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www.dailycal.org Established 1871. Independent Student Press Since 1971. SPORTS PiSTOl whiPPed: Nevada offense automatic at home in 52-31 rout of Bears. See BACK ARTS deAR diARy: Mandy Patinkin in Berkeley Rep’s 2010 premiere, ‘Compulsion.’ See PAGe 4 Berkeley, California Monday, September 20, 2010 NewS MeMORy JOG: Scientists find an Alzheimer’s drug that can improve users’ memory. See PAGe 2 Pro-Tenant Rent Board Majority May Be Unseated Although the Rent Stabilization Board has implemented rent control policies independently from the Berke- ley City Council since the mid- 1980s, increas- ing opposition to the board’s pro-tenant slate has given rise to what some commissioners say is, for the first time in years, a serious attempt to disrupt the board’s progressive ma- jority — a move that also mirrors the council’s own changing dynamics. Five current commissioners — Dave Blake, Katherine Harr, Lisa Stephens, Jesse Townley and Pam Webster — and challengers Asa Dodsworth, Tamar Larsen, Marcia Levenson and George Perezvelez are running to fill six of the board’s nine commission seats. As the Nov. 2 elections approach, a formi- dable opposition to the board’s pro- tenant slate has surfaced, challenging the security of the board’s progressive majority. Mayor Tom Bates and five coun- cil members — Linda Maio, Darryl Moore, Laurie Capitelli, Susan Wen- graf and Gordon Wozniak — have en- dorsed Perezvelez, a restaurant manag- er who serves on the city’s Commission on Labor and is currently chair of the Police Review Commission. Wozniak has also endorsed Larsen in addition to Perezvelez, making him the only one of the six to endorse more than one candidate for the board. Councilmembers Max Anderson, Jesse Arreguin and Kriss Worthing- ton have endorsed the pro-tenant slate selected by the Berkeley Tenants Con- vention, which includes Dodsworth and the five commissioners seeking reelection. “To some degree this is positioning itself to see if the mayor and his allies on the right side of the council will be able to break the tenant majority,” Blake said, adding that the majority of the current board is allied with the progressive minority on the council. “I think (Bates) just wants to feel that he hasn’t got anybody out there who’s go- ing to challenge him on other things.” Sid Lakireddy, president of the Berkeley Property Owners Associa- tion, said there is a more moderate force running in this year’s election that, if elected, could hold the board “more accountable.” “As an independent body, they’ve sort of created their own little play- grounds without any oversight … and that hasn’t worked,” Lakireddy said. He added that in recent years the board has created “very expensive” po- sitions for friends, while also running a yearly surplus of almost $500,000, which he said should instead be used to improve the city’s other housing and outreach programs. According to Stephen Barton, dep- uty director for the Rent Stabilization Program, the board’s surplus is set Plans for People’s Park Parking Meters May Cut Crime Plans to possibly install additional parking meters around People’s Park are under discussion by Berkeley com- munity members and city officials, with the intent to reduce crime and spark business interest in the area. Officials are in preliminary talks of increasing the number of meters around the park to limit the number of vehicles lingering on adjacent streets, which community members have said may encourage criminal activity and make it more difficult to shop in the city and on Telegraph Avenue. With retail income in the city down $200 million since 2008 — according to Dave Fogarty, the city’s economic development coordinator — and crime by J.D. Morris Contributing Writer in the park peaking in the past weeks, Jim Hynes, assistant to the city man- ager, said community members have been considering a change in parking policy around People’s Park for the past couple of months. “We’re trying to do everything we can to move people into the area,” Hynes said. “It’s really, ‘What can we do to help the business community by making it easier for people to come in?’” Currently, signs around People’s Park indicate a two-hour parking zone along its perimeter, but no meters regulate spaces adjacent to the park. Meters regulate Haste Street’s north side and Bowditch Street’s east, both of which are across the street from the park. There are no meters on either side of Dwight Way near the park. San Bruno Fires Hit Too Close To Home for Some Students Though 23 miles away, the fires that hit San Bruno after a gas line 30 inches in diameter exploded on Sept. 9 felt close to home for some UC Berkeley students. The gas line that exploded in the Glen- view area destroyed 37 homes, and 48 more homes experienced some degree of damage, resulting in four confirmed fatalities and at least 66 injuries. The city is in the process of removing debris, and a local assistance center with PG&E and American Red Cross personnel was set up to provide services to victims. “It was more scary than anything,” said UC Berkeley senior Kevin Hui. “My house was four blocks away, and my family could see the flames from home because they were so high.” Though Hui’s house and family were unharmed, the house of a classmate who he went to school with for eight years was completely destroyed, and her father was hospitalized for third-degree burns. Other students with roots in San Bruno also said that while their fami- lies were unharmed, friends’ houses were destroyed or damaged. Sophomore Sam Richman, whose first home was three blocks away from where the fire hit, said one of his broth- er’s friends lost her mother and sister, as well as her house, in the fire. Also, the homes of three of Richman’s family friends were destroyed. Richman said he first found out about the fire when he saw the entire neighborhood go up in flames on the television and was immediately con- cerned about the many homes of his by Samantha Strimling Contributing Writer Medical Cannabis Commission to Develop Standards for Permits In light of the Berkeley City Coun- cil’s proposed ballot measure to create seven new “cannabusiness” facilities, the Medical Cannabis Commission — which will likely be reconstituted under the measure — met Thursday to develop a comprehensive rubric to evaluate ap- plications for facility permits. In July, the council placed a measure by Gianna Albaum and Mary Susman on the November ballot that would al- low for six 30,000-square-foot canna- bis cultivation facilities and a fourth dispensary within the city. Anticipat- ing a flood of applications, the council asked the commission to develop a set of standards by which it could evaluate applicants. Kris Hermes, a commission member and spokesperson for Americans for >> CoMMiSSionerS: Page 2 >> DiSPenSary: Page 3 Raudel Wilson, Kris Hermes and Amanda Reiman (left to right), members of the Medical Cannabis Commission, met Thursday to discuss the application process for permits. shirin ghaffary/contributor 2010 Berkeley Elections by Stephanie Baer Daily Cal Staff Writer classmates from St. Ignatius College Preparatory High School, a private school in San Francisco where many students from San Bruno go to school. “It was obviously very scary,” he said. “I didn’t know which of my friends in San Bruno could possibly be affected. I didn’t know if it would start a wildfire. I didn’t know if it would stop. There was a lot of phone calling.” Richman said losses from the fires were especially difficult for St. Ignatius after the deaths of alumna Jill Costello, a Cal women’s crew squad coxswain who died from cancer in June, and Ken- dra Fallon, a UC San Diego sophomore who died from a plane crash in August. Richman plans to donate to the school’s clothes and food drive to help the fire vic- tims while they are out of their homes. Senior David Bautista, who grew up and attended Capuchino High School in San Bruno and had one friend lose his house in the fire, said the school hosted a dinner the night after the fire to provide food for the victims. The San Bruno community also hosted a fundraising festival Sunday, which Bautista attended, and the rec- reation center also collected donations, which senior Katie O’Connell — who commutes every day to UC Berkeley from her home in San Bruno — helped sort the day following the fire. Still, some students felt limited in their ability to respond. “I wish I could be involved,” Hui said. “If I was home, I would call friends and try to get stuff together, but I feel I can’t do anything from Berkeley.” Contact Samantha Strimling at [email protected]. Parking meters, such as this one across from People’s Park, are few in number in the streets around the park. The city is considering changing this current dearth in metered parking. jeff totten/contributor Contact J.D. Morris at [email protected]. Rent Board Incumbents To Face Councilmember- Endorsed Pro-Landlord Slate in Nov. 2 Elections Hynes said in an interview that it seemed “arbitrary” that meters did not surround the park. According to Roland Peterson, ex- ecutive director of the Telegraph Busi- ness Improvement District, people are currently able to park their vehicles free of charge for any amount of time, a situation that has recently come to be regarded as a problem by both city and UC Berkeley staff. New meters that would limit the amount of time people would be able to leave their cars parked in the area would encourage vehicle and patron turnover, he said. But any concrete action or meter in- stallation is still several months away, city officials said, as the city’s public works staff must first prepare a report to be considered by other departments before any plan can be formally sent to the Berkeley City Council. “The most accurate thing to say is that it’s an idea that’s being investigat- ed,” Peterson said, adding that he sup- ports the consideration of such a plan. George Beier, president of the Wil- lard Neighborhood Association and a candidate for the District 7 city council seat in the upcoming November elec- tion, said he is “fully behind” measures to reduce crime in the park, though he added that a real link between crime in the park and current parking policy would need to be investigated before taking further action. “I think that crime in People’s Park is a big problem,” Beier said. “Anything that drives new business to Telegraph Avenue is a great idea.”
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Page 1: Daily Cal - Monday, September 20, 2010

www.dailycal.org

Established 1871. Independent Student Press Since 1971.

SPORTS

PiSTOl whiPPed: Nevada offense automatic at home in 52-31 rout of Bears.See BACK

ARTS

deAR diARy: Mandy Patinkin in Berkeley Rep’s 2010 premiere, ‘Compulsion.’See PAGe 4

Berkeley, California Monday, September 20, 2010

NewS

MeMORy JOG: Scientists find an Alzheimer’s drug that can improve users’ memory.See PAGe 2

Pro-Tenant Rent Board Majority May Be Unseated

Although the Rent Stabilization Board has implemented rent control policies independently from the Berke-ley City Council since the mid-1980s, increas-ing opposition to the board’s pro-tenant slate has given rise to what some commissioners say is, for the first time in years, a serious attempt to disrupt the board’s progressive ma-jority — a move that also mirrors the council’s own changing dynamics.

