25-1825-1528-26)andManhattanCollege(25-825-1525-7)

Outside hitterTarahMurreywho returns to theBears as the lone senior was named the tourna-mentrsquosmost valuable player after leading the teamwith11killsand14digsTheBearsrsquooffensewassolidlogging a 341 attack percentage across the twogames

Calshouldbepoisedtoseesimilarresultstonightwhen it opens its seasonagainstUCRiversideat 5pmTheHighlandershadlittletocelebratein2010postinga2-30recordincludinga0-16markintheBigWestRiversidewaspicked to finish last in theBigWestin2011

ldquoItsoundsdemeaningtosaytune-upbutIwouldsaythesegamesaremoreofawaytogetmomentumgoing for our teamrdquo coach Rich Feller said ldquoThethreeweeksofpreseasonaremeanttoestablishsomesortoflineupandmomentumrdquo

Though theBearsmightbepusheda littlemoreonSaturdaywhentheysquareoffwithFairfieldat11amandFIUat7pmCallikelywonrsquotseeanyseri-ous competition Still the squadknows it needs togetofftoaquickstarttotheseason

ldquoYouplayeverygame likes itrsquos thenational titlerdquoMurreysaidldquoYoursquorenevergoingtoplayperfectvol-leyball but you always have to respect your oppo-nentrdquo

TheBearswillalsobeusingthisweekendaswellasthematchesintheupcomingweekstosolidifyitsstartinglineupThoughtheteamreturnssixstartersfrom2010 itwillneedto findawaytoreplacethepresenceofCarliLloydtheAVCANationalPlayerofthe Year in 2010 Lloyd finished her career with5697assistsmdashgoodenough for secondall time inCalhistory

By Connor Byrne | Staffcbyrnedailycalorg

All-American Tarah Murrey (middle) returns to lead the Bears as the biggest offensive threat Shannon hamiltonfile

when tonight at 7 pmwhere haaS pavilion

Quick LookCal v UC riverSide Bears slightly modify the

recipe for success in 2011

TheCal volleyball team is coming off itsbest season in program history The Bearstook their first Pac-10 title andmade theirdebutinthenationalchampionship One school of thought would be not tomesswithsuccessandsimplyplugplayersinto fill the twovacantpositionsat setteranddefensivespecialistinthestartinglineup Reigning AVCA Coach of the Year RichFeller is taking a slightly different routeWhile the overall offensive and defensiveschemeswillremaininplaceFellersaidheismixing things up in the lineup beginningwithtonightrsquosopeneragainstUCRiverside ldquoI donrsquot think yoursquoll see any sweepingchangesrdquo Feller said ldquoWe have a lotmoreweaponsnowMinusCarli(Lloyd)whowasthesetterweincreasedouroffensivethreatsbythreeorfournewplayersrdquo Last season the starters were solidifiedearly in the preseason and didnrsquot changemuchThisseasoneventhoseaccomplishedstarters thatwerekey contributors last yearhavetofightfortheirpositions MostnotablyCorreyJohnsonwhogar-neredAll-Pac10andAVCAhonorablemen-tionaccoladesasarightsidehitterlastsea-sonisdukingitoutwithtwooftheconfer-encersquos top blockers Shannon Hawari andKatBrownforaspotinthemiddle ldquoMostlyweneedoneof themiddleposi-tionstobeabletohitbehindthesetterexcep-tionally wellrdquo Feller said ldquoCorrey does that

By Christina Jones | Senior Staffcjonesdailycalorg

Setter PAGe 11 SeASon Preview PAGe 11 volleybAll PAGe 11

better than anyone We may continue tobounceherbetweenmiddleandrightsiderdquo IfJohnsondoesnrsquotwinamiddlespotshersquollbattle highly regarded freshman ChristinaHigginsforapositionontherightside As Feller experimentswith rotations thesetterpositionisforeseeablylocked After two years as Lloydrsquos understudyEllyBarrettwilltakethehelmTheuntestedjuniorhassomehugeshoestofillmdashLloydearnedNational Player of the Year honorslast yearmdashbut benefits from two years ofexperiencesettingtheB-team Barrett will be surrounded by powerfulattackers tohelpher ease into the roleAll-AmericanTarahMurrey returns as the lonesenior on the team coming off a breakoutjuniorcampaigninwhichsheemergedasoneof the countryrsquos top outside hittersMurreywillstepintoLloydrsquosroleasthevocalleaderinadditiontothestrongestoffensivethreat WhileMurreywillcertainlybeheardshenotes that the team has a more reservedtemperamentthisyear ldquoMe and Carli last year we could get alittlerowdyrdquoMurreysaidldquoButIthinkthatonce we get more comfortable with eachotherallofourtruepersonalitiesaregoingto come out and itrsquos going to be a lot offunrdquo The ability to keep energy updown the

CheCk onlinewwwdailycalorg

Volleyball beat writer christina Jones discusses the Bearsrsquo outlook for the season ahead in a daily cal podcast

Last year

the Cal volleyball team was one win away from a

national title The Bears are set on seizing

the crown in 2011

volleyball | Season Preview

ChriStopher mCdermUtfile

10 sports Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

W soccer

Bison are question mark for CalBy Seung Y Lee | Staffsyleedailycalorg

LastyeartheCalwomenrsquossoccerteamhad its biggest victory of the seasonagainstHawaiiatEdwardsStadiumpil-ingeightgoalsfromsixdifferentplayers ButastheBearspreparetoflydowntoHonolulufortherematchcoachNeilMcGuiredoesnotexpectanotherrompovertheRainbowWahine ldquoHawaii has a new coach and theplayerswillbemoremotivatedrdquoMcGuiresaid ldquoWe are also playing in front ofabout 3000 people I donrsquot anticipateanysortofsimilarperformancesrdquo ParticipatinginthelsquoOhanaHotelsNoKai lsquoOi tournament Cal (1-1) will firstplayNorthDakotaState (1-0)onFridaynightat10pmbeforebattlingthetour-nament host Hawaii (0-1) on Sundaynightat8pmBothmatchesareat theWaipirsquooPeninsulaSoccerStadium NeithertheBisonnortheWahinehaveclose to the talent the Bears haveAlthoughNorthDakotaStatewonmore

thanhalfitsmatcheslastseasonmostofits opponentswere tiny obscure schoolsscattered across theDakotasWith suchobscurity Cal players and coaches arereadyingtoplaytheBisonknowingnearlynothing about the team The one thingthesquaddoesknowaboutNorthDakotaState is that it plays a 4-4-2 lineup themostcommonformationinsoccer Unlike with North Dakota State theBears have experience playing againstHawaiiLedbystarstrikerAlexMorganrsquoshattrickCalbatteredtheWahinedefenseinthesecondhalfscoringfivegoals HoweverSundayrsquosmatchwilllikelybeconsiderably different since theWahinehiredanewcoachMicheleNagamine LikeHawaiiCalisalsoinatransitionmode adjusting to the void left by theseniorMorganInthelasttwomatchestheBearshavestruggledtoscoregoalslosingtoPepperdine2-1andthreadingpastSanDiegoState2-1thankstotwolategoalsbyseniorJulieBenzandjuniorLaurenBattung ldquoWehavebeenpracticinghowtopen-etratethroughthedefensebacklineand

creating scoring chancesrdquo Benz saidldquoWeneedtobemorefearlessinfrontofthenetrdquo For the Bears the ghost of Morganmdash who scored nearly a third of thesquadrsquos totalgoals last seasonmdash loomslargeovertheteamdemandingalterna-tivewaysfortheteamtoscoreandwingames One of the solutions that McGuireand the coaches are hoping for is thereturn of injured forwards MirandaWhiteandRachelMercik Mercik a sophomore has shownpromiseinherfirstyearwiththeteamstarting four games and scoring twogoals White a utility player for bothdefense and offense mdash will be able toprovide experience alongside Benz andBattungintheattackinglines ldquoWhite and Mercik are two playersthatsufferedfromlong-termandshort-term injuries that have come backrdquoMcGuire said ldquoWe havenrsquot had themenough of the field so I want to givethesetwosomequalityplayingtimethisweekendrdquo

Lauren Battung scored Calrsquos first goal in its 2-1 overtime win over San Diego State on Sunday It was her second goal of the year sean goebelfile

M soccer

Bears cross the bay to open their seasonBy Camellia Senemar | Staffcsenemardailycalorg

Season openers always havetheirjittersespeciallywhenteamsare away from the comforts oftheirhomefield WiththesetwoforcesworkingagainsttheNo7Calmenrsquossoccerteam this Friday evening theBears travel across the bridge toface the University of SanFranciscoatNegoescoStadiumat7pm Thedisparityinthetwoteamsrsquostandings mdash the Dons areunrankedmdashmightprovideahinttowards thegamersquos resultbutonpaper the Bearsrsquo all-time seriesrecord against USF stands at14-21-2EventhoughCalshutouttheDonsintheirlastfourencoun-ters the matchup still stands atrickytest ldquoUSF is a strong and talentedteamrdquo junior co-captain StevenBirnbaumsaidldquoWearejustlook-ing to play our game and get agoodstarttotheseasonrdquo Last yearrsquos tilt at GoldmanField produced then-sophomoreJohn Fitzpatrickrsquos game winninggoal in overtime It was then-sophomoreAnthonySalcicciawhofound Birnbaumrsquos head for theassistonthelastcornerkickofthematch The goal gave his squadthe1-0leadandashareoftheBayAreaClassicwithStanford Those three lethal juniors arethe only players to return to theBearsrsquo 11-man lineup from 2010All posted career highs in goalsassistsandpoints in their sopho-moreyearsandwillbelookingtoadd to their tallies Birnbaum isthesolereturningstarterfromthebacklineandisjoinedbySalciccia

as a fellow co-captain The cur-rentmemberswillhavebigshoesto fill after last seasonrsquos highlysuccessful campaign saw fiveseniors and one junior head toMajorLeagueSoccer CoachKevinGrimeswill havehis optionsopenwith this youngteammdashmorethanhalfareenter-ing their freshmen and sopho-more yearsThe five timePac-10Coach of the Yearmost recentlyawarded in 2010 also has twoexperienced forwards redshirtjuniors Kyle Lunt and MichaelMunozathisdisposal ldquoWe are confident with ourteamrdquo Birnbaum said ldquoAll theunderclassmen are very talentedandwillbeabigpartofourteamthisyearrdquo Calhasbeenpreparingappro-priately and avoiding any majorinjury concerns during the pastmonthofpreseasonTheultimategoal is to retain the conferencechampionshipTheyarepredictedto finish second while UCLAwhich claimed the second spotlast season is projected to takethe title Nonetheless the Bearsare feeling optimistic about theseason opener after honing theirtechniquesinthesummer ldquoWe are ready for tomorrowrdquojunior goalkeeper Robby Gogatzsaid ldquoWe just want to keep onimproving one game at a timeandbuildonourstrengthsrdquo Cal will have three gamesremainingintheBayAreaClassicAlthough the jitters of a seasonopenerwill have diminished theBearswillstillbeplayinginunfa-miliar territory in Illinois andConnecticut It wonrsquot be untilSept 16 that the club returnshometoEdwardsStadiumtofin-ishoffagainstSantaClara

11sportsFriday August 26 2011 The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

field hockeyFrom Page 9

SeaSon preview Bears will face a stacked Pac-12 schedule

From Page 9

Setter Barrett will build her own legacy after Lloydrsquos exit

stretch will be crucial as the Bears face a stacked conference slate that includes three other teams ranked in the top-10 nationally After a weak preseason Cal will have to be on top of its game to host perennial power No 6 Stanford to open conference play on Sept 13 The addition of Colorado and Utah extend

the Pac-12 season by four matches forcing the first leg of the Big Spike to take place on a Tuesday night No 2 USC picked to win the Pac-12 will pose the greatest challenge for the Bears who are predicted to finish sec-ond The Trojans return all of their starters from the team that lost to Cal in the Final Four but defeated the

Bears twice in the regular seasonCalrsquos not quite ready to face the likes to Stanford and USC yet but are putting the work in to get to that pointldquoWe played some hard volleyball in practice so conditioning-wise wersquore right thererdquo Murrey said ldquoMentally wersquore getting ready every single dayrdquoldquoWersquore ready to playrdquo

nearly as far last season without her This year however it seems plausible that Cal will achieve similar heights without the setter extraordinaire Lloyd had a lot of help with the meteoric rise of Tarah Murrey as one of the premier outside hitters in the nation So long as Lloydrsquos successor Elly Barrett can find Murrey on the outside the Bears will be in great shape It has yet to be seen if Barrett will contribute the same kind of dynamic play that Lloyd did or if she will have as well-rounded a game But frankly the team doesnrsquot need her to be Lloyd She doesnrsquot need to be the most vocal player on the court or fire her team up That responsibility will be left to Murrey the lone senior

on the team who was clearly part of the leadership core last year Barrett doesnrsquot have to try to learn a new offense like Lloyd did or guide her teammates through such adjust-ments to their timing The system is already in place The Austin Texas native just needs to be a competent setter Given that she was an even more highly-sought after recruit than Lloyd itrsquos safe to assume Barrett has that ability With two years waiting in the wings Barrett amassed a significant amount of reps in practice with her attackers Coach Rich Feller said shersquos tightly bonded with her fellow juniors many of whom shersquoll be setting in the middle and right side so chemistry shouldnrsquot

be an issue Last year the Bears lost Pac-10 Player of the Year in outside hitter Hana Cutura and the preseason talk was focused mainly on how Cal would compensate for such a huge loss It only took a few weeks for Tarah Murrey to rise from the ashes of a dis-appointing sophomore campaign to emerge as one of the countryrsquos best Suddenly no one was mentioning Cutura anymore It would be foolish to assume that Barrett who has not had experience starting will have a similar breakout year However once she proves herself to be a capable setter Lloydrsquos name will start to fade and Barrett can begin building her own legacy

From Page 9

volleyball Cal hopes to repeat success of 2010 tournament

By Eric Lee | Staffetleedailycalorg

After an undefeated exhibition schedule which included two con-vincing wins and a tie with Stanford the Cal field hockey team will visit No 16 Louisville at 3 pm at Trager Stadium for its first official game of the 2011 season

Coming off last yearrsquos disappoint-ing finish mdash a loss to Stanford in the NorPac Tournament final mdash the Bears hope to start the season strong as they embark on a mini-roadtrip to Louisville Ky for games against the Cardinals and No 13 Michigan State

Louisville enters this season with some new faces Justine Sowry is the new head coach and a number of senior leaders from last season have since graduated

The squad however returns three All-Big East preseason selec-tions along with a number of expe-rienced players to fill out the rest of the roster

The Cardinals finished the 2010 season with a 13-7 record and a 5-1 conference record good enough for second in the strong Big East confer-ence

Louisvillersquos season ended in the semifinals of the Big East Tournament a 2-1 loss to No 4 Connecticut

Last year the Cardinals defeated the Bears 2-0 in Louisville under then-head coach Pam Bustin who later took on head coaching duties at Duke

Returning sophomore Erin

Scheidtmiller provided one of Louisvillersquos goals in that game while the other score came from Tuli Lim who has since graduated

One thing the Bears have going for them is an extremely strong preseason which began with a dominating 10-2 victory over UC Davis

Sophomore Jordan OrsquoReilly started the contest off with a pair of goals and the Aggies never recov-ered

Sophomore Andrea Earle fresh-man Marcia Venter and senior Erin Magill each provided two goals in the offensive barrage

Cal then went to No 20 Stanford and tied a tough Cardinal squad 1-1 due to strong goalkeeping from senior Maddie Hand and sophomore Courtney Hendrickson Senior Megan Shimojima provided the Bearrsquos lone goal

In its final preseason scrimmage Cal defeated the University of Alberta 4-1 with another fine offensive performance from Shimojima who netted two goals in the match

The road does not get any easier after Louisville as the Bears face No 13 Michigan State the following day The Spartans who finished with an 15-6 record last season figure to be one of Calrsquos toughest matchups this upcoming season

Last year the Bears fell to Michigan State 3-4 in their second game of that season The match saw seven different lead changes before the Spartans scored the game-winning goal in the 69th minute to close out the Bears

Cal looks to build upon successful preseason

ldquoWersquoll use the games to find out which starting lineups will work the best and some of those may include the younger playersrdquo Feller said

ldquoIf therersquos an opportunity to play more people this is the chance to do

itrdquoJunior setter Elly Barrett will be the

one to pick up where Lloyd left off In 2010 Barrett logged only 27 sets through 13 games of work behind Lloyd and will look to establish herself

as a leader of the 2011 version of the Bears

ldquoIt will be good practice to stay focused on our side of the court regard-less of whorsquos on the other siderdquo Barrett said

DUMMY

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

1 Ridicule4 Magna __9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried folded and lled18 Squelch19 Opposite of cominrsquo20 Fruit-topped dessert22 Persons23 Prex for marketing or communication24 Egyptrsquos loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Tried39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation systems

1 Crawling bug2 Small veggies3 Engrave4 Regal home5 Mrs Ralph Kramden6 __ Hayworth7 Snatched8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebrsquos wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement

31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space ight agcy44 One of a pair45 British bishopsrsquo items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartlettrsquos book abbr53 Repulsive54 Green fruit55 Satanrsquos specialty59 Pauserrsquos words

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

Keep Berkeley Unique Shop LocallySupporting locally-owned independently operated businesses keeps our city unique creates more jobs and makes our economy stronger Look for this icon the next time yoursquore shopping for something special

Find a local business near you at buylocalberkeleycom All contributions are tax deductible dailycalorgdonate

Support independent student journalismDonate to the Daily Californian

Support independent student journalism Donate to the Daily CalAll contributions are tax deductible

dailycalorgdonate

12 PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

  • 0826_dailycal01
  • 0826_dailycal02
  • 0826_dailycal03
  • 0826_dailycal04
  • 0826_dailycal05
  • 0826_dailycal06
  • 0826_dailycal07
  • 0826_dailycal08
  • 0826_dailycal09
  • 0826_dailycal10
  • 0826_dailycal11
  • 0826_dailycal12

3OPINION amp News The Daily Californian

Jordan Bach-Lombardo jbachlombardodailycalorg

Bleary-eyed and carrying a slight headache from jet lag I stumbled up a concrete stair-

case to a second-story shopIt was my second day in Amman

Jordan and I found myself accompa-nying our Palestinian study-abroad program director as he ran errands To a sweet shop then an office sup-ply store afterwards a bread shop and then for our final stop to the tailorrsquos to pick up a pair of pants

In the shoprsquos cluttered lobby Abboud the tailor met us with the slacks After the flurry of introduc-tions Abboud asked me the tradi-tional second question ldquoWhatrsquos your religionrdquo

ldquoI donrsquot have onerdquo I answered utterly unaware of the rabbit hole I had just plunged myself down and equally unprepared for the vehe-mence of his response

Ten minutes later mdash a period dur-ing which I struggled to cobble together in Arabic a defense of my life philosophy as Abboud blazed through the finer points of Muhammadrsquos words and actions mdash I retraced my steps down the stair-case head reeling worse than before

This dialogue repeated itself many times across the country in taxi cabs and coffee shops libraries and kiosks Each conversation reinforced the absolute difference between me and the majority of the Jordanian people

As a non-believer a fundamental distinction separates me from the Muslim Jordanians mdash who constitute 92 percent of the countryrsquos popula-tion mdash I encountered every day Belief in God plays such an integral role in their everyday life mdash a hefty percentage of expressions of hope are greeted with the phrase ldquoIf God wills itrdquo mdash that many simply cannot under-stand how anyone can live without it

The moment many people I spoke with learned of my areligious convic-tion I instantly perceived a slight change in the way they viewed me In their eyes without God I had no moral compass As one zealous defender of the monotheistic philoso-phy lectured me without the supreme deity dictating my thoughts and actions there is nothing to stop me from killing people on the street

So while I was always treated with respect and kindness I felt sepa-

rated from the people around me There exists no bigger division between people than the trenches dug by religion

I relentlessly tried to breach this gulf I sipped tea with a street-side bookseller debated economic policy with Jordanian communists rolled balls of traditional mansaf in a fam-ilyrsquos home mdash all to no avail Always eluding me was the answer to that essential question How do I con-nect with the Jordanian people at a fundamental level

The answer came during the holi-est month of the Muslim calendar

Ramadan is the month of fasting that requires Muslims to abstain from eating and drinking from sunup to sundown Beyond the introspec-tion and religious reflection that tra-ditionally accompanies fasting it also strengthens ties between people as they collectively undertake the task

Considering the societal implica-tions of this practice I decided to fast Immediately I felt a change in my relationship with the people around me

On the first day about 10 min-utes before the call to prayer

that announced sundown and the end of the fast I brought a box of dates ndash a food traditionally used to break the fast ndash to the lobby of the hotel in which I was staying Yusuf a manager with whom I had always been on very good terms looked at the gift and understanding the sym-bolic significance of the dried fruit asked me ldquoAre you fastingrdquo

ldquoYesrdquo I respondedA bright smile appeared on his

face and he quickly stood up to shake my hand The dialogue repeated itself innumerous times as the question quickly supplanted any investigation into my religion

Each time I answered my new friend smiled shook my hand and after forcing me to sit down brought tea or coffee or some food to share

Fasting opened doors into the society to which I had previously not even had access Every night of Ramadan I went downtown with a friend from the program mdash he also fasted mdash and stayed there for hours less an intruder on the community there than a part of the group

We broke fast in restaurants sur-rounded by locals expectantly await-ing the call to prayer alongside them and as one digging into the food in front of us when the time came

After fast we sat for hours on the broad round concrete columns near a three-way intersection whiling away the time until suhoor ndash the meal eaten before beginning the dayrsquos fast ndash by talking and laughing with our friends and passersby The barriers between us were dimin-ished because we shared something special mdash I became a part of the local community

Ramadan kareem

Fellowship through fastingoff the Beat

Friday August 26 2011

Office of President releases payroll report

The UC Office of the President released the University of Califor-niarsquos annual payroll report for 2010 Wednesday revealing a recent trend of declining state funding for employee compensation

The report which outlines both the sources funding payroll and the groups receiving compensation pinpoints the two major sources for funding of the pay-roll as state general funds which includes educational fees and teaching hospitals

State funding for payroll declined by $174 million to 267 percent in 2010 making up 2 percent less of the total payroll than in 2009 Total pay from teaching hospitals increased by $76 million 4 percent higher than the fraction of total compensation it made up in 2009 according to the report

In 2008 however state general funds and educational fees made up over 30 percent of payroll funding ac-cording to the 2008 payroll report

ldquo(The decline) makes it harder to pay our staff and faculty makes it harder to keep tuition levels stable makes it harder to keep our buildings runningrdquo said Leslie Sepuka a spokes-person for the UC Office of the Presi-dent in an email

Sepuka added that the decline in

By Damian Ortellado | Staffdortelladodailycalorg

state funding especially affects the uni-versity because state funds are flexible whereas grants for instance are not

ldquoI think the key point is that the funds from the state are unrestricted mdash so the university has the flexibility to use them where it sees a needrdquo Sepuka said in the email ldquoIf the university gets a grant for a specific purpose (mela-noma research) you canrsquot use it to keep the library open for extended hours during finalsrdquo

Although funding from federal gov-ernment sources increased by $80 million the increase was due primarily to increased funding for research ac-cording to a press release from the UC Office of the President Sepuka said the increased funding is a step in the right direction for the university

ldquoThe medical centers have been growingrdquo Sepuka said ldquoThey also help support the medical schools and stu-dents mdash so that is a positive for the universityrdquo said Sepuka in an email

The growth in research expenditures also explains the total payroll increase to just under $1 billion in 2010 a 1 per-cent increase from 2009 However the rise is smaller compared to previous years according to the press release

Sepuka said the increase in research spending shows the importance of the university mdash which develops more pat-ents than any university in the nation mdash in the scientific community

Health care personnel made up

the largest percentage of payroll for any single group academic or non-academic with 216 percent of com-pensation funding going to the group mdash almost 5 percent higher than their fraction of the total payroll in 2009 Health care personnel have made up the largest percentage of payroll since 2007 according to calendar year pay-roll reports from previous years

In the 2005-2006 fiscal year health care personnel made up a little more than half of the payroll percentage they made up in total 2010 UC employee compensation according to a 2005-2006 fiscal year payroll report

Health sciences faculty members remain among the top 10 earning em-ployees at the university along with athletic coaches who mdash unlike faculty mdash are paid from non-state funds ac-cording to the press release These faculty members are often well-known in the medical community and receive much of their income from their clini-cal practices at UC medical centers

According to the report about 40 percent of payroll went to academic personnel such as professors lectur-ers student assistants and librarians

In fiscal year 2005-06 academic personnel made up almost 80 percent of total compensation nearly double what they did in 2010 according to the 2005-06 fiscal year report

Damian Ortellado covers higher education

HIGHER EDUCATION

PRESSPASSDAILYCALORG

Use your Press Pass at these locations and save moneyThe Press Pass is Berkeleyrsquos FREE discount card

FREE 16 oz SodaWhen You Order a

Large Super Burrito

North amp South Side

Any Slice amp Sodafor $319 plus tax

www

How can I make my Berkeley business more successfulWe can helpberkeleychambercom

This publication is not an official publication of the University of California but is published by an independent corporation using the name The Daily Californian pursuant to a license granted by the Regents of the University of California Advertisements appearing in The Daily Californian

reflect the views of the advertisers only They are not an expression of editorial opinion or of the views of the staff Opinions expressed in The Daily Californian by editors or columnists regarding candidates for political office or legislation are those of the editors or columnists and are not those of the Independent Berkeley Student Publishing Co Inc Unsigned editorials are the collective opinion of the Senior Editorial Board Reproduction

in any form whether in whole or in part without written permission from the editor is strictly prohibited Copyright 2011 All rights reserved

Mailing AddressPO Box 1949

Berkeley CA 94701-0949

Fax(510) 849-2803

Emailopiniondailycalorg

Letters to the Editor and Op-edsLetters and Op-eds may be sent via email Letters sent via US mail should be typed and must include

signature daytime phone number and place of residence All letters are edited for space and clarityOp-eds must be no longer than 700 words Letters must be no longer than 350 words

EDITORIALS

ldquoOpinion Many people seem to think that California is in a death spiral This is not true mdash California is extremely resilient wersquove managed to keep Berkeleyrsquos very high standingrdquo

mdashUC Berkeley Chancellor Robert Birgeneau

Editorial Cartoon By Anna Vignet

Berkeleyrsquos Independent Student Press mdash Celebrating 140 years

Senior Editorial BoardTomer Ovadia Editor in Chief and President

Leslie Toy Managing Editor

Emma Anderson Opnion Page EditorJordan Bach-Lombardo University News Editor

Stephanie Baer City News EditorTaryn Erhardt Photo Editor

Kelly Fang Multimedia Editor

Jonathan Kuperberg Sports Editor Gopal Lalchandani Night Editor

David Liu Arts amp Entertainment EditorMatthew Putzulu Development Editor

Ashley Villanueva Design Editor

First came the dreaded fur-lough program Then came fewer graduate student

instructors due to a lack of fund-ing continued competitive offers from big-budget private schools and the layoffs of colleagues and friends all while salaries for many UC faculty and staff members remained well below market rate

And yet across UC Berkeley and the entire UC many professors and staff members have chosen to stay For this we commend them and believe that the UC merit pro-gram announced last Wednesday is a step in the right direction

However we also hope that the university sees the bigger picture It is not only the level of pay that keeps these professors supervi-sors financial analysts and others from fleeing to Harvard Stanford or other private prestigious uni-versities but also the caliber of the schoolrsquos research students and educational atmosphere

Under this merit plan faculty and non-union staff members will be eligible to receive raises based on performance evaluations The raises mdash set at 3 percent of overall base pay mdash will be a much-needed reprieve especially for non-repre-sented staff who have not received pay increases for four years and

who have had to take pay-cuts during the furlough program

Through all the hurt that the university has experienced mdash with the slashing of $650 million in state funding this year alone the elimination of phones from many campus departments two years ago the dwindling budgets of aca-demic units mdash faculty and staff members have certainly shoul-dered a good share of the impacts In discussions of budget cuts the fear of loss in scholarly quality repeatedly surfaces But the cam-pus maintains high rankings because our outstanding instruc-tors and role models stick around

This new plan demonstrates that the UC acknowledges the need to retain these academics shows that those at the top value academic excellence and suggests the UC is aware of the ramifica-tions of potential brain drain

At the same time the UC needs to pursue more than just fiscal incentives We realize that money is tight but we hope that the UC will seek to support other pro-grams that make employees want to stay mdash the space for innovative and thorough research students eager to learn and grow and a community that lives and breathes academic excellence

UNIVERSITY ISSUESThe University of Californiarsquos new merit raise plan is a first step but other factors affect employee rentention

More than monetary

For more than two years they sat together in an Iranian prison For more

than two years they fended off sickness and depression watch-ing as their comrade showed signs of sickness so serious that she was allowed to return home without them And now the two UC Berkeley alumni may face eight more years of the same hei-nous conditions after they were sentenced

Though the verdict was read the campus community cannot consider this case closed

In the summer of 2009 Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal were hik-ing near the Iran-Iraq border with Bauerrsquos fiance Sarah Shourd when the three were seized by Iranian authorities accused of trespassing and spying mdash claims which those close to them have vehemently denied

The drawn-out legal process came to somewhat of a resolution last Saturday with an eight-year sentence But the evidence against them is extremely shaky if at all existent

With a brand new freshman class finding their way around UC Berkeley this week it is the campus communityrsquos duty to not let Bauer and Fattal become irrel-

evant These men walked through the same doorways to get to class and were taught by some of the same professors that many of us engage with today

We as students cannot exe-cute a plan to solve this situation The relations between the United States and Iran are beyond our reach We cannot offer diplomat-ic solutions or economic resourc-es We can however offer a resounding voice with the UC Berkeley community in unison with the friends and families of Bauer and Fattal We must call on others within the campus mdash stu-dent government officials admin-istrators students and professors mdash to renew the call for Bauer and Fattalrsquos and release And we must remain steadfast in our determi-nation to keep Bauer and Fattal alive in the campus conscious-ness and discourse

No matter how much time passes we should not and cannot forget these alumni who have captured the attention of the nation and the world As Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said ldquoIt is time for them to return home and be reunited with their fami-liesrdquo

We must stand behind our fel-low Golden Bears

CAMPUS AFFAIRSUC Berkeley must continue to acknowledge two campus alumni sentenced to eight years in prison by Iran

Supporting the hikers

Friday August 26 2011

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

Jillian Wertheim Blog Editor

Op-ED

I want to welcome everyone back to campus and share some reflections on what I think makes this campus so special

It is no secret that UC Berkeley is going through challenging times and that the statersquos persistent dis-investment in higher education forces us to make unhappy choices such as tuition increases

I am often asked how we deal with these challenges The answer is that everything we do is filtered through our commitment to access and excellence We are committed to maintaining and enhancing UC Berkeleyrsquos ranking as one of the top research universities in the world Forty-six new faculty will join our ranks this year 156 of our entering graduate students are winners of prestigious National Science Foundation multi-year fel-lowships and our entering under-graduate class is the product of the most competitive admissions pro-cess in our history We continue to launch cutting-edge interdisci-plinary research initiatives in the sciences humanities and social sciences such as the Berkeley Energy and Climate Change Institute the Haas Diversity Research Center and the Berkeley Institute for Jewish Law and Israeli Law Economy and Society

We are committed to maintain-ing broad social access to this excellence Our financial aid poli-cies and our private fundraising for scholarships have made it pos-sible for us to cushion the effects of tuition increases on all students who come from households that have a total annual income of less than $80000 These financial aid policies have allowed UC Berkeley to serve as an engine of upward

By George BreslauerSpecial to the Daily Calopiniondailycalorg

mobility for huge numbers of low-income students Now that tuition increases have raised the stakes our challenge will be to develop strategies for better supporting students from households earning $80000 to $120000

Of course all our students deserve access to a first-rate cur-riculum as well Toward that end we have invested some of the funds from tuition increases and nonresident tuition into expanding access to required Reading and Composition courses to large introductory classes in physics chemistry mathematics and statis-tics and to foreign language cours-es Next on this agenda is the con-struction of two new biology teaching laboratories made possi-ble by funds from an external source which will then make it possible for us to add sections in introductory biology classes

Improvement of the campusrsquos infrastructure is always on our radar screen One cannot deliver 21st century research and teaching in antiquated laboratories librar-ies classrooms and facilities At least a half-dozen new buildings have been completed and opened in recent years and another four will come on line in the next year and a half Most of these buildings have been paid for predominantly from private fundraising and seis-mic funds from the state

We also aspire to excellence in our administrative operations and services mdash areas in which Berkeley has historically lagged That is one of the principal purposes of Operational Excellence

Access and excellence are expensive to maintain but that is our determined goal Funds from the State of California for operat-ing Berkeley now constitute only 11 to 12 percent of our total reve-nues While we will continue to lobby vigorously for state funding

we must plan for and are actively pursuing alternative sources of funds In addition to tuition increases and larger nonresident undergraduate enrollments (shift-ing the ratio from 90 percent Californians to 80 percent Californians) we have raised $22 billion in private fundraising dur-ing the past six years and antici-pate completing our $3 billion campaign within 30 months We are also exploring entrepreneurial initiatives that will provide new income streams for departments within the university

We have a lot going for us an all-star faculty a global reputation strong support from a large alumni base the Bay Area as an attractive place to live connections to Silicon Valley and to Asia a committed workforce and a lock on the status of being the preeminent public uni-versity in the world Moreover wersquove been through very hard times before the Great Depression the political controversies of the 1950s and 1960s and the slashing of our state allocations in the late 1970rsquos the early 1990rsquos the early 2000rsquos and again in the late 2000rsquos Yet historically we have always bounced back and retained our pre-eminence as a public universi-ty There is something intangible that has kept UC Berkeley resilient through all these trials Surely our commitment to maintaining both access and excellence mdash and to serving the public good mdash has been an inspiration to students staff and faculty attracting them to this remarkable institution

We would value your thoughts on what makes UC Berkeley so special and resilient You can post your comments on our Facebook page at wwwfacebookcomucberkeley

George Breslauer is the Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost at UC Berkeley

Our campus has a commitment to both access and excellence

5opinionThe Daily CalifornianFriday August 26 2011

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

d

ailyc

alo

pin

ion

is o

n tw

itter

op-ed

This week marks the fortieth anni-versary of Chez Panisse the legendary Berkeley restaurant that pioneered the Slow Food movement that has now prompted Americans to desire seasonal local organic whole foods The ldquomotherrdquo of Chez Panisse Alice Waters credits her student experienc-es at UC Berkeley as inspiration She was among a group of countercultural activists who found their vision for sustainable agriculture on Sproul Plaza in the heady days of the Free Speech Movement

What might have seemed at the time an idealistic impractical pipe dream became four decades later a popular widespread economically viable movement The rise of farmersrsquo markets community gardens and Edible Schoolyards in public schools can be traced in part to UC Berkeley and its studentsrsquo capacity for inven-tion There is much to learn by revisit-ing this history not just as a nostalgic walk down memory lane This history is a reminder that paradigm shifts happen through creativity and collec-tive invention with protest and rejec-tion of a status quo only part of a much larger process

We begin the 2011-12 academic year with the inauspicious news that for the first time in the University of Californiarsquos history students are con-tributing more than the public to the cost of their education With the spec-ter of continuing budgetary shortfalls and tuition hikes looming students are likely to be paying even more by yearrsquos end UC Berkeley and UCLA are admitting unprecedented numbers of out-of-state students their full tuition payments backfilling the statersquos fiscal withdrawal What exactly is it that makes the University of California ldquopublicrdquo And how is our university ldquoof rdquo California when campuses now receive so little of their overall operat-ing expenses from the state mdash at Berkeley as low as 12 percent

