Volume 9, Issue 2 | Oct 15-Oct 21, 2014
UCSB’s Weekly Student-Run Newspaper
@tblucsb / thebottomline.as.ucsb.edu
PARDALL
FINCHER
PRIZE
See some of the colorful sights from last Saturday’s annual Pardall Carnival.
Find out why you shouldn’t be afraid to let David Fincher take a crack at your favorite novel.
Professor Shuji Nakamura has become the most recent Nobel Prize winner on our campus.
PHOTO / 5
A&E / 6
BIKES FOR DAYS!
Photo by Julissa Chacon
Amber Walker enthusiastically receives her bike from Kimberley Walker.
Guardian Scholars Receive Free Bikes From Associated Students Bike Shop Bryn Lemon On Oct. 9 at 1pm, 50 University of California, Santa Barbara students rode home in style after the Associated Students (AS) bike shop distributed 50 free bikes to those within the Guardian Scholars Program. The event was made possible by the collaborative work of many groups, including the Gaucho-U bike cohort, a program intended to facilitate staff in embodying effective communication, diversity, change and teamwork on campus, according to the Executive Vice Chancellor. “We’re really excited,” said Kimberly Tapia, a senior contracts analyst at UCSB. “We started as a staff group bringing bikes to staff, talking about health and fitness.” According to Tapia, the GauchoU bike cohort got in touch with Lisa Przekop, director of Admissions at UCSB, and the idea of reaching out to the Guardian scholars evolved. “This is why I love the Guardian Scholars Program at UCSB,” said Justin Brandy, a second-year biology major. “Ms. Lisa does so much for us. She does anything she can to help us. She just wants us to succeed because we’ve already been through a lot.” According to the UC Santa Barbara Current, the Guardian Scholars Program was established by the Makarechian family–Hadi, the founder of the Capital Pacific Holdings real estate company, and his wife Barbara–in 2012, and is carried on by the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation. The program offers both emotional and financial support to students who
SCI & TECH / 7
NATIONAL BEAT REPORT
Governor Brown Signs Consent, Gun Safety, and LGBT Rights Bills Into Law
Gilberto Flores NATIONAL BEAT REPORTER Before the start of the new school year, Gov. Jerry Brown signed several key pieces of legislation into law. In one way or another, each piece of legislation is relevant and important to the University of California Santa Barbara and Isla Vista community. The bills each deal respectively with issues of sexual assault on college campuses, gun safety, and LGBT rights. “Yes Means Yes” Law Senate Bill 967 makes California the first state in the country to require public colleges and universities to adopt a standard of clear consent for students engaging in sexual activity. The law also requires that state colleges and universities develop a plan for helping victims of sexual assault, which includes expanding counseling and health services, as well as requiring more training for faculty in charge of reviewing sexual assault and harassment complaints. The bill defines “affirmative consent” as an “affirmative, conscious and voluntary agreement to engage in sexual activity.” The bill goes on to stress that it is the responsibility of each individual involved to “ensure that he/ she has the affirmative consent of the others to engage in the sexual activity. Lack of protest or resistance does not mean consent, nor does silence mean consent.” This law comes after an April 2014 report prepared by the White House Task Force to Protect Students From Sexual Assault revealed that 20 percent of college women experience some form of a sexual assault. This statistic was derived from a study conducted for the Justice Department’s National Institute of Justice. According to the White House report, “most often, it’s by someone she knows – and also most often, she does not report what happened. Many survivors
are left feeling isolated, ashamed or to blame. Although it happens less often, men, too, are victims of these crimes.” “I think [the new law] demonstrates that California, in many respects, is on the forefront on understanding the importance of respect, in the strongest sense of the word… before engaging in activities that require consent,” said Rep. Lois Capps when asked for comment after an event hosted by UCSB Campus Democrats. Gun Violence Restraining Orders Assembly Bill 1014 allows a judge to issue an emergency gun violence restraining order to temporarily revoke access to firearms from someone who has been determined to pose “an immediate and present danger of causing personal injury to himself, herself, or another.” Senate Bill 505 requires local law enforcement agencies to develop and adopt policies that encourage officers to search the Justice Department’s gun registry databases to determine whether an individual subject to a welfare check is the registered owner of a firearm. These bills were introduced to the state legislature after the Isla Vista shooting in May left six people dead and 13 injured. “Today, Governor Brown helped to honor the life of my son, Christopher, and so many others killed by senseless gun violence by signing AB 1014 into law,” said Richard Martinez, father of Isla Vista shooting victim Christopher Ross MichaelsMartinez. “Nothing we can do will bring back Christopher, but I’m confident this new law will help save lives and prevent other families from experiencing this same kind of tragedy. States around the country should be exploring this life-saving measure.”