Five current commissioners — Dave Blake, Katherine Harr, Lisa Stephens, Jesse Townley and Pam Webster — and challengers Asa Dodsworth, Tamar Larsen, Marcia Levenson and George Perezvelez are running to fill six of the board’s nine commission seats. As the Nov. 2 elections approach, a formi-dable opposition to the board’s pro-tenant slate has surfaced, challenging the security of the board’s progressive majority.

Mayor Tom Bates and five coun-cil members — Linda Maio, Darryl Moore, Laurie Capitelli, Susan Wen-graf and Gordon Wozniak — have en-dorsed Perezvelez, a restaurant manag-er who serves on the city’s Commission on Labor and is currently chair of the Police Review Commission. Wozniak has also endorsed Larsen in addition to Perezvelez, making him the only one of the six to endorse more than one candidate for the board.

Councilmembers Max Anderson, Jesse Arreguin and Kriss Worthing-ton have endorsed the pro-tenant slate selected by the Berkeley Tenants Con-vention, which includes Dodsworth and the five commissioners seeking reelection.

“To some degree this is positioning itself to see if the mayor and his allies on the right side of the council will be able to break the tenant majority,” Blake said, adding that the majority of the current board is allied with the progressive minority on the council. “I think (Bates) just wants to feel that he hasn’t got anybody out there who’s go-ing to challenge him on other things.”

Sid Lakireddy, president of the Berkeley Property Owners Associa-tion, said there is a more moderate force running in this year’s election that, if elected, could hold the board “more accountable.”

“As an independent body, they’ve sort of created their own little play-grounds without any oversight … and that hasn’t worked,” Lakireddy said.

He added that in recent years the board has created “very expensive” po-sitions for friends, while also running a yearly surplus of almost $500,000, which he said should instead be used to improve the city’s other housing and outreach programs.

According to Stephen Barton, dep-uty director for the Rent Stabilization Program, the board’s surplus is set

Plans for People’s Park Parking Meters May Cut Crime

Plans to possibly install additional parking meters around People’s Park are under discussion by Berkeley com-munity members and city officials, with the intent to reduce crime and spark business interest in the area.

Officials are in preliminary talks of increasing the number of meters around the park to limit the number of vehicles lingering on adjacent streets, which community members have said may encourage criminal activity and make it more difficult to shop in the city and on Telegraph Avenue.

With retail income in the city down $200 million since 2008 — according to Dave Fogarty, the city’s economic development coordinator — and crime

by J.D. MorrisContributing Writer

in the park peaking in the past weeks, Jim Hynes, assistant to the city man-ager, said community members have been considering a change in parking policy around People’s Park for the past couple of months.

“We’re trying to do everything we can to move people into the area,” Hynes said. “It’s really, ‘What can we do to help the business community by making it easier for people to come in?’”

Currently, signs around People’s Park indicate a two-hour parking zone along its perimeter, but no meters regulate spaces adjacent to the park. Meters regulate Haste Street’s north side and Bowditch Street’s east, both of which are across the street from the park. There are no meters on either side of Dwight Way near the park.

San Bruno Fires Hit Too Close To Home for Some Students

Though 23 miles away, the fires that hit San Bruno after a gas line 30 inches in diameter exploded on Sept. 9 felt close to home for some UC Berkeley students.

The gas line that exploded in the Glen-view area destroyed 37 homes, and 48 more homes experienced some degree of damage, resulting in four confirmed fatalities and at least 66 injuries. The city is in the process of removing debris, and a local assistance center with PG&E and American Red Cross personnel was set up to provide services to victims.

“It was more scary than anything,” said UC Berkeley senior Kevin Hui. “My house was four blocks away, and my family could see the flames from home because they were so high.”

Though Hui’s house and family were unharmed, the house of a classmate who he went to school with for eight years was completely destroyed, and her father was hospitalized for third-degree burns.

Other students with roots in San Bruno also said that while their fami-lies were unharmed, friends’ houses were destroyed or damaged.

Sophomore Sam Richman, whose first home was three blocks away from where the fire hit, said one of his broth-er’s friends lost her mother and sister, as well as her house, in the fire. Also, the homes of three of Richman’s family friends were destroyed.

Richman said he first found out about the fire when he saw the entire neighborhood go up in flames on the television and was immediately con-cerned about the many homes of his

by Samantha StrimlingContributing Writer

Medical Cannabis Commission toDevelop Standards for Permits

In light of the Berkeley City Coun-cil’s proposed ballot measure to create seven new “cannabusiness” facilities, the Medical Cannabis Commission — which will likely be reconstituted under the measure — met Thursday to develop a comprehensive rubric to evaluate ap-plications for facility permits.

In July, the council placed a measure

by Gianna Albaumand Mary Susman

on the November ballot that would al-low for six 30,000-square-foot canna-bis cultivation facilities and a fourth dispensary within the city. Anticipat-ing a flood of applications, the council asked the commission to develop a set of standards by which it could evaluate applicants.

Kris Hermes, a commission member and spokesperson for Americans for

>> CoMMiSSionerS: Page 2 >> DiSPenSary: Page 3

Raudel Wilson, Kris Hermes and Amanda Reiman (left to right), members of the Medical Cannabis Commission, met Thursday to discuss the application process for permits.

shirin ghaffary/contributor

2010Berkeley

Elections

by Stephanie BaerDaily Cal Staff Writer

classmates from St. Ignatius College Preparatory High School, a private school in San Francisco where many students from San Bruno go to school.

“It was obviously very scary,” he said. “I didn’t know which of my friends in San Bruno could possibly be affected. I didn’t know if it would start a wildfire. I didn’t know if it would stop. There was a lot of phone calling.”

Richman said losses from the fires were especially difficult for St. Ignatius after the deaths of alumna Jill Costello, a Cal women’s crew squad coxswain who died from cancer in June, and Ken-dra Fallon, a UC San Diego sophomore who died from a plane crash in August. Richman plans to donate to the school’s clothes and food drive to help the fire vic-tims while they are out of their homes.

Senior David Bautista, who grew up and attended Capuchino High School in San Bruno and had one friend lose his house in the fire, said the school hosted a dinner the night after the fire to provide food for the victims.

The San Bruno community also hosted a fundraising festival Sunday, which Bautista attended, and the rec-reation center also collected donations, which senior Katie O’Connell — who commutes every day to UC Berkeley from her home in San Bruno — helped sort the day following the fire.

Still, some students felt limited in their ability to respond.

“I wish I could be involved,” Hui said. “If I was home, I would call friends and try to get stuff together, but I feel I can’t do anything from Berkeley.”

Contact Samantha Strimling at [email protected].

Parking meters, such as this one across from People’s Park, are few in number in the streets around the park. The city is considering changing this current dearth in metered parking.jeff totten/contributor

Contact J.D. Morris at [email protected].

Rent Board Incumbents To Face Councilmember- Endorsed Pro-Landlord Slate in Nov. 2 Elections

Hynes said in an interview that it seemed “arbitrary” that meters did not surround the park.

According to Roland Peterson, ex-ecutive director of the Telegraph Busi-ness Improvement District, people are currently able to park their vehicles free of charge for any amount of time, a situation that has recently come to be regarded as a problem by both city and UC Berkeley staff. New meters that would limit the amount of time people would be able to leave their cars parked in the area would encourage vehicle and patron turnover, he said.

But any concrete action or meter in-stallation is still several months away, city officials said, as the city’s public works staff must first prepare a report to be considered by other departments before any plan can be formally sent to

the Berkeley City Council.“The most accurate thing to say is

that it’s an idea that’s being investigat-ed,” Peterson said, adding that he sup-ports the consideration of such a plan.

George Beier, president of the Wil-lard Neighborhood Association and a candidate for the District 7 city council seat in the upcoming November elec-tion, said he is “fully behind” measures to reduce crime in the park, though he added that a real link between crime in the park and current parking policy would need to be investigated before taking further action.

“I think that crime in People’s Park is a big problem,” Beier said. “Anything that drives new business to Telegraph Avenue is a great idea.”

Page 2: Daily Cal - Monday, September 20, 2010

2 Monday, September 20, 2010 The Daily Californian

Sternly WordedCLOG.DAILYCAL.ORG Remember that time when Noah Stern voted on someone else’s behalf, got caught, lied about it and then continued on as ASUC President? Well we do. Hear about Stern’s non-apology-apologies, plans to close those elections “loopholes” and other absurdities on the Clog.

Turkeys and Temporary Restraining OrdersBLOG.DAILYCAL.ORG/NEWS Members of the UCPD and Berkeley Police Department took to their bicycles this week to raise money to buy 500 turkeys. But what are they going to do with all those turkeys? Find out on the news blog. Also, some news that will make you think twice about a certain counselor at Berkeley High.

Ten Items or What? BLOG.DAILYCAL.ORG/GRAMMAR The grammar blog has a discussion of the finer points of express lane wording, including which local stores seem to be able to compare plural nouns correctly. This in addition to the unwarranted word choices and ill-advised punctuation you’ve come to know and love.

You can send any comments, requests or turkeys to [email protected].

On the Blogsdailycal.org/blogs

corrections/clarifications:The Daily Californian strives for accuracy and fairness in the reporting of news. If a report is wrong or misleading, a request for a correction or clarification may be made.

letters to the editor: Letters may be sent via e-mail. Letters sent via U.S. mail should be typed and must include signature and daytime phone number. All letters are edited for space and clarity.

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 pro-

hibited. Copyright 2010. 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.