These are big fundamental long-range questions We ask them in a cli-mate of instability and duress It appears that higher education mdash not just in California but also nationally and globally mdash is undergoing a pro-found paradigm shift the likes of which we have not seen for at least 50 years The simultaneous emergence of higher educationrsquos first great techno-logical change in five centuries mdash the digital revolution mdash only compounds

our instability for this is yet one more mobile tectonic plate

The 2011-12 year is likely to see many political flashpoints tuition increases layoffs organizational restructuring a rise of ldquopermatemprdquo lecturers challenges to shared gover-nance a further erosion of the ties that once bound UCrsquos world renowned sys-tem Students may have difficulty get-ting classes the wheels of Operational Excellence will roll along to a destina-tion widely proclaimed yet remarkably ill-defined (ie how will we know when we are ldquoexcellentrdquo) Protest actions with their attendant Twitter feeds will inevitably pull us into a myopic fixa-tion on the present The battlegrounds will be multiple and dynamic

Yet protests wonrsquot make a future Neither will managerial exercises in efficiency Our needs far transcend what either the flash mob or organi-zational restructuring can produce

We need a big rethink about the future of higher education The last great paradigm shift in higher educa-tion happened half a century ago with the University of California its epicen-ter Can we once again be a leader

The scale of our current challenges is formidable its contours complex its inner workings opaque Unlike the last great period of innovation in higher education the signs are not auspicious The present has neither unprecedented prosperity nor the expansive vision that marked former UC President Clark Kerrrsquos era and the 1960 California Master Plan for Higher Education

Today a new design for higher edu-cation is unlikely to come from on high and itrsquos unlikely to come from one man The future of higher educa-tion mdash if it is to be bright mdash may well require collective invention It may require the very sort of collaborative ingenuity and original thinking that

gave rise to the Slow Food movement a product of Berkeleyrsquos soil

If you have walked by the Berkeley Art Museum this week you may have noticed corn growing outside Yes corn This is a sign that the artistsrsquo collective OPENrestaurant has taken up residence with their new project ldquoOPENed Education as Experiencerdquo On Saturday Aug 27 from 11 am to 5 pm they will transform the muse-um into an open classroom and living kitchen tracing the history of Chez Panisse and pointing to alternative strategies new and historical for the future of education They invite us to inaugurate the new academic year by looking into our past in order to envi-sion our future They invite us to cul-tivate not just corn but also the art of the long view

Catherine Cole is a professor in the Department of Theater Dance and Performance Studies at UC Berkeley

deanne chenstaff

The art of the long view seeing UC futuresBy Catherine ColeSpecial to the Daily Calopiniondailycalorg

Follow us on Twitter

Tweet your responses and letters to the editor they may be published

6 news Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

From Front

readiness Some say test does not gauge college preparedness

BERKELEY BREAKDOWN

Caleb Dardick the UC Berkeley director of local government and communityrelations has been an important part of the community for the past 16 years

eugene w laustaff

The surface of a material is usually as far as scientists have delved when exploring the objectrsquos chemistry be-cause it is where the most important reactions happen

But with relatively unexplored ma-terials such as semiconductors and superconductors looking past the surface has become increasingly im-portant which Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory scientists have accomplished in recent research

In a study published Aug 14 in the

After being a part of the Berkeley community for 16 years working for the city and the campus Caleb Dardick UC Berkeley director of local government and community relations is returning to his river roots to take up a new posi-tion at home in Nevada County

Dardick mdash who has been instrumen-tal to town-gown relations since immers-ing himself in Berkeley politics as former Mayor Shirley Deanrsquos legislative aid mdash will be moving to Nevada City to serve as executive director for the South Yuba River Citizens League In June Dardick applied for the position and was chosen earlier after a nationwide search

ldquoHe brings incredibly strong com-munication skills expertise in strate-gic planning mdash certainly in coalition building and program managementrdquo said Kim Milligan interim executive director for SYRCL

In his new position Dardick will lead the organization in its mission to protect the Yuba River and Watershed while working on statewide issues such as the recovery of salmon in the Yuba River mdash named one of Americarsquos Most Endangered Rivers in May by the conservation group American Rivers

ldquoWe went to the Yuba River all the time the older kids who could drive would drive through the neighbor-hood honk the horn and all the little kids would come running out and jump in the back of the truck and wersquod go to the river for the dayrdquo Dardick said ldquoWe just grew up lounging on the rocks and swimming in the beautiful clear water itrsquos part of my DNArdquo

After managing his fatherrsquos cam-paign for county supervisor in 1994 mdash his first foray into politics mdash Dardick worked on several more campaigns including Deanrsquos run-off campaign in December 1994 and then served as Deanrsquos legislative aid for four years

ldquoI became immersed in Berkeley

By Claire Perlman | Senior Staffcperlmandailycalorg

By Stephanie Baer | Senior Staffsbaerdailycalorg

CheCk Onlinewwwdailycalorg

Claire Perlman explains how Berkeley lab scientists have studied electronic structures

CheCk Onlinewwwdailycalorg

Listen to an interview of Caleb Dardick about his experiences serving the campus and the city

bull The percentage of Berkeley Unified School District stu-dents that took and passed the exit exam for math decreased from 82 percent for the class of 2010 to 81 per-cent in the class of 2011 and for English and language arts decreased from 84 to 81 percent

bull Passing black BUSD students decreased from 63 percent for the class of 2010 to 57 percent for the class of 2011 for the math portion of the exit exam and from 68 percent to 57 percent for the English portion Statewide the numbers increased from 66 to 68 percent and 71 to 72 percent respectively

bull Passing Latino BUSD students increased from 73 percent for 2010 to 75 percent for 2011 for the math portion of the exit exam and from 74 percent to 78 percent for the English portion Statewide the numbers increased from 74 to 77 percent and 73 to 76 percent respectively

bull Passing white BUSD students increased from 97 percent for 2010 to 99 percent for 2011 for both portions of the exam Statewide the numbers stayed constant at 91 per-cent for both

All numbers are from the exit exam administered in the 10th grade the first time the exit exam is administered and when most students take the exam

Research uses new technique to study the electronic structure of materials

Director of community relations to leave post

politics and I loved it It was the most interesting and exciting job I ever hadrdquo Dardick said ldquoYou could be dealing with potholes in the morning and the cityrsquos position on divestment in Nigeria in the afternoonrdquo

In 1998 Dardick was hired by UC Berkeleyrsquos department of community re-lations as interim director of the Berkeley Alliance mdash a collaboration between UC Berkeley and Berkeley Unified School District that still exists today which aims to build community partnerships to ef-fect change on critical social and eco-nomic equity issues in Berkeley

Two years later he decided to work for himself as a community relations consultant working on projects like the Ed Roberts Campus at the Ashby BART station and the David Brower Center

When Ed Roberts a UC Berkeley alum and leader in the local disabili-ties rights movement passed away in 1995 Dardick mdash under the direction of Dean mdash put together a task force of local activists disability rights leaders and campus community members to honor Robertsrsquo memory

ldquoMayor Dean asked me to represent the office at his memorial and I was hon-ored to do that because I grew up in the disability rights movement my father was a person with a disabilityrdquo he said

After 10 years of working for him-self Dardick returned to the campusrsquo community relations office where he continued to work on projects to con-nect the campus and city communities through community service projects and partnerships like the Joint South-side Safety Patrol program

ldquoHe knew the community He knew the various stakeholders and he had a manner or an ability to bring people to the table and work out solutionsrdquo said Councilmember Laurie Capitelli ldquoTheyrsquoll be big shoes to fillrdquo

Stephanie Baer is the city news editor

journal Nature Materials lab researchers explored the concept of using a high-en-ergy version of the technique of angle-re-solved photoemission mdash HARPES mdash to study the electronic structure of materi-als Though HARPES and its less intense counterpart ARPES have been around since 1905 when Albert Einstein first ex-plained the photoelectric effect mdash the ba-sis for these techniques mdash scientists have only recently been able to make use of the techniques

The photoelectric effect an impor-tant part of the foundation of quantum mechanics means that light behaves like a quantum of energy or a photon which can give all of its energy to an electron and liberate it as a photoelec-tron which then flies away explained Chuck Fadley mdash a distinguished profes-sor of physics at UC Davis an Advanced Light Source professor at Berkeley Lab and co-author of the paper

ldquoOne then measures the energy of the electron and its direction as pre-cisely as possible and from these measurements can deduce exquisite detail about how the electron was moving in the material before it was

ejected how the atoms are bound to one another whether they are magnet-ic or not how the material will conduct electricityrdquo he said

Without a sufficiently bright light source mdash and therefore sufficiently pow-erful beams of hard x-rays mdash scientists were unable to penetrate the materials on the atomic level that was necessary to observe interactions of photons and elec-trons beyond the surface

Because HARPES uses higher en-ergy it can reveal interactions signifi-cantly past the scope of what the less powerful ARPES can do According to Fadley ARPES uses ultraviolet and soft x-ray photons and therefore can-

not penetrate much past one nanome-ter whereas with HARPES scientists can measure photoelectrons and elec-tronic properties at depths anywhere between 6 and 10 nanometers

ldquoYou really give them a kickrdquo said Alexander Gray a graduate student at UC Davis and Berkeley Lab and a co-author of the study ldquoThis way even with electrons that are deep deep inside of the material you can really get the information about the elec-tronic properties of the material You can seek them out you can catch them and you can analyze themrdquo

Claire Perlman is the assistant uni-versity news editor

From Front

unemplOyment Rates in state higher than in rest of country

From Front

disCriminatiOn Initial complaint was filed in June 2009

Pyle in dismissing the merit of Senigarrsquos claims said that ldquoUCSF has an historic commitment to diversity in the work forcerdquo

ldquo(Fritz) had a very strong record of hiring retaining and promoting Afri-can-American employeesrdquo she added

A judge dismissed a wage discrimi-nation complaint that had originally been part of Senigarrsquos claim accord-ing to Pyle However Senigar is still claiming damages for wages he alleges he should have been paid because he was passed over for promotion

Senigar is claiming damages for that amount of money for the amount of money necessary to cover his medi-cal expenses and for the amount of money to compensate for among other things a ldquogeneral loss of self-

esteem and well-beingrdquo according to the second amended complaint The claim does not specify an exact amount for these damages

ldquoThis case is not about the moneyrdquo said Pamela Price Senigarrsquos attorney ldquoHe should have been given the op-portunity to succeed The denial of that opportunity is the issuerdquo

Senigar began to work for the uni-versity in October 1999 Over the seven years leading up to the first incident Price said that Senigar received posi-tive reviews from his superiors Senigar was fired by UCSF prior to the case go-ing to trial but it is not part of the cur-rent complaint according to Price

Pyle said that Fritz was ultimately laid off in 2009 for the same budget-ary reasons that the position in ques-

tion was never filledSenigar filed his initial complaint

on June 23 2009 A first amended complaint was filed on Aug 20 2009 and a second amended complaint mdash the complaint that forms the basis for the trial currently underway mdash was filed on Aug 16 2009

Because the complaint was not settled out of court it is now going to trial mdash an outcome that Senigar did not want to happen Price said

ldquoHe spent a lot of time trying to resolve it internally (so) a trial is totally a last resortrdquo she said ldquoHe never imagined he would have to go through the ordeal of filing the law-suit or going to trialrdquo

Jordan Bach-Lombardo is the uni-versity news editor

not gauge college preparedness says Mary Perry deputy director of Ed-Source a nonprofit organization that researches education in California

A separate report released earlier this month from the not-for-profit organization ACT mdash which admin-isters a test of the same name de-signed to measure college prepared-ness mdash seemingly contradicts the exit exam numbers showing college pre-paredness levels declining across the state from 31 percent meeting ACTrsquos benchmarks to 30 percent a decrease of roughly 1500 students

Perry says the ACT reportrsquos num-bersrsquo discrepancy may only be superfi-cial She said ACT test takers are self-selecting college-bound students whereas every California high school student must take the exit exam

ldquoYou donrsquot know whether the de-cline yoursquore seeing is a reduction of the skill set of California students or is because the group taking the test changedrdquo she added

State department spokesperson Jung says the two tests shouldnrsquot be compared because the exit exam measures math skills through sev-enth grade and English and language arts through the 10th grade while the ACT tests a studentrsquos ability to take college level courses

UC spokesperson Ricardo Vazquez said most UC admits take the SAT mdash a college-readiness test administered by the not-for-profit College Board mdash and a growing number are taking both the ACT and the SAT though few take the ACT exclusively Exact numbers for university were not im-mediately available as of press time

According to Perry 50 percent of graduating seniors in California took

the SAT while 22 percent took the ACT in 2010

She said the state is working on new standards that will better incorporate

college preparedness into high school requirements like the exit exam

Mihir Zaveri is the lead develop-ment and capital projects reporter

percent Since at least 2002 the state unemployment rate has been consis-tently higher than the national rate according to the statersquos analysis

In a press conference Thursday morning Gov Jerry Brown unveiled a three-part strategy called Califor-nia Jobs First plan aimed at lowering the statersquos unemployment rate The plan which will require a two-thirds vote from the state legislature for ap-proval would provide a tax credit for

businesses that hire more employees and also remove sales tax on manu-facturing equipment for startup com-panies during their first three years of business

ldquoBoosting job growth in California is a top priority and this proposal is a critical step in making sure the state does everything it can to support lo-cal job creationrdquo Brown said at the conference

Although Brown did not say specif-

ically how many jobs he estimates the plan will create he seemed confident that it would help lower the statersquos un-employment rate mdash the second high-est in the nation last month

ldquoWe know the future depends on growing our way out of this economic morassrdquo Assembly Speaker John Per-ez D-Los Angeles said at the confer-ence

Soumya Karlamangla is the assis-tant city news editor

CAMPUS FIGURES

RESEARCh amp IDEAS

7The Daily Californian PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011

TEXT ldquoNEDSVIPrdquo TO 22022

TO GET UP TO $20 OFF

Get up to 50 off flashdrives school supplies starting at $50 and more

NEDrsquoS BERKELYBOOKSTORE

2480 Bancroft Waynedsbookscomucb

8 paid advertisement Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

Catholics

Newman Hall amp Dwight Way

wwwcalnewmanorg

Monday 822 Ice Cream Social 8pm Tuesday 823 Newman Orientation Event (includes dinner) 6pm

Cal

College Ave

Wednesday 824 Rosary Group 8pm

Sunday 828 Mass 5pm Student Dinner 6pm Candlelight Mass 10pm

(across from unit 2)

Monday 829 Newman Orientation Event Part II 6pm

Saturday 827 Kayaking at Berkeley Marina Meet at Newman Hall 930am

Holy Spirit Parish

All events are ADA Accessible

Catholics Cal

Newman Hall Holy Spirit Parish

Monday 822 Ice Cream Social 8pmTuesday 823 Newman Orientation Event (includes dinner) 6pm

Wednesday 824 Rosary Group 8pm Saturday 827 Kayaking at Berkeley Marina Meet at Newman Hall 930amSunday 828 Mass 5pm Student Dinner 6pm Candlelight Mass 10pm

Monday 829 Newman Orientation Event Part II 6pm

All events are ADA Accessible

College Ave ampDwight Way

(across from unit 2)wwwcalnewmanorg

You beg your members to table on Sproul People walk right by You post hundreds of flyers in the hall and they get removed or covered up hours later Face it flyering is a costly labor-intensive process But therersquos a better way

Post your flyer in the most visible spot on

campus The Daily Cal

HEY STUDENT GROUPS

Take advantage of this savings now advertisingdailycalorg | 510-280-2452THE RULES Ads must run in four consecutive issues in AugustSeptember 2011 Student groups must pre-pay for ads This offer is only valid to UC Berkeley student groups officially registered with the ASUC or Campus Life amp Leadership

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLACK)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLUE)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (white)

LEVELS OF SERVICE AT A STEEP DISCOUNT TO STUDENT GROUPS ALL PLANS INCLUDE AD DESIGN AND APPEARANCES ON DAILYCALORG THIS IS A LIMITED OFFER ONLY FOR STUDENT GROUPS

SIXTEENTH OF A PAGE QUARTER OF A PAGE HALF OF A PAGE

But I started my dream of being a reporter by working in Eshleman Hall at the Daily Cal

Mark Summers REPORTER AT THE WALL STREET JOURNAL DAILY CAL ALUM rsquo

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLACK)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLUE)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (white)

Wersquove been a starting place for thousands of professionals who lead extraordinary careers in media advertising anad business If yoursquore ready to start your career now go to applydailycalorg

JOIN THE DAILY CALRECRUITMENT MEETINGS

Friday Aug 26 4pmTuesday Aug 31 5pm

600 Eshleman Hall

We are hiringWeb Developers Marketers Multimedia producers News Sports and Arts amp Entertainment reporters Photographers Copy Editors Designers Bloggers Illustrators Ads Representatives and more

SportSFriday august 26 2011 bull dailycal orgsports

AtCalwearemorethanfamiliarwith the aftermath of losing anincrediblequarterbackPerhapscur-rent students only know AaronRodgers as the alumnus that wonthe Super Bowl last season but Irememberhimas the savior ofCalfootball that brought us somerespectability AfterRodgersboltedfortheNFLcoachJeffTedfordhasyettotrotouta competent let alone comparablequarterbackWersquovejusthadaflurryofdisappointments In volleyball the setter is essen-tially the quarterback of the teamShersquostheonethatdeliverstheballtoattackers which requires remark-ablerapportandtimingwithhittersquickdecision-makingandtheabil-itytoreaddefenses TheCalvolleyballteamlosesitsquarterback this season in CarliLloydButdonrsquotexpect it tomeanthedemiseoftheBearsasRodgersrsquodepartureprovedtobe Lloyd probably meant more toherteamthanRodgersThenationalPlayer of the Year Lloyd institutedthenewup-tempooffensethatledtothe squadrsquos incredible run to theconference title and debut in thenationaltitlegame More importantly she was theheart and soul of the team Therewasnodoubtshewastheleaderonthe court keeping her teammatestogether and hitters focused Shesimplyrefusedto letherteamloseandhadawayofkillingopponentsrsquomomentumwithbigplays HerintensitywasinfectiousanditrsquoshardtoimaginetheBearsgoing

Bearsrsquo new quarterback

wonrsquot stop surging Cal

Christina Jones cjonesdailycalorg

ldquoIt sounds demeaning to say tune-up but I would say these

games are more of a way to get momentum going for our teamrdquo mdash Volleyball coach Rich Feller on the preseason

Bears open 2011 season with barren Riverside club

Eightmonthsafterdropping theNCAAchampi-onshipmatchtoPennStatelastDecembertheNo3Cal volleyball team will see itsfirstactionofthe2011seasonthisweekend

The Bears will host the CalMoltenClassictodayandSaturdayat Haas Pavillion inviting UCRiverside Fairfield and FloridaInternational University intoBerkeley

Calwillbelookingtorepeatitsperformance from 2010when itwon both of its matches of thepreseason tournament tallyingvictories over UC Santa Barbara(25-1825-1528-26)andManhattanCollege(25-825-1525-7)

Outside hitterTarahMurreywho returns to theBears as the lone senior was named the tourna-mentrsquosmost valuable player after leading the teamwith11killsand14digsTheBearsrsquooffensewassolidlogging a 341 attack percentage across the twogames

Calshouldbepoisedtoseesimilarresultstonightwhen it opens its seasonagainstUCRiversideat 5pmTheHighlandershadlittletocelebratein2010postinga2-30recordincludinga0-16markintheBigWestRiversidewaspicked to finish last in theBigWestin2011

ldquoItsoundsdemeaningtosaytune-upbutIwouldsaythesegamesaremoreofawaytogetmomentumgoing for our teamrdquo coach Rich Feller said ldquoThethreeweeksofpreseasonaremeanttoestablishsomesortoflineupandmomentumrdquo

Though theBearsmightbepusheda littlemoreonSaturdaywhentheysquareoffwithFairfieldat11amandFIUat7pmCallikelywonrsquotseeanyseri-ous competition Still the squadknows it needs togetofftoaquickstarttotheseason

ldquoYouplayeverygame likes itrsquos thenational titlerdquoMurreysaidldquoYoursquorenevergoingtoplayperfectvol-leyball but you always have to respect your oppo-nentrdquo

TheBearswillalsobeusingthisweekendaswellasthematchesintheupcomingweekstosolidifyitsstartinglineupThoughtheteamreturnssixstartersfrom2010 itwillneedto findawaytoreplacethepresenceofCarliLloydtheAVCANationalPlayerofthe Year in 2010 Lloyd finished her career with5697assistsmdashgoodenough for secondall time inCalhistory

By Connor Byrne | Staffcbyrnedailycalorg

All-American Tarah Murrey (middle) returns to lead the Bears as the biggest offensive threat Shannon hamiltonfile

when tonight at 7 pmwhere haaS pavilion

Quick LookCal v UC riverSide Bears slightly modify the

recipe for success in 2011

TheCal volleyball team is coming off itsbest season in program history The Bearstook their first Pac-10 title andmade theirdebutinthenationalchampionship One school of thought would be not tomesswithsuccessandsimplyplugplayersinto fill the twovacantpositionsat setteranddefensivespecialistinthestartinglineup Reigning AVCA Coach of the Year RichFeller is taking a slightly different routeWhile the overall offensive and defensiveschemeswillremaininplaceFellersaidheismixing things up in the lineup beginningwithtonightrsquosopeneragainstUCRiverside ldquoI donrsquot think yoursquoll see any sweepingchangesrdquo Feller said ldquoWe have a lotmoreweaponsnowMinusCarli(Lloyd)whowasthesetterweincreasedouroffensivethreatsbythreeorfournewplayersrdquo Last season the starters were solidifiedearly in the preseason and didnrsquot changemuchThisseasoneventhoseaccomplishedstarters thatwerekey contributors last yearhavetofightfortheirpositions MostnotablyCorreyJohnsonwhogar-neredAll-Pac10andAVCAhonorablemen-tionaccoladesasarightsidehitterlastsea-sonisdukingitoutwithtwooftheconfer-encersquos top blockers Shannon Hawari andKatBrownforaspotinthemiddle ldquoMostlyweneedoneof themiddleposi-tionstobeabletohitbehindthesetterexcep-tionally wellrdquo Feller said ldquoCorrey does that

By Christina Jones | Senior Staffcjonesdailycalorg

Setter PAGe 11 SeASon Preview PAGe 11 volleybAll PAGe 11

better than anyone We may continue tobounceherbetweenmiddleandrightsiderdquo IfJohnsondoesnrsquotwinamiddlespotshersquollbattle highly regarded freshman ChristinaHigginsforapositionontherightside As Feller experimentswith rotations thesetterpositionisforeseeablylocked After two years as Lloydrsquos understudyEllyBarrettwilltakethehelmTheuntestedjuniorhassomehugeshoestofillmdashLloydearnedNational Player of the Year honorslast yearmdashbut benefits from two years ofexperiencesettingtheB-team Barrett will be surrounded by powerfulattackers tohelpher ease into the roleAll-AmericanTarahMurrey returns as the lonesenior on the team coming off a breakoutjuniorcampaigninwhichsheemergedasoneof the countryrsquos top outside hittersMurreywillstepintoLloydrsquosroleasthevocalleaderinadditiontothestrongestoffensivethreat WhileMurreywillcertainlybeheardshenotes that the team has a more reservedtemperamentthisyear ldquoMe and Carli last year we could get alittlerowdyrdquoMurreysaidldquoButIthinkthatonce we get more comfortable with eachotherallofourtruepersonalitiesaregoingto come out and itrsquos going to be a lot offunrdquo The ability to keep energy updown the

CheCk onlinewwwdailycalorg

Volleyball beat writer christina Jones discusses the Bearsrsquo outlook for the season ahead in a daily cal podcast

Last year

the Cal volleyball team was one win away from a

national title The Bears are set on seizing

the crown in 2011

volleyball | Season Preview

ChriStopher mCdermUtfile

10 sports Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

W soccer

Bison are question mark for CalBy Seung Y Lee | Staffsyleedailycalorg

LastyeartheCalwomenrsquossoccerteamhad its biggest victory of the seasonagainstHawaiiatEdwardsStadiumpil-ingeightgoalsfromsixdifferentplayers ButastheBearspreparetoflydowntoHonolulufortherematchcoachNeilMcGuiredoesnotexpectanotherrompovertheRainbowWahine ldquoHawaii has a new coach and theplayerswillbemoremotivatedrdquoMcGuiresaid ldquoWe are also playing in front ofabout 3000 people I donrsquot anticipateanysortofsimilarperformancesrdquo ParticipatinginthelsquoOhanaHotelsNoKai lsquoOi tournament Cal (1-1) will firstplayNorthDakotaState (1-0)onFridaynightat10pmbeforebattlingthetour-nament host Hawaii (0-1) on Sundaynightat8pmBothmatchesareat theWaipirsquooPeninsulaSoccerStadium NeithertheBisonnortheWahinehaveclose to the talent the Bears haveAlthoughNorthDakotaStatewonmore

thanhalfitsmatcheslastseasonmostofits opponentswere tiny obscure schoolsscattered across theDakotasWith suchobscurity Cal players and coaches arereadyingtoplaytheBisonknowingnearlynothing about the team The one thingthesquaddoesknowaboutNorthDakotaState is that it plays a 4-4-2 lineup themostcommonformationinsoccer Unlike with North Dakota State theBears have experience playing againstHawaiiLedbystarstrikerAlexMorganrsquoshattrickCalbatteredtheWahinedefenseinthesecondhalfscoringfivegoals HoweverSundayrsquosmatchwilllikelybeconsiderably different since theWahinehiredanewcoachMicheleNagamine LikeHawaiiCalisalsoinatransitionmode adjusting to the void left by theseniorMorganInthelasttwomatchestheBearshavestruggledtoscoregoalslosingtoPepperdine2-1andthreadingpastSanDiegoState2-1thankstotwolategoalsbyseniorJulieBenzandjuniorLaurenBattung ldquoWehavebeenpracticinghowtopen-etratethroughthedefensebacklineand

creating scoring chancesrdquo Benz saidldquoWeneedtobemorefearlessinfrontofthenetrdquo For the Bears the ghost of Morganmdash who scored nearly a third of thesquadrsquos totalgoals last seasonmdash loomslargeovertheteamdemandingalterna-tivewaysfortheteamtoscoreandwingames One of the solutions that McGuireand the coaches are hoping for is thereturn of injured forwards MirandaWhiteandRachelMercik Mercik a sophomore has shownpromiseinherfirstyearwiththeteamstarting four games and scoring twogoals White a utility player for bothdefense and offense mdash will be able toprovide experience alongside Benz andBattungintheattackinglines ldquoWhite and Mercik are two playersthatsufferedfromlong-termandshort-term injuries that have come backrdquoMcGuire said ldquoWe havenrsquot had themenough of the field so I want to givethesetwosomequalityplayingtimethisweekendrdquo

Lauren Battung scored Calrsquos first goal in its 2-1 overtime win over San Diego State on Sunday It was her second goal of the year sean goebelfile

M soccer

Bears cross the bay to open their seasonBy Camellia Senemar | Staffcsenemardailycalorg

Season openers always havetheirjittersespeciallywhenteamsare away from the comforts oftheirhomefield WiththesetwoforcesworkingagainsttheNo7Calmenrsquossoccerteam this Friday evening theBears travel across the bridge toface the University of SanFranciscoatNegoescoStadiumat7pm Thedisparityinthetwoteamsrsquostandings mdash the Dons areunrankedmdashmightprovideahinttowards thegamersquos resultbutonpaper the Bearsrsquo all-time seriesrecord against USF stands at14-21-2EventhoughCalshutouttheDonsintheirlastfourencoun-ters the matchup still stands atrickytest ldquoUSF is a strong and talentedteamrdquo junior co-captain StevenBirnbaumsaidldquoWearejustlook-ing to play our game and get agoodstarttotheseasonrdquo Last yearrsquos tilt at GoldmanField produced then-sophomoreJohn Fitzpatrickrsquos game winninggoal in overtime It was then-sophomoreAnthonySalcicciawhofound Birnbaumrsquos head for theassistonthelastcornerkickofthematch The goal gave his squadthe1-0leadandashareoftheBayAreaClassicwithStanford Those three lethal juniors arethe only players to return to theBearsrsquo 11-man lineup from 2010All posted career highs in goalsassistsandpoints in their sopho-moreyearsandwillbelookingtoadd to their tallies Birnbaum isthesolereturningstarterfromthebacklineandisjoinedbySalciccia

as a fellow co-captain The cur-rentmemberswillhavebigshoesto fill after last seasonrsquos highlysuccessful campaign saw fiveseniors and one junior head toMajorLeagueSoccer CoachKevinGrimeswill havehis optionsopenwith this youngteammdashmorethanhalfareenter-ing their freshmen and sopho-more yearsThe five timePac-10Coach of the Yearmost recentlyawarded in 2010 also has twoexperienced forwards redshirtjuniors Kyle Lunt and MichaelMunozathisdisposal ldquoWe are confident with ourteamrdquo Birnbaum said ldquoAll theunderclassmen are very talentedandwillbeabigpartofourteamthisyearrdquo Calhasbeenpreparingappro-priately and avoiding any majorinjury concerns during the pastmonthofpreseasonTheultimategoal is to retain the conferencechampionshipTheyarepredictedto finish second while UCLAwhich claimed the second spotlast season is projected to takethe title Nonetheless the Bearsare feeling optimistic about theseason opener after honing theirtechniquesinthesummer ldquoWe are ready for tomorrowrdquojunior goalkeeper Robby Gogatzsaid ldquoWe just want to keep onimproving one game at a timeandbuildonourstrengthsrdquo Cal will have three gamesremainingintheBayAreaClassicAlthough the jitters of a seasonopenerwill have diminished theBearswillstillbeplayinginunfa-miliar territory in Illinois andConnecticut It wonrsquot be untilSept 16 that the club returnshometoEdwardsStadiumtofin-ishoffagainstSantaClara

11sportsFriday August 26 2011 The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

field hockeyFrom Page 9

SeaSon preview Bears will face a stacked Pac-12 schedule

From Page 9

Setter Barrett will build her own legacy after Lloydrsquos exit

stretch will be crucial as the Bears face a stacked conference slate that includes three other teams ranked in the top-10 nationally After a weak preseason Cal will have to be on top of its game to host perennial power No 6 Stanford to open conference play on Sept 13 The addition of Colorado and Utah extend

the Pac-12 season by four matches forcing the first leg of the Big Spike to take place on a Tuesday night No 2 USC picked to win the Pac-12 will pose the greatest challenge for the Bears who are predicted to finish sec-ond The Trojans return all of their starters from the team that lost to Cal in the Final Four but defeated the

Bears twice in the regular seasonCalrsquos not quite ready to face the likes to Stanford and USC yet but are putting the work in to get to that pointldquoWe played some hard volleyball in practice so conditioning-wise wersquore right thererdquo Murrey said ldquoMentally wersquore getting ready every single dayrdquoldquoWersquore ready to playrdquo

nearly as far last season without her This year however it seems plausible that Cal will achieve similar heights without the setter extraordinaire Lloyd had a lot of help with the meteoric rise of Tarah Murrey as one of the premier outside hitters in the nation So long as Lloydrsquos successor Elly Barrett can find Murrey on the outside the Bears will be in great shape It has yet to be seen if Barrett will contribute the same kind of dynamic play that Lloyd did or if she will have as well-rounded a game But frankly the team doesnrsquot need her to be Lloyd She doesnrsquot need to be the most vocal player on the court or fire her team up That responsibility will be left to Murrey the lone senior

on the team who was clearly part of the leadership core last year Barrett doesnrsquot have to try to learn a new offense like Lloyd did or guide her teammates through such adjust-ments to their timing The system is already in place The Austin Texas native just needs to be a competent setter Given that she was an even more highly-sought after recruit than Lloyd itrsquos safe to assume Barrett has that ability With two years waiting in the wings Barrett amassed a significant amount of reps in practice with her attackers Coach Rich Feller said shersquos tightly bonded with her fellow juniors many of whom shersquoll be setting in the middle and right side so chemistry shouldnrsquot

be an issue Last year the Bears lost Pac-10 Player of the Year in outside hitter Hana Cutura and the preseason talk was focused mainly on how Cal would compensate for such a huge loss It only took a few weeks for Tarah Murrey to rise from the ashes of a dis-appointing sophomore campaign to emerge as one of the countryrsquos best Suddenly no one was mentioning Cutura anymore It would be foolish to assume that Barrett who has not had experience starting will have a similar breakout year However once she proves herself to be a capable setter Lloydrsquos name will start to fade and Barrett can begin building her own legacy

From Page 9

volleyball Cal hopes to repeat success of 2010 tournament

By Eric Lee | Staffetleedailycalorg

After an undefeated exhibition schedule which included two con-vincing wins and a tie with Stanford the Cal field hockey team will visit No 16 Louisville at 3 pm at Trager Stadium for its first official game of the 2011 season

Coming off last yearrsquos disappoint-ing finish mdash a loss to Stanford in the NorPac Tournament final mdash the Bears hope to start the season strong as they embark on a mini-roadtrip to Louisville Ky for games against the Cardinals and No 13 Michigan State

Louisville enters this season with some new faces Justine Sowry is the new head coach and a number of senior leaders from last season have since graduated

The squad however returns three All-Big East preseason selec-tions along with a number of expe-rienced players to fill out the rest of the roster

The Cardinals finished the 2010 season with a 13-7 record and a 5-1 conference record good enough for second in the strong Big East confer-ence

Louisvillersquos season ended in the semifinals of the Big East Tournament a 2-1 loss to No 4 Connecticut

Last year the Cardinals defeated the Bears 2-0 in Louisville under then-head coach Pam Bustin who later took on head coaching duties at Duke

Returning sophomore Erin

Scheidtmiller provided one of Louisvillersquos goals in that game while the other score came from Tuli Lim who has since graduated

One thing the Bears have going for them is an extremely strong preseason which began with a dominating 10-2 victory over UC Davis

Sophomore Jordan OrsquoReilly started the contest off with a pair of goals and the Aggies never recov-ered

Sophomore Andrea Earle fresh-man Marcia Venter and senior Erin Magill each provided two goals in the offensive barrage

Cal then went to No 20 Stanford and tied a tough Cardinal squad 1-1 due to strong goalkeeping from senior Maddie Hand and sophomore Courtney Hendrickson Senior Megan Shimojima provided the Bearrsquos lone goal

In its final preseason scrimmage Cal defeated the University of Alberta 4-1 with another fine offensive performance from Shimojima who netted two goals in the match

The road does not get any easier after Louisville as the Bears face No 13 Michigan State the following day The Spartans who finished with an 15-6 record last season figure to be one of Calrsquos toughest matchups this upcoming season

Last year the Bears fell to Michigan State 3-4 in their second game of that season The match saw seven different lead changes before the Spartans scored the game-winning goal in the 69th minute to close out the Bears

Cal looks to build upon successful preseason

ldquoWersquoll use the games to find out which starting lineups will work the best and some of those may include the younger playersrdquo Feller said

ldquoIf therersquos an opportunity to play more people this is the chance to do

itrdquoJunior setter Elly Barrett will be the

one to pick up where Lloyd left off In 2010 Barrett logged only 27 sets through 13 games of work behind Lloyd and will look to establish herself

as a leader of the 2011 version of the Bears

ldquoIt will be good practice to stay focused on our side of the court regard-less of whorsquos on the other siderdquo Barrett said

