041414

Page 1

VOLUME 47, ISSUE 45

MONDAY, APRIL 14, 2014

WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG

CAMPUS

A.S. COUNCIL

TRITONS FORWARD SWEEPS Council May Presidential candidates Kyle Heiskala of Let’s Act! and Robby Boparai of Tritons Forward debated transportation, Sun God and spending at Price Center Plaza. TRITONS FORWARD, USED WITH PERMISSION

FINISHING ON A HIGH NOTE

PHOTO BY SIDDARTH ATRE/GUARDIAN

The UCSD Men’s Volleyball team ended its 2014 campaign impressively, beating Pacfic and making a strong effort against No. 4 Stanford. SPORTS, PAGE 12

EQUAL WORK, EQUAL PAY

narrowing the gender pay gap opinion, Page 4

SUSTAINING UCSD alumna for eco-consumerism FEATURES, Page 7

FORECAST

MONDAY H 81 L 55

TUESDAY H 79 L 55

WEDNESDAY THURSDAY H 70 L 55

H 68 L 56

VERBATIM

‘Free’ anything, whether it be pizza, Korean BBQ or tickets to a movie at AMC 12, is usually a pretty effective lure.”

- Kelvin Noronha THINKING CAPS

OPINION, PAGE 4

INSIDE Lights and Sirens............. 3 Quick Takes..................... 4 Whova App...................... 7 Crossword..................... 11 Sports............................ 12

A.S. President

V.P Campus Affairs

V.P External Affairs

V.P Finance & Resources

Robby Boparai

Amber Hawthorne

Allyson Osorio

Igor Geyn

BY gabriella fleischmann

T

News Editor

he Tritons Forward slate, led by presidential candidate Robby Boparai, won every A.S. Council position on Friday, April 11 after weeks of campaigning for this year’s elections. Additionally, students voted in favor of passing a referendum for bylaw revisions and a non-binding referendum in support of a student graffiti-art space. “I think our ideas resonate well with a lot of campus,” Boparai said. “We made sure we were thinking positive the whole time. We wanted to make sure people supporting us knew our ideas.” A.S. Elections Committee members announced the results on the Triton Steps around 11:30 p.m. and Tritons Forward members erupted in celebration. The winners included newly elected A.S. President Boparai, VP Campus Affairs Amber Hawthorne, VP Finances and Resources Igor Geyn and VP External Allyson Osorio. An anonymous source told the Guardian said that because the paperwork for the Eleanor Roosevelt College Senator was not turned in to A.S., there is no official ERC Senator yet. Osorio said that she does not know how Tritons Forward was able to secure every spot but speculates that it may have been because the slate was composed of members from many different groups and perspectives on campus. “It feels unreal; we woke up yesterday still questioning what

COLLEGE SENATORS

ELECTION 2014

23.3%

of students voted. 5201 votes out of 23,805 undergraduates.

969

total number of voters in Muir College — the most among all colleges

51.7%

percentage of electorate that voted for Robby Boparai

75.6%

percentage of voters that supported changes to the A.S. Constitution

92.3%

percentage of voters that supported a Grafitti Art Space in a non-binding vote

ACADEMIC SENATORS

MARSHALL COLLEGE Sulchona Marpadga Jonathan Slowey MUIR COLLEGE Brianne Logasa Taylor Valdivia SIXTH COLLEGE Liza Lukasheva Angie Saavedra WARREN COLLEGE Jesslyn Meyers Akshay Tangutur REVELLE COLLEGE Gino Calavitta Joshua Fachtmann Eleanor Roosevelt College has yet to choose college senators.

ARTS & HUMANITIES DEMI D. MUNDO BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES RUSHIL PATEL ENGINEERING SALMAN ALRASHED PHYSICAL SCIENCES ANGIE AGUILAR SOCIAL SCIENCES KIM HONG

happened,” Osorio said. “The slate is beyond excited and motivated and happy, but before anything, they’re just ready to get to work.” The results were originally supposed to be announced at 5:30 p.m. However, grievances against both slates were also being heard that evening before the announcement. The Elections Committee addressed nine grievances and the Judicial Board heard three appeals. The passed bylaws referendum will institute several changes to the structure of A.S. Council, starting in the Spring 2015 elections: replacing the position of VP Finances and Resources with an appointed Financial Controller; replacing the position of AVP Student Organizations with a Director of Student Organizations; the addition of two International Senator positions; the removal of one First Year Senator position; and removing the Academic Senators’ vote from A.S. Council while creating an Academic Representatives Council on which they will have a vote on the condition that Academic Senators do not run on any slates. The non-binding referendum in support of a graffiti-art space merely intends to keep the issue in conversation and for use as leverage against the administration to show that such a space is important to students. The new A.S. Council will begin its term and pick new cabinet members in Week 5.

readers can contact gabriella fleischmann

gfleisch@ucsd.edu

CAMPUSWIDE SENATORS

GARRETT DEMPSEY BRYAN DIERKING JOEY GILTNER PARTHU KALVA BRANDON KIM NADIA LOPEZ ADILENE RODRIGUEZ DOMINICK SUVONNASUPA

Not Fund ’14 Cultural Graduations The yearly alternative ceremonies may be cancelled due to a lack of A.S. funds. BY MERYL PRESS

Staff Writer Student organization funding requests, including “graduationrelated” events put on by student organizations, may be cut due to an exhaustion of the A.S Council’s programming budget. According to VP Finance and Resources Sean O’Neal, A.S. Council began this year with $436,000 in the Mandate Reserves and currently has $358,000. The funding requests for the next three weeks, including the request for the cultural graduation ceremonies, would deplete about $50,000 from the reserves. Heated debate sparked between A.S. Council members on Wednesday, April 9 in the Council’s meeting, during which they discussed whether taking money out of the Mandate Reserves is the appropriate action to take. These reserves are a separate account with money that A.S. Council is supposed to use only in dire or extreme situations. Campus-wide senator Jehoan Espinoza commented on his disappointment regarding the graduation-related events that may be cut. “I am a first-generation college student,” Espinoza said. “Our graduation ceremony is to celebrate our family, who is a very big supporter of our education. It is very disheartening that there might not be graduation events because of our A.S. vote.” A.S. Council discussed several options, including the possibility of either denying student organizations the money to finance graduationrelated events or funding the organizations by “dipping into” UCSD’s Mandate Reserves. However, by taking money out of the Mandate Reserves, the current A.S. Council will be setting the next group of council members into debt. A third option is a compromise: take a certain amount of money out of the Mandate Reserves, fund only specific student organizations whose events are critical to the graduation experience and prepare a plan for next year’s council members to work out of the debt. Campus-wide senator Austin Peters stated his concern regarding the extent of money A.S. Council might have to withdraw from the reserves. “I don’t think we quite understand the scale of the problem here,” Peters said. “We’re talking in the scope of potentially $90,000 to $100,000, and I don’t think we’re going to be able to make that up.” AVP Academic Affairs Robby See GRADUATION, page 3


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