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Notice of request for Prequalification of Design/Build Entities will be accepted in the office of the GSA-Purchasing Department, County of Alameda, 1401 Lakeside Drive, 9th Floor, Suite 907, Oakland, CA 94612 Request for Prequalification of Design/Build Entities – Project 10020 – Ashland Youth Center Responses Due by 2:00 pm on October 14, 2010 County Contact : Howard Johnson at (510) 208-9648 or via email: [email protected] Information regarding the above may be obtained at the Alameda County Current Contracting Opportunities Internet website at www.acgov.org.CNS-1945738#DAILY CALIFORNIANPublish 9/20/10

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alzheimer’s Drug May enhance learning

A drug currently used to lessen the effects of Alzheimer’s disease may soon be able to aid healthy adults in percep-tual learning, according to a study by UC Berkeley researchers.

In the study, published Sept. 16 in the science journal Current Biology, UC Berkeley researchers Michael Silver and Ariel Rokem found a link between the use of the Alzheimer’s drug donepezil and improved attention and memory in adults not affected by the disease while the subjects performed a specific task.

Donepezil, a drug often prescribed to Alzheimer’s patients, raises the level of one of the brain’s signaling mol-ecules — called acetylcholine — by destroying the enzyme that inhibits its longevity.

“Acetylcholine is involved in many

by Jessica GillotteContributing Writer

different processes in the brain includ-ing voluntarily devoting focused at-tention to a particular portion of the visual field when you know something important might appear in that loca-tion,” Rokem, a postdoctoral fellow at the campus Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute and lead author of the study, said in an e-mail.

Twelve subjects participated in the study, which had them take a 5-milli-gram dose of the drug during the first round of five-day courses and a place-bo during the second round about two weeks later.

After each round of courses, the subjects took a test that measured per-ceptual learning by reporting whether two sequentially presented fields of moving dots were proceeding in the same direction.

“Perceptual learning is the ability to get better at a particular perceptual

RESEARCH & IDEAS

discrimination with practice,” Silver, an assistant professor at the School of Op-tometry and the Helen Wills Neurosci-ence Institute and the study’s principle investigator, said in an e-mail. “With practice, anyone can improve their ability for a given perceptual discrimi-nation, but in our experiments, sub-jects taking donepezil during practice show about twice as much improve-ment in perceptual ability compared to subjects practicing under placebo.”

Silver noted that the study only re-vealed an improvement in attention in the specific task that the subjects were given, and more research is needed to determine whether the drug would en-hance performance in other tasks.

“One analogy is a fruit inspector who becomes very good at discriminating small differences in the colors of red

aside for disaster relief, software up-grades and other special projects that are not implemented on a regular ba-sis.

“Everybody runs a surplus ... be-cause by law you have to,” Blake said. “We have a very prudent surplus, and … any government runs a considerable surplus to make sure if you screw up, you don’t have to go borrow money.”

Since the state-mandated Costa-Hawkins Rental Housing Act of 1995 established a system of “vacancy de-control” to ensure property owners could align rates with market values at the time of vacancy by a tenant, ma-jor policy debates have been virtually eliminated, and the presence of a pro-landlord slate — which typically leans toward the center or the right of Berke-ley politics — has been nonexistent.

“We’re a body that’s put into place to ensure that there is some sort of eco-nomic justice in city government ... we have to lean to the left,” Townley said.

Though Perezvelez said he has been told he is not “progressive enough,” he added that the pro-tenant slate should not necessarily be defined as the “pro-gressive” candidates, since the Costa-Hawkins act in many ways eliminated the need for a pro-landlord slate.

“The whole thing about who’s pro-gressive and who’s not ... is extremely problematic,” he said. “The issue should be how do we, Democrats or Greens, liberals or progressives … get together and have viable discussion to move things forward.”

He also said the board should no longer only be defined along pro-ten-ant or pro-landlord lines and should instead represent the city’s different communities that cannot be so easily divided into the two categories.

“There is a disconnect between the rent board and minority communities in the city, and ... it needs to be diverse, and that’s one of the major things I’m running for,” Perezvelez said. “The diversity of elected officials is what makes us real — it’s what makes Berke-ley real.”

Noor Al-Samarrai of The Daily Cal-ifornian contributed to this report.

commissioners: Bates Backs New Candidatefrom froNt

>> alzheimer’s: Page 3

Stephanie Baer is the lead city government reporter. Contact her at [email protected].

Friday’s article “Grad Student Group Policy Would Change Funding Rules” incorrectly stated that the Graduate Assembly voted that the executive board’s decision over the summer to alter student group funding policies was “unlawfully imposed.” In fact, the assembly debated a resolution stating the summer decision was in violation of assembly bylaws but did not approve it.

The Daily Californian regrets the error.

Correction

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Page 3: Daily Cal - Monday, September 20, 2010

Friend (n.) — a person attached to another by feelings of affection or personal regard.

It took him a few seconds and sips to find the courage to ask that certain for-bidden question. To cross a line that is hardly discussed but is frequently felt.

“Why didn’t you accept me?”“I don’t know what you’re talking

about.”“My friend request. I sent it to you

like a month ago.”“I-I don’t go on my Facebook very

often, so I didn’t get a request.”“But you just changed your profile

picture two days ago!” He pointed across the party. “I saw it on her page!”

Yes, he went there.Now, I’ve never believed in the “awk-

ward turtle” gesture, feeling that point-ing out how uncomfortable a situation is will inevitably make it considerably worse. We didn’t need it anyway — the moment was already bad enough. All we could do was stare at each other in silence for a good twenty seconds.

You see, we both were caught in our own very inane and shallow traps. Now he knew that I had deemed him unwor-thy of mere Facebook friendship, which he took as the insult of insults. And now I had a very creepy idea of how much time he spent on the computer looking up trivial information about people he hardly knew.

Suddenly, we both knew far too much about the each other because we knew how the other one behaved on the Internet. Which is far too intimate a knowledge for people who are barely acquaintances “IRL.”

The Internet creates a digital dis-tance that can dramatically change our behavior.

Some people with more time to reflect about what they are saying and how it might be perceived act in a man-ner that is very formal, composed and polite online. This is how the quiet, vaguely aggressive guy in your group project can come off as a charming and well-informed gentleman in e-mails only to switch back to his douchy self in person. Even worse, I’ve seen this hap-pen to roommates who secretly hate each other but choose only to commu-nicate cordially and digitally to set a record for a potential lawsuit.

Then there’s the other extreme, where someone who seems normal

and well-adjusted in real life uses the Internet as a playground for the id, where they can indulge their secret wishes while feeling little or no criti-cism. This is how a seemingly mild-mannered and virtuous person can swiftly become very forward with their messages, demands and pictures taken. Of course, that last part could just be attributed to the ubiquity of Photoshop.

And while most of us probably don’t have two outrageously different identi-ties we switch between depending on our proximity to eye contact, we are nevertheless encouraged to behave very differently on the Internet and redefine the terms of our relationships with each other.

Many of us add almost anyone we can on Facebook, ranging from some girl met while drunk to the grad stu-dents in charge of our grades. And it

works. None of this feels that weird — at least, not as weird as it would be to have a conversation with these people face to face.

Sometimes, like the old-school AIM buddy list, the “Friends” category exists mainly to collect people, to quantify popularity and to gather information for the sake of stalking.

While this might seem extreme or even stupidly unnecessary, I doubt that most of us would call every member of our list a “Friend” in the real world sense.

A more accurate organizing label would be “People I Have Probably Met” with subcategories like “Childhood Chum,” “Work Peers,” “Relatives,” “Celebrities,” “Enemies,” “Old Study-Group Members,” “Exes,” “Former Roommates,” “Not Sure” and, of course, “Associates I Care About and Would Like To Talk With On a Regular Basis.”

You know, friends!

Now, you might be a pretty normal person in everyday life. You’re

humble, kind-hearted and polite, meaning you probably don’t talk about yourself very much.

But by opening a laptop, you can have another identity with a much larger group of Friends, one where you are a picture of you at your best, where you demonstrate your impressive self-esteem by displaying your myriad inter-ests, quotes that you guide your life by and your religious and political views.

You are free to announce your feel-ings, whether they are angsty or humorous, to everyone you know. Your Friends care, comment and figuratively laugh aloud with a thumbs up. How gratifying!

The problem, as I opened with, is when this self hits your real self — it can be very awkward to be confronted with the other person you’ve been.

If you still have any doubts about this, find an acquaintance you are also Facebook friends with. Now, print out their “About Me” section and read it aloud to them.

You’re probably not going to get very far, especially if you get the point where you remind them that they claim to like “the mini heart attack you get when you miss a step going down the stairs.”

What would happen if we considered all the people on our Friends list every time we updated our statuses, posted our pictures and sent out an invite?

If we’re lucky, we can make it just as uncomfortable as real life.

Send Pauline a friend request at [email protected].

We’re Virtually Friends

pauline horcher

On the UN International Day of PeacePeace and Conflict Studies presents

Nuclear Weapons Forum:9/21: "Countdown to Zero"(film)

7pm 155 Dwinelle[discussion following with Marylia Kelley, Exec Dir, Tri-Valley Cares]

“Countdown to Zero sweeps us into a scorching, hypnotic journey to reveal the palpable possibility of nuclear disaster.”

9/22: Lecture by Jonathan Schell, "Reaching Zero"

Senior Fellow at The Nation Institute and the Peace and Disarmament Correspondent for The Nation magazine.

His most recent book is The Seventh Decade: The New Shape of the Nuclear Danger.