DUMMY

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

1 Ridicule4 Magna __9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried folded and lled18 Squelch19 Opposite of cominrsquo20 Fruit-topped dessert22 Persons23 Prex for marketing or communication24 Egyptrsquos loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Tried39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation systems

1 Crawling bug2 Small veggies3 Engrave4 Regal home5 Mrs Ralph Kramden6 __ Hayworth7 Snatched8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebrsquos wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement

31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space ight agcy44 One of a pair45 British bishopsrsquo items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartlettrsquos book abbr53 Repulsive54 Green fruit55 Satanrsquos specialty59 Pauserrsquos words

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

Keep Berkeley Unique Shop LocallySupporting locally-owned independently operated businesses keeps our city unique creates more jobs and makes our economy stronger Look for this icon the next time yoursquore shopping for something special

Find a local business near you at buylocalberkeleycom All contributions are tax deductible dailycalorgdonate

Support independent student journalismDonate to the Daily Californian

Support independent student journalism Donate to the Daily CalAll contributions are tax deductible

dailycalorgdonate

12 PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

  • 0826_dailycal01
  • 0826_dailycal02
  • 0826_dailycal03
  • 0826_dailycal04
  • 0826_dailycal05
  • 0826_dailycal06
  • 0826_dailycal07
  • 0826_dailycal08
  • 0826_dailycal09
  • 0826_dailycal10
  • 0826_dailycal11
  • 0826_dailycal12

This publication is not an official publication of the University of California but is published by an independent corporation using the name The Daily Californian pursuant to a license granted by the Regents of the University of California Advertisements appearing in The Daily Californian

reflect the views of the advertisers only They are not an expression of editorial opinion or of the views of the staff Opinions expressed in The Daily Californian by editors or columnists regarding candidates for political office or legislation are those of the editors or columnists and are not those of the Independent Berkeley Student Publishing Co Inc Unsigned editorials are the collective opinion of the Senior Editorial Board Reproduction

in any form whether in whole or in part without written permission from the editor is strictly prohibited Copyright 2011 All rights reserved

Mailing AddressPO Box 1949

Berkeley CA 94701-0949

Fax(510) 849-2803

Emailopiniondailycalorg

Letters to the Editor and Op-edsLetters and Op-eds may be sent via email Letters sent via US mail should be typed and must include

signature daytime phone number and place of residence All letters are edited for space and clarityOp-eds must be no longer than 700 words Letters must be no longer than 350 words

EDITORIALS

ldquoOpinion Many people seem to think that California is in a death spiral This is not true mdash California is extremely resilient wersquove managed to keep Berkeleyrsquos very high standingrdquo

mdashUC Berkeley Chancellor Robert Birgeneau

Editorial Cartoon By Anna Vignet

Berkeleyrsquos Independent Student Press mdash Celebrating 140 years

Senior Editorial BoardTomer Ovadia Editor in Chief and President

Leslie Toy Managing Editor

Emma Anderson Opnion Page EditorJordan Bach-Lombardo University News Editor

Stephanie Baer City News EditorTaryn Erhardt Photo Editor

Kelly Fang Multimedia Editor

Jonathan Kuperberg Sports Editor Gopal Lalchandani Night Editor

David Liu Arts amp Entertainment EditorMatthew Putzulu Development Editor

Ashley Villanueva Design Editor

First came the dreaded fur-lough program Then came fewer graduate student

instructors due to a lack of fund-ing continued competitive offers from big-budget private schools and the layoffs of colleagues and friends all while salaries for many UC faculty and staff members remained well below market rate

And yet across UC Berkeley and the entire UC many professors and staff members have chosen to stay For this we commend them and believe that the UC merit pro-gram announced last Wednesday is a step in the right direction

However we also hope that the university sees the bigger picture It is not only the level of pay that keeps these professors supervi-sors financial analysts and others from fleeing to Harvard Stanford or other private prestigious uni-versities but also the caliber of the schoolrsquos research students and educational atmosphere

Under this merit plan faculty and non-union staff members will be eligible to receive raises based on performance evaluations The raises mdash set at 3 percent of overall base pay mdash will be a much-needed reprieve especially for non-repre-sented staff who have not received pay increases for four years and

who have had to take pay-cuts during the furlough program

Through all the hurt that the university has experienced mdash with the slashing of $650 million in state funding this year alone the elimination of phones from many campus departments two years ago the dwindling budgets of aca-demic units mdash faculty and staff members have certainly shoul-dered a good share of the impacts In discussions of budget cuts the fear of loss in scholarly quality repeatedly surfaces But the cam-pus maintains high rankings because our outstanding instruc-tors and role models stick around

This new plan demonstrates that the UC acknowledges the need to retain these academics shows that those at the top value academic excellence and suggests the UC is aware of the ramifica-tions of potential brain drain

At the same time the UC needs to pursue more than just fiscal incentives We realize that money is tight but we hope that the UC will seek to support other pro-grams that make employees want to stay mdash the space for innovative and thorough research students eager to learn and grow and a community that lives and breathes academic excellence

UNIVERSITY ISSUESThe University of Californiarsquos new merit raise plan is a first step but other factors affect employee rentention

More than monetary

For more than two years they sat together in an Iranian prison For more

than two years they fended off sickness and depression watch-ing as their comrade showed signs of sickness so serious that she was allowed to return home without them And now the two UC Berkeley alumni may face eight more years of the same hei-nous conditions after they were sentenced

Though the verdict was read the campus community cannot consider this case closed

In the summer of 2009 Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal were hik-ing near the Iran-Iraq border with Bauerrsquos fiance Sarah Shourd when the three were seized by Iranian authorities accused of trespassing and spying mdash claims which those close to them have vehemently denied

The drawn-out legal process came to somewhat of a resolution last Saturday with an eight-year sentence But the evidence against them is extremely shaky if at all existent

With a brand new freshman class finding their way around UC Berkeley this week it is the campus communityrsquos duty to not let Bauer and Fattal become irrel-

evant These men walked through the same doorways to get to class and were taught by some of the same professors that many of us engage with today

We as students cannot exe-cute a plan to solve this situation The relations between the United States and Iran are beyond our reach We cannot offer diplomat-ic solutions or economic resourc-es We can however offer a resounding voice with the UC Berkeley community in unison with the friends and families of Bauer and Fattal We must call on others within the campus mdash stu-dent government officials admin-istrators students and professors mdash to renew the call for Bauer and Fattalrsquos and release And we must remain steadfast in our determi-nation to keep Bauer and Fattal alive in the campus conscious-ness and discourse

No matter how much time passes we should not and cannot forget these alumni who have captured the attention of the nation and the world As Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said ldquoIt is time for them to return home and be reunited with their fami-liesrdquo

We must stand behind our fel-low Golden Bears

CAMPUS AFFAIRSUC Berkeley must continue to acknowledge two campus alumni sentenced to eight years in prison by Iran

Supporting the hikers

Friday August 26 2011

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

Jillian Wertheim Blog Editor

Op-ED

I want to welcome everyone back to campus and share some reflections on what I think makes this campus so special

It is no secret that UC Berkeley is going through challenging times and that the statersquos persistent dis-investment in higher education forces us to make unhappy choices such as tuition increases

I am often asked how we deal with these challenges The answer is that everything we do is filtered through our commitment to access and excellence We are committed to maintaining and enhancing UC Berkeleyrsquos ranking as one of the top research universities in the world Forty-six new faculty will join our ranks this year 156 of our entering graduate students are winners of prestigious National Science Foundation multi-year fel-lowships and our entering under-graduate class is the product of the most competitive admissions pro-cess in our history We continue to launch cutting-edge interdisci-plinary research initiatives in the sciences humanities and social sciences such as the Berkeley Energy and Climate Change Institute the Haas Diversity Research Center and the Berkeley Institute for Jewish Law and Israeli Law Economy and Society

We are committed to maintain-ing broad social access to this excellence Our financial aid poli-cies and our private fundraising for scholarships have made it pos-sible for us to cushion the effects of tuition increases on all students who come from households that have a total annual income of less than $80000 These financial aid policies have allowed UC Berkeley to serve as an engine of upward

By George BreslauerSpecial to the Daily Calopiniondailycalorg

mobility for huge numbers of low-income students Now that tuition increases have raised the stakes our challenge will be to develop strategies for better supporting students from households earning $80000 to $120000

Of course all our students deserve access to a first-rate cur-riculum as well Toward that end we have invested some of the funds from tuition increases and nonresident tuition into expanding access to required Reading and Composition courses to large introductory classes in physics chemistry mathematics and statis-tics and to foreign language cours-es Next on this agenda is the con-struction of two new biology teaching laboratories made possi-ble by funds from an external source which will then make it possible for us to add sections in introductory biology classes

Improvement of the campusrsquos infrastructure is always on our radar screen One cannot deliver 21st century research and teaching in antiquated laboratories librar-ies classrooms and facilities At least a half-dozen new buildings have been completed and opened in recent years and another four will come on line in the next year and a half Most of these buildings have been paid for predominantly from private fundraising and seis-mic funds from the state

We also aspire to excellence in our administrative operations and services mdash areas in which Berkeley has historically lagged That is one of the principal purposes of Operational Excellence

Access and excellence are expensive to maintain but that is our determined goal Funds from the State of California for operat-ing Berkeley now constitute only 11 to 12 percent of our total reve-nues While we will continue to lobby vigorously for state funding

we must plan for and are actively pursuing alternative sources of funds In addition to tuition increases and larger nonresident undergraduate enrollments (shift-ing the ratio from 90 percent Californians to 80 percent Californians) we have raised $22 billion in private fundraising dur-ing the past six years and antici-pate completing our $3 billion campaign within 30 months We are also exploring entrepreneurial initiatives that will provide new income streams for departments within the university

We have a lot going for us an all-star faculty a global reputation strong support from a large alumni base the Bay Area as an attractive place to live connections to Silicon Valley and to Asia a committed workforce and a lock on the status of being the preeminent public uni-versity in the world Moreover wersquove been through very hard times before the Great Depression the political controversies of the 1950s and 1960s and the slashing of our state allocations in the late 1970rsquos the early 1990rsquos the early 2000rsquos and again in the late 2000rsquos Yet historically we have always bounced back and retained our pre-eminence as a public universi-ty There is something intangible that has kept UC Berkeley resilient through all these trials Surely our commitment to maintaining both access and excellence mdash and to serving the public good mdash has been an inspiration to students staff and faculty attracting them to this remarkable institution

We would value your thoughts on what makes UC Berkeley so special and resilient You can post your comments on our Facebook page at wwwfacebookcomucberkeley

George Breslauer is the Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost at UC Berkeley

Our campus has a commitment to both access and excellence

5opinionThe Daily CalifornianFriday August 26 2011

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

d

ailyc

alo

pin

ion

is o

n tw

itter

op-ed

This week marks the fortieth anni-versary of Chez Panisse the legendary Berkeley restaurant that pioneered the Slow Food movement that has now prompted Americans to desire seasonal local organic whole foods The ldquomotherrdquo of Chez Panisse Alice Waters credits her student experienc-es at UC Berkeley as inspiration She was among a group of countercultural activists who found their vision for sustainable agriculture on Sproul Plaza in the heady days of the Free Speech Movement

What might have seemed at the time an idealistic impractical pipe dream became four decades later a popular widespread economically viable movement The rise of farmersrsquo markets community gardens and Edible Schoolyards in public schools can be traced in part to UC Berkeley and its studentsrsquo capacity for inven-tion There is much to learn by revisit-ing this history not just as a nostalgic walk down memory lane This history is a reminder that paradigm shifts happen through creativity and collec-tive invention with protest and rejec-tion of a status quo only part of a much larger process

We begin the 2011-12 academic year with the inauspicious news that for the first time in the University of Californiarsquos history students are con-tributing more than the public to the cost of their education With the spec-ter of continuing budgetary shortfalls and tuition hikes looming students are likely to be paying even more by yearrsquos end UC Berkeley and UCLA are admitting unprecedented numbers of out-of-state students their full tuition payments backfilling the statersquos fiscal withdrawal What exactly is it that makes the University of California ldquopublicrdquo And how is our university ldquoof rdquo California when campuses now receive so little of their overall operat-ing expenses from the state mdash at Berkeley as low as 12 percent

These are big fundamental long-range questions We ask them in a cli-mate of instability and duress It appears that higher education mdash not just in California but also nationally and globally mdash is undergoing a pro-found paradigm shift the likes of which we have not seen for at least 50 years The simultaneous emergence of higher educationrsquos first great techno-logical change in five centuries mdash the digital revolution mdash only compounds

our instability for this is yet one more mobile tectonic plate

The 2011-12 year is likely to see many political flashpoints tuition increases layoffs organizational restructuring a rise of ldquopermatemprdquo lecturers challenges to shared gover-nance a further erosion of the ties that once bound UCrsquos world renowned sys-tem Students may have difficulty get-ting classes the wheels of Operational Excellence will roll along to a destina-tion widely proclaimed yet remarkably ill-defined (ie how will we know when we are ldquoexcellentrdquo) Protest actions with their attendant Twitter feeds will inevitably pull us into a myopic fixa-tion on the present The battlegrounds will be multiple and dynamic

Yet protests wonrsquot make a future Neither will managerial exercises in efficiency Our needs far transcend what either the flash mob or organi-zational restructuring can produce

We need a big rethink about the future of higher education The last great paradigm shift in higher educa-tion happened half a century ago with the University of California its epicen-ter Can we once again be a leader

The scale of our current challenges is formidable its contours complex its inner workings opaque Unlike the last great period of innovation in higher education the signs are not auspicious The present has neither unprecedented prosperity nor the expansive vision that marked former UC President Clark Kerrrsquos era and the 1960 California Master Plan for Higher Education

Today a new design for higher edu-cation is unlikely to come from on high and itrsquos unlikely to come from one man The future of higher educa-tion mdash if it is to be bright mdash may well require collective invention It may require the very sort of collaborative ingenuity and original thinking that

gave rise to the Slow Food movement a product of Berkeleyrsquos soil

If you have walked by the Berkeley Art Museum this week you may have noticed corn growing outside Yes corn This is a sign that the artistsrsquo collective OPENrestaurant has taken up residence with their new project ldquoOPENed Education as Experiencerdquo On Saturday Aug 27 from 11 am to 5 pm they will transform the muse-um into an open classroom and living kitchen tracing the history of Chez Panisse and pointing to alternative strategies new and historical for the future of education They invite us to inaugurate the new academic year by looking into our past in order to envi-sion our future They invite us to cul-tivate not just corn but also the art of the long view

Catherine Cole is a professor in the Department of Theater Dance and Performance Studies at UC Berkeley

deanne chenstaff

The art of the long view seeing UC futuresBy Catherine ColeSpecial to the Daily Calopiniondailycalorg

Follow us on Twitter

Tweet your responses and letters to the editor they may be published

6 news Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

From Front

readiness Some say test does not gauge college preparedness

BERKELEY BREAKDOWN

Caleb Dardick the UC Berkeley director of local government and communityrelations has been an important part of the community for the past 16 years

eugene w laustaff

The surface of a material is usually as far as scientists have delved when exploring the objectrsquos chemistry be-cause it is where the most important reactions happen

But with relatively unexplored ma-terials such as semiconductors and superconductors looking past the surface has become increasingly im-portant which Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory scientists have accomplished in recent research

In a study published Aug 14 in the

After being a part of the Berkeley community for 16 years working for the city and the campus Caleb Dardick UC Berkeley director of local government and community relations is returning to his river roots to take up a new posi-tion at home in Nevada County

Dardick mdash who has been instrumen-tal to town-gown relations since immers-ing himself in Berkeley politics as former Mayor Shirley Deanrsquos legislative aid mdash will be moving to Nevada City to serve as executive director for the South Yuba River Citizens League In June Dardick applied for the position and was chosen earlier after a nationwide search

ldquoHe brings incredibly strong com-munication skills expertise in strate-gic planning mdash certainly in coalition building and program managementrdquo said Kim Milligan interim executive director for SYRCL

In his new position Dardick will lead the organization in its mission to protect the Yuba River and Watershed while working on statewide issues such as the recovery of salmon in the Yuba River mdash named one of Americarsquos Most Endangered Rivers in May by the conservation group American Rivers

ldquoWe went to the Yuba River all the time the older kids who could drive would drive through the neighbor-hood honk the horn and all the little kids would come running out and jump in the back of the truck and wersquod go to the river for the dayrdquo Dardick said ldquoWe just grew up lounging on the rocks and swimming in the beautiful clear water itrsquos part of my DNArdquo

After managing his fatherrsquos cam-paign for county supervisor in 1994 mdash his first foray into politics mdash Dardick worked on several more campaigns including Deanrsquos run-off campaign in December 1994 and then served as Deanrsquos legislative aid for four years

ldquoI became immersed in Berkeley

By Claire Perlman | Senior Staffcperlmandailycalorg

By Stephanie Baer | Senior Staffsbaerdailycalorg

CheCk Onlinewwwdailycalorg

Claire Perlman explains how Berkeley lab scientists have studied electronic structures

CheCk Onlinewwwdailycalorg

Listen to an interview of Caleb Dardick about his experiences serving the campus and the city

bull The percentage of Berkeley Unified School District stu-dents that took and passed the exit exam for math decreased from 82 percent for the class of 2010 to 81 per-cent in the class of 2011 and for English and language arts decreased from 84 to 81 percent

bull Passing black BUSD students decreased from 63 percent for the class of 2010 to 57 percent for the class of 2011 for the math portion of the exit exam and from 68 percent to 57 percent for the English portion Statewide the numbers increased from 66 to 68 percent and 71 to 72 percent respectively

bull Passing Latino BUSD students increased from 73 percent for 2010 to 75 percent for 2011 for the math portion of the exit exam and from 74 percent to 78 percent for the English portion Statewide the numbers increased from 74 to 77 percent and 73 to 76 percent respectively

bull Passing white BUSD students increased from 97 percent for 2010 to 99 percent for 2011 for both portions of the exam Statewide the numbers stayed constant at 91 per-cent for both

All numbers are from the exit exam administered in the 10th grade the first time the exit exam is administered and when most students take the exam

Research uses new technique to study the electronic structure of materials

Director of community relations to leave post

politics and I loved it It was the most interesting and exciting job I ever hadrdquo Dardick said ldquoYou could be dealing with potholes in the morning and the cityrsquos position on divestment in Nigeria in the afternoonrdquo

In 1998 Dardick was hired by UC Berkeleyrsquos department of community re-lations as interim director of the Berkeley Alliance mdash a collaboration between UC Berkeley and Berkeley Unified School District that still exists today which aims to build community partnerships to ef-fect change on critical social and eco-nomic equity issues in Berkeley

Two years later he decided to work for himself as a community relations consultant working on projects like the Ed Roberts Campus at the Ashby BART station and the David Brower Center

When Ed Roberts a UC Berkeley alum and leader in the local disabili-ties rights movement passed away in 1995 Dardick mdash under the direction of Dean mdash put together a task force of local activists disability rights leaders and campus community members to honor Robertsrsquo memory

ldquoMayor Dean asked me to represent the office at his memorial and I was hon-ored to do that because I grew up in the disability rights movement my father was a person with a disabilityrdquo he said

After 10 years of working for him-self Dardick returned to the campusrsquo community relations office where he continued to work on projects to con-nect the campus and city communities through community service projects and partnerships like the Joint South-side Safety Patrol program

ldquoHe knew the community He knew the various stakeholders and he had a manner or an ability to bring people to the table and work out solutionsrdquo said Councilmember Laurie Capitelli ldquoTheyrsquoll be big shoes to fillrdquo

Stephanie Baer is the city news editor

journal Nature Materials lab researchers explored the concept of using a high-en-ergy version of the technique of angle-re-solved photoemission mdash HARPES mdash to study the electronic structure of materi-als Though HARPES and its less intense counterpart ARPES have been around since 1905 when Albert Einstein first ex-plained the photoelectric effect mdash the ba-sis for these techniques mdash scientists have only recently been able to make use of the techniques

The photoelectric effect an impor-tant part of the foundation of quantum mechanics means that light behaves like a quantum of energy or a photon which can give all of its energy to an electron and liberate it as a photoelec-tron which then flies away explained Chuck Fadley mdash a distinguished profes-sor of physics at UC Davis an Advanced Light Source professor at Berkeley Lab and co-author of the paper

ldquoOne then measures the energy of the electron and its direction as pre-cisely as possible and from these measurements can deduce exquisite detail about how the electron was moving in the material before it was

ejected how the atoms are bound to one another whether they are magnet-ic or not how the material will conduct electricityrdquo he said

Without a sufficiently bright light source mdash and therefore sufficiently pow-erful beams of hard x-rays mdash scientists were unable to penetrate the materials on the atomic level that was necessary to observe interactions of photons and elec-trons beyond the surface

Because HARPES uses higher en-ergy it can reveal interactions signifi-cantly past the scope of what the less powerful ARPES can do According to Fadley ARPES uses ultraviolet and soft x-ray photons and therefore can-

not penetrate much past one nanome-ter whereas with HARPES scientists can measure photoelectrons and elec-tronic properties at depths anywhere between 6 and 10 nanometers

ldquoYou really give them a kickrdquo said Alexander Gray a graduate student at UC Davis and Berkeley Lab and a co-author of the study ldquoThis way even with electrons that are deep deep inside of the material you can really get the information about the elec-tronic properties of the material You can seek them out you can catch them and you can analyze themrdquo

Claire Perlman is the assistant uni-versity news editor

From Front

unemplOyment Rates in state higher than in rest of country

From Front

disCriminatiOn Initial complaint was filed in June 2009

Pyle in dismissing the merit of Senigarrsquos claims said that ldquoUCSF has an historic commitment to diversity in the work forcerdquo

ldquo(Fritz) had a very strong record of hiring retaining and promoting Afri-can-American employeesrdquo she added

A judge dismissed a wage discrimi-nation complaint that had originally been part of Senigarrsquos claim accord-ing to Pyle However Senigar is still claiming damages for wages he alleges he should have been paid because he was passed over for promotion

Senigar is claiming damages for that amount of money for the amount of money necessary to cover his medi-cal expenses and for the amount of money to compensate for among other things a ldquogeneral loss of self-

esteem and well-beingrdquo according to the second amended complaint The claim does not specify an exact amount for these damages

ldquoThis case is not about the moneyrdquo said Pamela Price Senigarrsquos attorney ldquoHe should have been given the op-portunity to succeed The denial of that opportunity is the issuerdquo

Senigar began to work for the uni-versity in October 1999 Over the seven years leading up to the first incident Price said that Senigar received posi-tive reviews from his superiors Senigar was fired by UCSF prior to the case go-ing to trial but it is not part of the cur-rent complaint according to Price

Pyle said that Fritz was ultimately laid off in 2009 for the same budget-ary reasons that the position in ques-

tion was never filledSenigar filed his initial complaint

on June 23 2009 A first amended complaint was filed on Aug 20 2009 and a second amended complaint mdash the complaint that forms the basis for the trial currently underway mdash was filed on Aug 16 2009

Because the complaint was not settled out of court it is now going to trial mdash an outcome that Senigar did not want to happen Price said

ldquoHe spent a lot of time trying to resolve it internally (so) a trial is totally a last resortrdquo she said ldquoHe never imagined he would have to go through the ordeal of filing the law-suit or going to trialrdquo

Jordan Bach-Lombardo is the uni-versity news editor

not gauge college preparedness says Mary Perry deputy director of Ed-Source a nonprofit organization that researches education in California

A separate report released earlier this month from the not-for-profit organization ACT mdash which admin-isters a test of the same name de-signed to measure college prepared-ness mdash seemingly contradicts the exit exam numbers showing college pre-paredness levels declining across the state from 31 percent meeting ACTrsquos benchmarks to 30 percent a decrease of roughly 1500 students

Perry says the ACT reportrsquos num-bersrsquo discrepancy may only be superfi-cial She said ACT test takers are self-selecting college-bound students whereas every California high school student must take the exit exam

ldquoYou donrsquot know whether the de-cline yoursquore seeing is a reduction of the skill set of California students or is because the group taking the test changedrdquo she added

State department spokesperson Jung says the two tests shouldnrsquot be compared because the exit exam measures math skills through sev-enth grade and English and language arts through the 10th grade while the ACT tests a studentrsquos ability to take college level courses

UC spokesperson Ricardo Vazquez said most UC admits take the SAT mdash a college-readiness test administered by the not-for-profit College Board mdash and a growing number are taking both the ACT and the SAT though few take the ACT exclusively Exact numbers for university were not im-mediately available as of press time

According to Perry 50 percent of graduating seniors in California took

the SAT while 22 percent took the ACT in 2010

She said the state is working on new standards that will better incorporate

college preparedness into high school requirements like the exit exam

Mihir Zaveri is the lead develop-ment and capital projects reporter

percent Since at least 2002 the state unemployment rate has been consis-tently higher than the national rate according to the statersquos analysis

In a press conference Thursday morning Gov Jerry Brown unveiled a three-part strategy called Califor-nia Jobs First plan aimed at lowering the statersquos unemployment rate The plan which will require a two-thirds vote from the state legislature for ap-proval would provide a tax credit for

businesses that hire more employees and also remove sales tax on manu-facturing equipment for startup com-panies during their first three years of business

ldquoBoosting job growth in California is a top priority and this proposal is a critical step in making sure the state does everything it can to support lo-cal job creationrdquo Brown said at the conference

Although Brown did not say specif-

ically how many jobs he estimates the plan will create he seemed confident that it would help lower the statersquos un-employment rate mdash the second high-est in the nation last month

ldquoWe know the future depends on growing our way out of this economic morassrdquo Assembly Speaker John Per-ez D-Los Angeles said at the confer-ence

Soumya Karlamangla is the assis-tant city news editor

CAMPUS FIGURES

RESEARCh amp IDEAS

7The Daily Californian PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011

TEXT ldquoNEDSVIPrdquo TO 22022

TO GET UP TO $20 OFF

Get up to 50 off flashdrives school supplies starting at $50 and more

NEDrsquoS BERKELYBOOKSTORE

2480 Bancroft Waynedsbookscomucb

8 paid advertisement Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

Catholics

Newman Hall amp Dwight Way

wwwcalnewmanorg

Monday 822 Ice Cream Social 8pm Tuesday 823 Newman Orientation Event (includes dinner) 6pm

Cal

College Ave

Wednesday 824 Rosary Group 8pm

Sunday 828 Mass 5pm Student Dinner 6pm Candlelight Mass 10pm

(across from unit 2)

Monday 829 Newman Orientation Event Part II 6pm

Saturday 827 Kayaking at Berkeley Marina Meet at Newman Hall 930am

Holy Spirit Parish

All events are ADA Accessible

Catholics Cal

Newman Hall Holy Spirit Parish

Monday 822 Ice Cream Social 8pmTuesday 823 Newman Orientation Event (includes dinner) 6pm

Wednesday 824 Rosary Group 8pm Saturday 827 Kayaking at Berkeley Marina Meet at Newman Hall 930amSunday 828 Mass 5pm Student Dinner 6pm Candlelight Mass 10pm

Monday 829 Newman Orientation Event Part II 6pm

All events are ADA Accessible

College Ave ampDwight Way

(across from unit 2)wwwcalnewmanorg

You beg your members to table on Sproul People walk right by You post hundreds of flyers in the hall and they get removed or covered up hours later Face it flyering is a costly labor-intensive process But therersquos a better way

Post your flyer in the most visible spot on

campus The Daily Cal

HEY STUDENT GROUPS

Take advantage of this savings now advertisingdailycalorg | 510-280-2452THE RULES Ads must run in four consecutive issues in AugustSeptember 2011 Student groups must pre-pay for ads This offer is only valid to UC Berkeley student groups officially registered with the ASUC or Campus Life amp Leadership

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLACK)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLUE)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (white)

LEVELS OF SERVICE AT A STEEP DISCOUNT TO STUDENT GROUPS ALL PLANS INCLUDE AD DESIGN AND APPEARANCES ON DAILYCALORG THIS IS A LIMITED OFFER ONLY FOR STUDENT GROUPS

SIXTEENTH OF A PAGE QUARTER OF A PAGE HALF OF A PAGE

But I started my dream of being a reporter by working in Eshleman Hall at the Daily Cal

Mark Summers REPORTER AT THE WALL STREET JOURNAL DAILY CAL ALUM rsquo

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLACK)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLUE)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (white)

Wersquove been a starting place for thousands of professionals who lead extraordinary careers in media advertising anad business If yoursquore ready to start your career now go to applydailycalorg

JOIN THE DAILY CALRECRUITMENT MEETINGS

Friday Aug 26 4pmTuesday Aug 31 5pm

600 Eshleman Hall

We are hiringWeb Developers Marketers Multimedia producers News Sports and Arts amp Entertainment reporters Photographers Copy Editors Designers Bloggers Illustrators Ads Representatives and more

SportSFriday august 26 2011 bull dailycal orgsports

AtCalwearemorethanfamiliarwith the aftermath of losing anincrediblequarterbackPerhapscur-rent students only know AaronRodgers as the alumnus that wonthe Super Bowl last season but Irememberhimas the savior ofCalfootball that brought us somerespectability AfterRodgersboltedfortheNFLcoachJeffTedfordhasyettotrotouta competent let alone comparablequarterbackWersquovejusthadaflurryofdisappointments In volleyball the setter is essen-tially the quarterback of the teamShersquostheonethatdeliverstheballtoattackers which requires remark-ablerapportandtimingwithhittersquickdecision-makingandtheabil-itytoreaddefenses TheCalvolleyballteamlosesitsquarterback this season in CarliLloydButdonrsquotexpect it tomeanthedemiseoftheBearsasRodgersrsquodepartureprovedtobe Lloyd probably meant more toherteamthanRodgersThenationalPlayer of the Year Lloyd institutedthenewup-tempooffensethatledtothe squadrsquos incredible run to theconference title and debut in thenationaltitlegame More importantly she was theheart and soul of the team Therewasnodoubtshewastheleaderonthe court keeping her teammatestogether and hitters focused Shesimplyrefusedto letherteamloseandhadawayofkillingopponentsrsquomomentumwithbigplays HerintensitywasinfectiousanditrsquoshardtoimaginetheBearsgoing

Bearsrsquo new quarterback

wonrsquot stop surging Cal

Christina Jones cjonesdailycalorg

ldquoIt sounds demeaning to say tune-up but I would say these

games are more of a way to get momentum going for our teamrdquo mdash Volleyball coach Rich Feller on the preseason

Bears open 2011 season with barren Riverside club

Eightmonthsafterdropping theNCAAchampi-onshipmatchtoPennStatelastDecembertheNo3Cal volleyball team will see itsfirstactionofthe2011seasonthisweekend

The Bears will host the CalMoltenClassictodayandSaturdayat Haas Pavillion inviting UCRiverside Fairfield and FloridaInternational University intoBerkeley

Calwillbelookingtorepeatitsperformance from 2010when itwon both of its matches of thepreseason tournament tallyingvictories over UC Santa Barbara(25-1825-1528-26)andManhattanCollege(25-825-1525-7)

Outside hitterTarahMurreywho returns to theBears as the lone senior was named the tourna-mentrsquosmost valuable player after leading the teamwith11killsand14digsTheBearsrsquooffensewassolidlogging a 341 attack percentage across the twogames

Calshouldbepoisedtoseesimilarresultstonightwhen it opens its seasonagainstUCRiversideat 5pmTheHighlandershadlittletocelebratein2010postinga2-30recordincludinga0-16markintheBigWestRiversidewaspicked to finish last in theBigWestin2011

ldquoItsoundsdemeaningtosaytune-upbutIwouldsaythesegamesaremoreofawaytogetmomentumgoing for our teamrdquo coach Rich Feller said ldquoThethreeweeksofpreseasonaremeanttoestablishsomesortoflineupandmomentumrdquo

Though theBearsmightbepusheda littlemoreonSaturdaywhentheysquareoffwithFairfieldat11amandFIUat7pmCallikelywonrsquotseeanyseri-ous competition Still the squadknows it needs togetofftoaquickstarttotheseason

ldquoYouplayeverygame likes itrsquos thenational titlerdquoMurreysaidldquoYoursquorenevergoingtoplayperfectvol-leyball but you always have to respect your oppo-nentrdquo

TheBearswillalsobeusingthisweekendaswellasthematchesintheupcomingweekstosolidifyitsstartinglineupThoughtheteamreturnssixstartersfrom2010 itwillneedto findawaytoreplacethepresenceofCarliLloydtheAVCANationalPlayerofthe Year in 2010 Lloyd finished her career with5697assistsmdashgoodenough for secondall time inCalhistory

By Connor Byrne | Staffcbyrnedailycalorg

All-American Tarah Murrey (middle) returns to lead the Bears as the biggest offensive threat Shannon hamiltonfile

when tonight at 7 pmwhere haaS pavilion

Quick LookCal v UC riverSide Bears slightly modify the

recipe for success in 2011

TheCal volleyball team is coming off itsbest season in program history The Bearstook their first Pac-10 title andmade theirdebutinthenationalchampionship One school of thought would be not tomesswithsuccessandsimplyplugplayersinto fill the twovacantpositionsat setteranddefensivespecialistinthestartinglineup Reigning AVCA Coach of the Year RichFeller is taking a slightly different routeWhile the overall offensive and defensiveschemeswillremaininplaceFellersaidheismixing things up in the lineup beginningwithtonightrsquosopeneragainstUCRiverside ldquoI donrsquot think yoursquoll see any sweepingchangesrdquo Feller said ldquoWe have a lotmoreweaponsnowMinusCarli(Lloyd)whowasthesetterweincreasedouroffensivethreatsbythreeorfournewplayersrdquo Last season the starters were solidifiedearly in the preseason and didnrsquot changemuchThisseasoneventhoseaccomplishedstarters thatwerekey contributors last yearhavetofightfortheirpositions MostnotablyCorreyJohnsonwhogar-neredAll-Pac10andAVCAhonorablemen-tionaccoladesasarightsidehitterlastsea-sonisdukingitoutwithtwooftheconfer-encersquos top blockers Shannon Hawari andKatBrownforaspotinthemiddle ldquoMostlyweneedoneof themiddleposi-tionstobeabletohitbehindthesetterexcep-tionally wellrdquo Feller said ldquoCorrey does that

By Christina Jones | Senior Staffcjonesdailycalorg

Setter PAGe 11 SeASon Preview PAGe 11 volleybAll PAGe 11

better than anyone We may continue tobounceherbetweenmiddleandrightsiderdquo IfJohnsondoesnrsquotwinamiddlespotshersquollbattle highly regarded freshman ChristinaHigginsforapositionontherightside As Feller experimentswith rotations thesetterpositionisforeseeablylocked After two years as Lloydrsquos understudyEllyBarrettwilltakethehelmTheuntestedjuniorhassomehugeshoestofillmdashLloydearnedNational Player of the Year honorslast yearmdashbut benefits from two years ofexperiencesettingtheB-team Barrett will be surrounded by powerfulattackers tohelpher ease into the roleAll-AmericanTarahMurrey returns as the lonesenior on the team coming off a breakoutjuniorcampaigninwhichsheemergedasoneof the countryrsquos top outside hittersMurreywillstepintoLloydrsquosroleasthevocalleaderinadditiontothestrongestoffensivethreat WhileMurreywillcertainlybeheardshenotes that the team has a more reservedtemperamentthisyear ldquoMe and Carli last year we could get alittlerowdyrdquoMurreysaidldquoButIthinkthatonce we get more comfortable with eachotherallofourtruepersonalitiesaregoingto come out and itrsquos going to be a lot offunrdquo The ability to keep energy updown the