See LGBT | Page 2
AS BEAT REPORT
Photos by Julissa Chacon Bikers Brandon Hendrickson (Bottom) and Kimberly Tapia (Top) are overjoyed to recieve their bikes. have recently aged out of the foster AS were all abandoned property on system. campus, according to James Wagner, The bikes distributed through program manager for the Transportation Alternatives program. The bikes were held for a period of time and then refurbished by students on the cycling team, the CSO program, and AS staff before being “released back to the community.” Upon arrival, each of the students received a golden ticket guaranteeing them the bike of their choice, an accompanying U-lock, and a free campus bike registration. Wagner estimates that the cost of a new bike with these additional features would be around $160 plus tax, and a used bike with the same features would be at least $100. “I’m very excited,” said Brandy, holding his new bike. “I spotted it in line and I thought I have to get it. I ran right over to it.” UCSB is ranked third on the 10 Most Friendly Bike Campuses in America, according to Best Colleges Online, proving just how pivotal a bike is to a student’s experience on campus. Brandy explained, “I’m really appreciative of this. My bike just got stolen a couple of weeks ago and I’ve been walking everywhere on campus to work, to classes, to 8ams, so this will add another 45 minutes to my day.” The AS bike shop is located across the bike path from the Social Sciences and Media Studies building, and offers a variety of services for students’ cycling needs.
Associated Students Discuss UCPD Halloween Protocol at First Senate Meeting Bailee Abell AS BEAT REPORTER The Associated Students Senate began the 2014-2015 academic year with their first meeting of fall quarter on Wednesday, Oct. 8, during which they discussed University of California Police Department Halloween protocol and ongoing negotiations with the Graduate Student Association. Chief of Police Dustin Olsen, Public Relations Specialist Ariel Bournes, and Officer Alexis Dougherty were in attendance as representatives from UCPD. They shared that the police department has increased their number of patrols, particularly on campus and in Isla Vista, on Friday and Saturday nights. These patrols have included UCPD officers from other UC campuses, which have been supporting University of California, Santa Barbara since the events of May 23. “We are really trying to make sure the community feels safe and is safe,” said Olsen. “With that, we also have some sobriety checkpoints… leading up through Halloween, and certainly we have been really busy and engaged getting ready for Halloween.” Olsen stated that the ten UC campus police departments participate in ongoing system-wide training and have spent the past two years focusing on crowd control training. Although the officers from other UC campuses are not as experienced with Isla Vista culture, they have received the same training as UCSB police and have been in collaboration in order to be
equipped to handle Halloween weekend. During the Executive Officers’ Reports, AS President Ali Guthy discussed negotiations with the Graduate Student Association over the use of the GSA lounge by undergraduate students. “We entered negotiations with the Graduate Students Association midSeptember over the usage of the GSA lounge, which, as you all know, a lot of our groups in AS utilize for standing meetings,” said Guthy. The Environmental Affairs Board and the Family Literacy Program are two of the many student organizations that meet weekly in the GSA lounge. Despite this, GSA notified AS mid-September of their decision to rescind the undergraduate student usage of the GSA lounge. “They were open to allowing undergraduate students to use the lounge on a case-by-case basis, but they were not interested in allowing undergraduates to use the space as standing meeting time,” said Guthy. “We are hoping to continue our negotiations and our dialogue [but] I do not believe that this is a positive dialogue for either of our student associations. We really should be working together for all students at UCSB. We have had a longstanding history of mutual cooperation and working together.”
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