7pm @ The International HouseCo-sponsors: Global Zero, United Nation Association-East Bay, International House

How can I make my Berkeley business more successful?We can help.berkeleychamber.com

3Monday, September 20, 2010The Daily Californian

alzheimer’s: Drug Improved Subjects’ Perception from Page 2

apples,” Silver said in the e-mail. “This perceptual learning for color discrimi-nation of red may not generalize to dis-criminating colors of green apples.”

Ahmad Salehi, a clinical associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford University, said in an e-mail that the study is immensely important in helping researchers un-derstand the role acetylcholine plays in the cognitive processes of both healthy people and people with the disease.

Although the effects of donepezil are very beneficial to specific tasks involv-ing visual perception, Silver notes that “it is far too early to say how donepezil

may be used in the general population in the future.”

According to Aaron Seitz, UC River-side assistant professor of psychology, this is the first study to make a direct link between acetylcholine and visual perceptual learning in humans.

“This research shows promise,” he said in an e-mail. “With more detailed studies, acetylcholine can be used to help optimize learning procedures to produce better and greater learning ef-fects in people with sensory and learn-ing disabilities as well as in the general populations.”

Contact Jessica Gillotte at [email protected].

dispensary: Permit application Process Proposedfrom front

Safe Access, said the proposed two-tier process — whereby applicants send the commission a letter of intent and then a certain number are invited to submit complete proposals — was intended to help “weed out” unfeasible proposals, adding that creating a fourth dispen-sary would open a “Pandora’s box” of applicants.

Though Thursday’s meeting was largely a brainstorming session, Amanda Reiman, a commission mem-ber and research director for Berkeley Patients Group, said she expected next month’s meeting to yield a rubric for the council.

Commission member Jorge Galan suggested that the rubric evaluate the viability of applicants’ plans.

“(Applicants) can promise the moon,” he said at the meeting. “How are they actually going to implement the plans?”

The commission is also considering

using a point system to rate applicants in several designated categories such as quality control, safety and environ-mental sustainability.

Reiman said she and Wendy Cosin, deputy planning director for the city, will review their notes and come to the next commission meeting on Oct. 21 with a summary and clarification of Thursday’s discussion.

The recommendations the commis-sion brings to the council are not bind-ing and may be undermined as current members can be superseded if the bal-lot measure passes, especially since the commission now largely consists of “cannabusiness” representatives and medical marijuana activists. In a June interview, Mayor Tom Bates likened the makeup of the commission to “the fox guarding the henhouse.”

The ballot measure would bring the commission under the city’s purview, requiring that each of the nine com-mission members be appointed by a council member.

Though the new commission will continue to have two dispensary rep-resentatives, Hermes said it was not clear how much of the membership would stay the same.

However, Reiman said the change was merely an attempt to include more voices in the development of local can-nabis policy, adding that she supports the reconstitution of the commission.

“They’re just evolving the commis-sion into what other city commissions already are,” she said.

Hermes said the change would grant the city more control than before because the council would not only choose the members of the commis-sion, but also select the recipients of the licenses.

“Hopefully (we can develop) a set of recommendations based on a merit-rating system that will help guide city council members in making what is hopefully an objective and not subjec-tive decision on who gets licensed,” he said.

Contact Gianna Albaum and Mary Susman at [email protected].

jobboard.dailycal.org

Your dream job is just a click away.

Page 4: Daily Cal - Monday, September 20, 2010

& Entertainmentthe daily Californian

9.20.2010Arts

Compulsion,” the first produc-tion of the Berkeley repertory theatre’s

2010-2011 sea-son, depicts one Sid Silver (Man-dy Patinkin) in his attempts to publish anne frank’s “the diary of a young Girl” and adapt it for the stage. Mesmerized by anne’s hopeful prose and steadfast courage, the erstwhile writer devotes and sacrifices his profes-sional life to championing her work. Silver comes up against obstacle after obstacle: Unsympathetic editors, mean lawyers and anti-Semitism. as the play

by Derek SagehornContributing Writer

unfolds it becomes apparent that the biggest hurdle is his own paranoia. the literary bigwigs and attorneys are unhelpful politicos, a bit cartoonish at first. But Sid’s devotion to telling anne’s story becomes an unhealthy obses-sion, one that torpedoes his career and threatens to sink his marriage.

Silver speaks with anne frank about his mission, her writing and the terror she witnessed. Speaking to dead teenage girls might seem laughable in another context, but here it’s a touching look into a troubled man’s mind. the play uses marionettes to represent anne and her family as Silver recol-lects some of the diary’s most moving scenes. a group of puppeteers expertly bring Silver’s dream to life. all four actors lend anne a voice, each distinct, but each also full of whimsy and hope. although she’s not the star of the show,

anne provides rays of optimism.the play is full of jokes, not all of

them funny, but i’m not sure playwright rinne Groff is going for guffaws. at first the neurotic Jewish jokes have a charm to them; Patinkin comes off as something between Woody allen and lewis Black. it becomes increasingly apparent that his neuroses and fears are sad rather than funny. Silver is a perpetual victim of others’ bigotry, both real and perceived. Some jokes are ac-tually recycled from “annie hall,” which suggests the writer wanted to evoke ste-reotypes instead of laughter. one of the better gags is Silver mistaking various WaSP-y editors for the same person, a biting dose of “reverse racism.”

Patinkin is spectacular in “Com-pulsion.” he perfectly balances the affability and grotesqueness of the ob-sessive Sid Silver. he has a rare gift to

command and terrify a room with his shouts, and then lull/pacify the crowd with soft lyrical adulations of anne frank’s work. that skill — to repel and attract an audience simultaneously — is crucial to the success of the work.

Groff plays with narrative voice in the play, giving a peek into her main character’s head. We see his madness firsthand: his jokes and paranoia are identifiable, his obsession admirable, and his terror is capable of producing boatloads of empathy. the reality of his obtuse methods (litigation) seems noble at first, insane towards the end. Silver slowly morphs into a monster, showing that even a good cause can be undone by too much passion.

“Compulsion” is a horrifically inter-esting character study. although Silver never hid in an attic or entered a death camp, the nazis have scarred him irre-

vocably. the crimes of auschwitz have driven him mad with fear and disgust.

anne’s diary becomes the only reas-surance of hope for man’s redemption. however, investing his entire soul in this figure can only result in disaster.

“Compulsion” is deft, smart and terribly sad. however it suffers from a slow second act, which has many re-deemable moments but lacks a driving force. But maybe it’s a bit truer to life in that respect, as Silver wastes away and gradually confronts his problems. regardless, it’s a fantastic script paired with a powerful turn from a Broadway great. (another reason to see it: you can brag about seeing it first next year when it wins a bunch of tonys in new york.)

Make early Tonys predictions with Derek at [email protected].

Riding Latest Waves, Tamaryn Carves Niche

Most of the time, music just sounds like music. it doesn’t need to conjure up the im-

age of a bowl of oranges or depict a dramatic conversation in the way that figurative painting, film, or literature all need to refer to something beyond themselves. Unlike these and many other art forms, music doesn’t need to represent anything. it’s a purely abstract medium. Music just needs to be musical.

But of course, music can sound like something beyond itself. debussy’s “la mer” sounds a lot like the rising and falling of a swelling sea. Brian eno’s Another Green World features songs like “little fishes” and “Sombre rep-tiles” that actually sound like swim-ming and slithering creatures from some alien ecosystem. thelonious Monk’s “’round Midnight” accurately captures that tenuous hour when today turns into tomorrow.

San francisco’s tamaryn falls firmly within this tradition of representation-al music. When the duo (comprised of the eponymous chanteuse and guitarist/producer rex John Shelver-ton) released their first full-length album last week, they aptly titled it The Waves. the nine heavily textured songs undulate, crash and recede just like waves breaking on a rocky beach. rex’s fuzzy, reverb-drenched instru-mentals suggest a scene, whether it’s the ocean (“the Waves”), a dry windy desert (“Sandstone”), or a colorful underwater reef (“Coral flower”), and tamaryn’s atmospheric lyrics and willowy vocals complete these vivid landscapes.

during a phone interview, tamaryn elaborated on the use of landscape in her songs, saying, “they represent ex-ternal and human internal emotional landscapes.” to explain what she aims for in creating musical landscapes, she brought up the work of German direc-tor Werner herzog. “the kind of thing

by David WagnerDaily Cal Staff Writer

i’m talking about is really captured in ‘aguirre, the Wrath of God,’” she said, referencing herzog’s 1972 film, which follows a 16th century conquistador as he and his crew travel down the amazon river in search of el dorado and increasingly lose their sanity.

tamaryn’s way of wiggling into the listener’s subconscious and manipu-lating their mental imagery may be a skill learned from her upbringing. She was raised by her mother and godmother, both non-normative psy-chologists. the former founded one of the first primal scream centers in northern California, the latter’s work focusing more on Jungian archetypes and emotional intelligence. She spent her formative years in new Zealand, where her mother and godmother ran a homeless shelter, until she perma-nently moved to the United States at age seven.

this early exposure to psychology formed the way tamaryn would later approach music. “i was raised by really far-out people that have really far-out ideas and it’s affected me,” said tamaryn. “i have my own personal mythology and my own personal symbolism or connection to symbol-ism and that comes out in the lyrics for sure.”