CheCk onlinewwwdailycalorg

Volleyball beat writer christina Jones discusses the Bearsrsquo outlook for the season ahead in a daily cal podcast

Last year

the Cal volleyball team was one win away from a

national title The Bears are set on seizing

the crown in 2011

volleyball | Season Preview

ChriStopher mCdermUtfile

10 sports Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

W soccer

Bison are question mark for CalBy Seung Y Lee | Staffsyleedailycalorg

LastyeartheCalwomenrsquossoccerteamhad its biggest victory of the seasonagainstHawaiiatEdwardsStadiumpil-ingeightgoalsfromsixdifferentplayers ButastheBearspreparetoflydowntoHonolulufortherematchcoachNeilMcGuiredoesnotexpectanotherrompovertheRainbowWahine ldquoHawaii has a new coach and theplayerswillbemoremotivatedrdquoMcGuiresaid ldquoWe are also playing in front ofabout 3000 people I donrsquot anticipateanysortofsimilarperformancesrdquo ParticipatinginthelsquoOhanaHotelsNoKai lsquoOi tournament Cal (1-1) will firstplayNorthDakotaState (1-0)onFridaynightat10pmbeforebattlingthetour-nament host Hawaii (0-1) on Sundaynightat8pmBothmatchesareat theWaipirsquooPeninsulaSoccerStadium NeithertheBisonnortheWahinehaveclose to the talent the Bears haveAlthoughNorthDakotaStatewonmore

thanhalfitsmatcheslastseasonmostofits opponentswere tiny obscure schoolsscattered across theDakotasWith suchobscurity Cal players and coaches arereadyingtoplaytheBisonknowingnearlynothing about the team The one thingthesquaddoesknowaboutNorthDakotaState is that it plays a 4-4-2 lineup themostcommonformationinsoccer Unlike with North Dakota State theBears have experience playing againstHawaiiLedbystarstrikerAlexMorganrsquoshattrickCalbatteredtheWahinedefenseinthesecondhalfscoringfivegoals HoweverSundayrsquosmatchwilllikelybeconsiderably different since theWahinehiredanewcoachMicheleNagamine LikeHawaiiCalisalsoinatransitionmode adjusting to the void left by theseniorMorganInthelasttwomatchestheBearshavestruggledtoscoregoalslosingtoPepperdine2-1andthreadingpastSanDiegoState2-1thankstotwolategoalsbyseniorJulieBenzandjuniorLaurenBattung ldquoWehavebeenpracticinghowtopen-etratethroughthedefensebacklineand

creating scoring chancesrdquo Benz saidldquoWeneedtobemorefearlessinfrontofthenetrdquo For the Bears the ghost of Morganmdash who scored nearly a third of thesquadrsquos totalgoals last seasonmdash loomslargeovertheteamdemandingalterna-tivewaysfortheteamtoscoreandwingames One of the solutions that McGuireand the coaches are hoping for is thereturn of injured forwards MirandaWhiteandRachelMercik Mercik a sophomore has shownpromiseinherfirstyearwiththeteamstarting four games and scoring twogoals White a utility player for bothdefense and offense mdash will be able toprovide experience alongside Benz andBattungintheattackinglines ldquoWhite and Mercik are two playersthatsufferedfromlong-termandshort-term injuries that have come backrdquoMcGuire said ldquoWe havenrsquot had themenough of the field so I want to givethesetwosomequalityplayingtimethisweekendrdquo

Lauren Battung scored Calrsquos first goal in its 2-1 overtime win over San Diego State on Sunday It was her second goal of the year sean goebelfile

M soccer

Bears cross the bay to open their seasonBy Camellia Senemar | Staffcsenemardailycalorg

Season openers always havetheirjittersespeciallywhenteamsare away from the comforts oftheirhomefield WiththesetwoforcesworkingagainsttheNo7Calmenrsquossoccerteam this Friday evening theBears travel across the bridge toface the University of SanFranciscoatNegoescoStadiumat7pm Thedisparityinthetwoteamsrsquostandings mdash the Dons areunrankedmdashmightprovideahinttowards thegamersquos resultbutonpaper the Bearsrsquo all-time seriesrecord against USF stands at14-21-2EventhoughCalshutouttheDonsintheirlastfourencoun-ters the matchup still stands atrickytest ldquoUSF is a strong and talentedteamrdquo junior co-captain StevenBirnbaumsaidldquoWearejustlook-ing to play our game and get agoodstarttotheseasonrdquo Last yearrsquos tilt at GoldmanField produced then-sophomoreJohn Fitzpatrickrsquos game winninggoal in overtime It was then-sophomoreAnthonySalcicciawhofound Birnbaumrsquos head for theassistonthelastcornerkickofthematch The goal gave his squadthe1-0leadandashareoftheBayAreaClassicwithStanford Those three lethal juniors arethe only players to return to theBearsrsquo 11-man lineup from 2010All posted career highs in goalsassistsandpoints in their sopho-moreyearsandwillbelookingtoadd to their tallies Birnbaum isthesolereturningstarterfromthebacklineandisjoinedbySalciccia

as a fellow co-captain The cur-rentmemberswillhavebigshoesto fill after last seasonrsquos highlysuccessful campaign saw fiveseniors and one junior head toMajorLeagueSoccer CoachKevinGrimeswill havehis optionsopenwith this youngteammdashmorethanhalfareenter-ing their freshmen and sopho-more yearsThe five timePac-10Coach of the Yearmost recentlyawarded in 2010 also has twoexperienced forwards redshirtjuniors Kyle Lunt and MichaelMunozathisdisposal ldquoWe are confident with ourteamrdquo Birnbaum said ldquoAll theunderclassmen are very talentedandwillbeabigpartofourteamthisyearrdquo Calhasbeenpreparingappro-priately and avoiding any majorinjury concerns during the pastmonthofpreseasonTheultimategoal is to retain the conferencechampionshipTheyarepredictedto finish second while UCLAwhich claimed the second spotlast season is projected to takethe title Nonetheless the Bearsare feeling optimistic about theseason opener after honing theirtechniquesinthesummer ldquoWe are ready for tomorrowrdquojunior goalkeeper Robby Gogatzsaid ldquoWe just want to keep onimproving one game at a timeandbuildonourstrengthsrdquo Cal will have three gamesremainingintheBayAreaClassicAlthough the jitters of a seasonopenerwill have diminished theBearswillstillbeplayinginunfa-miliar territory in Illinois andConnecticut It wonrsquot be untilSept 16 that the club returnshometoEdwardsStadiumtofin-ishoffagainstSantaClara

11sportsFriday August 26 2011 The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

field hockeyFrom Page 9

SeaSon preview Bears will face a stacked Pac-12 schedule

From Page 9

Setter Barrett will build her own legacy after Lloydrsquos exit

stretch will be crucial as the Bears face a stacked conference slate that includes three other teams ranked in the top-10 nationally After a weak preseason Cal will have to be on top of its game to host perennial power No 6 Stanford to open conference play on Sept 13 The addition of Colorado and Utah extend

the Pac-12 season by four matches forcing the first leg of the Big Spike to take place on a Tuesday night No 2 USC picked to win the Pac-12 will pose the greatest challenge for the Bears who are predicted to finish sec-ond The Trojans return all of their starters from the team that lost to Cal in the Final Four but defeated the

Bears twice in the regular seasonCalrsquos not quite ready to face the likes to Stanford and USC yet but are putting the work in to get to that pointldquoWe played some hard volleyball in practice so conditioning-wise wersquore right thererdquo Murrey said ldquoMentally wersquore getting ready every single dayrdquoldquoWersquore ready to playrdquo

nearly as far last season without her This year however it seems plausible that Cal will achieve similar heights without the setter extraordinaire Lloyd had a lot of help with the meteoric rise of Tarah Murrey as one of the premier outside hitters in the nation So long as Lloydrsquos successor Elly Barrett can find Murrey on the outside the Bears will be in great shape It has yet to be seen if Barrett will contribute the same kind of dynamic play that Lloyd did or if she will have as well-rounded a game But frankly the team doesnrsquot need her to be Lloyd She doesnrsquot need to be the most vocal player on the court or fire her team up That responsibility will be left to Murrey the lone senior

on the team who was clearly part of the leadership core last year Barrett doesnrsquot have to try to learn a new offense like Lloyd did or guide her teammates through such adjust-ments to their timing The system is already in place The Austin Texas native just needs to be a competent setter Given that she was an even more highly-sought after recruit than Lloyd itrsquos safe to assume Barrett has that ability With two years waiting in the wings Barrett amassed a significant amount of reps in practice with her attackers Coach Rich Feller said shersquos tightly bonded with her fellow juniors many of whom shersquoll be setting in the middle and right side so chemistry shouldnrsquot

be an issue Last year the Bears lost Pac-10 Player of the Year in outside hitter Hana Cutura and the preseason talk was focused mainly on how Cal would compensate for such a huge loss It only took a few weeks for Tarah Murrey to rise from the ashes of a dis-appointing sophomore campaign to emerge as one of the countryrsquos best Suddenly no one was mentioning Cutura anymore It would be foolish to assume that Barrett who has not had experience starting will have a similar breakout year However once she proves herself to be a capable setter Lloydrsquos name will start to fade and Barrett can begin building her own legacy

From Page 9

volleyball Cal hopes to repeat success of 2010 tournament

By Eric Lee | Staffetleedailycalorg

After an undefeated exhibition schedule which included two con-vincing wins and a tie with Stanford the Cal field hockey team will visit No 16 Louisville at 3 pm at Trager Stadium for its first official game of the 2011 season

Coming off last yearrsquos disappoint-ing finish mdash a loss to Stanford in the NorPac Tournament final mdash the Bears hope to start the season strong as they embark on a mini-roadtrip to Louisville Ky for games against the Cardinals and No 13 Michigan State

Louisville enters this season with some new faces Justine Sowry is the new head coach and a number of senior leaders from last season have since graduated

The squad however returns three All-Big East preseason selec-tions along with a number of expe-rienced players to fill out the rest of the roster

The Cardinals finished the 2010 season with a 13-7 record and a 5-1 conference record good enough for second in the strong Big East confer-ence

Louisvillersquos season ended in the semifinals of the Big East Tournament a 2-1 loss to No 4 Connecticut

Last year the Cardinals defeated the Bears 2-0 in Louisville under then-head coach Pam Bustin who later took on head coaching duties at Duke

Returning sophomore Erin

Scheidtmiller provided one of Louisvillersquos goals in that game while the other score came from Tuli Lim who has since graduated

One thing the Bears have going for them is an extremely strong preseason which began with a dominating 10-2 victory over UC Davis

Sophomore Jordan OrsquoReilly started the contest off with a pair of goals and the Aggies never recov-ered

Sophomore Andrea Earle fresh-man Marcia Venter and senior Erin Magill each provided two goals in the offensive barrage

Cal then went to No 20 Stanford and tied a tough Cardinal squad 1-1 due to strong goalkeeping from senior Maddie Hand and sophomore Courtney Hendrickson Senior Megan Shimojima provided the Bearrsquos lone goal

In its final preseason scrimmage Cal defeated the University of Alberta 4-1 with another fine offensive performance from Shimojima who netted two goals in the match

The road does not get any easier after Louisville as the Bears face No 13 Michigan State the following day The Spartans who finished with an 15-6 record last season figure to be one of Calrsquos toughest matchups this upcoming season

Last year the Bears fell to Michigan State 3-4 in their second game of that season The match saw seven different lead changes before the Spartans scored the game-winning goal in the 69th minute to close out the Bears

Cal looks to build upon successful preseason

ldquoWersquoll use the games to find out which starting lineups will work the best and some of those may include the younger playersrdquo Feller said

ldquoIf therersquos an opportunity to play more people this is the chance to do

itrdquoJunior setter Elly Barrett will be the

one to pick up where Lloyd left off In 2010 Barrett logged only 27 sets through 13 games of work behind Lloyd and will look to establish herself

as a leader of the 2011 version of the Bears

ldquoIt will be good practice to stay focused on our side of the court regard-less of whorsquos on the other siderdquo Barrett said

DUMMY

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

1 Ridicule4 Magna __9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried folded and lled18 Squelch19 Opposite of cominrsquo20 Fruit-topped dessert22 Persons23 Prex for marketing or communication24 Egyptrsquos loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Tried39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation systems

1 Crawling bug2 Small veggies3 Engrave4 Regal home5 Mrs Ralph Kramden6 __ Hayworth7 Snatched8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebrsquos wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement

31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space ight agcy44 One of a pair45 British bishopsrsquo items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartlettrsquos book abbr53 Repulsive54 Green fruit55 Satanrsquos specialty59 Pauserrsquos words

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

Keep Berkeley Unique Shop LocallySupporting locally-owned independently operated businesses keeps our city unique creates more jobs and makes our economy stronger Look for this icon the next time yoursquore shopping for something special

Find a local business near you at buylocalberkeleycom All contributions are tax deductible dailycalorgdonate

Support independent student journalismDonate to the Daily Californian

Support independent student journalism Donate to the Daily CalAll contributions are tax deductible

dailycalorgdonate

12 PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

  • 0826_dailycal01
  • 0826_dailycal02
  • 0826_dailycal03
  • 0826_dailycal04
  • 0826_dailycal05
  • 0826_dailycal06
  • 0826_dailycal07
  • 0826_dailycal08
  • 0826_dailycal09
  • 0826_dailycal10
  • 0826_dailycal11
  • 0826_dailycal12

5opinionThe Daily CalifornianFriday August 26 2011

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

d

ailyc

alo

pin

ion

is o

n tw

itter

op-ed

This week marks the fortieth anni-versary of Chez Panisse the legendary Berkeley restaurant that pioneered the Slow Food movement that has now prompted Americans to desire seasonal local organic whole foods The ldquomotherrdquo of Chez Panisse Alice Waters credits her student experienc-es at UC Berkeley as inspiration She was among a group of countercultural activists who found their vision for sustainable agriculture on Sproul Plaza in the heady days of the Free Speech Movement

What might have seemed at the time an idealistic impractical pipe dream became four decades later a popular widespread economically viable movement The rise of farmersrsquo markets community gardens and Edible Schoolyards in public schools can be traced in part to UC Berkeley and its studentsrsquo capacity for inven-tion There is much to learn by revisit-ing this history not just as a nostalgic walk down memory lane This history is a reminder that paradigm shifts happen through creativity and collec-tive invention with protest and rejec-tion of a status quo only part of a much larger process

We begin the 2011-12 academic year with the inauspicious news that for the first time in the University of Californiarsquos history students are con-tributing more than the public to the cost of their education With the spec-ter of continuing budgetary shortfalls and tuition hikes looming students are likely to be paying even more by yearrsquos end UC Berkeley and UCLA are admitting unprecedented numbers of out-of-state students their full tuition payments backfilling the statersquos fiscal withdrawal What exactly is it that makes the University of California ldquopublicrdquo And how is our university ldquoof rdquo California when campuses now receive so little of their overall operat-ing expenses from the state mdash at Berkeley as low as 12 percent

These are big fundamental long-range questions We ask them in a cli-mate of instability and duress It appears that higher education mdash not just in California but also nationally and globally mdash is undergoing a pro-found paradigm shift the likes of which we have not seen for at least 50 years The simultaneous emergence of higher educationrsquos first great techno-logical change in five centuries mdash the digital revolution mdash only compounds

our instability for this is yet one more mobile tectonic plate

The 2011-12 year is likely to see many political flashpoints tuition increases layoffs organizational restructuring a rise of ldquopermatemprdquo lecturers challenges to shared gover-nance a further erosion of the ties that once bound UCrsquos world renowned sys-tem Students may have difficulty get-ting classes the wheels of Operational Excellence will roll along to a destina-tion widely proclaimed yet remarkably ill-defined (ie how will we know when we are ldquoexcellentrdquo) Protest actions with their attendant Twitter feeds will inevitably pull us into a myopic fixa-tion on the present The battlegrounds will be multiple and dynamic

Yet protests wonrsquot make a future Neither will managerial exercises in efficiency Our needs far transcend what either the flash mob or organi-zational restructuring can produce

We need a big rethink about the future of higher education The last great paradigm shift in higher educa-tion happened half a century ago with the University of California its epicen-ter Can we once again be a leader

The scale of our current challenges is formidable its contours complex its inner workings opaque Unlike the last great period of innovation in higher education the signs are not auspicious The present has neither unprecedented prosperity nor the expansive vision that marked former UC President Clark Kerrrsquos era and the 1960 California Master Plan for Higher Education

Today a new design for higher edu-cation is unlikely to come from on high and itrsquos unlikely to come from one man The future of higher educa-tion mdash if it is to be bright mdash may well require collective invention It may require the very sort of collaborative ingenuity and original thinking that

gave rise to the Slow Food movement a product of Berkeleyrsquos soil

If you have walked by the Berkeley Art Museum this week you may have noticed corn growing outside Yes corn This is a sign that the artistsrsquo collective OPENrestaurant has taken up residence with their new project ldquoOPENed Education as Experiencerdquo On Saturday Aug 27 from 11 am to 5 pm they will transform the muse-um into an open classroom and living kitchen tracing the history of Chez Panisse and pointing to alternative strategies new and historical for the future of education They invite us to inaugurate the new academic year by looking into our past in order to envi-sion our future They invite us to cul-tivate not just corn but also the art of the long view

Catherine Cole is a professor in the Department of Theater Dance and Performance Studies at UC Berkeley

deanne chenstaff

The art of the long view seeing UC futuresBy Catherine ColeSpecial to the Daily Calopiniondailycalorg

Follow us on Twitter

Tweet your responses and letters to the editor they may be published

6 news Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

From Front

readiness Some say test does not gauge college preparedness

BERKELEY BREAKDOWN

Caleb Dardick the UC Berkeley director of local government and communityrelations has been an important part of the community for the past 16 years

eugene w laustaff

The surface of a material is usually as far as scientists have delved when exploring the objectrsquos chemistry be-cause it is where the most important reactions happen

But with relatively unexplored ma-terials such as semiconductors and superconductors looking past the surface has become increasingly im-portant which Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory scientists have accomplished in recent research

In a study published Aug 14 in the

After being a part of the Berkeley community for 16 years working for the city and the campus Caleb Dardick UC Berkeley director of local government and community relations is returning to his river roots to take up a new posi-tion at home in Nevada County

Dardick mdash who has been instrumen-tal to town-gown relations since immers-ing himself in Berkeley politics as former Mayor Shirley Deanrsquos legislative aid mdash will be moving to Nevada City to serve as executive director for the South Yuba River Citizens League In June Dardick applied for the position and was chosen earlier after a nationwide search

ldquoHe brings incredibly strong com-munication skills expertise in strate-gic planning mdash certainly in coalition building and program managementrdquo said Kim Milligan interim executive director for SYRCL

In his new position Dardick will lead the organization in its mission to protect the Yuba River and Watershed while working on statewide issues such as the recovery of salmon in the Yuba River mdash named one of Americarsquos Most Endangered Rivers in May by the conservation group American Rivers

ldquoWe went to the Yuba River all the time the older kids who could drive would drive through the neighbor-hood honk the horn and all the little kids would come running out and jump in the back of the truck and wersquod go to the river for the dayrdquo Dardick said ldquoWe just grew up lounging on the rocks and swimming in the beautiful clear water itrsquos part of my DNArdquo

After managing his fatherrsquos cam-paign for county supervisor in 1994 mdash his first foray into politics mdash Dardick worked on several more campaigns including Deanrsquos run-off campaign in December 1994 and then served as Deanrsquos legislative aid for four years

ldquoI became immersed in Berkeley

By Claire Perlman | Senior Staffcperlmandailycalorg

By Stephanie Baer | Senior Staffsbaerdailycalorg

CheCk Onlinewwwdailycalorg

Claire Perlman explains how Berkeley lab scientists have studied electronic structures

CheCk Onlinewwwdailycalorg

Listen to an interview of Caleb Dardick about his experiences serving the campus and the city

bull The percentage of Berkeley Unified School District stu-dents that took and passed the exit exam for math decreased from 82 percent for the class of 2010 to 81 per-cent in the class of 2011 and for English and language arts decreased from 84 to 81 percent

bull Passing black BUSD students decreased from 63 percent for the class of 2010 to 57 percent for the class of 2011 for the math portion of the exit exam and from 68 percent to 57 percent for the English portion Statewide the numbers increased from 66 to 68 percent and 71 to 72 percent respectively

bull Passing Latino BUSD students increased from 73 percent for 2010 to 75 percent for 2011 for the math portion of the exit exam and from 74 percent to 78 percent for the English portion Statewide the numbers increased from 74 to 77 percent and 73 to 76 percent respectively

bull Passing white BUSD students increased from 97 percent for 2010 to 99 percent for 2011 for both portions of the exam Statewide the numbers stayed constant at 91 per-cent for both

All numbers are from the exit exam administered in the 10th grade the first time the exit exam is administered and when most students take the exam

Research uses new technique to study the electronic structure of materials

Director of community relations to leave post

politics and I loved it It was the most interesting and exciting job I ever hadrdquo Dardick said ldquoYou could be dealing with potholes in the morning and the cityrsquos position on divestment in Nigeria in the afternoonrdquo

In 1998 Dardick was hired by UC Berkeleyrsquos department of community re-lations as interim director of the Berkeley Alliance mdash a collaboration between UC Berkeley and Berkeley Unified School District that still exists today which aims to build community partnerships to ef-fect change on critical social and eco-nomic equity issues in Berkeley

Two years later he decided to work for himself as a community relations consultant working on projects like the Ed Roberts Campus at the Ashby BART station and the David Brower Center

When Ed Roberts a UC Berkeley alum and leader in the local disabili-ties rights movement passed away in 1995 Dardick mdash under the direction of Dean mdash put together a task force of local activists disability rights leaders and campus community members to honor Robertsrsquo memory

ldquoMayor Dean asked me to represent the office at his memorial and I was hon-ored to do that because I grew up in the disability rights movement my father was a person with a disabilityrdquo he said

After 10 years of working for him-self Dardick returned to the campusrsquo community relations office where he continued to work on projects to con-nect the campus and city communities through community service projects and partnerships like the Joint South-side Safety Patrol program

ldquoHe knew the community He knew the various stakeholders and he had a manner or an ability to bring people to the table and work out solutionsrdquo said Councilmember Laurie Capitelli ldquoTheyrsquoll be big shoes to fillrdquo

Stephanie Baer is the city news editor

journal Nature Materials lab researchers explored the concept of using a high-en-ergy version of the technique of angle-re-solved photoemission mdash HARPES mdash to study the electronic structure of materi-als Though HARPES and its less intense counterpart ARPES have been around since 1905 when Albert Einstein first ex-plained the photoelectric effect mdash the ba-sis for these techniques mdash scientists have only recently been able to make use of the techniques

The photoelectric effect an impor-tant part of the foundation of quantum mechanics means that light behaves like a quantum of energy or a photon which can give all of its energy to an electron and liberate it as a photoelec-tron which then flies away explained Chuck Fadley mdash a distinguished profes-sor of physics at UC Davis an Advanced Light Source professor at Berkeley Lab and co-author of the paper

ldquoOne then measures the energy of the electron and its direction as pre-cisely as possible and from these measurements can deduce exquisite detail about how the electron was moving in the material before it was

ejected how the atoms are bound to one another whether they are magnet-ic or not how the material will conduct electricityrdquo he said

Without a sufficiently bright light source mdash and therefore sufficiently pow-erful beams of hard x-rays mdash scientists were unable to penetrate the materials on the atomic level that was necessary to observe interactions of photons and elec-trons beyond the surface

Because HARPES uses higher en-ergy it can reveal interactions signifi-cantly past the scope of what the less powerful ARPES can do According to Fadley ARPES uses ultraviolet and soft x-ray photons and therefore can-

not penetrate much past one nanome-ter whereas with HARPES scientists can measure photoelectrons and elec-tronic properties at depths anywhere between 6 and 10 nanometers

ldquoYou really give them a kickrdquo said Alexander Gray a graduate student at UC Davis and Berkeley Lab and a co-author of the study ldquoThis way even with electrons that are deep deep inside of the material you can really get the information about the elec-tronic properties of the material You can seek them out you can catch them and you can analyze themrdquo

Claire Perlman is the assistant uni-versity news editor

From Front

unemplOyment Rates in state higher than in rest of country

From Front

disCriminatiOn Initial complaint was filed in June 2009

Pyle in dismissing the merit of Senigarrsquos claims said that ldquoUCSF has an historic commitment to diversity in the work forcerdquo

ldquo(Fritz) had a very strong record of hiring retaining and promoting Afri-can-American employeesrdquo she added

A judge dismissed a wage discrimi-nation complaint that had originally been part of Senigarrsquos claim accord-ing to Pyle However Senigar is still claiming damages for wages he alleges he should have been paid because he was passed over for promotion

Senigar is claiming damages for that amount of money for the amount of money necessary to cover his medi-cal expenses and for the amount of money to compensate for among other things a ldquogeneral loss of self-

esteem and well-beingrdquo according to the second amended complaint The claim does not specify an exact amount for these damages

ldquoThis case is not about the moneyrdquo said Pamela Price Senigarrsquos attorney ldquoHe should have been given the op-portunity to succeed The denial of that opportunity is the issuerdquo

Senigar began to work for the uni-versity in October 1999 Over the seven years leading up to the first incident Price said that Senigar received posi-tive reviews from his superiors Senigar was fired by UCSF prior to the case go-ing to trial but it is not part of the cur-rent complaint according to Price

Pyle said that Fritz was ultimately laid off in 2009 for the same budget-ary reasons that the position in ques-

tion was never filledSenigar filed his initial complaint

on June 23 2009 A first amended complaint was filed on Aug 20 2009 and a second amended complaint mdash the complaint that forms the basis for the trial currently underway mdash was filed on Aug 16 2009

Because the complaint was not settled out of court it is now going to trial mdash an outcome that Senigar did not want to happen Price said

ldquoHe spent a lot of time trying to resolve it internally (so) a trial is totally a last resortrdquo she said ldquoHe never imagined he would have to go through the ordeal of filing the law-suit or going to trialrdquo

Jordan Bach-Lombardo is the uni-versity news editor

not gauge college preparedness says Mary Perry deputy director of Ed-Source a nonprofit organization that researches education in California

A separate report released earlier this month from the not-for-profit organization ACT mdash which admin-isters a test of the same name de-signed to measure college prepared-ness mdash seemingly contradicts the exit exam numbers showing college pre-paredness levels declining across the state from 31 percent meeting ACTrsquos benchmarks to 30 percent a decrease of roughly 1500 students

Perry says the ACT reportrsquos num-bersrsquo discrepancy may only be superfi-cial She said ACT test takers are self-selecting college-bound students whereas every California high school student must take the exit exam

ldquoYou donrsquot know whether the de-cline yoursquore seeing is a reduction of the skill set of California students or is because the group taking the test changedrdquo she added

State department spokesperson Jung says the two tests shouldnrsquot be compared because the exit exam measures math skills through sev-enth grade and English and language arts through the 10th grade while the ACT tests a studentrsquos ability to take college level courses

UC spokesperson Ricardo Vazquez said most UC admits take the SAT mdash a college-readiness test administered by the not-for-profit College Board mdash and a growing number are taking both the ACT and the SAT though few take the ACT exclusively Exact numbers for university were not im-mediately available as of press time

According to Perry 50 percent of graduating seniors in California took

the SAT while 22 percent took the ACT in 2010

She said the state is working on new standards that will better incorporate

college preparedness into high school requirements like the exit exam

Mihir Zaveri is the lead develop-ment and capital projects reporter

percent Since at least 2002 the state unemployment rate has been consis-tently higher than the national rate according to the statersquos analysis

In a press conference Thursday morning Gov Jerry Brown unveiled a three-part strategy called Califor-nia Jobs First plan aimed at lowering the statersquos unemployment rate The plan which will require a two-thirds vote from the state legislature for ap-proval would provide a tax credit for

businesses that hire more employees and also remove sales tax on manu-facturing equipment for startup com-panies during their first three years of business

ldquoBoosting job growth in California is a top priority and this proposal is a critical step in making sure the state does everything it can to support lo-cal job creationrdquo Brown said at the conference

Although Brown did not say specif-

ically how many jobs he estimates the plan will create he seemed confident that it would help lower the statersquos un-employment rate mdash the second high-est in the nation last month

ldquoWe know the future depends on growing our way out of this economic morassrdquo Assembly Speaker John Per-ez D-Los Angeles said at the confer-ence

Soumya Karlamangla is the assis-tant city news editor

CAMPUS FIGURES

RESEARCh amp IDEAS

7The Daily Californian PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011

TEXT ldquoNEDSVIPrdquo TO 22022

TO GET UP TO $20 OFF

Get up to 50 off flashdrives school supplies starting at $50 and more

NEDrsquoS BERKELYBOOKSTORE

2480 Bancroft Waynedsbookscomucb

8 paid advertisement Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

Catholics

Newman Hall amp Dwight Way

wwwcalnewmanorg

Monday 822 Ice Cream Social 8pm Tuesday 823 Newman Orientation Event (includes dinner) 6pm

Cal

College Ave

Wednesday 824 Rosary Group 8pm

Sunday 828 Mass 5pm Student Dinner 6pm Candlelight Mass 10pm

(across from unit 2)

Monday 829 Newman Orientation Event Part II 6pm

Saturday 827 Kayaking at Berkeley Marina Meet at Newman Hall 930am

Holy Spirit Parish

All events are ADA Accessible

Catholics Cal

Newman Hall Holy Spirit Parish

Monday 822 Ice Cream Social 8pmTuesday 823 Newman Orientation Event (includes dinner) 6pm

Wednesday 824 Rosary Group 8pm Saturday 827 Kayaking at Berkeley Marina Meet at Newman Hall 930amSunday 828 Mass 5pm Student Dinner 6pm Candlelight Mass 10pm

Monday 829 Newman Orientation Event Part II 6pm

All events are ADA Accessible

College Ave ampDwight Way

(across from unit 2)wwwcalnewmanorg

You beg your members to table on Sproul People walk right by You post hundreds of flyers in the hall and they get removed or covered up hours later Face it flyering is a costly labor-intensive process But therersquos a better way

Post your flyer in the most visible spot on

campus The Daily Cal

HEY STUDENT GROUPS

Take advantage of this savings now advertisingdailycalorg | 510-280-2452THE RULES Ads must run in four consecutive issues in AugustSeptember 2011 Student groups must pre-pay for ads This offer is only valid to UC Berkeley student groups officially registered with the ASUC or Campus Life amp Leadership

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLACK)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLUE)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (white)

LEVELS OF SERVICE AT A STEEP DISCOUNT TO STUDENT GROUPS ALL PLANS INCLUDE AD DESIGN AND APPEARANCES ON DAILYCALORG THIS IS A LIMITED OFFER ONLY FOR STUDENT GROUPS

SIXTEENTH OF A PAGE QUARTER OF A PAGE HALF OF A PAGE

But I started my dream of being a reporter by working in Eshleman Hall at the Daily Cal

Mark Summers REPORTER AT THE WALL STREET JOURNAL DAILY CAL ALUM rsquo

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLACK)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLUE)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (white)

Wersquove been a starting place for thousands of professionals who lead extraordinary careers in media advertising anad business If yoursquore ready to start your career now go to applydailycalorg

JOIN THE DAILY CALRECRUITMENT MEETINGS

Friday Aug 26 4pmTuesday Aug 31 5pm

600 Eshleman Hall

We are hiringWeb Developers Marketers Multimedia producers News Sports and Arts amp Entertainment reporters Photographers Copy Editors Designers Bloggers Illustrators Ads Representatives and more

SportSFriday august 26 2011 bull dailycal orgsports

AtCalwearemorethanfamiliarwith the aftermath of losing anincrediblequarterbackPerhapscur-rent students only know AaronRodgers as the alumnus that wonthe Super Bowl last season but Irememberhimas the savior ofCalfootball that brought us somerespectability AfterRodgersboltedfortheNFLcoachJeffTedfordhasyettotrotouta competent let alone comparablequarterbackWersquovejusthadaflurryofdisappointments In volleyball the setter is essen-tially the quarterback of the teamShersquostheonethatdeliverstheballtoattackers which requires remark-ablerapportandtimingwithhittersquickdecision-makingandtheabil-itytoreaddefenses TheCalvolleyballteamlosesitsquarterback this season in CarliLloydButdonrsquotexpect it tomeanthedemiseoftheBearsasRodgersrsquodepartureprovedtobe Lloyd probably meant more toherteamthanRodgersThenationalPlayer of the Year Lloyd institutedthenewup-tempooffensethatledtothe squadrsquos incredible run to theconference title and debut in thenationaltitlegame More importantly she was theheart and soul of the team Therewasnodoubtshewastheleaderonthe court keeping her teammatestogether and hitters focused Shesimplyrefusedto letherteamloseandhadawayofkillingopponentsrsquomomentumwithbigplays HerintensitywasinfectiousanditrsquoshardtoimaginetheBearsgoing

Bearsrsquo new quarterback

wonrsquot stop surging Cal

Christina Jones cjonesdailycalorg

ldquoIt sounds demeaning to say tune-up but I would say these

games are more of a way to get momentum going for our teamrdquo mdash Volleyball coach Rich Feller on the preseason

Bears open 2011 season with barren Riverside club

Eightmonthsafterdropping theNCAAchampi-onshipmatchtoPennStatelastDecembertheNo3Cal volleyball team will see itsfirstactionofthe2011seasonthisweekend

The Bears will host the CalMoltenClassictodayandSaturdayat Haas Pavillion inviting UCRiverside Fairfield and FloridaInternational University intoBerkeley

Calwillbelookingtorepeatitsperformance from 2010when itwon both of its matches of thepreseason tournament tallyingvictories over UC Santa Barbara(25-1825-1528-26)andManhattanCollege(25-825-1525-7)

Outside hitterTarahMurreywho returns to theBears as the lone senior was named the tourna-mentrsquosmost valuable player after leading the teamwith11killsand14digsTheBearsrsquooffensewassolidlogging a 341 attack percentage across the twogames

Calshouldbepoisedtoseesimilarresultstonightwhen it opens its seasonagainstUCRiversideat 5pmTheHighlandershadlittletocelebratein2010postinga2-30recordincludinga0-16markintheBigWestRiversidewaspicked to finish last in theBigWestin2011

ldquoItsoundsdemeaningtosaytune-upbutIwouldsaythesegamesaremoreofawaytogetmomentumgoing for our teamrdquo coach Rich Feller said ldquoThethreeweeksofpreseasonaremeanttoestablishsomesortoflineupandmomentumrdquo

Though theBearsmightbepusheda littlemoreonSaturdaywhentheysquareoffwithFairfieldat11amandFIUat7pmCallikelywonrsquotseeanyseri-ous competition Still the squadknows it needs togetofftoaquickstarttotheseason

ldquoYouplayeverygame likes itrsquos thenational titlerdquoMurreysaidldquoYoursquorenevergoingtoplayperfectvol-leyball but you always have to respect your oppo-nentrdquo

TheBearswillalsobeusingthisweekendaswellasthematchesintheupcomingweekstosolidifyitsstartinglineupThoughtheteamreturnssixstartersfrom2010 itwillneedto findawaytoreplacethepresenceofCarliLloydtheAVCANationalPlayerofthe Year in 2010 Lloyd finished her career with5697assistsmdashgoodenough for secondall time inCalhistory

