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VOLUME 48, ISSUE 57

TUESDAY, MAY 26, 2015

WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG

CAMPUS

CALiFORNIA

Speaker of CA Assembly Supports New State Budget

PHOTO COURTESY OF GENINDIGENOUS.COM

OVERCOMING OBSTACLES

Assembly Member Toni Atkins endorsed Gov. Brown’s revised plan, which reallocates funds to the CSU and UC campuses. BY Brynna Bolt

Senior Staff Writer GEN INDIGENOUS SEEKS TO EMPOWER NATIVE AMERICAN YOUTH THROUGH EDUCATIONALOPPORTUNITIES THAT HAVE BEEN SORELY MISSED. READ ON ABOUT THE PROJECT’S BENEFITS. FEATURES, PAGE 7

U.K. FOLLOWS U.S. LEAD

Politicians join celebrities OPINION, Page 4

D-II DISAPPOINTMENT MIXED RESULTS AT NCAA FINALE SPORTS, Page 12

FORECAST

TUESDAY WEDNESDAY H 69 L 59

H 69 L 57

THURSDAY H 72 L 59

FRIDAY

H 73 L 59

Dean of Arts and Humanities Cristina Della Colletta addresses students at the “Round But Square” exhibit opening last Tuesday. Photo by Siddharth Atre / UCSD Guardian

Administrators Suspend University Art Gallery

T

By TINA BUTOIU // nEWS

EDITOR &

he Division of Arts and Humanities will be placing UCSD’s University Art Gallery on hold indefinitely beginning July 1. The division’s dean, Cristina Della Coletta and Visual Arts Department Chair Jordan Crandall made the announcement in a joint statement last Wednesday. Della Colletta, Crandall and Visual Arts Vice-Chair Jack Greenstein told the UCSD Guardian that the dean established a committee comprised of UCSD faculty to determine the future of the UAG. “The gallery’s future is on hold to the extent that there is no programming scheduled for the summer or next year,” the officials said in a joint email. “The visual arts department has been discussing the mission and operation of the gallery for several years and, with resources from the dean, established a committee to survey the faculty and come up with a plan. However, there was no consensus on how the gallery would be run, so the plan was not approved.” Though Della Colletta and Crandall have denied that the gallery is closed, UAG Assistant Director Merete Kjaer, whose position will also terminate July 1, told the Guardian that she still believes recent events point to closure. “Knowing what we’ve gone through this year of trying to secure funding and continue and the action of laying everyone off, I don’t really know what you call

JACKY TO

VERBATIM

See UAG, page 3

UNSNAP YOUR BRA AND TAKE IT OFF. THIS WILL FEEL REBELLIOUS AND COOL, LIKE YOU’VE BROKEN SOME UNSPOKEN LAW. NOW WEAR AN UNCOMFORTABLY TIGHT TANK TOP THAT MOLDS ITSELF TO EVERY DETAIL....

SAN DIEGO

HOW-TO-GURU

OPINION, PAGE 4

INSIDE COMICS........................... 2 QUICK TAKES................... 4 7 CUPS OF TEA................ 6 CROSSWORD................. 10 MIND OF AN ATHLETE.... 12

// EDITORIAL ASSISTANT

it other than closing,” Kjaer said. “I think that it’s just rhetoric, choosing one word over another.” Greenstein stated that there currently is no funding line for the UAG. The department chair and dean said they could not discuss personnel issues when asked about the employment status of UAG employees. The closure of the UAG would make UCSD the only UC campus without an official art gallery or art museum, since all nine UC schools have at least one official university art gallery or museum. Greenstein stated that the visual arts faculty will hold a series of discussions in the following months to determine the gallery’s future. Once the department establishes a plan, it will forward it to the dean and Executive Vice Chancellor Suresh Subramani for final approval. Second-year graduate student Julia Fernandez told the Guardian that eliminating the gallery diminishes the value of her degree. “What worries me is that this is [going to] be a larger reflection of how the arts and department are viewed on this campus,” Fernandez said. “This is very surprising and embarrassing for the school because it’s a reflection of the degree that we’re getting from a school that doesn’t really appreciate the arts.” Fernandez first heard about the change in

UCSD Medical Students Killed in Car Accident DUI suspect Jason King collided with the victims’ car while driving against highway traffic. BY Josh Lefler

Contributing writeR Two UCSD students were killed in a head-on collision last Saturday, May 16. Madison Cornwell, 23, and fellow classmate Anne Baldock, 24, were both graduate students attending the UCSD School of Medicine. Several others were critically injured as well. The crash occurred early Saturday morning at 1:30 a.m., when Jason King, 21, was driving the wrong way down California 163 and collided with the victims’ Toyota Prius near Mission Valley. King, a Marine stationed at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, is suspected of having been intoxicated at the time of the incident.

The two graduate students were highly regarded among the medical school community for their humanitarian interests, as well as for their contributions to the university, according to Carolyn Kelly, associate dean of the School of Medicine. Baldock, a second-year medical student, had recently finished her medical science training program and was planning to begin laboratory work on her thesis in the summer. She had planned on becoming a neurosurgeon. Cornwell, also a second year, planned on spending the next year in Malawi, focusing on her involvement in the Peanut Butter Project, a program focusing on research to feed malnourished people around the world. Cornwell would have conducted

humanitarian research focused on childhood malnutrition. Three other students, Jared Molitoris, 27, Yuki lizuka, 31, and Stosh Ozog, 25, were also in the Prius and were hospitalized for serious injuries, along with King. King faces charges of vehicular manslaughter and five counts of drunk-driving-related injury or death. His arraignment on May 20 was held bedside at the hospital, during which he plead not guilty. Regardless of King’s conviction, the administration at MCAS Miramar aims to hold King accountable for the incident, as MCAS spokesman 1st Lt. Gabriel Adibe told the See COLLISION page 3

Speaker of the California State Assembly Toni Atkins (D-San Diego) recently expressed approval of Gov. Brown’s May Revision of the 2015–2016 state budget, specifically commending the proposed measures to provide additional funding to California universities while acknowledging the need for further action. The May Revision, which is a revision of the budget as it was stated in January, provides no additional general-use funding beyond the $119.5 million that was originally granted to the University of California. It does, however, allocate $7.6 billion from the state budget to repay the system’s pension obligations. According to Atkins, this action will free up funding which would otherwise be spent funding the retirement of UC employees. The budget further provides both $25 million for deferred general maintenance and $25 million for energy-efficiency projects, which will help UC campuses reduce their greenhouse gas emissions. While general-use funding for UC campuses did not increase in the May Revision, an additional $38 million is being added to the $119.5 million already granted to the California State University system by the January proposal. Still, this figure remains $59 million less than was requested by university administrators. Atkins told the UCSD Guardian in an interview that she was pleased with the increase in funding for both the CSU and UC systems. “The Assembly has always wanted more money for the [UC and CSU campuses],” Atkins said. “In this provision, the governor has granted that.” The May Revision further states that increased state funding should mean that tuition hikes are not necessary for native California students. However, a steady increase in the cost of out-of-state tuition is expected, according to Atkins. This raise is occurring largely as a result of the UC system’s prices becoming more aligned with the market, Atkins claimed, as the cost of attending a UC campus for out-ofstate students has been significantly cheaper than it would be for other universities. This difference was mainly due to the UC system’s need to balance its budget using out-ofstate tuition. As a result, the number of out-ofstate students on campuses such as UCSD and UC Berkeley has reached 20 percent of total enrollment. While Atkins acknowledged the benefits of the diversity that outSee ATKINS, page 3


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