More recently, she’s worked for her uncle, a psychiatrist in San francisco. But she remains hesitant to stretch the connection between her family’s psychological interests and her music. “i didn’t start a band to talk about psychology,” she claims. yet traces of dark, subconscious forces seem to fig-ure strongly in her husky yet breathy vocals.

tamaryn is a San francisco trans-plant, still somewhat new to the foggy peninsula. Before heading west, she lived in new york City for nine years, where she worked in record stores, clothing stores, bars, and avant-garde music venues, establishing strong ties in the local rock scene. She and rex would collaborate whenever their paths happened to cross or by long-distance communication. But after re-

leasing 2009’s eP Led Astray Washed Ashore, tamaryn says she came to “realize that i was not going to find anybody else that was a better match for me than him.” She packed up and moved to San francisco to work on what would become The Waves.

and San francisco, as another kind of landscape, also shows up in the music. “the beauty of it was a big inspiration,” says tamaryn, “but also for me it was kind of a lonely place be-cause i came from being in new york for nine years … the fact that i didn’t really know many people here and spent a lot of time alone really affected the record.”

“San francisco is a weird place,” muses tamaryn. “it’s really beautiful and it has a lot of atmosphere to it, but it’s also a dark place,” she says, describ-ing how the city’s drug culture can often lead to burning out. this mix-ture of beauty and desolation pervades The Waves, and similarly informed the group’s hometown performance last Wednesday at the elbo room in celebration of their album’s release.

rex may have been the first person to walk onstage and the last to leave, making his elusive guitar stylings the dominant force driving the music, and the bassist and drummer may have held down a solid, gritty bedrock with admirable stage presence, but really, the three dudes on stage were ultimately tamaryn’s props. Waifishly thin, broodingly pale, languidly wav-ing her spidery limbs to her band-mates’ wall of sound, she sported all black attire and fire engine lipstick, delivering her hazy siren song vocals with dramatic flair. She oozed just the right mixture of disdain and allure to keep the audience intrigued. She seemed to make more than a few fans that night at the cramped, dimly lit venue. and with music as compelling as hers, it’s hard to imagine that San francisco will be a lonely place for tamaryn much longer.

Steer a ship through the swelling seas with David at [email protected] RESTREPO/STAFF

AnnE MARIE SCHuLER/STAFF

PHOTO SLIDESHOWCheck out more shots from Berkeley Rep’s ‘Compulsion’ online.

Mandy Patinkin Plays Lead Role In ‘Compulsion,’ Berkeley Rep’s Inaugural Fall Production

Page 5: Daily Cal - Monday, September 20, 2010

5Monday, September 20, 2010The Daily Californian

Berkeley is a city whose social fabric is held together by its local enclaves, DIY enthu-siasts and, of course, eco-friendly food

distributors who make their homes in Berkeley’s thriving farmers’ markets. And it is especially these markets that encourage active community engagement, providing the cultural paste to join independent outlets to the greater development of the community. But with three prominent Berkeley Farmers’ Markets stationed at Center, North Shattuck and Derby, is there room for another one? Does the cultural paste need another adhesive element?

Co-founders Isaac Cronin and Julia Fry think so. For the past 14 Saturday mornings, at the corner of San Pablo Avenue and Virginia Street in the Berkeley Adult School parking lot, the Beehive Market has re-conceptualized what a farmers’ market could be and how it could function. Its official opening took place this past Saturday, launched by a heartfelt speech from City Coun-cilmember Darryl Moore and culminated with a lively performance by rock band Grand Lake. Sure, it has green, local sustainability stipulations for its vendors, but where else can you find recy-cling outposts to discard decrepit electronic equip-ment, purchase hand-tailored bike apparel, listen to local Berkeley bands and engage in epicurean delights like pupusas and artisanal sauerkraut?

“Other markets only sell food, but we’re a green-consumer project,” notes Cronin, who in the ’80s worked in marketing for organic food and green transportation. The idea of transforming the typi-cal farmers’ market into a holistic social gathering was conceived about a year and a half ago by Fry, whose bio-botanical laundry detergent was con-tinually ignored by other local farmers’ markets. Fry briefly saw an opportunity for a green pop-up store on Shattuck, but after that fell through, she looked to West Berkeley — a neighborhood to which many markets have ventured, full of prom-ise, but have left empty-handed. “We’re trying to change behavior in an area that hasn’t had a stable farmers’ market in almost 30 years,” said Fry. Her complaint was that many other farmers’ markets fell short of promoting a fully integrated green life-style, focusing on food production but excluding other important green domestic services.

The Beehive supplies customers with 30 to 40 vendors, including big names like Scream Sorbet

by Justin BoloisContributing Writer

Farmers’ Market Tries New Approach

If you’ve ever heard some celebrity drop the term “method acting” in an interview, you know your own

gag reflex when it comes to emoting workshops. For non-professionals like myself, a lot of the picturing-your-cat-dying-to-cry shit can seem like an absurd pastime for all of those bored celebrities hanging out in Los Angeles.

And if there’s one actor who should be bored by now, it’s probably Joaquin Phoenix. Since an interview with David Letterman back in February 2009, the man has been engaging in a whole lot of “method” amid what the public has decried as madness.

A bearded, rapping, cranky Phoenix is now in theaters, with Casey Affleck’s directorial debut and pseudo-docu-mentary “I’m Still Here” that chronicles the public demise of the Academy Award-nominated actor’s legitimacy which, come to find out, was com-pletely staged.

For all of my hesitation when it comes to “getting in the mood” for a role, I actually really appreciate the investment that Phoenix has made. It’s as if he’s playing us in a reverse “Tru-man Show” scenario. And I’m not the only one who sees the irony in light of certain mythical birds, right? Phoenix rising up out of the ashes of an inten-tionally botched career? Anyone?

I’m going to see this film in theaters because with all of the big production budgets out there that would have hap-pily written Phoenix checks with six or more digits, the actor chose to experi-ment not just with a young first-time filmmaker, but with more than a year of his life.

He also rocked a beard for WAY lon-ger than Brad Pitt, and he didn’t have any hairy Angelina Jolie by his side to help him comb it either.

Phoenix: 1. Public: 0. Method acting: You’re still on watch.

—Hayley Hosman

In case you were wondering, Joaquin Phoenix is still here. Not that anyone cared where he went

in the first place. Since the premiere of the Casey Affleck-directed mocku-mentary “I’m Still Here,” Phoenix has gone from has-been to I-don’t-want-to-know-where-this-guy’s-been.

When Phoenix announced on the “Late Show with David Letterman” back in 2009 that he’d forgo acting in pursuit of a hip-hop career, nobody took him seriously. If you did, you were most likely asleep under a very large boulder while all of pop culture flew by overhead.

Things were already getting weird even before the “Letterman” lampoon. In 2006, Phoenix was pulled from the driver’s seat of his flipped car — you might guess with a BAC higher than his Rotten Tomatoes score — by one Wer-ner Herzog. Since Phoenix’s downward spiral began, he has created some kind of personal meta-narrative about show business and its stultifying effects.

But the fact remains that, at least for “I’m Still Here,” everything has been staged. Phoenix has been operating on a certain trajectory from the beginning and, once Casey Affleck confirmed this after the movie’s release, everything up to this point is rendered totally embar-rassing — if it wasn’t embarrassing enough already. Phoenix’s stunt is con-trived, to say the least. That beard alone is enough to discredit an otherwise solid, sometimes great body of work.

Let’s have a moment of silence for the Joaquin Phoenix of bygone days: The nebbish Joaquin of “Two Lovers,” the half-baked studmuffin of “Walk the Line,” the alien-ass-kicking-baseball-wielding Joaquin of “Signs” and even that little shit in “Gladiator.”

However, if “I’m Still Here” were directed by Werner Herzog, I’d recon-sider my position.

—Ryan Lattanzio

An occasional forum for pop culture quarrels

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This Week:Joaquin Phoenix

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Oakland’s Wax Idols to Grace Rickshaw Stop

I really don’t know how anyone could kick me out of a band. I’m like, the perfect bandmate,”

says Heather Fedewa, with an air of pseudo-stupefaction. “It’s a mystery to me, at least.”

The Oakland inhabitant and front-femme of fuzzy foursome Wax Idols doesn’t have to wonder what it might be like to have a band give her the ol’ heave-ho. She knows — a few times over — how the process goes. The 22-year-old was “too serious” for Hunx and His Punx (“I’m moody and they all have a party-thing,” she explains) and the wrong kind of metaphorical fish to share the proverbial pond with the rest of Bare Wires, both Oakland staples who’ve given Fedewa the boot. But like Momma said, things always work out for the best.

“I just kept getting kicked out of shit,” she explains. “I was like, ‘Damn, this sucks. I need to stop being in other people’s bands.’” It was enough of a realization to turn her once-solo project into a full-fledged band (with Ashley Thomas, Paul Keelan and Courtney Gray rounding out the group) sometime last year. Wax Idols, who play at Rickshaw Stop in San Francisco tonight, was the result. The band’s sound is a bit too corporeal to rightfully claim their self-applied MySpace “post punk” tag, and despite well-defined melodies, “pop” seems like it’s missing a qualifying adjec-tive. But paired with their other label, “hyphy,” it’s hard to imagine they take pre-determined descriptors to heart. Noisy but focused, the band creates tight bursts of jangly abandon almost entirely under Fedewa’s direction.

The multi-instrumentalist also plays drums in Lilac (who, along with Hunx and His Punx and Frankie Rose & the Outs, will share the stage with Wax Idols at Rickshaw) and “everything” in Blasted Canyons, but she has complete control over everything in Wax Idols, going as far as comparing herself to a well-known dictator. Thus far, she’s written and recorded everything on her own, and while a more textbook band relationship is developing, being the head honcho ain’t too shabby.

“It’s kind of cool to be able to be like, ‘Nope, you can’t play it like that, I don’t care what you say. No,’” she says laughing. “That’s what really does it for me.”