By Connor Byrne | Staffcbyrnedailycalorg

All-American Tarah Murrey (middle) returns to lead the Bears as the biggest offensive threat Shannon hamiltonfile

when tonight at 7 pmwhere haaS pavilion

Quick LookCal v UC riverSide Bears slightly modify the

recipe for success in 2011

TheCal volleyball team is coming off itsbest season in program history The Bearstook their first Pac-10 title andmade theirdebutinthenationalchampionship One school of thought would be not tomesswithsuccessandsimplyplugplayersinto fill the twovacantpositionsat setteranddefensivespecialistinthestartinglineup Reigning AVCA Coach of the Year RichFeller is taking a slightly different routeWhile the overall offensive and defensiveschemeswillremaininplaceFellersaidheismixing things up in the lineup beginningwithtonightrsquosopeneragainstUCRiverside ldquoI donrsquot think yoursquoll see any sweepingchangesrdquo Feller said ldquoWe have a lotmoreweaponsnowMinusCarli(Lloyd)whowasthesetterweincreasedouroffensivethreatsbythreeorfournewplayersrdquo Last season the starters were solidifiedearly in the preseason and didnrsquot changemuchThisseasoneventhoseaccomplishedstarters thatwerekey contributors last yearhavetofightfortheirpositions MostnotablyCorreyJohnsonwhogar-neredAll-Pac10andAVCAhonorablemen-tionaccoladesasarightsidehitterlastsea-sonisdukingitoutwithtwooftheconfer-encersquos top blockers Shannon Hawari andKatBrownforaspotinthemiddle ldquoMostlyweneedoneof themiddleposi-tionstobeabletohitbehindthesetterexcep-tionally wellrdquo Feller said ldquoCorrey does that

By Christina Jones | Senior Staffcjonesdailycalorg

Setter PAGe 11 SeASon Preview PAGe 11 volleybAll PAGe 11

better than anyone We may continue tobounceherbetweenmiddleandrightsiderdquo IfJohnsondoesnrsquotwinamiddlespotshersquollbattle highly regarded freshman ChristinaHigginsforapositionontherightside As Feller experimentswith rotations thesetterpositionisforeseeablylocked After two years as Lloydrsquos understudyEllyBarrettwilltakethehelmTheuntestedjuniorhassomehugeshoestofillmdashLloydearnedNational Player of the Year honorslast yearmdashbut benefits from two years ofexperiencesettingtheB-team Barrett will be surrounded by powerfulattackers tohelpher ease into the roleAll-AmericanTarahMurrey returns as the lonesenior on the team coming off a breakoutjuniorcampaigninwhichsheemergedasoneof the countryrsquos top outside hittersMurreywillstepintoLloydrsquosroleasthevocalleaderinadditiontothestrongestoffensivethreat WhileMurreywillcertainlybeheardshenotes that the team has a more reservedtemperamentthisyear ldquoMe and Carli last year we could get alittlerowdyrdquoMurreysaidldquoButIthinkthatonce we get more comfortable with eachotherallofourtruepersonalitiesaregoingto come out and itrsquos going to be a lot offunrdquo The ability to keep energy updown the

CheCk onlinewwwdailycalorg

Volleyball beat writer christina Jones discusses the Bearsrsquo outlook for the season ahead in a daily cal podcast

Last year

the Cal volleyball team was one win away from a

national title The Bears are set on seizing

the crown in 2011

volleyball | Season Preview

ChriStopher mCdermUtfile

10 sports Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

W soccer

Bison are question mark for CalBy Seung Y Lee | Staffsyleedailycalorg

LastyeartheCalwomenrsquossoccerteamhad its biggest victory of the seasonagainstHawaiiatEdwardsStadiumpil-ingeightgoalsfromsixdifferentplayers ButastheBearspreparetoflydowntoHonolulufortherematchcoachNeilMcGuiredoesnotexpectanotherrompovertheRainbowWahine ldquoHawaii has a new coach and theplayerswillbemoremotivatedrdquoMcGuiresaid ldquoWe are also playing in front ofabout 3000 people I donrsquot anticipateanysortofsimilarperformancesrdquo ParticipatinginthelsquoOhanaHotelsNoKai lsquoOi tournament Cal (1-1) will firstplayNorthDakotaState (1-0)onFridaynightat10pmbeforebattlingthetour-nament host Hawaii (0-1) on Sundaynightat8pmBothmatchesareat theWaipirsquooPeninsulaSoccerStadium NeithertheBisonnortheWahinehaveclose to the talent the Bears haveAlthoughNorthDakotaStatewonmore

thanhalfitsmatcheslastseasonmostofits opponentswere tiny obscure schoolsscattered across theDakotasWith suchobscurity Cal players and coaches arereadyingtoplaytheBisonknowingnearlynothing about the team The one thingthesquaddoesknowaboutNorthDakotaState is that it plays a 4-4-2 lineup themostcommonformationinsoccer Unlike with North Dakota State theBears have experience playing againstHawaiiLedbystarstrikerAlexMorganrsquoshattrickCalbatteredtheWahinedefenseinthesecondhalfscoringfivegoals HoweverSundayrsquosmatchwilllikelybeconsiderably different since theWahinehiredanewcoachMicheleNagamine LikeHawaiiCalisalsoinatransitionmode adjusting to the void left by theseniorMorganInthelasttwomatchestheBearshavestruggledtoscoregoalslosingtoPepperdine2-1andthreadingpastSanDiegoState2-1thankstotwolategoalsbyseniorJulieBenzandjuniorLaurenBattung ldquoWehavebeenpracticinghowtopen-etratethroughthedefensebacklineand

creating scoring chancesrdquo Benz saidldquoWeneedtobemorefearlessinfrontofthenetrdquo For the Bears the ghost of Morganmdash who scored nearly a third of thesquadrsquos totalgoals last seasonmdash loomslargeovertheteamdemandingalterna-tivewaysfortheteamtoscoreandwingames One of the solutions that McGuireand the coaches are hoping for is thereturn of injured forwards MirandaWhiteandRachelMercik Mercik a sophomore has shownpromiseinherfirstyearwiththeteamstarting four games and scoring twogoals White a utility player for bothdefense and offense mdash will be able toprovide experience alongside Benz andBattungintheattackinglines ldquoWhite and Mercik are two playersthatsufferedfromlong-termandshort-term injuries that have come backrdquoMcGuire said ldquoWe havenrsquot had themenough of the field so I want to givethesetwosomequalityplayingtimethisweekendrdquo

Lauren Battung scored Calrsquos first goal in its 2-1 overtime win over San Diego State on Sunday It was her second goal of the year sean goebelfile

M soccer

Bears cross the bay to open their seasonBy Camellia Senemar | Staffcsenemardailycalorg

Season openers always havetheirjittersespeciallywhenteamsare away from the comforts oftheirhomefield WiththesetwoforcesworkingagainsttheNo7Calmenrsquossoccerteam this Friday evening theBears travel across the bridge toface the University of SanFranciscoatNegoescoStadiumat7pm Thedisparityinthetwoteamsrsquostandings mdash the Dons areunrankedmdashmightprovideahinttowards thegamersquos resultbutonpaper the Bearsrsquo all-time seriesrecord against USF stands at14-21-2EventhoughCalshutouttheDonsintheirlastfourencoun-ters the matchup still stands atrickytest ldquoUSF is a strong and talentedteamrdquo junior co-captain StevenBirnbaumsaidldquoWearejustlook-ing to play our game and get agoodstarttotheseasonrdquo Last yearrsquos tilt at GoldmanField produced then-sophomoreJohn Fitzpatrickrsquos game winninggoal in overtime It was then-sophomoreAnthonySalcicciawhofound Birnbaumrsquos head for theassistonthelastcornerkickofthematch The goal gave his squadthe1-0leadandashareoftheBayAreaClassicwithStanford Those three lethal juniors arethe only players to return to theBearsrsquo 11-man lineup from 2010All posted career highs in goalsassistsandpoints in their sopho-moreyearsandwillbelookingtoadd to their tallies Birnbaum isthesolereturningstarterfromthebacklineandisjoinedbySalciccia

as a fellow co-captain The cur-rentmemberswillhavebigshoesto fill after last seasonrsquos highlysuccessful campaign saw fiveseniors and one junior head toMajorLeagueSoccer CoachKevinGrimeswill havehis optionsopenwith this youngteammdashmorethanhalfareenter-ing their freshmen and sopho-more yearsThe five timePac-10Coach of the Yearmost recentlyawarded in 2010 also has twoexperienced forwards redshirtjuniors Kyle Lunt and MichaelMunozathisdisposal ldquoWe are confident with ourteamrdquo Birnbaum said ldquoAll theunderclassmen are very talentedandwillbeabigpartofourteamthisyearrdquo Calhasbeenpreparingappro-priately and avoiding any majorinjury concerns during the pastmonthofpreseasonTheultimategoal is to retain the conferencechampionshipTheyarepredictedto finish second while UCLAwhich claimed the second spotlast season is projected to takethe title Nonetheless the Bearsare feeling optimistic about theseason opener after honing theirtechniquesinthesummer ldquoWe are ready for tomorrowrdquojunior goalkeeper Robby Gogatzsaid ldquoWe just want to keep onimproving one game at a timeandbuildonourstrengthsrdquo Cal will have three gamesremainingintheBayAreaClassicAlthough the jitters of a seasonopenerwill have diminished theBearswillstillbeplayinginunfa-miliar territory in Illinois andConnecticut It wonrsquot be untilSept 16 that the club returnshometoEdwardsStadiumtofin-ishoffagainstSantaClara

11sportsFriday August 26 2011 The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

field hockeyFrom Page 9

SeaSon preview Bears will face a stacked Pac-12 schedule

From Page 9

Setter Barrett will build her own legacy after Lloydrsquos exit

stretch will be crucial as the Bears face a stacked conference slate that includes three other teams ranked in the top-10 nationally After a weak preseason Cal will have to be on top of its game to host perennial power No 6 Stanford to open conference play on Sept 13 The addition of Colorado and Utah extend

the Pac-12 season by four matches forcing the first leg of the Big Spike to take place on a Tuesday night No 2 USC picked to win the Pac-12 will pose the greatest challenge for the Bears who are predicted to finish sec-ond The Trojans return all of their starters from the team that lost to Cal in the Final Four but defeated the

Bears twice in the regular seasonCalrsquos not quite ready to face the likes to Stanford and USC yet but are putting the work in to get to that pointldquoWe played some hard volleyball in practice so conditioning-wise wersquore right thererdquo Murrey said ldquoMentally wersquore getting ready every single dayrdquoldquoWersquore ready to playrdquo

nearly as far last season without her This year however it seems plausible that Cal will achieve similar heights without the setter extraordinaire Lloyd had a lot of help with the meteoric rise of Tarah Murrey as one of the premier outside hitters in the nation So long as Lloydrsquos successor Elly Barrett can find Murrey on the outside the Bears will be in great shape It has yet to be seen if Barrett will contribute the same kind of dynamic play that Lloyd did or if she will have as well-rounded a game But frankly the team doesnrsquot need her to be Lloyd She doesnrsquot need to be the most vocal player on the court or fire her team up That responsibility will be left to Murrey the lone senior

on the team who was clearly part of the leadership core last year Barrett doesnrsquot have to try to learn a new offense like Lloyd did or guide her teammates through such adjust-ments to their timing The system is already in place The Austin Texas native just needs to be a competent setter Given that she was an even more highly-sought after recruit than Lloyd itrsquos safe to assume Barrett has that ability With two years waiting in the wings Barrett amassed a significant amount of reps in practice with her attackers Coach Rich Feller said shersquos tightly bonded with her fellow juniors many of whom shersquoll be setting in the middle and right side so chemistry shouldnrsquot

be an issue Last year the Bears lost Pac-10 Player of the Year in outside hitter Hana Cutura and the preseason talk was focused mainly on how Cal would compensate for such a huge loss It only took a few weeks for Tarah Murrey to rise from the ashes of a dis-appointing sophomore campaign to emerge as one of the countryrsquos best Suddenly no one was mentioning Cutura anymore It would be foolish to assume that Barrett who has not had experience starting will have a similar breakout year However once she proves herself to be a capable setter Lloydrsquos name will start to fade and Barrett can begin building her own legacy

From Page 9

volleyball Cal hopes to repeat success of 2010 tournament

By Eric Lee | Staffetleedailycalorg

After an undefeated exhibition schedule which included two con-vincing wins and a tie with Stanford the Cal field hockey team will visit No 16 Louisville at 3 pm at Trager Stadium for its first official game of the 2011 season

Coming off last yearrsquos disappoint-ing finish mdash a loss to Stanford in the NorPac Tournament final mdash the Bears hope to start the season strong as they embark on a mini-roadtrip to Louisville Ky for games against the Cardinals and No 13 Michigan State

Louisville enters this season with some new faces Justine Sowry is the new head coach and a number of senior leaders from last season have since graduated

The squad however returns three All-Big East preseason selec-tions along with a number of expe-rienced players to fill out the rest of the roster

The Cardinals finished the 2010 season with a 13-7 record and a 5-1 conference record good enough for second in the strong Big East confer-ence

Louisvillersquos season ended in the semifinals of the Big East Tournament a 2-1 loss to No 4 Connecticut

Last year the Cardinals defeated the Bears 2-0 in Louisville under then-head coach Pam Bustin who later took on head coaching duties at Duke

Returning sophomore Erin

Scheidtmiller provided one of Louisvillersquos goals in that game while the other score came from Tuli Lim who has since graduated

One thing the Bears have going for them is an extremely strong preseason which began with a dominating 10-2 victory over UC Davis

Sophomore Jordan OrsquoReilly started the contest off with a pair of goals and the Aggies never recov-ered

Sophomore Andrea Earle fresh-man Marcia Venter and senior Erin Magill each provided two goals in the offensive barrage

Cal then went to No 20 Stanford and tied a tough Cardinal squad 1-1 due to strong goalkeeping from senior Maddie Hand and sophomore Courtney Hendrickson Senior Megan Shimojima provided the Bearrsquos lone goal

In its final preseason scrimmage Cal defeated the University of Alberta 4-1 with another fine offensive performance from Shimojima who netted two goals in the match

The road does not get any easier after Louisville as the Bears face No 13 Michigan State the following day The Spartans who finished with an 15-6 record last season figure to be one of Calrsquos toughest matchups this upcoming season

Last year the Bears fell to Michigan State 3-4 in their second game of that season The match saw seven different lead changes before the Spartans scored the game-winning goal in the 69th minute to close out the Bears

Cal looks to build upon successful preseason

ldquoWersquoll use the games to find out which starting lineups will work the best and some of those may include the younger playersrdquo Feller said

ldquoIf therersquos an opportunity to play more people this is the chance to do

itrdquoJunior setter Elly Barrett will be the

one to pick up where Lloyd left off In 2010 Barrett logged only 27 sets through 13 games of work behind Lloyd and will look to establish herself

as a leader of the 2011 version of the Bears

ldquoIt will be good practice to stay focused on our side of the court regard-less of whorsquos on the other siderdquo Barrett said

DUMMY

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

1 Ridicule4 Magna __9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried folded and lled18 Squelch19 Opposite of cominrsquo20 Fruit-topped dessert22 Persons23 Prex for marketing or communication24 Egyptrsquos loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Tried39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation systems

1 Crawling bug2 Small veggies3 Engrave4 Regal home5 Mrs Ralph Kramden6 __ Hayworth7 Snatched8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebrsquos wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement

31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space ight agcy44 One of a pair45 British bishopsrsquo items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartlettrsquos book abbr53 Repulsive54 Green fruit55 Satanrsquos specialty59 Pauserrsquos words

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

Keep Berkeley Unique Shop LocallySupporting locally-owned independently operated businesses keeps our city unique creates more jobs and makes our economy stronger Look for this icon the next time yoursquore shopping for something special

Find a local business near you at buylocalberkeleycom All contributions are tax deductible dailycalorgdonate

Support independent student journalismDonate to the Daily Californian

Support independent student journalism Donate to the Daily CalAll contributions are tax deductible

dailycalorgdonate

12 PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

  • 0826_dailycal01
  • 0826_dailycal02
  • 0826_dailycal03
  • 0826_dailycal04
  • 0826_dailycal05
  • 0826_dailycal06
  • 0826_dailycal07
  • 0826_dailycal08
  • 0826_dailycal09
  • 0826_dailycal10
  • 0826_dailycal11
  • 0826_dailycal12

6 news Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

From Front

readiness Some say test does not gauge college preparedness

BERKELEY BREAKDOWN

Caleb Dardick the UC Berkeley director of local government and communityrelations has been an important part of the community for the past 16 years

eugene w laustaff

The surface of a material is usually as far as scientists have delved when exploring the objectrsquos chemistry be-cause it is where the most important reactions happen

But with relatively unexplored ma-terials such as semiconductors and superconductors looking past the surface has become increasingly im-portant which Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory scientists have accomplished in recent research

In a study published Aug 14 in the

After being a part of the Berkeley community for 16 years working for the city and the campus Caleb Dardick UC Berkeley director of local government and community relations is returning to his river roots to take up a new posi-tion at home in Nevada County

Dardick mdash who has been instrumen-tal to town-gown relations since immers-ing himself in Berkeley politics as former Mayor Shirley Deanrsquos legislative aid mdash will be moving to Nevada City to serve as executive director for the South Yuba River Citizens League In June Dardick applied for the position and was chosen earlier after a nationwide search

ldquoHe brings incredibly strong com-munication skills expertise in strate-gic planning mdash certainly in coalition building and program managementrdquo said Kim Milligan interim executive director for SYRCL

In his new position Dardick will lead the organization in its mission to protect the Yuba River and Watershed while working on statewide issues such as the recovery of salmon in the Yuba River mdash named one of Americarsquos Most Endangered Rivers in May by the conservation group American Rivers

ldquoWe went to the Yuba River all the time the older kids who could drive would drive through the neighbor-hood honk the horn and all the little kids would come running out and jump in the back of the truck and wersquod go to the river for the dayrdquo Dardick said ldquoWe just grew up lounging on the rocks and swimming in the beautiful clear water itrsquos part of my DNArdquo

After managing his fatherrsquos cam-paign for county supervisor in 1994 mdash his first foray into politics mdash Dardick worked on several more campaigns including Deanrsquos run-off campaign in December 1994 and then served as Deanrsquos legislative aid for four years

ldquoI became immersed in Berkeley

By Claire Perlman | Senior Staffcperlmandailycalorg

By Stephanie Baer | Senior Staffsbaerdailycalorg

CheCk Onlinewwwdailycalorg

Claire Perlman explains how Berkeley lab scientists have studied electronic structures

CheCk Onlinewwwdailycalorg

Listen to an interview of Caleb Dardick about his experiences serving the campus and the city

bull The percentage of Berkeley Unified School District stu-dents that took and passed the exit exam for math decreased from 82 percent for the class of 2010 to 81 per-cent in the class of 2011 and for English and language arts decreased from 84 to 81 percent

bull Passing black BUSD students decreased from 63 percent for the class of 2010 to 57 percent for the class of 2011 for the math portion of the exit exam and from 68 percent to 57 percent for the English portion Statewide the numbers increased from 66 to 68 percent and 71 to 72 percent respectively

bull Passing Latino BUSD students increased from 73 percent for 2010 to 75 percent for 2011 for the math portion of the exit exam and from 74 percent to 78 percent for the English portion Statewide the numbers increased from 74 to 77 percent and 73 to 76 percent respectively

bull Passing white BUSD students increased from 97 percent for 2010 to 99 percent for 2011 for both portions of the exam Statewide the numbers stayed constant at 91 per-cent for both

All numbers are from the exit exam administered in the 10th grade the first time the exit exam is administered and when most students take the exam

Research uses new technique to study the electronic structure of materials

Director of community relations to leave post

politics and I loved it It was the most interesting and exciting job I ever hadrdquo Dardick said ldquoYou could be dealing with potholes in the morning and the cityrsquos position on divestment in Nigeria in the afternoonrdquo

In 1998 Dardick was hired by UC Berkeleyrsquos department of community re-lations as interim director of the Berkeley Alliance mdash a collaboration between UC Berkeley and Berkeley Unified School District that still exists today which aims to build community partnerships to ef-fect change on critical social and eco-nomic equity issues in Berkeley

Two years later he decided to work for himself as a community relations consultant working on projects like the Ed Roberts Campus at the Ashby BART station and the David Brower Center

When Ed Roberts a UC Berkeley alum and leader in the local disabili-ties rights movement passed away in 1995 Dardick mdash under the direction of Dean mdash put together a task force of local activists disability rights leaders and campus community members to honor Robertsrsquo memory

ldquoMayor Dean asked me to represent the office at his memorial and I was hon-ored to do that because I grew up in the disability rights movement my father was a person with a disabilityrdquo he said

After 10 years of working for him-self Dardick returned to the campusrsquo community relations office where he continued to work on projects to con-nect the campus and city communities through community service projects and partnerships like the Joint South-side Safety Patrol program

ldquoHe knew the community He knew the various stakeholders and he had a manner or an ability to bring people to the table and work out solutionsrdquo said Councilmember Laurie Capitelli ldquoTheyrsquoll be big shoes to fillrdquo

Stephanie Baer is the city news editor

journal Nature Materials lab researchers explored the concept of using a high-en-ergy version of the technique of angle-re-solved photoemission mdash HARPES mdash to study the electronic structure of materi-als Though HARPES and its less intense counterpart ARPES have been around since 1905 when Albert Einstein first ex-plained the photoelectric effect mdash the ba-sis for these techniques mdash scientists have only recently been able to make use of the techniques

The photoelectric effect an impor-tant part of the foundation of quantum mechanics means that light behaves like a quantum of energy or a photon which can give all of its energy to an electron and liberate it as a photoelec-tron which then flies away explained Chuck Fadley mdash a distinguished profes-sor of physics at UC Davis an Advanced Light Source professor at Berkeley Lab and co-author of the paper

ldquoOne then measures the energy of the electron and its direction as pre-cisely as possible and from these measurements can deduce exquisite detail about how the electron was moving in the material before it was

ejected how the atoms are bound to one another whether they are magnet-ic or not how the material will conduct electricityrdquo he said

Without a sufficiently bright light source mdash and therefore sufficiently pow-erful beams of hard x-rays mdash scientists were unable to penetrate the materials on the atomic level that was necessary to observe interactions of photons and elec-trons beyond the surface

Because HARPES uses higher en-ergy it can reveal interactions signifi-cantly past the scope of what the less powerful ARPES can do According to Fadley ARPES uses ultraviolet and soft x-ray photons and therefore can-

not penetrate much past one nanome-ter whereas with HARPES scientists can measure photoelectrons and elec-tronic properties at depths anywhere between 6 and 10 nanometers

ldquoYou really give them a kickrdquo said Alexander Gray a graduate student at UC Davis and Berkeley Lab and a co-author of the study ldquoThis way even with electrons that are deep deep inside of the material you can really get the information about the elec-tronic properties of the material You can seek them out you can catch them and you can analyze themrdquo

Claire Perlman is the assistant uni-versity news editor

From Front

unemplOyment Rates in state higher than in rest of country

From Front

disCriminatiOn Initial complaint was filed in June 2009

Pyle in dismissing the merit of Senigarrsquos claims said that ldquoUCSF has an historic commitment to diversity in the work forcerdquo

ldquo(Fritz) had a very strong record of hiring retaining and promoting Afri-can-American employeesrdquo she added

A judge dismissed a wage discrimi-nation complaint that had originally been part of Senigarrsquos claim accord-ing to Pyle However Senigar is still claiming damages for wages he alleges he should have been paid because he was passed over for promotion

Senigar is claiming damages for that amount of money for the amount of money necessary to cover his medi-cal expenses and for the amount of money to compensate for among other things a ldquogeneral loss of self-

esteem and well-beingrdquo according to the second amended complaint The claim does not specify an exact amount for these damages

ldquoThis case is not about the moneyrdquo said Pamela Price Senigarrsquos attorney ldquoHe should have been given the op-portunity to succeed The denial of that opportunity is the issuerdquo

Senigar began to work for the uni-versity in October 1999 Over the seven years leading up to the first incident Price said that Senigar received posi-tive reviews from his superiors Senigar was fired by UCSF prior to the case go-ing to trial but it is not part of the cur-rent complaint according to Price

Pyle said that Fritz was ultimately laid off in 2009 for the same budget-ary reasons that the position in ques-

tion was never filledSenigar filed his initial complaint

on June 23 2009 A first amended complaint was filed on Aug 20 2009 and a second amended complaint mdash the complaint that forms the basis for the trial currently underway mdash was filed on Aug 16 2009

Because the complaint was not settled out of court it is now going to trial mdash an outcome that Senigar did not want to happen Price said

ldquoHe spent a lot of time trying to resolve it internally (so) a trial is totally a last resortrdquo she said ldquoHe never imagined he would have to go through the ordeal of filing the law-suit or going to trialrdquo

Jordan Bach-Lombardo is the uni-versity news editor

not gauge college preparedness says Mary Perry deputy director of Ed-Source a nonprofit organization that researches education in California

A separate report released earlier this month from the not-for-profit organization ACT mdash which admin-isters a test of the same name de-signed to measure college prepared-ness mdash seemingly contradicts the exit exam numbers showing college pre-paredness levels declining across the state from 31 percent meeting ACTrsquos benchmarks to 30 percent a decrease of roughly 1500 students

Perry says the ACT reportrsquos num-bersrsquo discrepancy may only be superfi-cial She said ACT test takers are self-selecting college-bound students whereas every California high school student must take the exit exam

ldquoYou donrsquot know whether the de-cline yoursquore seeing is a reduction of the skill set of California students or is because the group taking the test changedrdquo she added

State department spokesperson Jung says the two tests shouldnrsquot be compared because the exit exam measures math skills through sev-enth grade and English and language arts through the 10th grade while the ACT tests a studentrsquos ability to take college level courses

UC spokesperson Ricardo Vazquez said most UC admits take the SAT mdash a college-readiness test administered by the not-for-profit College Board mdash and a growing number are taking both the ACT and the SAT though few take the ACT exclusively Exact numbers for university were not im-mediately available as of press time

According to Perry 50 percent of graduating seniors in California took

the SAT while 22 percent took the ACT in 2010

She said the state is working on new standards that will better incorporate

college preparedness into high school requirements like the exit exam

Mihir Zaveri is the lead develop-ment and capital projects reporter

percent Since at least 2002 the state unemployment rate has been consis-tently higher than the national rate according to the statersquos analysis

In a press conference Thursday morning Gov Jerry Brown unveiled a three-part strategy called Califor-nia Jobs First plan aimed at lowering the statersquos unemployment rate The plan which will require a two-thirds vote from the state legislature for ap-proval would provide a tax credit for

businesses that hire more employees and also remove sales tax on manu-facturing equipment for startup com-panies during their first three years of business

ldquoBoosting job growth in California is a top priority and this proposal is a critical step in making sure the state does everything it can to support lo-cal job creationrdquo Brown said at the conference

Although Brown did not say specif-

ically how many jobs he estimates the plan will create he seemed confident that it would help lower the statersquos un-employment rate mdash the second high-est in the nation last month

ldquoWe know the future depends on growing our way out of this economic morassrdquo Assembly Speaker John Per-ez D-Los Angeles said at the confer-ence

Soumya Karlamangla is the assis-tant city news editor

CAMPUS FIGURES

RESEARCh amp IDEAS

7The Daily Californian PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011

TEXT ldquoNEDSVIPrdquo TO 22022

TO GET UP TO $20 OFF

Get up to 50 off flashdrives school supplies starting at $50 and more

NEDrsquoS BERKELYBOOKSTORE

2480 Bancroft Waynedsbookscomucb

8 paid advertisement Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

Catholics

Newman Hall amp Dwight Way

wwwcalnewmanorg

Monday 822 Ice Cream Social 8pm Tuesday 823 Newman Orientation Event (includes dinner) 6pm

Cal

College Ave

Wednesday 824 Rosary Group 8pm

Sunday 828 Mass 5pm Student Dinner 6pm Candlelight Mass 10pm

(across from unit 2)

Monday 829 Newman Orientation Event Part II 6pm

Saturday 827 Kayaking at Berkeley Marina Meet at Newman Hall 930am

Holy Spirit Parish

All events are ADA Accessible

Catholics Cal

Newman Hall Holy Spirit Parish

Monday 822 Ice Cream Social 8pmTuesday 823 Newman Orientation Event (includes dinner) 6pm

Wednesday 824 Rosary Group 8pm Saturday 827 Kayaking at Berkeley Marina Meet at Newman Hall 930amSunday 828 Mass 5pm Student Dinner 6pm Candlelight Mass 10pm

Monday 829 Newman Orientation Event Part II 6pm

All events are ADA Accessible

College Ave ampDwight Way

(across from unit 2)wwwcalnewmanorg

You beg your members to table on Sproul People walk right by You post hundreds of flyers in the hall and they get removed or covered up hours later Face it flyering is a costly labor-intensive process But therersquos a better way

Post your flyer in the most visible spot on

campus The Daily Cal

HEY STUDENT GROUPS

Take advantage of this savings now advertisingdailycalorg | 510-280-2452THE RULES Ads must run in four consecutive issues in AugustSeptember 2011 Student groups must pre-pay for ads This offer is only valid to UC Berkeley student groups officially registered with the ASUC or Campus Life amp Leadership

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLACK)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLUE)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (white)

LEVELS OF SERVICE AT A STEEP DISCOUNT TO STUDENT GROUPS ALL PLANS INCLUDE AD DESIGN AND APPEARANCES ON DAILYCALORG THIS IS A LIMITED OFFER ONLY FOR STUDENT GROUPS

SIXTEENTH OF A PAGE QUARTER OF A PAGE HALF OF A PAGE

But I started my dream of being a reporter by working in Eshleman Hall at the Daily Cal

Mark Summers REPORTER AT THE WALL STREET JOURNAL DAILY CAL ALUM rsquo

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLACK)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLUE)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (white)

Wersquove been a starting place for thousands of professionals who lead extraordinary careers in media advertising anad business If yoursquore ready to start your career now go to applydailycalorg

JOIN THE DAILY CALRECRUITMENT MEETINGS

Friday Aug 26 4pmTuesday Aug 31 5pm

600 Eshleman Hall

We are hiringWeb Developers Marketers Multimedia producers News Sports and Arts amp Entertainment reporters Photographers Copy Editors Designers Bloggers Illustrators Ads Representatives and more

SportSFriday august 26 2011 bull dailycal orgsports

AtCalwearemorethanfamiliarwith the aftermath of losing anincrediblequarterbackPerhapscur-rent students only know AaronRodgers as the alumnus that wonthe Super Bowl last season but Irememberhimas the savior ofCalfootball that brought us somerespectability AfterRodgersboltedfortheNFLcoachJeffTedfordhasyettotrotouta competent let alone comparablequarterbackWersquovejusthadaflurryofdisappointments In volleyball the setter is essen-tially the quarterback of the teamShersquostheonethatdeliverstheballtoattackers which requires remark-ablerapportandtimingwithhittersquickdecision-makingandtheabil-itytoreaddefenses TheCalvolleyballteamlosesitsquarterback this season in CarliLloydButdonrsquotexpect it tomeanthedemiseoftheBearsasRodgersrsquodepartureprovedtobe Lloyd probably meant more toherteamthanRodgersThenationalPlayer of the Year Lloyd institutedthenewup-tempooffensethatledtothe squadrsquos incredible run to theconference title and debut in thenationaltitlegame More importantly she was theheart and soul of the team Therewasnodoubtshewastheleaderonthe court keeping her teammatestogether and hitters focused Shesimplyrefusedto letherteamloseandhadawayofkillingopponentsrsquomomentumwithbigplays HerintensitywasinfectiousanditrsquoshardtoimaginetheBearsgoing

Bearsrsquo new quarterback

wonrsquot stop surging Cal

Christina Jones cjonesdailycalorg

ldquoIt sounds demeaning to say tune-up but I would say these

games are more of a way to get momentum going for our teamrdquo mdash Volleyball coach Rich Feller on the preseason

Bears open 2011 season with barren Riverside club

Eightmonthsafterdropping theNCAAchampi-onshipmatchtoPennStatelastDecembertheNo3Cal volleyball team will see itsfirstactionofthe2011seasonthisweekend

The Bears will host the CalMoltenClassictodayandSaturdayat Haas Pavillion inviting UCRiverside Fairfield and FloridaInternational University intoBerkeley

Calwillbelookingtorepeatitsperformance from 2010when itwon both of its matches of thepreseason tournament tallyingvictories over UC Santa Barbara(25-1825-1528-26)andManhattanCollege(25-825-1525-7)

Outside hitterTarahMurreywho returns to theBears as the lone senior was named the tourna-mentrsquosmost valuable player after leading the teamwith11killsand14digsTheBearsrsquooffensewassolidlogging a 341 attack percentage across the twogames

Calshouldbepoisedtoseesimilarresultstonightwhen it opens its seasonagainstUCRiversideat 5pmTheHighlandershadlittletocelebratein2010postinga2-30recordincludinga0-16markintheBigWestRiversidewaspicked to finish last in theBigWestin2011

ldquoItsoundsdemeaningtosaytune-upbutIwouldsaythesegamesaremoreofawaytogetmomentumgoing for our teamrdquo coach Rich Feller said ldquoThethreeweeksofpreseasonaremeanttoestablishsomesortoflineupandmomentumrdquo

Though theBearsmightbepusheda littlemoreonSaturdaywhentheysquareoffwithFairfieldat11amandFIUat7pmCallikelywonrsquotseeanyseri-ous competition Still the squadknows it needs togetofftoaquickstarttotheseason

ldquoYouplayeverygame likes itrsquos thenational titlerdquoMurreysaidldquoYoursquorenevergoingtoplayperfectvol-leyball but you always have to respect your oppo-nentrdquo

TheBearswillalsobeusingthisweekendaswellasthematchesintheupcomingweekstosolidifyitsstartinglineupThoughtheteamreturnssixstartersfrom2010 itwillneedto findawaytoreplacethepresenceofCarliLloydtheAVCANationalPlayerofthe Year in 2010 Lloyd finished her career with5697assistsmdashgoodenough for secondall time inCalhistory

By Connor Byrne | Staffcbyrnedailycalorg

All-American Tarah Murrey (middle) returns to lead the Bears as the biggest offensive threat Shannon hamiltonfile

when tonight at 7 pmwhere haaS pavilion

Quick LookCal v UC riverSide Bears slightly modify the

recipe for success in 2011

TheCal volleyball team is coming off itsbest season in program history The Bearstook their first Pac-10 title andmade theirdebutinthenationalchampionship One school of thought would be not tomesswithsuccessandsimplyplugplayersinto fill the twovacantpositionsat setteranddefensivespecialistinthestartinglineup Reigning AVCA Coach of the Year RichFeller is taking a slightly different routeWhile the overall offensive and defensiveschemeswillremaininplaceFellersaidheismixing things up in the lineup beginningwithtonightrsquosopeneragainstUCRiverside ldquoI donrsquot think yoursquoll see any sweepingchangesrdquo Feller said ldquoWe have a lotmoreweaponsnowMinusCarli(Lloyd)whowasthesetterweincreasedouroffensivethreatsbythreeorfournewplayersrdquo Last season the starters were solidifiedearly in the preseason and didnrsquot changemuchThisseasoneventhoseaccomplishedstarters thatwerekey contributors last yearhavetofightfortheirpositions MostnotablyCorreyJohnsonwhogar-neredAll-Pac10andAVCAhonorablemen-tionaccoladesasarightsidehitterlastsea-sonisdukingitoutwithtwooftheconfer-encersquos top blockers Shannon Hawari andKatBrownforaspotinthemiddle ldquoMostlyweneedoneof themiddleposi-tionstobeabletohitbehindthesetterexcep-tionally wellrdquo Feller said ldquoCorrey does that

By Christina Jones | Senior Staffcjonesdailycalorg

Setter PAGe 11 SeASon Preview PAGe 11 volleybAll PAGe 11

better than anyone We may continue tobounceherbetweenmiddleandrightsiderdquo IfJohnsondoesnrsquotwinamiddlespotshersquollbattle highly regarded freshman ChristinaHigginsforapositionontherightside As Feller experimentswith rotations thesetterpositionisforeseeablylocked After two years as Lloydrsquos understudyEllyBarrettwilltakethehelmTheuntestedjuniorhassomehugeshoestofillmdashLloydearnedNational Player of the Year honorslast yearmdashbut benefits from two years ofexperiencesettingtheB-team Barrett will be surrounded by powerfulattackers tohelpher ease into the roleAll-AmericanTarahMurrey returns as the lonesenior on the team coming off a breakoutjuniorcampaigninwhichsheemergedasoneof the countryrsquos top outside hittersMurreywillstepintoLloydrsquosroleasthevocalleaderinadditiontothestrongestoffensivethreat WhileMurreywillcertainlybeheardshenotes that the team has a more reservedtemperamentthisyear ldquoMe and Carli last year we could get alittlerowdyrdquoMurreysaidldquoButIthinkthatonce we get more comfortable with eachotherallofourtruepersonalitiesaregoingto come out and itrsquos going to be a lot offunrdquo The ability to keep energy updown the

CheCk onlinewwwdailycalorg

Volleyball beat writer christina Jones discusses the Bearsrsquo outlook for the season ahead in a daily cal podcast

Last year

the Cal volleyball team was one win away from a

national title The Bears are set on seizing

the crown in 2011

volleyball | Season Preview

ChriStopher mCdermUtfile

10 sports Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

W soccer

Bison are question mark for CalBy Seung Y Lee | Staffsyleedailycalorg

LastyeartheCalwomenrsquossoccerteamhad its biggest victory of the seasonagainstHawaiiatEdwardsStadiumpil-ingeightgoalsfromsixdifferentplayers ButastheBearspreparetoflydowntoHonolulufortherematchcoachNeilMcGuiredoesnotexpectanotherrompovertheRainbowWahine ldquoHawaii has a new coach and theplayerswillbemoremotivatedrdquoMcGuiresaid ldquoWe are also playing in front ofabout 3000 people I donrsquot anticipateanysortofsimilarperformancesrdquo ParticipatinginthelsquoOhanaHotelsNoKai lsquoOi tournament Cal (1-1) will firstplayNorthDakotaState (1-0)onFridaynightat10pmbeforebattlingthetour-nament host Hawaii (0-1) on Sundaynightat8pmBothmatchesareat theWaipirsquooPeninsulaSoccerStadium NeithertheBisonnortheWahinehaveclose to the talent the Bears haveAlthoughNorthDakotaStatewonmore

thanhalfitsmatcheslastseasonmostofits opponentswere tiny obscure schoolsscattered across theDakotasWith suchobscurity Cal players and coaches arereadyingtoplaytheBisonknowingnearlynothing about the team The one thingthesquaddoesknowaboutNorthDakotaState is that it plays a 4-4-2 lineup themostcommonformationinsoccer Unlike with North Dakota State theBears have experience playing againstHawaiiLedbystarstrikerAlexMorganrsquoshattrickCalbatteredtheWahinedefenseinthesecondhalfscoringfivegoals HoweverSundayrsquosmatchwilllikelybeconsiderably different since theWahinehiredanewcoachMicheleNagamine LikeHawaiiCalisalsoinatransitionmode adjusting to the void left by theseniorMorganInthelasttwomatchestheBearshavestruggledtoscoregoalslosingtoPepperdine2-1andthreadingpastSanDiegoState2-1thankstotwolategoalsbyseniorJulieBenzandjuniorLaurenBattung ldquoWehavebeenpracticinghowtopen-etratethroughthedefensebacklineand

creating scoring chancesrdquo Benz saidldquoWeneedtobemorefearlessinfrontofthenetrdquo For the Bears the ghost of Morganmdash who scored nearly a third of thesquadrsquos totalgoals last seasonmdash loomslargeovertheteamdemandingalterna-tivewaysfortheteamtoscoreandwingames One of the solutions that McGuireand the coaches are hoping for is thereturn of injured forwards MirandaWhiteandRachelMercik Mercik a sophomore has shownpromiseinherfirstyearwiththeteamstarting four games and scoring twogoals White a utility player for bothdefense and offense mdash will be able toprovide experience alongside Benz andBattungintheattackinglines ldquoWhite and Mercik are two playersthatsufferedfromlong-termandshort-term injuries that have come backrdquoMcGuire said ldquoWe havenrsquot had themenough of the field so I want to givethesetwosomequalityplayingtimethisweekendrdquo

Lauren Battung scored Calrsquos first goal in its 2-1 overtime win over San Diego State on Sunday It was her second goal of the year sean goebelfile

M soccer

Bears cross the bay to open their seasonBy Camellia Senemar | Staffcsenemardailycalorg

Season openers always havetheirjittersespeciallywhenteamsare away from the comforts oftheirhomefield WiththesetwoforcesworkingagainsttheNo7Calmenrsquossoccerteam this Friday evening theBears travel across the bridge toface the University of SanFranciscoatNegoescoStadiumat7pm Thedisparityinthetwoteamsrsquostandings mdash the Dons areunrankedmdashmightprovideahinttowards thegamersquos resultbutonpaper the Bearsrsquo all-time seriesrecord against USF stands at14-21-2EventhoughCalshutouttheDonsintheirlastfourencoun-ters the matchup still stands atrickytest ldquoUSF is a strong and talentedteamrdquo junior co-captain StevenBirnbaumsaidldquoWearejustlook-ing to play our game and get agoodstarttotheseasonrdquo Last yearrsquos tilt at GoldmanField produced then-sophomoreJohn Fitzpatrickrsquos game winninggoal in overtime It was then-sophomoreAnthonySalcicciawhofound Birnbaumrsquos head for theassistonthelastcornerkickofthematch The goal gave his squadthe1-0leadandashareoftheBayAreaClassicwithStanford Those three lethal juniors arethe only players to return to theBearsrsquo 11-man lineup from 2010All posted career highs in goalsassistsandpoints in their sopho-moreyearsandwillbelookingtoadd to their tallies Birnbaum isthesolereturningstarterfromthebacklineandisjoinedbySalciccia

as a fellow co-captain The cur-rentmemberswillhavebigshoesto fill after last seasonrsquos highlysuccessful campaign saw fiveseniors and one junior head toMajorLeagueSoccer CoachKevinGrimeswill havehis optionsopenwith this youngteammdashmorethanhalfareenter-ing their freshmen and sopho-more yearsThe five timePac-10Coach of the Yearmost recentlyawarded in 2010 also has twoexperienced forwards redshirtjuniors Kyle Lunt and MichaelMunozathisdisposal ldquoWe are confident with ourteamrdquo Birnbaum said ldquoAll theunderclassmen are very talentedandwillbeabigpartofourteamthisyearrdquo Calhasbeenpreparingappro-priately and avoiding any majorinjury concerns during the pastmonthofpreseasonTheultimategoal is to retain the conferencechampionshipTheyarepredictedto finish second while UCLAwhich claimed the second spotlast season is projected to takethe title Nonetheless the Bearsare feeling optimistic about theseason opener after honing theirtechniquesinthesummer ldquoWe are ready for tomorrowrdquojunior goalkeeper Robby Gogatzsaid ldquoWe just want to keep onimproving one game at a timeandbuildonourstrengthsrdquo Cal will have three gamesremainingintheBayAreaClassicAlthough the jitters of a seasonopenerwill have diminished theBearswillstillbeplayinginunfa-miliar territory in Illinois andConnecticut It wonrsquot be untilSept 16 that the club returnshometoEdwardsStadiumtofin-ishoffagainstSantaClara

11sportsFriday August 26 2011 The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

field hockeyFrom Page 9

SeaSon preview Bears will face a stacked Pac-12 schedule

From Page 9

Setter Barrett will build her own legacy after Lloydrsquos exit

stretch will be crucial as the Bears face a stacked conference slate that includes three other teams ranked in the top-10 nationally After a weak preseason Cal will have to be on top of its game to host perennial power No 6 Stanford to open conference play on Sept 13 The addition of Colorado and Utah extend

the Pac-12 season by four matches forcing the first leg of the Big Spike to take place on a Tuesday night No 2 USC picked to win the Pac-12 will pose the greatest challenge for the Bears who are predicted to finish sec-ond The Trojans return all of their starters from the team that lost to Cal in the Final Four but defeated the

Bears twice in the regular seasonCalrsquos not quite ready to face the likes to Stanford and USC yet but are putting the work in to get to that pointldquoWe played some hard volleyball in practice so conditioning-wise wersquore right thererdquo Murrey said ldquoMentally wersquore getting ready every single dayrdquoldquoWersquore ready to playrdquo

nearly as far last season without her This year however it seems plausible that Cal will achieve similar heights without the setter extraordinaire Lloyd had a lot of help with the meteoric rise of Tarah Murrey as one of the premier outside hitters in the nation So long as Lloydrsquos successor Elly Barrett can find Murrey on the outside the Bears will be in great shape It has yet to be seen if Barrett will contribute the same kind of dynamic play that Lloyd did or if she will have as well-rounded a game But frankly the team doesnrsquot need her to be Lloyd She doesnrsquot need to be the most vocal player on the court or fire her team up That responsibility will be left to Murrey the lone senior

on the team who was clearly part of the leadership core last year Barrett doesnrsquot have to try to learn a new offense like Lloyd did or guide her teammates through such adjust-ments to their timing The system is already in place The Austin Texas native just needs to be a competent setter Given that she was an even more highly-sought after recruit than Lloyd itrsquos safe to assume Barrett has that ability With two years waiting in the wings Barrett amassed a significant amount of reps in practice with her attackers Coach Rich Feller said shersquos tightly bonded with her fellow juniors many of whom shersquoll be setting in the middle and right side so chemistry shouldnrsquot

be an issue Last year the Bears lost Pac-10 Player of the Year in outside hitter Hana Cutura and the preseason talk was focused mainly on how Cal would compensate for such a huge loss It only took a few weeks for Tarah Murrey to rise from the ashes of a dis-appointing sophomore campaign to emerge as one of the countryrsquos best Suddenly no one was mentioning Cutura anymore It would be foolish to assume that Barrett who has not had experience starting will have a similar breakout year However once she proves herself to be a capable setter Lloydrsquos name will start to fade and Barrett can begin building her own legacy

From Page 9

volleyball Cal hopes to repeat success of 2010 tournament

By Eric Lee | Staffetleedailycalorg

After an undefeated exhibition schedule which included two con-vincing wins and a tie with Stanford the Cal field hockey team will visit No 16 Louisville at 3 pm at Trager Stadium for its first official game of the 2011 season

Coming off last yearrsquos disappoint-ing finish mdash a loss to Stanford in the NorPac Tournament final mdash the Bears hope to start the season strong as they embark on a mini-roadtrip to Louisville Ky for games against the Cardinals and No 13 Michigan State

Louisville enters this season with some new faces Justine Sowry is the new head coach and a number of senior leaders from last season have since graduated

The squad however returns three All-Big East preseason selec-tions along with a number of expe-rienced players to fill out the rest of the roster

The Cardinals finished the 2010 season with a 13-7 record and a 5-1 conference record good enough for second in the strong Big East confer-ence

Louisvillersquos season ended in the semifinals of the Big East Tournament a 2-1 loss to No 4 Connecticut

Last year the Cardinals defeated the Bears 2-0 in Louisville under then-head coach Pam Bustin who later took on head coaching duties at Duke

Returning sophomore Erin

Scheidtmiller provided one of Louisvillersquos goals in that game while the other score came from Tuli Lim who has since graduated

One thing the Bears have going for them is an extremely strong preseason which began with a dominating 10-2 victory over UC Davis

Sophomore Jordan OrsquoReilly started the contest off with a pair of goals and the Aggies never recov-ered

Sophomore Andrea Earle fresh-man Marcia Venter and senior Erin Magill each provided two goals in the offensive barrage

Cal then went to No 20 Stanford and tied a tough Cardinal squad 1-1 due to strong goalkeeping from senior Maddie Hand and sophomore Courtney Hendrickson Senior Megan Shimojima provided the Bearrsquos lone goal

In its final preseason scrimmage Cal defeated the University of Alberta 4-1 with another fine offensive performance from Shimojima who netted two goals in the match

The road does not get any easier after Louisville as the Bears face No 13 Michigan State the following day The Spartans who finished with an 15-6 record last season figure to be one of Calrsquos toughest matchups this upcoming season

Last year the Bears fell to Michigan State 3-4 in their second game of that season The match saw seven different lead changes before the Spartans scored the game-winning goal in the 69th minute to close out the Bears

Cal looks to build upon successful preseason

ldquoWersquoll use the games to find out which starting lineups will work the best and some of those may include the younger playersrdquo Feller said

ldquoIf therersquos an opportunity to play more people this is the chance to do

itrdquoJunior setter Elly Barrett will be the

one to pick up where Lloyd left off In 2010 Barrett logged only 27 sets through 13 games of work behind Lloyd and will look to establish herself

as a leader of the 2011 version of the Bears

ldquoIt will be good practice to stay focused on our side of the court regard-less of whorsquos on the other siderdquo Barrett said

DUMMY

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

1 Ridicule4 Magna __9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried folded and lled18 Squelch19 Opposite of cominrsquo20 Fruit-topped dessert22 Persons23 Prex for marketing or communication24 Egyptrsquos loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Tried39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation systems

1 Crawling bug2 Small veggies3 Engrave4 Regal home5 Mrs Ralph Kramden6 __ Hayworth7 Snatched8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebrsquos wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement

31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space ight agcy44 One of a pair45 British bishopsrsquo items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartlettrsquos book abbr53 Repulsive54 Green fruit55 Satanrsquos specialty59 Pauserrsquos words

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

Keep Berkeley Unique Shop LocallySupporting locally-owned independently operated businesses keeps our city unique creates more jobs and makes our economy stronger Look for this icon the next time yoursquore shopping for something special

Find a local business near you at buylocalberkeleycom All contributions are tax deductible dailycalorgdonate

Support independent student journalismDonate to the Daily Californian

Support independent student journalism Donate to the Daily CalAll contributions are tax deductible

dailycalorgdonate

12 PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

  • 0826_dailycal01
  • 0826_dailycal02
  • 0826_dailycal03
  • 0826_dailycal04
  • 0826_dailycal05
  • 0826_dailycal06
  • 0826_dailycal07
  • 0826_dailycal08
  • 0826_dailycal09
  • 0826_dailycal10
  • 0826_dailycal11
  • 0826_dailycal12

7The Daily Californian PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011

TEXT ldquoNEDSVIPrdquo TO 22022

TO GET UP TO $20 OFF

Get up to 50 off flashdrives school supplies starting at $50 and more

NEDrsquoS BERKELYBOOKSTORE

2480 Bancroft Waynedsbookscomucb

8 paid advertisement Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

Catholics

Newman Hall amp Dwight Way

wwwcalnewmanorg

Monday 822 Ice Cream Social 8pm Tuesday 823 Newman Orientation Event (includes dinner) 6pm

Cal

College Ave

Wednesday 824 Rosary Group 8pm

Sunday 828 Mass 5pm Student Dinner 6pm Candlelight Mass 10pm

(across from unit 2)

Monday 829 Newman Orientation Event Part II 6pm

Saturday 827 Kayaking at Berkeley Marina Meet at Newman Hall 930am

Holy Spirit Parish

All events are ADA Accessible

Catholics Cal

Newman Hall Holy Spirit Parish

Monday 822 Ice Cream Social 8pmTuesday 823 Newman Orientation Event (includes dinner) 6pm

Wednesday 824 Rosary Group 8pm Saturday 827 Kayaking at Berkeley Marina Meet at Newman Hall 930amSunday 828 Mass 5pm Student Dinner 6pm Candlelight Mass 10pm

Monday 829 Newman Orientation Event Part II 6pm

All events are ADA Accessible

College Ave ampDwight Way

(across from unit 2)wwwcalnewmanorg

You beg your members to table on Sproul People walk right by You post hundreds of flyers in the hall and they get removed or covered up hours later Face it flyering is a costly labor-intensive process But therersquos a better way

Post your flyer in the most visible spot on

campus The Daily Cal

HEY STUDENT GROUPS

Take advantage of this savings now advertisingdailycalorg | 510-280-2452THE RULES Ads must run in four consecutive issues in AugustSeptember 2011 Student groups must pre-pay for ads This offer is only valid to UC Berkeley student groups officially registered with the ASUC or Campus Life amp Leadership

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLACK)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLUE)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (white)

LEVELS OF SERVICE AT A STEEP DISCOUNT TO STUDENT GROUPS ALL PLANS INCLUDE AD DESIGN AND APPEARANCES ON DAILYCALORG THIS IS A LIMITED OFFER ONLY FOR STUDENT GROUPS

SIXTEENTH OF A PAGE QUARTER OF A PAGE HALF OF A PAGE

But I started my dream of being a reporter by working in Eshleman Hall at the Daily Cal

Mark Summers REPORTER AT THE WALL STREET JOURNAL DAILY CAL ALUM rsquo

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLACK)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLUE)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (white)

Wersquove been a starting place for thousands of professionals who lead extraordinary careers in media advertising anad business If yoursquore ready to start your career now go to applydailycalorg

JOIN THE DAILY CALRECRUITMENT MEETINGS

Friday Aug 26 4pmTuesday Aug 31 5pm

600 Eshleman Hall

We are hiringWeb Developers Marketers Multimedia producers News Sports and Arts amp Entertainment reporters Photographers Copy Editors Designers Bloggers Illustrators Ads Representatives and more

SportSFriday august 26 2011 bull dailycal orgsports

AtCalwearemorethanfamiliarwith the aftermath of losing anincrediblequarterbackPerhapscur-rent students only know AaronRodgers as the alumnus that wonthe Super Bowl last season but Irememberhimas the savior ofCalfootball that brought us somerespectability AfterRodgersboltedfortheNFLcoachJeffTedfordhasyettotrotouta competent let alone comparablequarterbackWersquovejusthadaflurryofdisappointments In volleyball the setter is essen-tially the quarterback of the teamShersquostheonethatdeliverstheballtoattackers which requires remark-ablerapportandtimingwithhittersquickdecision-makingandtheabil-itytoreaddefenses TheCalvolleyballteamlosesitsquarterback this season in CarliLloydButdonrsquotexpect it tomeanthedemiseoftheBearsasRodgersrsquodepartureprovedtobe Lloyd probably meant more toherteamthanRodgersThenationalPlayer of the Year Lloyd institutedthenewup-tempooffensethatledtothe squadrsquos incredible run to theconference title and debut in thenationaltitlegame More importantly she was theheart and soul of the team Therewasnodoubtshewastheleaderonthe court keeping her teammatestogether and hitters focused Shesimplyrefusedto letherteamloseandhadawayofkillingopponentsrsquomomentumwithbigplays HerintensitywasinfectiousanditrsquoshardtoimaginetheBearsgoing

Bearsrsquo new quarterback

wonrsquot stop surging Cal

Christina Jones cjonesdailycalorg

ldquoIt sounds demeaning to say tune-up but I would say these

games are more of a way to get momentum going for our teamrdquo mdash Volleyball coach Rich Feller on the preseason

Bears open 2011 season with barren Riverside club

Eightmonthsafterdropping theNCAAchampi-onshipmatchtoPennStatelastDecembertheNo3Cal volleyball team will see itsfirstactionofthe2011seasonthisweekend

The Bears will host the CalMoltenClassictodayandSaturdayat Haas Pavillion inviting UCRiverside Fairfield and FloridaInternational University intoBerkeley

Calwillbelookingtorepeatitsperformance from 2010when itwon both of its matches of thepreseason tournament tallyingvictories over UC Santa Barbara(25-1825-1528-26)andManhattanCollege(25-825-1525-7)

Outside hitterTarahMurreywho returns to theBears as the lone senior was named the tourna-mentrsquosmost valuable player after leading the teamwith11killsand14digsTheBearsrsquooffensewassolidlogging a 341 attack percentage across the twogames

Calshouldbepoisedtoseesimilarresultstonightwhen it opens its seasonagainstUCRiversideat 5pmTheHighlandershadlittletocelebratein2010postinga2-30recordincludinga0-16markintheBigWestRiversidewaspicked to finish last in theBigWestin2011

ldquoItsoundsdemeaningtosaytune-upbutIwouldsaythesegamesaremoreofawaytogetmomentumgoing for our teamrdquo coach Rich Feller said ldquoThethreeweeksofpreseasonaremeanttoestablishsomesortoflineupandmomentumrdquo

Though theBearsmightbepusheda littlemoreonSaturdaywhentheysquareoffwithFairfieldat11amandFIUat7pmCallikelywonrsquotseeanyseri-ous competition Still the squadknows it needs togetofftoaquickstarttotheseason

ldquoYouplayeverygame likes itrsquos thenational titlerdquoMurreysaidldquoYoursquorenevergoingtoplayperfectvol-leyball but you always have to respect your oppo-nentrdquo

TheBearswillalsobeusingthisweekendaswellasthematchesintheupcomingweekstosolidifyitsstartinglineupThoughtheteamreturnssixstartersfrom2010 itwillneedto findawaytoreplacethepresenceofCarliLloydtheAVCANationalPlayerofthe Year in 2010 Lloyd finished her career with5697assistsmdashgoodenough for secondall time inCalhistory

By Connor Byrne | Staffcbyrnedailycalorg

All-American Tarah Murrey (middle) returns to lead the Bears as the biggest offensive threat Shannon hamiltonfile

when tonight at 7 pmwhere haaS pavilion

Quick LookCal v UC riverSide Bears slightly modify the

recipe for success in 2011

TheCal volleyball team is coming off itsbest season in program history The Bearstook their first Pac-10 title andmade theirdebutinthenationalchampionship One school of thought would be not tomesswithsuccessandsimplyplugplayersinto fill the twovacantpositionsat setteranddefensivespecialistinthestartinglineup Reigning AVCA Coach of the Year RichFeller is taking a slightly different routeWhile the overall offensive and defensiveschemeswillremaininplaceFellersaidheismixing things up in the lineup beginningwithtonightrsquosopeneragainstUCRiverside ldquoI donrsquot think yoursquoll see any sweepingchangesrdquo Feller said ldquoWe have a lotmoreweaponsnowMinusCarli(Lloyd)whowasthesetterweincreasedouroffensivethreatsbythreeorfournewplayersrdquo Last season the starters were solidifiedearly in the preseason and didnrsquot changemuchThisseasoneventhoseaccomplishedstarters thatwerekey contributors last yearhavetofightfortheirpositions MostnotablyCorreyJohnsonwhogar-neredAll-Pac10andAVCAhonorablemen-tionaccoladesasarightsidehitterlastsea-sonisdukingitoutwithtwooftheconfer-encersquos top blockers Shannon Hawari andKatBrownforaspotinthemiddle ldquoMostlyweneedoneof themiddleposi-tionstobeabletohitbehindthesetterexcep-tionally wellrdquo Feller said ldquoCorrey does that

By Christina Jones | Senior Staffcjonesdailycalorg

Setter PAGe 11 SeASon Preview PAGe 11 volleybAll PAGe 11

better than anyone We may continue tobounceherbetweenmiddleandrightsiderdquo IfJohnsondoesnrsquotwinamiddlespotshersquollbattle highly regarded freshman ChristinaHigginsforapositionontherightside As Feller experimentswith rotations thesetterpositionisforeseeablylocked After two years as Lloydrsquos understudyEllyBarrettwilltakethehelmTheuntestedjuniorhassomehugeshoestofillmdashLloydearnedNational Player of the Year honorslast yearmdashbut benefits from two years ofexperiencesettingtheB-team Barrett will be surrounded by powerfulattackers tohelpher ease into the roleAll-AmericanTarahMurrey returns as the lonesenior on the team coming off a breakoutjuniorcampaigninwhichsheemergedasoneof the countryrsquos top outside hittersMurreywillstepintoLloydrsquosroleasthevocalleaderinadditiontothestrongestoffensivethreat WhileMurreywillcertainlybeheardshenotes that the team has a more reservedtemperamentthisyear ldquoMe and Carli last year we could get alittlerowdyrdquoMurreysaidldquoButIthinkthatonce we get more comfortable with eachotherallofourtruepersonalitiesaregoingto come out and itrsquos going to be a lot offunrdquo The ability to keep energy updown the

CheCk onlinewwwdailycalorg

Volleyball beat writer christina Jones discusses the Bearsrsquo outlook for the season ahead in a daily cal podcast

Last year

the Cal volleyball team was one win away from a

national title The Bears are set on seizing

the crown in 2011

volleyball | Season Preview

ChriStopher mCdermUtfile

10 sports Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

W soccer

Bison are question mark for CalBy Seung Y Lee | Staffsyleedailycalorg

LastyeartheCalwomenrsquossoccerteamhad its biggest victory of the seasonagainstHawaiiatEdwardsStadiumpil-ingeightgoalsfromsixdifferentplayers ButastheBearspreparetoflydowntoHonolulufortherematchcoachNeilMcGuiredoesnotexpectanotherrompovertheRainbowWahine ldquoHawaii has a new coach and theplayerswillbemoremotivatedrdquoMcGuiresaid ldquoWe are also playing in front ofabout 3000 people I donrsquot anticipateanysortofsimilarperformancesrdquo ParticipatinginthelsquoOhanaHotelsNoKai lsquoOi tournament Cal (1-1) will firstplayNorthDakotaState (1-0)onFridaynightat10pmbeforebattlingthetour-nament host Hawaii (0-1) on Sundaynightat8pmBothmatchesareat theWaipirsquooPeninsulaSoccerStadium NeithertheBisonnortheWahinehaveclose to the talent the Bears haveAlthoughNorthDakotaStatewonmore

thanhalfitsmatcheslastseasonmostofits opponentswere tiny obscure schoolsscattered across theDakotasWith suchobscurity Cal players and coaches arereadyingtoplaytheBisonknowingnearlynothing about the team The one thingthesquaddoesknowaboutNorthDakotaState is that it plays a 4-4-2 lineup themostcommonformationinsoccer Unlike with North Dakota State theBears have experience playing againstHawaiiLedbystarstrikerAlexMorganrsquoshattrickCalbatteredtheWahinedefenseinthesecondhalfscoringfivegoals HoweverSundayrsquosmatchwilllikelybeconsiderably different since theWahinehiredanewcoachMicheleNagamine LikeHawaiiCalisalsoinatransitionmode adjusting to the void left by theseniorMorganInthelasttwomatchestheBearshavestruggledtoscoregoalslosingtoPepperdine2-1andthreadingpastSanDiegoState2-1thankstotwolategoalsbyseniorJulieBenzandjuniorLaurenBattung ldquoWehavebeenpracticinghowtopen-etratethroughthedefensebacklineand

creating scoring chancesrdquo Benz saidldquoWeneedtobemorefearlessinfrontofthenetrdquo For the Bears the ghost of Morganmdash who scored nearly a third of thesquadrsquos totalgoals last seasonmdash loomslargeovertheteamdemandingalterna-tivewaysfortheteamtoscoreandwingames One of the solutions that McGuireand the coaches are hoping for is thereturn of injured forwards MirandaWhiteandRachelMercik Mercik a sophomore has shownpromiseinherfirstyearwiththeteamstarting four games and scoring twogoals White a utility player for bothdefense and offense mdash will be able toprovide experience alongside Benz andBattungintheattackinglines ldquoWhite and Mercik are two playersthatsufferedfromlong-termandshort-term injuries that have come backrdquoMcGuire said ldquoWe havenrsquot had themenough of the field so I want to givethesetwosomequalityplayingtimethisweekendrdquo

Lauren Battung scored Calrsquos first goal in its 2-1 overtime win over San Diego State on Sunday It was her second goal of the year sean goebelfile

M soccer

Bears cross the bay to open their seasonBy Camellia Senemar | Staffcsenemardailycalorg

Season openers always havetheirjittersespeciallywhenteamsare away from the comforts oftheirhomefield WiththesetwoforcesworkingagainsttheNo7Calmenrsquossoccerteam this Friday evening theBears travel across the bridge toface the University of SanFranciscoatNegoescoStadiumat7pm Thedisparityinthetwoteamsrsquostandings mdash the Dons areunrankedmdashmightprovideahinttowards thegamersquos resultbutonpaper the Bearsrsquo all-time seriesrecord against USF stands at14-21-2EventhoughCalshutouttheDonsintheirlastfourencoun-ters the matchup still stands atrickytest ldquoUSF is a strong and talentedteamrdquo junior co-captain StevenBirnbaumsaidldquoWearejustlook-ing to play our game and get agoodstarttotheseasonrdquo Last yearrsquos tilt at GoldmanField produced then-sophomoreJohn Fitzpatrickrsquos game winninggoal in overtime It was then-sophomoreAnthonySalcicciawhofound Birnbaumrsquos head for theassistonthelastcornerkickofthematch The goal gave his squadthe1-0leadandashareoftheBayAreaClassicwithStanford Those three lethal juniors arethe only players to return to theBearsrsquo 11-man lineup from 2010All posted career highs in goalsassistsandpoints in their sopho-moreyearsandwillbelookingtoadd to their tallies Birnbaum isthesolereturningstarterfromthebacklineandisjoinedbySalciccia

as a fellow co-captain The cur-rentmemberswillhavebigshoesto fill after last seasonrsquos highlysuccessful campaign saw fiveseniors and one junior head toMajorLeagueSoccer CoachKevinGrimeswill havehis optionsopenwith this youngteammdashmorethanhalfareenter-ing their freshmen and sopho-more yearsThe five timePac-10Coach of the Yearmost recentlyawarded in 2010 also has twoexperienced forwards redshirtjuniors Kyle Lunt and MichaelMunozathisdisposal ldquoWe are confident with ourteamrdquo Birnbaum said ldquoAll theunderclassmen are very talentedandwillbeabigpartofourteamthisyearrdquo Calhasbeenpreparingappro-priately and avoiding any majorinjury concerns during the pastmonthofpreseasonTheultimategoal is to retain the conferencechampionshipTheyarepredictedto finish second while UCLAwhich claimed the second spotlast season is projected to takethe title Nonetheless the Bearsare feeling optimistic about theseason opener after honing theirtechniquesinthesummer ldquoWe are ready for tomorrowrdquojunior goalkeeper Robby Gogatzsaid ldquoWe just want to keep onimproving one game at a timeandbuildonourstrengthsrdquo Cal will have three gamesremainingintheBayAreaClassicAlthough the jitters of a seasonopenerwill have diminished theBearswillstillbeplayinginunfa-miliar territory in Illinois andConnecticut It wonrsquot be untilSept 16 that the club returnshometoEdwardsStadiumtofin-ishoffagainstSantaClara

11sportsFriday August 26 2011 The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

field hockeyFrom Page 9

SeaSon preview Bears will face a stacked Pac-12 schedule

From Page 9

Setter Barrett will build her own legacy after Lloydrsquos exit

stretch will be crucial as the Bears face a stacked conference slate that includes three other teams ranked in the top-10 nationally After a weak preseason Cal will have to be on top of its game to host perennial power No 6 Stanford to open conference play on Sept 13 The addition of Colorado and Utah extend

the Pac-12 season by four matches forcing the first leg of the Big Spike to take place on a Tuesday night No 2 USC picked to win the Pac-12 will pose the greatest challenge for the Bears who are predicted to finish sec-ond The Trojans return all of their starters from the team that lost to Cal in the Final Four but defeated the

Bears twice in the regular seasonCalrsquos not quite ready to face the likes to Stanford and USC yet but are putting the work in to get to that pointldquoWe played some hard volleyball in practice so conditioning-wise wersquore right thererdquo Murrey said ldquoMentally wersquore getting ready every single dayrdquoldquoWersquore ready to playrdquo

nearly as far last season without her This year however it seems plausible that Cal will achieve similar heights without the setter extraordinaire Lloyd had a lot of help with the meteoric rise of Tarah Murrey as one of the premier outside hitters in the nation So long as Lloydrsquos successor Elly Barrett can find Murrey on the outside the Bears will be in great shape It has yet to be seen if Barrett will contribute the same kind of dynamic play that Lloyd did or if she will have as well-rounded a game But frankly the team doesnrsquot need her to be Lloyd She doesnrsquot need to be the most vocal player on the court or fire her team up That responsibility will be left to Murrey the lone senior

on the team who was clearly part of the leadership core last year Barrett doesnrsquot have to try to learn a new offense like Lloyd did or guide her teammates through such adjust-ments to their timing The system is already in place The Austin Texas native just needs to be a competent setter Given that she was an even more highly-sought after recruit than Lloyd itrsquos safe to assume Barrett has that ability With two years waiting in the wings Barrett amassed a significant amount of reps in practice with her attackers Coach Rich Feller said shersquos tightly bonded with her fellow juniors many of whom shersquoll be setting in the middle and right side so chemistry shouldnrsquot

be an issue Last year the Bears lost Pac-10 Player of the Year in outside hitter Hana Cutura and the preseason talk was focused mainly on how Cal would compensate for such a huge loss It only took a few weeks for Tarah Murrey to rise from the ashes of a dis-appointing sophomore campaign to emerge as one of the countryrsquos best Suddenly no one was mentioning Cutura anymore It would be foolish to assume that Barrett who has not had experience starting will have a similar breakout year However once she proves herself to be a capable setter Lloydrsquos name will start to fade and Barrett can begin building her own legacy

From Page 9

volleyball Cal hopes to repeat success of 2010 tournament

By Eric Lee | Staffetleedailycalorg

After an undefeated exhibition schedule which included two con-vincing wins and a tie with Stanford the Cal field hockey team will visit No 16 Louisville at 3 pm at Trager Stadium for its first official game of the 2011 season

Coming off last yearrsquos disappoint-ing finish mdash a loss to Stanford in the NorPac Tournament final mdash the Bears hope to start the season strong as they embark on a mini-roadtrip to Louisville Ky for games against the Cardinals and No 13 Michigan State

Louisville enters this season with some new faces Justine Sowry is the new head coach and a number of senior leaders from last season have since graduated

The squad however returns three All-Big East preseason selec-tions along with a number of expe-rienced players to fill out the rest of the roster

The Cardinals finished the 2010 season with a 13-7 record and a 5-1 conference record good enough for second in the strong Big East confer-ence

Louisvillersquos season ended in the semifinals of the Big East Tournament a 2-1 loss to No 4 Connecticut

Last year the Cardinals defeated the Bears 2-0 in Louisville under then-head coach Pam Bustin who later took on head coaching duties at Duke

Returning sophomore Erin

Scheidtmiller provided one of Louisvillersquos goals in that game while the other score came from Tuli Lim who has since graduated

One thing the Bears have going for them is an extremely strong preseason which began with a dominating 10-2 victory over UC Davis

Sophomore Jordan OrsquoReilly started the contest off with a pair of goals and the Aggies never recov-ered

Sophomore Andrea Earle fresh-man Marcia Venter and senior Erin Magill each provided two goals in the offensive barrage

Cal then went to No 20 Stanford and tied a tough Cardinal squad 1-1 due to strong goalkeeping from senior Maddie Hand and sophomore Courtney Hendrickson Senior Megan Shimojima provided the Bearrsquos lone goal

In its final preseason scrimmage Cal defeated the University of Alberta 4-1 with another fine offensive performance from Shimojima who netted two goals in the match

The road does not get any easier after Louisville as the Bears face No 13 Michigan State the following day The Spartans who finished with an 15-6 record last season figure to be one of Calrsquos toughest matchups this upcoming season