Fedewa, a Michigan native, landed

by Bryan GerhartContributing Writer

in Oakland a few years back when a lack of cash money determined that the California city would be the final destination of her travels. As rooted as her band is in the East Bay, she’s blunt and detached, but not distant, when it comes to describing her home base. “Oakland is fucked up. There’s gang wars and crazy violence and depres-sion and people are poor and shit,” she says, desensitization almost showing itself off. “It’s kind of scary.” However, the surroundings provide fodder, neg-ative or not, for her personal outlook and musical output. “I guess I’m kind of pissed all the time and maybe part of it is because of that kind of stuff.”

Based on her track record, it’s hard to imagine Fedewa settling into a musical routine that’s written in stone, but this doesn’t mean that the future of Wax Idols hangs in the balance. “We haven’t played that many shows, but

I think we’re pretty good.” There’s a nonchalance in her tone that suggests either disinterest or disbelief, but in ei-ther case Fedewa recognizes that she’s got something good going on. “People seem to like it. It’s been really fun and all of my friends have been really sup-portive and shit. Everyone in my band is awesome. It’s just cool.”

what: Wax Idols, Lilac and others

whERE: Rickshaw Stop, 155 Fell Street, San Francisco

COSt: $10 to $12

whEn: 8pm

Bryan Gerhart is the lead music critic. Contact him at [email protected].

Keep away from ukelele fondling and hippie yodeling with Justin at [email protected].

sergio garcia/courTesy

anne Marie schuler/sTaff

anne Marie schuler/sTaff

and Soul Food Farm, that appear in a rotational shift each week, allowing new businesses and neophyte entrepreneurs to test their product. This dynamic offers what co-founder Steve Goldin describes as a setting for “incubation.” UC Berkeley student and compost distributor Jerry Gorin, a friend of mine, recognizes this relationship as a viable opportunity. “The Beehive seemed like it was at a level of progress I was at,” says Gorin. “I was starting out with something completely new and educating people about it, while the Beehive was also trying to expand the credo of what a farmers’ market can be. Typically students don’t have the capital or experience to open a store immediately, but for someone who has a hobby or strong desire, the Beehive is a place that will embrace you.”

One of the most distinctive aspects of the Bee-hive’s makeup is its fall concert lineup, curated by UC Berkeley student and NPR contributor Will Butler, also an acquaintance. Unlike the ukulele fondling or hippie yodeling one might find at the Center market, the Beehive navigates in an entirely different direction, culling local indepen-dent talent from all over the Bay Area, such as Emily Jane White, Man/Miracle and promising new acts like You Are Plural.

“I don’t know of any place in Berkeley where you can go on a weekly basis and see a great band for free,” says Butler. “I think that the northwest San Pablo corridor is an awesome area and is a safe and more vibrant strip than most students would imagine it to be. And yet it’s still largely un-trafficked by the university population. Many of these bands have received serious critical ac-claim, but they’re still our local boys (and girls).”

Although in its nascent stage, the Beehive features ambitious projects like its underground dining program, offering a four-course meal every Tuesday in conjunction with a local winery, and is already hoping to expand the quantity of available vendors.

Cronin, who attended UC Berkeley during the Free Speech Movement, understands Berkeley’s receptivity to new ideas and hopes that the com-munity will come to appreciate this new model. In broadening the concept of a farmers’ market, Cronin and company are pushing for progress, a place of congregation rather than stop-and-shop curiosity. And who could ever complain about that?

Page 6: Daily Cal - Monday, September 20, 2010

© 20

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Inc.

In the �ght against breast cancer, birthdays are signs of

progress – and we want to see more of them. A world with

more birthdays gets closer and closer at every Making Strides

Against Breast Cancer event. Visit cancer.org/stridesonline to

join us and help create more birthdays in your community.

Together, we’ll stay well, get well, �nd cures, and �ght back.

Saturday, October 23 Making Strides San FranciscoSpeedway Meadow, Golden Gate Park

Saturday, October 30 Making Strides San JoseArena Green, Guadalupe River Park

1.877.906.722 makingstrides.acsevents.org/bayarea

© 20

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nc. In the �ght against breast cancer, birthdays are signs of

progress – and we want to see more of them. A world with more birthdays gets closer and closer at every Making Strides Against Breast Cancer event. Visit cancer.org/stridesonline to join us and help create more birthdays in your community. Together, we’ll stay well, get well, �nd cures, and �ght back.

Saturday, October 23 Making Strides San FranciscoSpeedway Meadow, Golden Gate Park

Saturday, October 30 Making Strides San JoseArena Green, Guadalupe River Park

1.877.906.7222 makingstrides.acsevents.org/bayarea

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A stunning day of FREE performances! Our Open House features a full day of music, dance, and theater events for performing-arts lovers of all ages. Four stages at UC Berkeley come alive with a sampling of artistic riches from the Bay Area and far beyond, including performances by:

The Kronos Quartet • Linda Tillery and the Cultural Heritage Choir • Pacific Mozart Ensemble • Diamano Coura West African Dance Company • Word for Word Theater Company • Teslim • John Santos Sextet • Mark Morris Dance Group • Melody of China • Marc Teicholz • Philharmonia Baroque Chamber Players • San Francisco Opera Adler Fellows • UC Jazz Ensembles • Melanie DeMore Community Sing

Plus CD signings, an instrument petting zoo, and more!

For complete event information, including the schedule of performances and activities, visit calperformances.org or call 510.642.9988

yevelev from backThe Bears’ thumping of UC Davis

and Colorado may have given the Cal Student Store and Mario’s La Fiesta more customers and accelerated the end of Dan Hawkins’ forgettable ten-ure in Boulder.

What that early-season cupcake feast didn’t do is douse those burning concerns.

497 Nevada yards and three Ri-ley interceptions later, the questions were met with a resounding “no.”

When it mattered most against the Wolf Pack, Cal’s quarterback hardly looked like the conference’s most experienced (and winningest) active signal-caller.

All three of Riley’s picks occurred in Nevada territory. A delay of game penalty in the final period turned a fourth-and-4 into fourth-and-long, which the Bears failed to convert.

After a final interception into the arms of Duke Williams, Riley’s brim-ming offseason optimism devolved into unbridled frustration.

“(Coach Jeff Tedford) asked me

what I was doing and I said ‘Obvious-ly I forced the damn ball’,” Riley said.

Meanwhile, a defensive unit that made so many plays earlier in the year started to give them up instead.

After preaching discipline and sure tackling throughout the week Cal’s defense found itself repeatedly caught off-balance and out of position.

A unit that prided itself on dictat-ing the opponent’s offensive game-plan continually found itself at the mercy of King Kaepernick.

For the third straight September, the Bears must regroup quickly after another fast start was derailed in em-barrassing fashion.

Cal’s first chance to respond comes against a surging Arizona team fresh off an upset of No. 9 Iowa. Fittingly, the game is a rematch of the one that started Vereen’s remarkable late-sea-son stretch in 2009.

If there’s a safe bet to make af-ter Friday’s debacle, it’s that he’ll be ready to deliver.

Beyond him, it’s anyone’s guess.

Give Ed a resounding “no” at [email protected].

Dougherty’s Goal Upsets Cardinal in Cal Upset

The Cal field hockey team entered the weekend seeking retribution for last season’s 4-2 loss to Stanford, and got it. A 2009 de-feat denied Cal its first top seed in the NorPac tourna-ment in four years.

On Sunday, the Bears toppled the No. 16 Cardinal, 2-1, at Varsity Turf in Stanford.

In a contest between two high-scoring offenses, Cal (4-4, 3-0 in the NorPac) matched Stanford shot for shot and out-cornered the Cardinal (5-2, 2-1) 6-1 in the first half, but neither found the cage until a few minutes before halftime.

Stanford tested Bears keeper Mad-die Hand early, recording three shots on goal within the first three minutes.

After the opening minutes, however, play bogged down. Fouls committed by each team picked up; Cal and the Car-

by Catherine Nguyencontributing Writer

dinal tallied a total of 16 fouls in the first half alone.

Six minutes before halftime, Stan-ford’s Courtney Haldeman ended the scoreless struggle with her second goal of the year by firing home a loose ball.

The 1-0 lead was short-lived. For-ward Lauren Livingston scored her second goal of the season to tie the game 1-1 going into the break.

The second half was even more foul-ridden than the first. Both squads com-mitted 11 and 12 fouls, respectively, and both managed only four shots each.

Despite the number of fouls called, the Bears continued to work toward the elusive tiebreaking goal.

“We made it a point not to let offi-ciating get in the way,” Cal head coach Shellie Onstead said.

With only ten minutes left, Onstead’s team earned a corner that would prove to be the turning point of the game.

Freshman Shannon Elmitt dished the penalty stroke to Deanna Kennedy, who assisted Claire Dougherty for the

game-winning goal. Dougherty tapped Kennedy’s cross in from the left side of the cage giving her sole possession of first place on the team with six scores.

Stanford’s powerful offense would not go down quietly. With two minutes remaining, Becky Dru, the Cardinal’s team leading scorer, attempted a last-gasp shot, but sophomore Haleh Nou-rani made the save to preserve the win.

The Bears look ahead to next week’s match at UC Davis hoping to secure a winning record for the first time this season. Cal defeated Davis, 5-1, on Sept. 5, but now it must play on the Aggies’ slow, long-blade turf.

“We’ll approach it like any confer-ence game," Onstead said. "We have to go to their house and do well under a pretty unique surface and conditions in Davis ... They’re coming off three wins on a road trip, so it’ll be a good match.”

Catherine Nguyen covers field hockey. Contact her at [email protected].