Last year the Bears fell to Michigan State 3-4 in their second game of that season The match saw seven different lead changes before the Spartans scored the game-winning goal in the 69th minute to close out the Bears

Cal looks to build upon successful preseason

ldquoWersquoll use the games to find out which starting lineups will work the best and some of those may include the younger playersrdquo Feller said

ldquoIf therersquos an opportunity to play more people this is the chance to do

itrdquoJunior setter Elly Barrett will be the

one to pick up where Lloyd left off In 2010 Barrett logged only 27 sets through 13 games of work behind Lloyd and will look to establish herself

as a leader of the 2011 version of the Bears

ldquoIt will be good practice to stay focused on our side of the court regard-less of whorsquos on the other siderdquo Barrett said

DUMMY

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

1 Ridicule4 Magna __9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried folded and lled18 Squelch19 Opposite of cominrsquo20 Fruit-topped dessert22 Persons23 Prex for marketing or communication24 Egyptrsquos loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Tried39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation systems

1 Crawling bug2 Small veggies3 Engrave4 Regal home5 Mrs Ralph Kramden6 __ Hayworth7 Snatched8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebrsquos wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement

31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space ight agcy44 One of a pair45 British bishopsrsquo items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartlettrsquos book abbr53 Repulsive54 Green fruit55 Satanrsquos specialty59 Pauserrsquos words

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

Keep Berkeley Unique Shop LocallySupporting locally-owned independently operated businesses keeps our city unique creates more jobs and makes our economy stronger Look for this icon the next time yoursquore shopping for something special

Find a local business near you at buylocalberkeleycom All contributions are tax deductible dailycalorgdonate

Support independent student journalismDonate to the Daily Californian

Support independent student journalism Donate to the Daily CalAll contributions are tax deductible

dailycalorgdonate

12 PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

  • 0826_dailycal01
  • 0826_dailycal02
  • 0826_dailycal03
  • 0826_dailycal04
  • 0826_dailycal05
  • 0826_dailycal06
  • 0826_dailycal07
  • 0826_dailycal08
  • 0826_dailycal09
  • 0826_dailycal10
  • 0826_dailycal11
  • 0826_dailycal12

8 paid advertisement Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

Catholics

Newman Hall amp Dwight Way

wwwcalnewmanorg

Monday 822 Ice Cream Social 8pm Tuesday 823 Newman Orientation Event (includes dinner) 6pm

Cal

College Ave

Wednesday 824 Rosary Group 8pm

Sunday 828 Mass 5pm Student Dinner 6pm Candlelight Mass 10pm

(across from unit 2)

Monday 829 Newman Orientation Event Part II 6pm

Saturday 827 Kayaking at Berkeley Marina Meet at Newman Hall 930am

Holy Spirit Parish

All events are ADA Accessible

Catholics Cal

Newman Hall Holy Spirit Parish

Monday 822 Ice Cream Social 8pmTuesday 823 Newman Orientation Event (includes dinner) 6pm

Wednesday 824 Rosary Group 8pm Saturday 827 Kayaking at Berkeley Marina Meet at Newman Hall 930amSunday 828 Mass 5pm Student Dinner 6pm Candlelight Mass 10pm

Monday 829 Newman Orientation Event Part II 6pm

All events are ADA Accessible

College Ave ampDwight Way

(across from unit 2)wwwcalnewmanorg

You beg your members to table on Sproul People walk right by You post hundreds of flyers in the hall and they get removed or covered up hours later Face it flyering is a costly labor-intensive process But therersquos a better way

Post your flyer in the most visible spot on

campus The Daily Cal

HEY STUDENT GROUPS

Take advantage of this savings now advertisingdailycalorg | 510-280-2452THE RULES Ads must run in four consecutive issues in AugustSeptember 2011 Student groups must pre-pay for ads This offer is only valid to UC Berkeley student groups officially registered with the ASUC or Campus Life amp Leadership

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLACK)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLUE)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (white)

LEVELS OF SERVICE AT A STEEP DISCOUNT TO STUDENT GROUPS ALL PLANS INCLUDE AD DESIGN AND APPEARANCES ON DAILYCALORG THIS IS A LIMITED OFFER ONLY FOR STUDENT GROUPS

SIXTEENTH OF A PAGE QUARTER OF A PAGE HALF OF A PAGE

But I started my dream of being a reporter by working in Eshleman Hall at the Daily Cal

Mark Summers REPORTER AT THE WALL STREET JOURNAL DAILY CAL ALUM rsquo

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLACK)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (BLUE)

DC WIDE LOGO 01 (white)

Wersquove been a starting place for thousands of professionals who lead extraordinary careers in media advertising anad business If yoursquore ready to start your career now go to applydailycalorg

JOIN THE DAILY CALRECRUITMENT MEETINGS

Friday Aug 26 4pmTuesday Aug 31 5pm

600 Eshleman Hall

We are hiringWeb Developers Marketers Multimedia producers News Sports and Arts amp Entertainment reporters Photographers Copy Editors Designers Bloggers Illustrators Ads Representatives and more

SportSFriday august 26 2011 bull dailycal orgsports

AtCalwearemorethanfamiliarwith the aftermath of losing anincrediblequarterbackPerhapscur-rent students only know AaronRodgers as the alumnus that wonthe Super Bowl last season but Irememberhimas the savior ofCalfootball that brought us somerespectability AfterRodgersboltedfortheNFLcoachJeffTedfordhasyettotrotouta competent let alone comparablequarterbackWersquovejusthadaflurryofdisappointments In volleyball the setter is essen-tially the quarterback of the teamShersquostheonethatdeliverstheballtoattackers which requires remark-ablerapportandtimingwithhittersquickdecision-makingandtheabil-itytoreaddefenses TheCalvolleyballteamlosesitsquarterback this season in CarliLloydButdonrsquotexpect it tomeanthedemiseoftheBearsasRodgersrsquodepartureprovedtobe Lloyd probably meant more toherteamthanRodgersThenationalPlayer of the Year Lloyd institutedthenewup-tempooffensethatledtothe squadrsquos incredible run to theconference title and debut in thenationaltitlegame More importantly she was theheart and soul of the team Therewasnodoubtshewastheleaderonthe court keeping her teammatestogether and hitters focused Shesimplyrefusedto letherteamloseandhadawayofkillingopponentsrsquomomentumwithbigplays HerintensitywasinfectiousanditrsquoshardtoimaginetheBearsgoing

Bearsrsquo new quarterback

wonrsquot stop surging Cal

Christina Jones cjonesdailycalorg

ldquoIt sounds demeaning to say tune-up but I would say these

games are more of a way to get momentum going for our teamrdquo mdash Volleyball coach Rich Feller on the preseason

Bears open 2011 season with barren Riverside club

Eightmonthsafterdropping theNCAAchampi-onshipmatchtoPennStatelastDecembertheNo3Cal volleyball team will see itsfirstactionofthe2011seasonthisweekend

The Bears will host the CalMoltenClassictodayandSaturdayat Haas Pavillion inviting UCRiverside Fairfield and FloridaInternational University intoBerkeley

Calwillbelookingtorepeatitsperformance from 2010when itwon both of its matches of thepreseason tournament tallyingvictories over UC Santa Barbara(25-1825-1528-26)andManhattanCollege(25-825-1525-7)

Outside hitterTarahMurreywho returns to theBears as the lone senior was named the tourna-mentrsquosmost valuable player after leading the teamwith11killsand14digsTheBearsrsquooffensewassolidlogging a 341 attack percentage across the twogames

Calshouldbepoisedtoseesimilarresultstonightwhen it opens its seasonagainstUCRiversideat 5pmTheHighlandershadlittletocelebratein2010postinga2-30recordincludinga0-16markintheBigWestRiversidewaspicked to finish last in theBigWestin2011

ldquoItsoundsdemeaningtosaytune-upbutIwouldsaythesegamesaremoreofawaytogetmomentumgoing for our teamrdquo coach Rich Feller said ldquoThethreeweeksofpreseasonaremeanttoestablishsomesortoflineupandmomentumrdquo

Though theBearsmightbepusheda littlemoreonSaturdaywhentheysquareoffwithFairfieldat11amandFIUat7pmCallikelywonrsquotseeanyseri-ous competition Still the squadknows it needs togetofftoaquickstarttotheseason

ldquoYouplayeverygame likes itrsquos thenational titlerdquoMurreysaidldquoYoursquorenevergoingtoplayperfectvol-leyball but you always have to respect your oppo-nentrdquo

TheBearswillalsobeusingthisweekendaswellasthematchesintheupcomingweekstosolidifyitsstartinglineupThoughtheteamreturnssixstartersfrom2010 itwillneedto findawaytoreplacethepresenceofCarliLloydtheAVCANationalPlayerofthe Year in 2010 Lloyd finished her career with5697assistsmdashgoodenough for secondall time inCalhistory

By Connor Byrne | Staffcbyrnedailycalorg

All-American Tarah Murrey (middle) returns to lead the Bears as the biggest offensive threat Shannon hamiltonfile

when tonight at 7 pmwhere haaS pavilion

Quick LookCal v UC riverSide Bears slightly modify the

recipe for success in 2011

TheCal volleyball team is coming off itsbest season in program history The Bearstook their first Pac-10 title andmade theirdebutinthenationalchampionship One school of thought would be not tomesswithsuccessandsimplyplugplayersinto fill the twovacantpositionsat setteranddefensivespecialistinthestartinglineup Reigning AVCA Coach of the Year RichFeller is taking a slightly different routeWhile the overall offensive and defensiveschemeswillremaininplaceFellersaidheismixing things up in the lineup beginningwithtonightrsquosopeneragainstUCRiverside ldquoI donrsquot think yoursquoll see any sweepingchangesrdquo Feller said ldquoWe have a lotmoreweaponsnowMinusCarli(Lloyd)whowasthesetterweincreasedouroffensivethreatsbythreeorfournewplayersrdquo Last season the starters were solidifiedearly in the preseason and didnrsquot changemuchThisseasoneventhoseaccomplishedstarters thatwerekey contributors last yearhavetofightfortheirpositions MostnotablyCorreyJohnsonwhogar-neredAll-Pac10andAVCAhonorablemen-tionaccoladesasarightsidehitterlastsea-sonisdukingitoutwithtwooftheconfer-encersquos top blockers Shannon Hawari andKatBrownforaspotinthemiddle ldquoMostlyweneedoneof themiddleposi-tionstobeabletohitbehindthesetterexcep-tionally wellrdquo Feller said ldquoCorrey does that

By Christina Jones | Senior Staffcjonesdailycalorg

Setter PAGe 11 SeASon Preview PAGe 11 volleybAll PAGe 11

better than anyone We may continue tobounceherbetweenmiddleandrightsiderdquo IfJohnsondoesnrsquotwinamiddlespotshersquollbattle highly regarded freshman ChristinaHigginsforapositionontherightside As Feller experimentswith rotations thesetterpositionisforeseeablylocked After two years as Lloydrsquos understudyEllyBarrettwilltakethehelmTheuntestedjuniorhassomehugeshoestofillmdashLloydearnedNational Player of the Year honorslast yearmdashbut benefits from two years ofexperiencesettingtheB-team Barrett will be surrounded by powerfulattackers tohelpher ease into the roleAll-AmericanTarahMurrey returns as the lonesenior on the team coming off a breakoutjuniorcampaigninwhichsheemergedasoneof the countryrsquos top outside hittersMurreywillstepintoLloydrsquosroleasthevocalleaderinadditiontothestrongestoffensivethreat WhileMurreywillcertainlybeheardshenotes that the team has a more reservedtemperamentthisyear ldquoMe and Carli last year we could get alittlerowdyrdquoMurreysaidldquoButIthinkthatonce we get more comfortable with eachotherallofourtruepersonalitiesaregoingto come out and itrsquos going to be a lot offunrdquo The ability to keep energy updown the

CheCk onlinewwwdailycalorg

Volleyball beat writer christina Jones discusses the Bearsrsquo outlook for the season ahead in a daily cal podcast

Last year

the Cal volleyball team was one win away from a

national title The Bears are set on seizing

the crown in 2011

volleyball | Season Preview

ChriStopher mCdermUtfile

10 sports Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

W soccer

Bison are question mark for CalBy Seung Y Lee | Staffsyleedailycalorg

LastyeartheCalwomenrsquossoccerteamhad its biggest victory of the seasonagainstHawaiiatEdwardsStadiumpil-ingeightgoalsfromsixdifferentplayers ButastheBearspreparetoflydowntoHonolulufortherematchcoachNeilMcGuiredoesnotexpectanotherrompovertheRainbowWahine ldquoHawaii has a new coach and theplayerswillbemoremotivatedrdquoMcGuiresaid ldquoWe are also playing in front ofabout 3000 people I donrsquot anticipateanysortofsimilarperformancesrdquo ParticipatinginthelsquoOhanaHotelsNoKai lsquoOi tournament Cal (1-1) will firstplayNorthDakotaState (1-0)onFridaynightat10pmbeforebattlingthetour-nament host Hawaii (0-1) on Sundaynightat8pmBothmatchesareat theWaipirsquooPeninsulaSoccerStadium NeithertheBisonnortheWahinehaveclose to the talent the Bears haveAlthoughNorthDakotaStatewonmore

thanhalfitsmatcheslastseasonmostofits opponentswere tiny obscure schoolsscattered across theDakotasWith suchobscurity Cal players and coaches arereadyingtoplaytheBisonknowingnearlynothing about the team The one thingthesquaddoesknowaboutNorthDakotaState is that it plays a 4-4-2 lineup themostcommonformationinsoccer Unlike with North Dakota State theBears have experience playing againstHawaiiLedbystarstrikerAlexMorganrsquoshattrickCalbatteredtheWahinedefenseinthesecondhalfscoringfivegoals HoweverSundayrsquosmatchwilllikelybeconsiderably different since theWahinehiredanewcoachMicheleNagamine LikeHawaiiCalisalsoinatransitionmode adjusting to the void left by theseniorMorganInthelasttwomatchestheBearshavestruggledtoscoregoalslosingtoPepperdine2-1andthreadingpastSanDiegoState2-1thankstotwolategoalsbyseniorJulieBenzandjuniorLaurenBattung ldquoWehavebeenpracticinghowtopen-etratethroughthedefensebacklineand

creating scoring chancesrdquo Benz saidldquoWeneedtobemorefearlessinfrontofthenetrdquo For the Bears the ghost of Morganmdash who scored nearly a third of thesquadrsquos totalgoals last seasonmdash loomslargeovertheteamdemandingalterna-tivewaysfortheteamtoscoreandwingames One of the solutions that McGuireand the coaches are hoping for is thereturn of injured forwards MirandaWhiteandRachelMercik Mercik a sophomore has shownpromiseinherfirstyearwiththeteamstarting four games and scoring twogoals White a utility player for bothdefense and offense mdash will be able toprovide experience alongside Benz andBattungintheattackinglines ldquoWhite and Mercik are two playersthatsufferedfromlong-termandshort-term injuries that have come backrdquoMcGuire said ldquoWe havenrsquot had themenough of the field so I want to givethesetwosomequalityplayingtimethisweekendrdquo

Lauren Battung scored Calrsquos first goal in its 2-1 overtime win over San Diego State on Sunday It was her second goal of the year sean goebelfile

M soccer

Bears cross the bay to open their seasonBy Camellia Senemar | Staffcsenemardailycalorg

Season openers always havetheirjittersespeciallywhenteamsare away from the comforts oftheirhomefield WiththesetwoforcesworkingagainsttheNo7Calmenrsquossoccerteam this Friday evening theBears travel across the bridge toface the University of SanFranciscoatNegoescoStadiumat7pm Thedisparityinthetwoteamsrsquostandings mdash the Dons areunrankedmdashmightprovideahinttowards thegamersquos resultbutonpaper the Bearsrsquo all-time seriesrecord against USF stands at14-21-2EventhoughCalshutouttheDonsintheirlastfourencoun-ters the matchup still stands atrickytest ldquoUSF is a strong and talentedteamrdquo junior co-captain StevenBirnbaumsaidldquoWearejustlook-ing to play our game and get agoodstarttotheseasonrdquo Last yearrsquos tilt at GoldmanField produced then-sophomoreJohn Fitzpatrickrsquos game winninggoal in overtime It was then-sophomoreAnthonySalcicciawhofound Birnbaumrsquos head for theassistonthelastcornerkickofthematch The goal gave his squadthe1-0leadandashareoftheBayAreaClassicwithStanford Those three lethal juniors arethe only players to return to theBearsrsquo 11-man lineup from 2010All posted career highs in goalsassistsandpoints in their sopho-moreyearsandwillbelookingtoadd to their tallies Birnbaum isthesolereturningstarterfromthebacklineandisjoinedbySalciccia

as a fellow co-captain The cur-rentmemberswillhavebigshoesto fill after last seasonrsquos highlysuccessful campaign saw fiveseniors and one junior head toMajorLeagueSoccer CoachKevinGrimeswill havehis optionsopenwith this youngteammdashmorethanhalfareenter-ing their freshmen and sopho-more yearsThe five timePac-10Coach of the Yearmost recentlyawarded in 2010 also has twoexperienced forwards redshirtjuniors Kyle Lunt and MichaelMunozathisdisposal ldquoWe are confident with ourteamrdquo Birnbaum said ldquoAll theunderclassmen are very talentedandwillbeabigpartofourteamthisyearrdquo Calhasbeenpreparingappro-priately and avoiding any majorinjury concerns during the pastmonthofpreseasonTheultimategoal is to retain the conferencechampionshipTheyarepredictedto finish second while UCLAwhich claimed the second spotlast season is projected to takethe title Nonetheless the Bearsare feeling optimistic about theseason opener after honing theirtechniquesinthesummer ldquoWe are ready for tomorrowrdquojunior goalkeeper Robby Gogatzsaid ldquoWe just want to keep onimproving one game at a timeandbuildonourstrengthsrdquo Cal will have three gamesremainingintheBayAreaClassicAlthough the jitters of a seasonopenerwill have diminished theBearswillstillbeplayinginunfa-miliar territory in Illinois andConnecticut It wonrsquot be untilSept 16 that the club returnshometoEdwardsStadiumtofin-ishoffagainstSantaClara

11sportsFriday August 26 2011 The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

field hockeyFrom Page 9

SeaSon preview Bears will face a stacked Pac-12 schedule

From Page 9

Setter Barrett will build her own legacy after Lloydrsquos exit

stretch will be crucial as the Bears face a stacked conference slate that includes three other teams ranked in the top-10 nationally After a weak preseason Cal will have to be on top of its game to host perennial power No 6 Stanford to open conference play on Sept 13 The addition of Colorado and Utah extend

the Pac-12 season by four matches forcing the first leg of the Big Spike to take place on a Tuesday night No 2 USC picked to win the Pac-12 will pose the greatest challenge for the Bears who are predicted to finish sec-ond The Trojans return all of their starters from the team that lost to Cal in the Final Four but defeated the

Bears twice in the regular seasonCalrsquos not quite ready to face the likes to Stanford and USC yet but are putting the work in to get to that pointldquoWe played some hard volleyball in practice so conditioning-wise wersquore right thererdquo Murrey said ldquoMentally wersquore getting ready every single dayrdquoldquoWersquore ready to playrdquo

nearly as far last season without her This year however it seems plausible that Cal will achieve similar heights without the setter extraordinaire Lloyd had a lot of help with the meteoric rise of Tarah Murrey as one of the premier outside hitters in the nation So long as Lloydrsquos successor Elly Barrett can find Murrey on the outside the Bears will be in great shape It has yet to be seen if Barrett will contribute the same kind of dynamic play that Lloyd did or if she will have as well-rounded a game But frankly the team doesnrsquot need her to be Lloyd She doesnrsquot need to be the most vocal player on the court or fire her team up That responsibility will be left to Murrey the lone senior

on the team who was clearly part of the leadership core last year Barrett doesnrsquot have to try to learn a new offense like Lloyd did or guide her teammates through such adjust-ments to their timing The system is already in place The Austin Texas native just needs to be a competent setter Given that she was an even more highly-sought after recruit than Lloyd itrsquos safe to assume Barrett has that ability With two years waiting in the wings Barrett amassed a significant amount of reps in practice with her attackers Coach Rich Feller said shersquos tightly bonded with her fellow juniors many of whom shersquoll be setting in the middle and right side so chemistry shouldnrsquot

be an issue Last year the Bears lost Pac-10 Player of the Year in outside hitter Hana Cutura and the preseason talk was focused mainly on how Cal would compensate for such a huge loss It only took a few weeks for Tarah Murrey to rise from the ashes of a dis-appointing sophomore campaign to emerge as one of the countryrsquos best Suddenly no one was mentioning Cutura anymore It would be foolish to assume that Barrett who has not had experience starting will have a similar breakout year However once she proves herself to be a capable setter Lloydrsquos name will start to fade and Barrett can begin building her own legacy

From Page 9

volleyball Cal hopes to repeat success of 2010 tournament

By Eric Lee | Staffetleedailycalorg

After an undefeated exhibition schedule which included two con-vincing wins and a tie with Stanford the Cal field hockey team will visit No 16 Louisville at 3 pm at Trager Stadium for its first official game of the 2011 season

Coming off last yearrsquos disappoint-ing finish mdash a loss to Stanford in the NorPac Tournament final mdash the Bears hope to start the season strong as they embark on a mini-roadtrip to Louisville Ky for games against the Cardinals and No 13 Michigan State

Louisville enters this season with some new faces Justine Sowry is the new head coach and a number of senior leaders from last season have since graduated

The squad however returns three All-Big East preseason selec-tions along with a number of expe-rienced players to fill out the rest of the roster

The Cardinals finished the 2010 season with a 13-7 record and a 5-1 conference record good enough for second in the strong Big East confer-ence

Louisvillersquos season ended in the semifinals of the Big East Tournament a 2-1 loss to No 4 Connecticut

Last year the Cardinals defeated the Bears 2-0 in Louisville under then-head coach Pam Bustin who later took on head coaching duties at Duke

Returning sophomore Erin

Scheidtmiller provided one of Louisvillersquos goals in that game while the other score came from Tuli Lim who has since graduated

One thing the Bears have going for them is an extremely strong preseason which began with a dominating 10-2 victory over UC Davis

Sophomore Jordan OrsquoReilly started the contest off with a pair of goals and the Aggies never recov-ered

Sophomore Andrea Earle fresh-man Marcia Venter and senior Erin Magill each provided two goals in the offensive barrage

Cal then went to No 20 Stanford and tied a tough Cardinal squad 1-1 due to strong goalkeeping from senior Maddie Hand and sophomore Courtney Hendrickson Senior Megan Shimojima provided the Bearrsquos lone goal

In its final preseason scrimmage Cal defeated the University of Alberta 4-1 with another fine offensive performance from Shimojima who netted two goals in the match

The road does not get any easier after Louisville as the Bears face No 13 Michigan State the following day The Spartans who finished with an 15-6 record last season figure to be one of Calrsquos toughest matchups this upcoming season

Last year the Bears fell to Michigan State 3-4 in their second game of that season The match saw seven different lead changes before the Spartans scored the game-winning goal in the 69th minute to close out the Bears

Cal looks to build upon successful preseason

ldquoWersquoll use the games to find out which starting lineups will work the best and some of those may include the younger playersrdquo Feller said

ldquoIf therersquos an opportunity to play more people this is the chance to do

itrdquoJunior setter Elly Barrett will be the

one to pick up where Lloyd left off In 2010 Barrett logged only 27 sets through 13 games of work behind Lloyd and will look to establish herself

as a leader of the 2011 version of the Bears

ldquoIt will be good practice to stay focused on our side of the court regard-less of whorsquos on the other siderdquo Barrett said

DUMMY

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

1 Ridicule4 Magna __9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried folded and lled18 Squelch19 Opposite of cominrsquo20 Fruit-topped dessert22 Persons23 Prex for marketing or communication24 Egyptrsquos loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Tried39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation systems

1 Crawling bug2 Small veggies3 Engrave4 Regal home5 Mrs Ralph Kramden6 __ Hayworth7 Snatched8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebrsquos wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement

31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space ight agcy44 One of a pair45 British bishopsrsquo items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartlettrsquos book abbr53 Repulsive54 Green fruit55 Satanrsquos specialty59 Pauserrsquos words

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

Keep Berkeley Unique Shop LocallySupporting locally-owned independently operated businesses keeps our city unique creates more jobs and makes our economy stronger Look for this icon the next time yoursquore shopping for something special

Find a local business near you at buylocalberkeleycom All contributions are tax deductible dailycalorgdonate

Support independent student journalismDonate to the Daily Californian

Support independent student journalism Donate to the Daily CalAll contributions are tax deductible

dailycalorgdonate

12 PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

  • 0826_dailycal01
  • 0826_dailycal02
  • 0826_dailycal03
  • 0826_dailycal04
  • 0826_dailycal05
  • 0826_dailycal06
  • 0826_dailycal07
  • 0826_dailycal08
  • 0826_dailycal09
  • 0826_dailycal10
  • 0826_dailycal11
  • 0826_dailycal12

SportSFriday august 26 2011 bull dailycal orgsports

AtCalwearemorethanfamiliarwith the aftermath of losing anincrediblequarterbackPerhapscur-rent students only know AaronRodgers as the alumnus that wonthe Super Bowl last season but Irememberhimas the savior ofCalfootball that brought us somerespectability AfterRodgersboltedfortheNFLcoachJeffTedfordhasyettotrotouta competent let alone comparablequarterbackWersquovejusthadaflurryofdisappointments In volleyball the setter is essen-tially the quarterback of the teamShersquostheonethatdeliverstheballtoattackers which requires remark-ablerapportandtimingwithhittersquickdecision-makingandtheabil-itytoreaddefenses TheCalvolleyballteamlosesitsquarterback this season in CarliLloydButdonrsquotexpect it tomeanthedemiseoftheBearsasRodgersrsquodepartureprovedtobe Lloyd probably meant more toherteamthanRodgersThenationalPlayer of the Year Lloyd institutedthenewup-tempooffensethatledtothe squadrsquos incredible run to theconference title and debut in thenationaltitlegame More importantly she was theheart and soul of the team Therewasnodoubtshewastheleaderonthe court keeping her teammatestogether and hitters focused Shesimplyrefusedto letherteamloseandhadawayofkillingopponentsrsquomomentumwithbigplays HerintensitywasinfectiousanditrsquoshardtoimaginetheBearsgoing

Bearsrsquo new quarterback

wonrsquot stop surging Cal

Christina Jones cjonesdailycalorg

ldquoIt sounds demeaning to say tune-up but I would say these

games are more of a way to get momentum going for our teamrdquo mdash Volleyball coach Rich Feller on the preseason

Bears open 2011 season with barren Riverside club

Eightmonthsafterdropping theNCAAchampi-onshipmatchtoPennStatelastDecembertheNo3Cal volleyball team will see itsfirstactionofthe2011seasonthisweekend

The Bears will host the CalMoltenClassictodayandSaturdayat Haas Pavillion inviting UCRiverside Fairfield and FloridaInternational University intoBerkeley

Calwillbelookingtorepeatitsperformance from 2010when itwon both of its matches of thepreseason tournament tallyingvictories over UC Santa Barbara(25-1825-1528-26)andManhattanCollege(25-825-1525-7)

Outside hitterTarahMurreywho returns to theBears as the lone senior was named the tourna-mentrsquosmost valuable player after leading the teamwith11killsand14digsTheBearsrsquooffensewassolidlogging a 341 attack percentage across the twogames

Calshouldbepoisedtoseesimilarresultstonightwhen it opens its seasonagainstUCRiversideat 5pmTheHighlandershadlittletocelebratein2010postinga2-30recordincludinga0-16markintheBigWestRiversidewaspicked to finish last in theBigWestin2011

ldquoItsoundsdemeaningtosaytune-upbutIwouldsaythesegamesaremoreofawaytogetmomentumgoing for our teamrdquo coach Rich Feller said ldquoThethreeweeksofpreseasonaremeanttoestablishsomesortoflineupandmomentumrdquo

Though theBearsmightbepusheda littlemoreonSaturdaywhentheysquareoffwithFairfieldat11amandFIUat7pmCallikelywonrsquotseeanyseri-ous competition Still the squadknows it needs togetofftoaquickstarttotheseason

ldquoYouplayeverygame likes itrsquos thenational titlerdquoMurreysaidldquoYoursquorenevergoingtoplayperfectvol-leyball but you always have to respect your oppo-nentrdquo

TheBearswillalsobeusingthisweekendaswellasthematchesintheupcomingweekstosolidifyitsstartinglineupThoughtheteamreturnssixstartersfrom2010 itwillneedto findawaytoreplacethepresenceofCarliLloydtheAVCANationalPlayerofthe Year in 2010 Lloyd finished her career with5697assistsmdashgoodenough for secondall time inCalhistory

By Connor Byrne | Staffcbyrnedailycalorg

All-American Tarah Murrey (middle) returns to lead the Bears as the biggest offensive threat Shannon hamiltonfile

when tonight at 7 pmwhere haaS pavilion

Quick LookCal v UC riverSide Bears slightly modify the

recipe for success in 2011

TheCal volleyball team is coming off itsbest season in program history The Bearstook their first Pac-10 title andmade theirdebutinthenationalchampionship One school of thought would be not tomesswithsuccessandsimplyplugplayersinto fill the twovacantpositionsat setteranddefensivespecialistinthestartinglineup Reigning AVCA Coach of the Year RichFeller is taking a slightly different routeWhile the overall offensive and defensiveschemeswillremaininplaceFellersaidheismixing things up in the lineup beginningwithtonightrsquosopeneragainstUCRiverside ldquoI donrsquot think yoursquoll see any sweepingchangesrdquo Feller said ldquoWe have a lotmoreweaponsnowMinusCarli(Lloyd)whowasthesetterweincreasedouroffensivethreatsbythreeorfournewplayersrdquo Last season the starters were solidifiedearly in the preseason and didnrsquot changemuchThisseasoneventhoseaccomplishedstarters thatwerekey contributors last yearhavetofightfortheirpositions MostnotablyCorreyJohnsonwhogar-neredAll-Pac10andAVCAhonorablemen-tionaccoladesasarightsidehitterlastsea-sonisdukingitoutwithtwooftheconfer-encersquos top blockers Shannon Hawari andKatBrownforaspotinthemiddle ldquoMostlyweneedoneof themiddleposi-tionstobeabletohitbehindthesetterexcep-tionally wellrdquo Feller said ldquoCorrey does that

By Christina Jones | Senior Staffcjonesdailycalorg

Setter PAGe 11 SeASon Preview PAGe 11 volleybAll PAGe 11

better than anyone We may continue tobounceherbetweenmiddleandrightsiderdquo IfJohnsondoesnrsquotwinamiddlespotshersquollbattle highly regarded freshman ChristinaHigginsforapositionontherightside As Feller experimentswith rotations thesetterpositionisforeseeablylocked After two years as Lloydrsquos understudyEllyBarrettwilltakethehelmTheuntestedjuniorhassomehugeshoestofillmdashLloydearnedNational Player of the Year honorslast yearmdashbut benefits from two years ofexperiencesettingtheB-team Barrett will be surrounded by powerfulattackers tohelpher ease into the roleAll-AmericanTarahMurrey returns as the lonesenior on the team coming off a breakoutjuniorcampaigninwhichsheemergedasoneof the countryrsquos top outside hittersMurreywillstepintoLloydrsquosroleasthevocalleaderinadditiontothestrongestoffensivethreat WhileMurreywillcertainlybeheardshenotes that the team has a more reservedtemperamentthisyear ldquoMe and Carli last year we could get alittlerowdyrdquoMurreysaidldquoButIthinkthatonce we get more comfortable with eachotherallofourtruepersonalitiesaregoingto come out and itrsquos going to be a lot offunrdquo The ability to keep energy updown the

CheCk onlinewwwdailycalorg

Volleyball beat writer christina Jones discusses the Bearsrsquo outlook for the season ahead in a daily cal podcast

Last year

the Cal volleyball team was one win away from a

national title The Bears are set on seizing

the crown in 2011

volleyball | Season Preview

ChriStopher mCdermUtfile

10 sports Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

W soccer

Bison are question mark for CalBy Seung Y Lee | Staffsyleedailycalorg

LastyeartheCalwomenrsquossoccerteamhad its biggest victory of the seasonagainstHawaiiatEdwardsStadiumpil-ingeightgoalsfromsixdifferentplayers ButastheBearspreparetoflydowntoHonolulufortherematchcoachNeilMcGuiredoesnotexpectanotherrompovertheRainbowWahine ldquoHawaii has a new coach and theplayerswillbemoremotivatedrdquoMcGuiresaid ldquoWe are also playing in front ofabout 3000 people I donrsquot anticipateanysortofsimilarperformancesrdquo ParticipatinginthelsquoOhanaHotelsNoKai lsquoOi tournament Cal (1-1) will firstplayNorthDakotaState (1-0)onFridaynightat10pmbeforebattlingthetour-nament host Hawaii (0-1) on Sundaynightat8pmBothmatchesareat theWaipirsquooPeninsulaSoccerStadium NeithertheBisonnortheWahinehaveclose to the talent the Bears haveAlthoughNorthDakotaStatewonmore

thanhalfitsmatcheslastseasonmostofits opponentswere tiny obscure schoolsscattered across theDakotasWith suchobscurity Cal players and coaches arereadyingtoplaytheBisonknowingnearlynothing about the team The one thingthesquaddoesknowaboutNorthDakotaState is that it plays a 4-4-2 lineup themostcommonformationinsoccer Unlike with North Dakota State theBears have experience playing againstHawaiiLedbystarstrikerAlexMorganrsquoshattrickCalbatteredtheWahinedefenseinthesecondhalfscoringfivegoals HoweverSundayrsquosmatchwilllikelybeconsiderably different since theWahinehiredanewcoachMicheleNagamine LikeHawaiiCalisalsoinatransitionmode adjusting to the void left by theseniorMorganInthelasttwomatchestheBearshavestruggledtoscoregoalslosingtoPepperdine2-1andthreadingpastSanDiegoState2-1thankstotwolategoalsbyseniorJulieBenzandjuniorLaurenBattung ldquoWehavebeenpracticinghowtopen-etratethroughthedefensebacklineand

creating scoring chancesrdquo Benz saidldquoWeneedtobemorefearlessinfrontofthenetrdquo For the Bears the ghost of Morganmdash who scored nearly a third of thesquadrsquos totalgoals last seasonmdash loomslargeovertheteamdemandingalterna-tivewaysfortheteamtoscoreandwingames One of the solutions that McGuireand the coaches are hoping for is thereturn of injured forwards MirandaWhiteandRachelMercik Mercik a sophomore has shownpromiseinherfirstyearwiththeteamstarting four games and scoring twogoals White a utility player for bothdefense and offense mdash will be able toprovide experience alongside Benz andBattungintheattackinglines ldquoWhite and Mercik are two playersthatsufferedfromlong-termandshort-term injuries that have come backrdquoMcGuire said ldquoWe havenrsquot had themenough of the field so I want to givethesetwosomequalityplayingtimethisweekendrdquo

Lauren Battung scored Calrsquos first goal in its 2-1 overtime win over San Diego State on Sunday It was her second goal of the year sean goebelfile

M soccer

Bears cross the bay to open their seasonBy Camellia Senemar | Staffcsenemardailycalorg

Season openers always havetheirjittersespeciallywhenteamsare away from the comforts oftheirhomefield WiththesetwoforcesworkingagainsttheNo7Calmenrsquossoccerteam this Friday evening theBears travel across the bridge toface the University of SanFranciscoatNegoescoStadiumat7pm Thedisparityinthetwoteamsrsquostandings mdash the Dons areunrankedmdashmightprovideahinttowards thegamersquos resultbutonpaper the Bearsrsquo all-time seriesrecord against USF stands at14-21-2EventhoughCalshutouttheDonsintheirlastfourencoun-ters the matchup still stands atrickytest ldquoUSF is a strong and talentedteamrdquo junior co-captain StevenBirnbaumsaidldquoWearejustlook-ing to play our game and get agoodstarttotheseasonrdquo Last yearrsquos tilt at GoldmanField produced then-sophomoreJohn Fitzpatrickrsquos game winninggoal in overtime It was then-sophomoreAnthonySalcicciawhofound Birnbaumrsquos head for theassistonthelastcornerkickofthematch The goal gave his squadthe1-0leadandashareoftheBayAreaClassicwithStanford Those three lethal juniors arethe only players to return to theBearsrsquo 11-man lineup from 2010All posted career highs in goalsassistsandpoints in their sopho-moreyearsandwillbelookingtoadd to their tallies Birnbaum isthesolereturningstarterfromthebacklineandisjoinedbySalciccia

as a fellow co-captain The cur-rentmemberswillhavebigshoesto fill after last seasonrsquos highlysuccessful campaign saw fiveseniors and one junior head toMajorLeagueSoccer CoachKevinGrimeswill havehis optionsopenwith this youngteammdashmorethanhalfareenter-ing their freshmen and sopho-more yearsThe five timePac-10Coach of the Yearmost recentlyawarded in 2010 also has twoexperienced forwards redshirtjuniors Kyle Lunt and MichaelMunozathisdisposal ldquoWe are confident with ourteamrdquo Birnbaum said ldquoAll theunderclassmen are very talentedandwillbeabigpartofourteamthisyearrdquo Calhasbeenpreparingappro-priately and avoiding any majorinjury concerns during the pastmonthofpreseasonTheultimategoal is to retain the conferencechampionshipTheyarepredictedto finish second while UCLAwhich claimed the second spotlast season is projected to takethe title Nonetheless the Bearsare feeling optimistic about theseason opener after honing theirtechniquesinthesummer ldquoWe are ready for tomorrowrdquojunior goalkeeper Robby Gogatzsaid ldquoWe just want to keep onimproving one game at a timeandbuildonourstrengthsrdquo Cal will have three gamesremainingintheBayAreaClassicAlthough the jitters of a seasonopenerwill have diminished theBearswillstillbeplayinginunfa-miliar territory in Illinois andConnecticut It wonrsquot be untilSept 16 that the club returnshometoEdwardsStadiumtofin-ishoffagainstSantaClara

11sportsFriday August 26 2011 The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

field hockeyFrom Page 9

SeaSon preview Bears will face a stacked Pac-12 schedule

From Page 9

Setter Barrett will build her own legacy after Lloydrsquos exit

stretch will be crucial as the Bears face a stacked conference slate that includes three other teams ranked in the top-10 nationally After a weak preseason Cal will have to be on top of its game to host perennial power No 6 Stanford to open conference play on Sept 13 The addition of Colorado and Utah extend

the Pac-12 season by four matches forcing the first leg of the Big Spike to take place on a Tuesday night No 2 USC picked to win the Pac-12 will pose the greatest challenge for the Bears who are predicted to finish sec-ond The Trojans return all of their starters from the team that lost to Cal in the Final Four but defeated the

Bears twice in the regular seasonCalrsquos not quite ready to face the likes to Stanford and USC yet but are putting the work in to get to that pointldquoWe played some hard volleyball in practice so conditioning-wise wersquore right thererdquo Murrey said ldquoMentally wersquore getting ready every single dayrdquoldquoWersquore ready to playrdquo

nearly as far last season without her This year however it seems plausible that Cal will achieve similar heights without the setter extraordinaire Lloyd had a lot of help with the meteoric rise of Tarah Murrey as one of the premier outside hitters in the nation So long as Lloydrsquos successor Elly Barrett can find Murrey on the outside the Bears will be in great shape It has yet to be seen if Barrett will contribute the same kind of dynamic play that Lloyd did or if she will have as well-rounded a game But frankly the team doesnrsquot need her to be Lloyd She doesnrsquot need to be the most vocal player on the court or fire her team up That responsibility will be left to Murrey the lone senior

on the team who was clearly part of the leadership core last year Barrett doesnrsquot have to try to learn a new offense like Lloyd did or guide her teammates through such adjust-ments to their timing The system is already in place The Austin Texas native just needs to be a competent setter Given that she was an even more highly-sought after recruit than Lloyd itrsquos safe to assume Barrett has that ability With two years waiting in the wings Barrett amassed a significant amount of reps in practice with her attackers Coach Rich Feller said shersquos tightly bonded with her fellow juniors many of whom shersquoll be setting in the middle and right side so chemistry shouldnrsquot

be an issue Last year the Bears lost Pac-10 Player of the Year in outside hitter Hana Cutura and the preseason talk was focused mainly on how Cal would compensate for such a huge loss It only took a few weeks for Tarah Murrey to rise from the ashes of a dis-appointing sophomore campaign to emerge as one of the countryrsquos best Suddenly no one was mentioning Cutura anymore It would be foolish to assume that Barrett who has not had experience starting will have a similar breakout year However once she proves herself to be a capable setter Lloydrsquos name will start to fade and Barrett can begin building her own legacy

From Page 9

volleyball Cal hopes to repeat success of 2010 tournament

By Eric Lee | Staffetleedailycalorg

After an undefeated exhibition schedule which included two con-vincing wins and a tie with Stanford the Cal field hockey team will visit No 16 Louisville at 3 pm at Trager Stadium for its first official game of the 2011 season

Coming off last yearrsquos disappoint-ing finish mdash a loss to Stanford in the NorPac Tournament final mdash the Bears hope to start the season strong as they embark on a mini-roadtrip to Louisville Ky for games against the Cardinals and No 13 Michigan State

Louisville enters this season with some new faces Justine Sowry is the new head coach and a number of senior leaders from last season have since graduated

The squad however returns three All-Big East preseason selec-tions along with a number of expe-rienced players to fill out the rest of the roster

The Cardinals finished the 2010 season with a 13-7 record and a 5-1 conference record good enough for second in the strong Big East confer-ence

Louisvillersquos season ended in the semifinals of the Big East Tournament a 2-1 loss to No 4 Connecticut

Last year the Cardinals defeated the Bears 2-0 in Louisville under then-head coach Pam Bustin who later took on head coaching duties at Duke

Returning sophomore Erin

Scheidtmiller provided one of Louisvillersquos goals in that game while the other score came from Tuli Lim who has since graduated

One thing the Bears have going for them is an extremely strong preseason which began with a dominating 10-2 victory over UC Davis

Sophomore Jordan OrsquoReilly started the contest off with a pair of goals and the Aggies never recov-ered

Sophomore Andrea Earle fresh-man Marcia Venter and senior Erin Magill each provided two goals in the offensive barrage

Cal then went to No 20 Stanford and tied a tough Cardinal squad 1-1 due to strong goalkeeping from senior Maddie Hand and sophomore Courtney Hendrickson Senior Megan Shimojima provided the Bearrsquos lone goal

In its final preseason scrimmage Cal defeated the University of Alberta 4-1 with another fine offensive performance from Shimojima who netted two goals in the match

The road does not get any easier after Louisville as the Bears face No 13 Michigan State the following day The Spartans who finished with an 15-6 record last season figure to be one of Calrsquos toughest matchups this upcoming season

Last year the Bears fell to Michigan State 3-4 in their second game of that season The match saw seven different lead changes before the Spartans scored the game-winning goal in the 69th minute to close out the Bears

Cal looks to build upon successful preseason

ldquoWersquoll use the games to find out which starting lineups will work the best and some of those may include the younger playersrdquo Feller said

ldquoIf therersquos an opportunity to play more people this is the chance to do

itrdquoJunior setter Elly Barrett will be the

one to pick up where Lloyd left off In 2010 Barrett logged only 27 sets through 13 games of work behind Lloyd and will look to establish herself

as a leader of the 2011 version of the Bears

ldquoIt will be good practice to stay focused on our side of the court regard-less of whorsquos on the other siderdquo Barrett said

DUMMY

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

1 Ridicule4 Magna __9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried folded and lled18 Squelch19 Opposite of cominrsquo20 Fruit-topped dessert22 Persons23 Prex for marketing or communication24 Egyptrsquos loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Tried39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation systems

1 Crawling bug2 Small veggies3 Engrave4 Regal home5 Mrs Ralph Kramden6 __ Hayworth7 Snatched8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebrsquos wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement

31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space ight agcy44 One of a pair45 British bishopsrsquo items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartlettrsquos book abbr53 Repulsive54 Green fruit55 Satanrsquos specialty59 Pauserrsquos words

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

Keep Berkeley Unique Shop LocallySupporting locally-owned independently operated businesses keeps our city unique creates more jobs and makes our economy stronger Look for this icon the next time yoursquore shopping for something special

Find a local business near you at buylocalberkeleycom All contributions are tax deductible dailycalorgdonate

Support independent student journalismDonate to the Daily Californian

Support independent student journalism Donate to the Daily CalAll contributions are tax deductible

dailycalorgdonate

12 PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

  • 0826_dailycal01
  • 0826_dailycal02
  • 0826_dailycal03
  • 0826_dailycal04
  • 0826_dailycal05
  • 0826_dailycal06
  • 0826_dailycal07
  • 0826_dailycal08
  • 0826_dailycal09
  • 0826_dailycal10
  • 0826_dailycal11
  • 0826_dailycal12

10 sports Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

W soccer

Bison are question mark for CalBy Seung Y Lee | Staffsyleedailycalorg

LastyeartheCalwomenrsquossoccerteamhad its biggest victory of the seasonagainstHawaiiatEdwardsStadiumpil-ingeightgoalsfromsixdifferentplayers ButastheBearspreparetoflydowntoHonolulufortherematchcoachNeilMcGuiredoesnotexpectanotherrompovertheRainbowWahine ldquoHawaii has a new coach and theplayerswillbemoremotivatedrdquoMcGuiresaid ldquoWe are also playing in front ofabout 3000 people I donrsquot anticipateanysortofsimilarperformancesrdquo ParticipatinginthelsquoOhanaHotelsNoKai lsquoOi tournament Cal (1-1) will firstplayNorthDakotaState (1-0)onFridaynightat10pmbeforebattlingthetour-nament host Hawaii (0-1) on Sundaynightat8pmBothmatchesareat theWaipirsquooPeninsulaSoccerStadium NeithertheBisonnortheWahinehaveclose to the talent the Bears haveAlthoughNorthDakotaStatewonmore

thanhalfitsmatcheslastseasonmostofits opponentswere tiny obscure schoolsscattered across theDakotasWith suchobscurity Cal players and coaches arereadyingtoplaytheBisonknowingnearlynothing about the team The one thingthesquaddoesknowaboutNorthDakotaState is that it plays a 4-4-2 lineup themostcommonformationinsoccer Unlike with North Dakota State theBears have experience playing againstHawaiiLedbystarstrikerAlexMorganrsquoshattrickCalbatteredtheWahinedefenseinthesecondhalfscoringfivegoals HoweverSundayrsquosmatchwilllikelybeconsiderably different since theWahinehiredanewcoachMicheleNagamine LikeHawaiiCalisalsoinatransitionmode adjusting to the void left by theseniorMorganInthelasttwomatchestheBearshavestruggledtoscoregoalslosingtoPepperdine2-1andthreadingpastSanDiegoState2-1thankstotwolategoalsbyseniorJulieBenzandjuniorLaurenBattung ldquoWehavebeenpracticinghowtopen-etratethroughthedefensebacklineand

creating scoring chancesrdquo Benz saidldquoWeneedtobemorefearlessinfrontofthenetrdquo For the Bears the ghost of Morganmdash who scored nearly a third of thesquadrsquos totalgoals last seasonmdash loomslargeovertheteamdemandingalterna-tivewaysfortheteamtoscoreandwingames One of the solutions that McGuireand the coaches are hoping for is thereturn of injured forwards MirandaWhiteandRachelMercik Mercik a sophomore has shownpromiseinherfirstyearwiththeteamstarting four games and scoring twogoals White a utility player for bothdefense and offense mdash will be able toprovide experience alongside Benz andBattungintheattackinglines ldquoWhite and Mercik are two playersthatsufferedfromlong-termandshort-term injuries that have come backrdquoMcGuire said ldquoWe havenrsquot had themenough of the field so I want to givethesetwosomequalityplayingtimethisweekendrdquo

Lauren Battung scored Calrsquos first goal in its 2-1 overtime win over San Diego State on Sunday It was her second goal of the year sean goebelfile

M soccer

Bears cross the bay to open their seasonBy Camellia Senemar | Staffcsenemardailycalorg

Season openers always havetheirjittersespeciallywhenteamsare away from the comforts oftheirhomefield WiththesetwoforcesworkingagainsttheNo7Calmenrsquossoccerteam this Friday evening theBears travel across the bridge toface the University of SanFranciscoatNegoescoStadiumat7pm Thedisparityinthetwoteamsrsquostandings mdash the Dons areunrankedmdashmightprovideahinttowards thegamersquos resultbutonpaper the Bearsrsquo all-time seriesrecord against USF stands at14-21-2EventhoughCalshutouttheDonsintheirlastfourencoun-ters the matchup still stands atrickytest ldquoUSF is a strong and talentedteamrdquo junior co-captain StevenBirnbaumsaidldquoWearejustlook-ing to play our game and get agoodstarttotheseasonrdquo Last yearrsquos tilt at GoldmanField produced then-sophomoreJohn Fitzpatrickrsquos game winninggoal in overtime It was then-sophomoreAnthonySalcicciawhofound Birnbaumrsquos head for theassistonthelastcornerkickofthematch The goal gave his squadthe1-0leadandashareoftheBayAreaClassicwithStanford Those three lethal juniors arethe only players to return to theBearsrsquo 11-man lineup from 2010All posted career highs in goalsassistsandpoints in their sopho-moreyearsandwillbelookingtoadd to their tallies Birnbaum isthesolereturningstarterfromthebacklineandisjoinedbySalciccia

as a fellow co-captain The cur-rentmemberswillhavebigshoesto fill after last seasonrsquos highlysuccessful campaign saw fiveseniors and one junior head toMajorLeagueSoccer CoachKevinGrimeswill havehis optionsopenwith this youngteammdashmorethanhalfareenter-ing their freshmen and sopho-more yearsThe five timePac-10Coach of the Yearmost recentlyawarded in 2010 also has twoexperienced forwards redshirtjuniors Kyle Lunt and MichaelMunozathisdisposal ldquoWe are confident with ourteamrdquo Birnbaum said ldquoAll theunderclassmen are very talentedandwillbeabigpartofourteamthisyearrdquo Calhasbeenpreparingappro-priately and avoiding any majorinjury concerns during the pastmonthofpreseasonTheultimategoal is to retain the conferencechampionshipTheyarepredictedto finish second while UCLAwhich claimed the second spotlast season is projected to takethe title Nonetheless the Bearsare feeling optimistic about theseason opener after honing theirtechniquesinthesummer ldquoWe are ready for tomorrowrdquojunior goalkeeper Robby Gogatzsaid ldquoWe just want to keep onimproving one game at a timeandbuildonourstrengthsrdquo Cal will have three gamesremainingintheBayAreaClassicAlthough the jitters of a seasonopenerwill have diminished theBearswillstillbeplayinginunfa-miliar territory in Illinois andConnecticut It wonrsquot be untilSept 16 that the club returnshometoEdwardsStadiumtofin-ishoffagainstSantaClara

11sportsFriday August 26 2011 The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

field hockeyFrom Page 9

SeaSon preview Bears will face a stacked Pac-12 schedule

From Page 9

Setter Barrett will build her own legacy after Lloydrsquos exit

stretch will be crucial as the Bears face a stacked conference slate that includes three other teams ranked in the top-10 nationally After a weak preseason Cal will have to be on top of its game to host perennial power No 6 Stanford to open conference play on Sept 13 The addition of Colorado and Utah extend

the Pac-12 season by four matches forcing the first leg of the Big Spike to take place on a Tuesday night No 2 USC picked to win the Pac-12 will pose the greatest challenge for the Bears who are predicted to finish sec-ond The Trojans return all of their starters from the team that lost to Cal in the Final Four but defeated the

Bears twice in the regular seasonCalrsquos not quite ready to face the likes to Stanford and USC yet but are putting the work in to get to that pointldquoWe played some hard volleyball in practice so conditioning-wise wersquore right thererdquo Murrey said ldquoMentally wersquore getting ready every single dayrdquoldquoWersquore ready to playrdquo

nearly as far last season without her This year however it seems plausible that Cal will achieve similar heights without the setter extraordinaire Lloyd had a lot of help with the meteoric rise of Tarah Murrey as one of the premier outside hitters in the nation So long as Lloydrsquos successor Elly Barrett can find Murrey on the outside the Bears will be in great shape It has yet to be seen if Barrett will contribute the same kind of dynamic play that Lloyd did or if she will have as well-rounded a game But frankly the team doesnrsquot need her to be Lloyd She doesnrsquot need to be the most vocal player on the court or fire her team up That responsibility will be left to Murrey the lone senior

on the team who was clearly part of the leadership core last year Barrett doesnrsquot have to try to learn a new offense like Lloyd did or guide her teammates through such adjust-ments to their timing The system is already in place The Austin Texas native just needs to be a competent setter Given that she was an even more highly-sought after recruit than Lloyd itrsquos safe to assume Barrett has that ability With two years waiting in the wings Barrett amassed a significant amount of reps in practice with her attackers Coach Rich Feller said shersquos tightly bonded with her fellow juniors many of whom shersquoll be setting in the middle and right side so chemistry shouldnrsquot

be an issue Last year the Bears lost Pac-10 Player of the Year in outside hitter Hana Cutura and the preseason talk was focused mainly on how Cal would compensate for such a huge loss It only took a few weeks for Tarah Murrey to rise from the ashes of a dis-appointing sophomore campaign to emerge as one of the countryrsquos best Suddenly no one was mentioning Cutura anymore It would be foolish to assume that Barrett who has not had experience starting will have a similar breakout year However once she proves herself to be a capable setter Lloydrsquos name will start to fade and Barrett can begin building her own legacy

From Page 9

volleyball Cal hopes to repeat success of 2010 tournament

By Eric Lee | Staffetleedailycalorg

After an undefeated exhibition schedule which included two con-vincing wins and a tie with Stanford the Cal field hockey team will visit No 16 Louisville at 3 pm at Trager Stadium for its first official game of the 2011 season

Coming off last yearrsquos disappoint-ing finish mdash a loss to Stanford in the NorPac Tournament final mdash the Bears hope to start the season strong as they embark on a mini-roadtrip to Louisville Ky for games against the Cardinals and No 13 Michigan State

Louisville enters this season with some new faces Justine Sowry is the new head coach and a number of senior leaders from last season have since graduated

The squad however returns three All-Big East preseason selec-tions along with a number of expe-rienced players to fill out the rest of the roster

The Cardinals finished the 2010 season with a 13-7 record and a 5-1 conference record good enough for second in the strong Big East confer-ence

Louisvillersquos season ended in the semifinals of the Big East Tournament a 2-1 loss to No 4 Connecticut

Last year the Cardinals defeated the Bears 2-0 in Louisville under then-head coach Pam Bustin who later took on head coaching duties at Duke

Returning sophomore Erin

Scheidtmiller provided one of Louisvillersquos goals in that game while the other score came from Tuli Lim who has since graduated

One thing the Bears have going for them is an extremely strong preseason which began with a dominating 10-2 victory over UC Davis

Sophomore Jordan OrsquoReilly started the contest off with a pair of goals and the Aggies never recov-ered

Sophomore Andrea Earle fresh-man Marcia Venter and senior Erin Magill each provided two goals in the offensive barrage

Cal then went to No 20 Stanford and tied a tough Cardinal squad 1-1 due to strong goalkeeping from senior Maddie Hand and sophomore Courtney Hendrickson Senior Megan Shimojima provided the Bearrsquos lone goal

In its final preseason scrimmage Cal defeated the University of Alberta 4-1 with another fine offensive performance from Shimojima who netted two goals in the match

The road does not get any easier after Louisville as the Bears face No 13 Michigan State the following day The Spartans who finished with an 15-6 record last season figure to be one of Calrsquos toughest matchups this upcoming season

Last year the Bears fell to Michigan State 3-4 in their second game of that season The match saw seven different lead changes before the Spartans scored the game-winning goal in the 69th minute to close out the Bears

Cal looks to build upon successful preseason

ldquoWersquoll use the games to find out which starting lineups will work the best and some of those may include the younger playersrdquo Feller said

ldquoIf therersquos an opportunity to play more people this is the chance to do

itrdquoJunior setter Elly Barrett will be the

one to pick up where Lloyd left off In 2010 Barrett logged only 27 sets through 13 games of work behind Lloyd and will look to establish herself

as a leader of the 2011 version of the Bears

ldquoIt will be good practice to stay focused on our side of the court regard-less of whorsquos on the other siderdquo Barrett said

DUMMY

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

1 Ridicule4 Magna __9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried folded and lled18 Squelch19 Opposite of cominrsquo20 Fruit-topped dessert22 Persons23 Prex for marketing or communication24 Egyptrsquos loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Tried39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation systems

1 Crawling bug2 Small veggies3 Engrave4 Regal home5 Mrs Ralph Kramden6 __ Hayworth7 Snatched8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebrsquos wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement

31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space ight agcy44 One of a pair45 British bishopsrsquo items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartlettrsquos book abbr53 Repulsive54 Green fruit55 Satanrsquos specialty59 Pauserrsquos words

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

Keep Berkeley Unique Shop LocallySupporting locally-owned independently operated businesses keeps our city unique creates more jobs and makes our economy stronger Look for this icon the next time yoursquore shopping for something special

Find a local business near you at buylocalberkeleycom All contributions are tax deductible dailycalorgdonate

Support independent student journalismDonate to the Daily Californian

Support independent student journalism Donate to the Daily CalAll contributions are tax deductible

dailycalorgdonate

12 PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

  • 0826_dailycal01
  • 0826_dailycal02
  • 0826_dailycal03
  • 0826_dailycal04
  • 0826_dailycal05
  • 0826_dailycal06
  • 0826_dailycal07
  • 0826_dailycal08
  • 0826_dailycal09
  • 0826_dailycal10
  • 0826_dailycal11
  • 0826_dailycal12

11sportsFriday August 26 2011 The Daily Californian

FULL COLOR ON THIS PAGEDO NOT REMOVE THE GRAY BAR---KEEP IT IN YOUR DESIGN

field hockeyFrom Page 9

SeaSon preview Bears will face a stacked Pac-12 schedule

From Page 9

Setter Barrett will build her own legacy after Lloydrsquos exit

stretch will be crucial as the Bears face a stacked conference slate that includes three other teams ranked in the top-10 nationally After a weak preseason Cal will have to be on top of its game to host perennial power No 6 Stanford to open conference play on Sept 13 The addition of Colorado and Utah extend

the Pac-12 season by four matches forcing the first leg of the Big Spike to take place on a Tuesday night No 2 USC picked to win the Pac-12 will pose the greatest challenge for the Bears who are predicted to finish sec-ond The Trojans return all of their starters from the team that lost to Cal in the Final Four but defeated the

Bears twice in the regular seasonCalrsquos not quite ready to face the likes to Stanford and USC yet but are putting the work in to get to that pointldquoWe played some hard volleyball in practice so conditioning-wise wersquore right thererdquo Murrey said ldquoMentally wersquore getting ready every single dayrdquoldquoWersquore ready to playrdquo

nearly as far last season without her This year however it seems plausible that Cal will achieve similar heights without the setter extraordinaire Lloyd had a lot of help with the meteoric rise of Tarah Murrey as one of the premier outside hitters in the nation So long as Lloydrsquos successor Elly Barrett can find Murrey on the outside the Bears will be in great shape It has yet to be seen if Barrett will contribute the same kind of dynamic play that Lloyd did or if she will have as well-rounded a game But frankly the team doesnrsquot need her to be Lloyd She doesnrsquot need to be the most vocal player on the court or fire her team up That responsibility will be left to Murrey the lone senior

on the team who was clearly part of the leadership core last year Barrett doesnrsquot have to try to learn a new offense like Lloyd did or guide her teammates through such adjust-ments to their timing The system is already in place The Austin Texas native just needs to be a competent setter Given that she was an even more highly-sought after recruit than Lloyd itrsquos safe to assume Barrett has that ability With two years waiting in the wings Barrett amassed a significant amount of reps in practice with her attackers Coach Rich Feller said shersquos tightly bonded with her fellow juniors many of whom shersquoll be setting in the middle and right side so chemistry shouldnrsquot

be an issue Last year the Bears lost Pac-10 Player of the Year in outside hitter Hana Cutura and the preseason talk was focused mainly on how Cal would compensate for such a huge loss It only took a few weeks for Tarah Murrey to rise from the ashes of a dis-appointing sophomore campaign to emerge as one of the countryrsquos best Suddenly no one was mentioning Cutura anymore It would be foolish to assume that Barrett who has not had experience starting will have a similar breakout year However once she proves herself to be a capable setter Lloydrsquos name will start to fade and Barrett can begin building her own legacy

From Page 9

volleyball Cal hopes to repeat success of 2010 tournament

By Eric Lee | Staffetleedailycalorg

After an undefeated exhibition schedule which included two con-vincing wins and a tie with Stanford the Cal field hockey team will visit No 16 Louisville at 3 pm at Trager Stadium for its first official game of the 2011 season

Coming off last yearrsquos disappoint-ing finish mdash a loss to Stanford in the NorPac Tournament final mdash the Bears hope to start the season strong as they embark on a mini-roadtrip to Louisville Ky for games against the Cardinals and No 13 Michigan State

Louisville enters this season with some new faces Justine Sowry is the new head coach and a number of senior leaders from last season have since graduated

The squad however returns three All-Big East preseason selec-tions along with a number of expe-rienced players to fill out the rest of the roster

The Cardinals finished the 2010 season with a 13-7 record and a 5-1 conference record good enough for second in the strong Big East confer-ence

Louisvillersquos season ended in the semifinals of the Big East Tournament a 2-1 loss to No 4 Connecticut

Last year the Cardinals defeated the Bears 2-0 in Louisville under then-head coach Pam Bustin who later took on head coaching duties at Duke

Returning sophomore Erin

Scheidtmiller provided one of Louisvillersquos goals in that game while the other score came from Tuli Lim who has since graduated

One thing the Bears have going for them is an extremely strong preseason which began with a dominating 10-2 victory over UC Davis

Sophomore Jordan OrsquoReilly started the contest off with a pair of goals and the Aggies never recov-ered

Sophomore Andrea Earle fresh-man Marcia Venter and senior Erin Magill each provided two goals in the offensive barrage

Cal then went to No 20 Stanford and tied a tough Cardinal squad 1-1 due to strong goalkeeping from senior Maddie Hand and sophomore Courtney Hendrickson Senior Megan Shimojima provided the Bearrsquos lone goal

In its final preseason scrimmage Cal defeated the University of Alberta 4-1 with another fine offensive performance from Shimojima who netted two goals in the match

The road does not get any easier after Louisville as the Bears face No 13 Michigan State the following day The Spartans who finished with an 15-6 record last season figure to be one of Calrsquos toughest matchups this upcoming season

Last year the Bears fell to Michigan State 3-4 in their second game of that season The match saw seven different lead changes before the Spartans scored the game-winning goal in the 69th minute to close out the Bears

Cal looks to build upon successful preseason

ldquoWersquoll use the games to find out which starting lineups will work the best and some of those may include the younger playersrdquo Feller said

ldquoIf therersquos an opportunity to play more people this is the chance to do

itrdquoJunior setter Elly Barrett will be the

one to pick up where Lloyd left off In 2010 Barrett logged only 27 sets through 13 games of work behind Lloyd and will look to establish herself

as a leader of the 2011 version of the Bears

ldquoIt will be good practice to stay focused on our side of the court regard-less of whorsquos on the other siderdquo Barrett said

DUMMY

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

25

V EASY 25

3 7 9 56 7 1 3

8 4 5 66 2 8 7

1 5 9 39 3 4 15 6 2 87 8 1 4

9 8 7 2

3 2 4 8 6 7 9 1 55 6 7 1 9 2 8 3 48 1 9 3 4 5 2 6 76 3 2 4 8 1 5 7 94 8 1 5 7 9 3 2 67 9 5 2 3 6 4 8 11 5 3 6 2 4 7 9 82 7 6 9 5 8 1 4 39 4 8 7 1 3 6 5 2

26

V EASY 26

9 2 8 6 17 1 9

5 8 6 48 5 1 4

5 9 4 26 4 8 7

4 6 3 93 2 1

6 5 4 7 8

9 7 2 3 4 8 6 5 13 4 6 7 1 5 9 8 25 8 1 6 9 2 3 7 48 3 9 2 5 7 1 4 61 5 7 9 6 4 8 2 32 6 4 1 8 3 5 9 74 1 8 5 7 6 2 3 97 9 3 8 2 1 4 6 56 2 5 4 3 9 7 1 8

27

V EASY 27

4 6 89 5 7 83 8 5 2 45 1 9 3 4

3 27 8 9 1 3

6 3 5 8 77 2 5 1

1 9 6

1 5 4 6 8 7 2 3 99 6 2 1 3 4 5 7 83 7 8 5 9 2 1 6 45 1 9 2 7 3 4 8 68 3 6 9 4 1 7 2 52 4 7 8 5 6 9 1 36 9 1 3 2 5 8 4 77 2 5 4 6 8 3 9 14 8 3 7 1 9 6 5 2

28

V EASY 28

8 7 1 24 6 2 8 9

5 9 31 7 6 83 4 1 9

7 2 3 53 7 1

1 6 8 9 44 3 2 5

8 9 7 3 1 4 6 5 23 1 4 5 6 2 7 8 92 5 6 9 7 8 1 3 45 4 1 7 2 9 3 6 86 8 3 4 5 1 9 2 77 2 9 6 8 3 5 4 19 3 5 2 4 7 8 1 61 6 2 8 9 5 4 7 34 7 8 1 3 6 2 9 5

Page 7 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

CROSSWORD PUZZLE4793

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36

37 38 39

40 41 42

43 44 45

46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59

60 61 62

63 64 65

ACROSS 1 Ridicule 4 Magna __ 9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried

folded and filled18 Squelch19 Opposite of comin20 Fruit-topped

dessert22 Persons23 Prefix for marketing

or communication24 Egypts loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Trifled39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed

experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation

systems

DOWN 1 Crawling bug 2 Small veggies 3 Engrave 4 Regal home 5 Mrs Ralph Kramden 6 __ Hayworth 7 Snatched 8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebs wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space flight agcy 44 One of a pair45 British bishops items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartletts

book abbr53 Repulsive 54 Green fruit55 Satans specialty59 Pausers words

Answer to Previous Puzzle

1 Ridicule4 Magna __9 Over13 Holey articles15 Roar like __16 Hard lump17 Tortillamdashfried folded and lled18 Squelch19 Opposite of cominrsquo20 Fruit-topped dessert22 Persons23 Prex for marketing or communication24 Egyptrsquos loc26 Giggle29 Ship stabilizers34 Played a part35 Brooch36 Eur nation37 Deafening38 Tried39 Resembling40 Days of yore41 Fraus and sentildeoras42 Famous43 Fluctuated45 Self-proclaimed experts46 Timber tree47 Tower site48 Capital city51 Fair56 Lacking moisture57 Hole-maker58 Not taped60 Actress Rinna61 Sweetly in music62 Middle East leader63 __ over faint64 Eyelid problems65 Transportation systems

1 Crawling bug2 Small veggies3 Engrave4 Regal home5 Mrs Ralph Kramden6 __ Hayworth7 Snatched8 Strengthened metal

9 Cat or goat10 Time when the hands are together11 Actress Falco12 Certain cysts14 Comforted21 Marsh growth25 Ebrsquos wife in comics26 Narratives27 Sorbonne for one28 Practice piece29 Howled30 Word of agreement

31 Malice32 Symbol33 Toboggans35 Word of invitation38 Blond kids39 Endearing41 Common verb42 Space ight agcy44 One of a pair45 British bishopsrsquo items47 Portion48 Refuse to cooperate49 __ Indians

50 Ascend52 Entry in Bartlettrsquos book abbr53 Repulsive54 Green fruit55 Satanrsquos specialty59 Pauserrsquos words

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

21

HARD 21

2 7 4 1 67 5 4 9

3 83 4

8 52 8

7 31 4 6 2

8 4 6 7 5

8 9 2 7 4 1 6 3 57 5 6 8 3 2 1 4 94 1 3 5 9 6 8 2 76 7 9 3 5 4 2 1 82 8 1 6 7 9 4 5 35 3 4 2 1 8 9 7 69 6 7 1 2 5 3 8 41 4 5 9 8 3 7 6 23 2 8 4 6 7 5 9 1

22

HARD 22

6 3 9 49 2 5

4 35 2

7 4 83 1

8 16 8 29 7 1 5

1 5 6 3 9 8 2 4 79 7 3 4 6 2 8 5 12 4 8 1 5 7 6 3 98 3 5 2 1 9 7 6 47 1 9 5 4 6 3 2 86 2 4 7 8 3 1 9 53 8 7 9 2 5 4 1 65 6 1 8 3 4 9 7 24 9 2 6 7 1 5 8 3

23

HARD 23

2 6 1 9 54 6 78

7 2 89 5

1 4 62

5 4 66 7 1 2 3

7 3 2 6 4 1 9 5 84 9 5 3 2 8 6 7 18 1 6 5 9 7 4 2 35 7 9 2 6 3 8 1 46 4 8 9 1 5 2 3 73 2 1 8 7 4 5 6 91 8 3 4 5 6 7 9 22 5 4 7 3 9 1 8 69 6 7 1 8 2 3 4 5

24

HARD 24

5 7 89 8 33 5 42 6 5

7 29 5 6

9 1 38 4 7

5 3 9

5 1 4 3 7 9 6 8 29 6 2 8 4 1 3 7 53 8 7 6 2 5 4 9 12 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 46 4 5 7 1 2 9 3 88 9 1 4 5 3 7 2 67 2 9 1 8 6 5 4 31 3 8 5 9 4 2 6 74 5 6 2 3 7 8 1 9

Page 6 of 25wwwsudokucom 24 Jul 05

Keep Berkeley Unique Shop LocallySupporting locally-owned independently operated businesses keeps our city unique creates more jobs and makes our economy stronger Look for this icon the next time yoursquore shopping for something special

Find a local business near you at buylocalberkeleycom All contributions are tax deductible dailycalorgdonate

Support independent student journalismDonate to the Daily Californian

Support independent student journalism Donate to the Daily CalAll contributions are tax deductible

dailycalorgdonate

12 PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

  • 0826_dailycal01
  • 0826_dailycal02
  • 0826_dailycal03
  • 0826_dailycal04
  • 0826_dailycal05
  • 0826_dailycal06
  • 0826_dailycal07
  • 0826_dailycal08
  • 0826_dailycal09
  • 0826_dailycal10
  • 0826_dailycal11
  • 0826_dailycal12

12 PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday August 26 2011The Daily Californian

  • 0826_dailycal01
  • 0826_dailycal02
  • 0826_dailycal03
  • 0826_dailycal04
  • 0826_dailycal05
  • 0826_dailycal06
  • 0826_dailycal07
  • 0826_dailycal08
  • 0826_dailycal09
  • 0826_dailycal10
  • 0826_dailycal11
  • 0826_dailycal12