Field hockeycal 2Stanford 1

6 SPORTS Monday, September 20, 2010 The Daily Californian

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# 97

V. EASY # 97

7 5 6 43 2 8 9 51 7 6

8 9 1 31 8 5 4

7 6 2 83 8 72 4 6 1 8

3 4 5 9

7 5 6 4 3 9 8 2 14 3 2 6 8 1 7 9 59 1 8 7 5 2 3 4 68 6 9 1 2 4 5 3 71 2 3 8 7 5 9 6 45 7 4 3 9 6 2 1 83 9 1 5 4 8 6 7 22 4 5 9 6 7 1 8 36 8 7 2 1 3 4 5 9

# 98

V. EASY # 98

9 1 7 8 28 4 3 6

3 2 9 59 8 1

5 4 3 9 86 7 47 4 8 5

5 3 6 28 5 1 3 9

9 6 1 7 8 5 4 3 22 8 5 9 4 3 1 6 74 7 3 6 1 2 9 8 53 9 8 2 7 4 6 5 15 4 7 1 3 6 2 9 86 1 2 5 9 8 7 4 37 3 4 8 2 9 5 1 61 5 9 3 6 7 8 2 48 2 6 4 5 1 3 7 9

# 99

V. EASY # 99

3 2 67 1 9 82 9 7 4 38 2 6 9 7

9 11 5 4 6 3

3 5 1 7 46 4 1 5

5 2 3

5 4 8 3 1 2 6 7 97 3 1 6 9 5 2 4 82 6 9 7 8 4 3 5 18 2 4 1 3 6 5 9 73 9 6 8 5 7 4 1 21 5 7 4 2 9 8 6 39 8 3 5 6 1 7 2 46 7 2 9 4 8 1 3 54 1 5 2 7 3 9 8 6

# 100

V. EASY # 100

8 6 27 2 3 1 9

9 5 7 1 33 6 1

4 6 7 5 22 9 8

5 8 7 6 41 4 3 2 8

9 1 6

8 3 1 6 9 4 7 5 25 7 2 3 1 8 6 9 44 6 9 2 5 7 1 3 87 8 3 4 2 5 9 6 11 4 6 8 7 9 5 2 32 9 5 1 3 6 8 4 73 5 8 7 6 2 4 1 96 1 7 9 4 3 2 8 59 2 4 5 8 1 3 7 6

Page 25 of 25www.sudoku.com 24 Jul 05

# 97

V. EASY # 97

7 5 6 43 2 8 9 51 7 6

8 9 1 31 8 5 4

7 6 2 83 8 72 4 6 1 8

3 4 5 9

7 5 6 4 3 9 8 2 14 3 2 6 8 1 7 9 59 1 8 7 5 2 3 4 68 6 9 1 2 4 5 3 71 2 3 8 7 5 9 6 45 7 4 3 9 6 2 1 83 9 1 5 4 8 6 7 22 4 5 9 6 7 1 8 36 8 7 2 1 3 4 5 9

# 98

V. EASY # 98

9 1 7 8 28 4 3 6

3 2 9 59 8 1

5 4 3 9 86 7 47 4 8 5

5 3 6 28 5 1 3 9

9 6 1 7 8 5 4 3 22 8 5 9 4 3 1 6 74 7 3 6 1 2 9 8 53 9 8 2 7 4 6 5 15 4 7 1 3 6 2 9 86 1 2 5 9 8 7 4 37 3 4 8 2 9 5 1 61 5 9 3 6 7 8 2 48 2 6 4 5 1 3 7 9

# 99

V. EASY # 99

3 2 67 1 9 82 9 7 4 38 2 6 9 7

9 11 5 4 6 3

3 5 1 7 46 4 1 5

5 2 3

5 4 8 3 1 2 6 7 97 3 1 6 9 5 2 4 82 6 9 7 8 4 3 5 18 2 4 1 3 6 5 9 73 9 6 8 5 7 4 1 21 5 7 4 2 9 8 6 39 8 3 5 6 1 7 2 46 7 2 9 4 8 1 3 54 1 5 2 7 3 9 8 6

# 100

V. EASY # 100

8 6 27 2 3 1 9

9 5 7 1 33 6 1

4 6 7 5 22 9 8

5 8 7 6 41 4 3 2 8

9 1 6

8 3 1 6 9 4 7 5 25 7 2 3 1 8 6 9 44 6 9 2 5 7 1 3 87 8 3 4 2 5 9 6 11 4 6 8 7 9 5 2 32 9 5 1 3 6 8 4 73 5 8 7 6 2 4 1 96 1 7 9 4 3 2 8 59 2 4 5 8 1 3 7 6

Page 25 of 25www.sudoku.com 24 Jul 05

SUDOKU

YESTERDAY’S SOLUTIONS

#4619CROSSWORD PUZZLE

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 66 67

68 69 70

ACROSS 1. Lid 4. Dickens or Darwin: abbr. 8. Break a commandment13. Muscle quality14. Stag15. Operating room

substance, once16. Numerical prefix17. Inner: pref.18. Draws close to19. Breakfast order22. Stroke gently23. Scouting accessories24. Not mine, not his

and not hers26. Take a break29. On the beach32. Terrify36. Gallup!s specialty38. Conception39. Perry!s creator40. Prices per hour41. Beaks42. Lean43. Uranium and silver44. Turn bad45. “All __!”47. Terrain feature49. Word with Nicene

or Apostles!51. Suit fabrics56. Words with

mode or king58. Breakfast order61. Fight63. Open for discussion64. Mr. Autry65. Levels66. Light color67. Behold: Lat.68. Burros69. “The __ the limit!”70. Mailman!s beat: abbr.

DOWN 1. Beverage 2. Square columns 3. __ pie 4. Dairy product 5. Object with

five digits 6. __ Johnson 7. Smoker!s item 8. 2010 happening

9. Western Indian10. Ecstatic11. Like the Sahara12. Formerly13. A-120. In this spot21. Purposes25. Scenic river27. Shadowbox28. __ pole30. Singer McEntire31. Like pie?32. Bristle33. Nursery item34. Distributes35. Pave again37. __ majesty40. Western event44. Time of day46. Second pitch48. Standing50. Wives of

barons52. Lawn tool53. Discharge54. Reel, for one55. Pintail duck

56. Dog on “The Thin Man”

57. Luau wear59. Hit60. British party

member62. Italian numeral

O D I C P R O S R A B I D

M U C H H U N T E L A T E

I D E A A S E A A A R O N

T E R R E S T R I A L S

L I E N I T C S T

U T E N S I L D Y N A M O

P R O S E T I N E O V I D

R A F T C I A O S N O L O

I N F O E S N E A C R E S

D U E N N A A L I G H T S

E S E U S S B E A

F R E E W H E E L I N G

A L I A S N E A R A G E R

N A C R E S A R I N O V A

T W E E D E R M A T R E Y

Answer to Previous Puzzle

ACROSS1. Lid4. Dickens or Darwin: abbr.8. Break a commandment13. Muscle quality14. Stag15. Operating room substance, once16. Numerical prefix17. Inner: pref.18. Draws close to19. Breakfast order22. Stroke gently23. Scouting accessories24. Not mine, not his and not hers26. Take a break29. On the beach32. Terrify36. Gallup’s specialty38. Conception39. Perry’s creator40. Prices per hour41. Beaks42. Lean43. Uranium and silver44. Turn bad45. “All __!”47. Terrain feature49. Word with Nicene or Apostles’51. Suit fabrics56. Words with mode or king58. Breakfast order61. Fight63. Open for discussion64. Mr. Autry65. Levels66. Light color67. Behold: Lat.68. Burros69. “The __ the limit!”70. Mailman’s beat: abbr.

DOWN1. Beverage2. Square columns3. __ pie4. Dairy product5. Object with five digits6. __ Johnson7. Smoker’s item8. 2010 happening9. Western Indian

10. Ecstatic11. Like the Sahara12. Formerly13. A-120. In this spot21. Purposes25. Scenic river27. Shadowbox28. __ pole30. Singer McEntire

31. Like pie?32. Bristle33. Nursery item34. Distributes35. Pave again37. __ majesty40. Western event44. Time of day46. Second pitch48. Standing

50. Wives of barons52. Lawn tool53. Discharge54. Reel, for one55. Pintail duck56. Dog on “The Thin Man”57. Luau wear59. Hit60. British party member62. Italian numeral

CROSSWORD

# 97

HARD # 97

5 8 41 7 5

3 86 4 22 5

4 1 99 4

1 7 68 5 3

6 5 3 8 9 1 7 2 41 7 8 4 5 2 6 9 39 2 4 3 7 6 8 5 15 9 6 1 8 7 3 4 23 8 2 6 4 9 5 1 74 1 7 5 2 3 9 6 87 6 9 2 3 4 1 8 52 3 5 9 1 8 4 7 68 4 1 7 6 5 2 3 9

# 98

HARD # 98

7 43 4

6 9 2 78 1 3 2 7

9 8 7 1 59 4 8 7

9 88 6

1 2 8 7 3 5 6 4 93 7 9 6 2 4 5 8 14 5 6 1 9 8 2 7 38 1 5 3 4 2 9 6 76 3 7 5 1 9 8 2 49 4 2 8 6 7 3 1 55 9 4 2 8 1 7 3 62 6 1 9 7 3 4 5 87 8 3 4 5 6 1 9 2

# 99

HARD # 99

1 56 4 1

4 3 96 7 4

1 87 1 3

9 2 84 3 9

8 2

2 4 1 8 9 7 5 3 63 7 9 6 5 2 8 4 18 6 5 1 4 3 7 9 29 5 6 7 3 8 1 2 41 2 3 4 6 5 9 7 87 8 4 9 2 1 3 6 55 9 7 2 8 6 4 1 34 3 2 5 1 9 6 8 76 1 8 3 7 4 2 5 9

# 100

HARD # 100

2 7 11 5 6 9

7 4 68 6 2

1 7 33 6 2

9 7 1 49 8 7

6 2 3 7 8 5 4 9 11 4 5 2 6 9 7 8 38 7 9 4 3 1 5 6 23 5 8 6 2 4 9 1 77 6 1 5 9 3 2 4 82 9 4 8 1 7 3 5 64 3 7 1 5 6 8 2 95 8 6 9 7 2 1 3 49 1 2 3 4 8 6 7 5

Page 25 of 25www.sudoku.com 24 Jul 05

# 97

HARD # 97

5 8 41 7 5

3 86 4 22 5

4 1 99 4

1 7 68 5 3

6 5 3 8 9 1 7 2 41 7 8 4 5 2 6 9 39 2 4 3 7 6 8 5 15 9 6 1 8 7 3 4 23 8 2 6 4 9 5 1 74 1 7 5 2 3 9 6 87 6 9 2 3 4 1 8 52 3 5 9 1 8 4 7 68 4 1 7 6 5 2 3 9

# 98

HARD # 98

7 43 4

6 9 2 78 1 3 2 7

9 8 7 1 59 4 8 7

9 88 6

1 2 8 7 3 5 6 4 93 7 9 6 2 4 5 8 14 5 6 1 9 8 2 7 38 1 5 3 4 2 9 6 76 3 7 5 1 9 8 2 49 4 2 8 6 7 3 1 55 9 4 2 8 1 7 3 62 6 1 9 7 3 4 5 87 8 3 4 5 6 1 9 2

# 99

HARD # 99

1 56 4 1

4 3 96 7 4

1 87 1 3

9 2 84 3 9

8 2

2 4 1 8 9 7 5 3 63 7 9 6 5 2 8 4 18 6 5 1 4 3 7 9 29 5 6 7 3 8 1 2 41 2 3 4 6 5 9 7 87 8 4 9 2 1 3 6 55 9 7 2 8 6 4 1 34 3 2 5 1 9 6 8 76 1 8 3 7 4 2 5 9

# 100

HARD # 100

2 7 11 5 6 9

7 4 68 6 2

1 7 33 6 2

9 7 1 49 8 7

6 2 3 7 8 5 4 9 11 4 5 2 6 9 7 8 38 7 9 4 3 1 5 6 23 5 8 6 2 4 9 1 77 6 1 5 9 3 2 4 82 9 4 8 1 7 3 5 64 3 7 1 5 6 8 2 95 8 6 9 7 2 1 3 49 1 2 3 4 8 6 7 5

Page 25 of 25www.sudoku.com 24 Jul 05

#4619CROSSWORD PUZZLE

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 66 67

68 69 70

ACROSS 1. Lid 4. Dickens or Darwin: abbr. 8. Break a commandment13. Muscle quality14. Stag15. Operating room

substance, once16. Numerical prefix17. Inner: pref.18. Draws close to19. Breakfast order22. Stroke gently23. Scouting accessories24. Not mine, not his

and not hers26. Take a break29. On the beach32. Terrify36. Gallup!s specialty38. Conception39. Perry!s creator40. Prices per hour41. Beaks42. Lean43. Uranium and silver44. Turn bad45. “All __!”47. Terrain feature49. Word with Nicene

or Apostles!51. Suit fabrics56. Words with

mode or king58. Breakfast order61. Fight63. Open for discussion64. Mr. Autry65. Levels66. Light color67. Behold: Lat.68. Burros69. “The __ the limit!”70. Mailman!s beat: abbr.

DOWN 1. Beverage 2. Square columns 3. __ pie 4. Dairy product 5. Object with

five digits 6. __ Johnson 7. Smoker!s item 8. 2010 happening

9. Western Indian10. Ecstatic11. Like the Sahara12. Formerly13. A-120. In this spot21. Purposes25. Scenic river27. Shadowbox28. __ pole30. Singer McEntire31. Like pie?32. Bristle33. Nursery item34. Distributes35. Pave again37. __ majesty40. Western event44. Time of day46. Second pitch48. Standing50. Wives of

barons52. Lawn tool53. Discharge54. Reel, for one55. Pintail duck

56. Dog on “The Thin Man”

57. Luau wear59. Hit60. British party

member62. Italian numeral

O D I C P R O S R A B I D

M U C H H U N T E L A T E

I D E A A S E A A A R O N

T E R R E S T R I A L S

L I E N I T C S T

U T E N S I L D Y N A M O

P R O S E T I N E O V I D

R A F T C I A O S N O L O

I N F O E S N E A C R E S

D U E N N A A L I G H T S

E S E U S S B E A

F R E E W H E E L I N G

A L I A S N E A R A G E R

N A C R E S A R I N O V A

T W E E D E R M A T R E Y

Answer to Previous Puzzle

Tigers, Bears Lack Scoring Wizardry in 1-1 Tie

The Cal women’s soccer team was exhausting its final resources. Defend-er Emi Lawson was playing forward for the last 10 minutes of what was almost the Bears’ first loss of the season.

Pacific scored on Cal just minutes before the end of the first half yester-day, and 12 shots later, the Bears still couldn’t get a goal.

But when Lawson knocked the ball off the crossbar into the back of the net with barely three minutes remaining, her team survived with a 1-1 tie.

The Tigers weren’t expected to pro-vide this type of test. Out of its four Pac-10 opponents this season, Pacific has only scored on Cal and Oregon.

Coach Neil McGuire attributed the difficulty the No. 16 Bears (5-0-3) en-dured against the Tigers partially to the tight turnaround between their Friday game against San Francisco and yesterday’s tilt at Edwards Stadium.

by Alex MatthewsContributing Writer

The Dons also gave Cal a harder time scoring than expected in the Bears’ 1-0 home victory.

“(San Francisco) took away the central part of the field very well and forced us wide,” McGuire said. “We were serving the ball from distances, so it was harder to get to goal.”

The Bears only managed to retake the center of the goal area for a score when they were awarded a penalty kick early in the second half against the Dons. Captain Alex Morgan, who made the penalty her 10th goal of the season, didn’t get many other chances.

San Francisco had prepared to con-tain a speedy Bears’ offense, focusing primarily on Morgan. Defenders kept up with Cal’s runners efficiently and got numbers back quickly at any sign of the Bears transitioning to the attack.

While Morgan was able to play some dangerous balls from the side-line, San Francisco was careful to keep players on the receiving ends of her crosses off frame.

Pacific’s defensive tactics weren’t quite as organized as the Dons’, but the performance of goalie Tasha Long con-

tinually bailed out the Tigers. The keeper saved eight of the Bears’

12 second-half shots, effectively shut-ting down the Cal’s attack.

McGuire said he put Lawson up top to get more goal-scoring opportunities in the air. It was not until there were just three minutes remaining that his decision paid off.

“Every chance we got, I was focusing on what can I do in that moment to try and keep us from losing,” Lawson said of being asked to play offense for the last ten minutes of regulation.

Although the results weren’t neces-sarily ideal, these high-pressure game situations are more realistic for what awaits the Bears the rest of the season. Cal faces No. 3 Portland on Thursday.

“Mentally, this game is a really good stepping stone, going into play-ing against Portland and the Pac-10,” Lawson said.

“Because if we’re mentally able to come back in a game like this, then I think we’ll be able to stay strong throughout the regular season.”

w. soccerCal 1Pacific 1

Alex Matthews covers women’s soccer. Contact her at [email protected].

Cal’s Saturday schedule of the tour-nament was, unsurprisingly, a breeze.

It treaded past Pomona 8-2 in the first quarter before switching to ex-tended garbage time mode en route a 17-8 victory. 27 Bears played through-out the game, including four different goalies.

Later in the day against No. 9 Pep-perdine, the score was tied up at four at the end of the first quarter. Cal then held the Waves to two goals compared with its 11 the rest of the way.

Contact Newsdesk at [email protected].

volleyball: Cal’s Nine-Point Run Clinches WinfRom baCktained many long rallies.

After multiple ties and lead changes, the Bears took control of the first set when Lloyd stretched to save a pass headed over the net, and delivered a quick ball to sophomore Kat Brown. The middle hitter hammered it straight to the floor for a 21-18 advantage that would build to a 25-18 victory.

The scrappy Gaels (7-5) set the pace for most of the second set, but the tide turned once it was knotted up at 20-20. The stage was set when Brown’s kill attempt was controversially ruled out, with Cal arguing that it deflected off a St. Mary’s blocker.

Junior outside hitter Tarah Murrey took matters out of the officials’ hands,

drilling the ball down the middle of the court with a vengeance, which pro-pelled a 25-22 set victory.

“I was proud of our ability to fight back and to control each play and just play as a team,” Lloyd said. “It’s really good to play teams like (St. Mary’s) early because they’re not going to go away, they’re going to keep coming back.”

Though the Gaels battled, the Bears were too strong in the third. A nine-point Cal run proved insurmountable, and Feller’s squad earned the sweep and a perfect preseason record.

“The first thing I said to the girls (af-ter the match) was ‘Pac-10s are here. We’re ready for it,’” Lloyd said.

m. polo: first Two Games Provided No ChallengesfRom baCk

football: Untimely miscues Drag Down bearsfRom baCk

down the rest of the way.The play was one of many misfires

on Friday night for Riley, who tossed a career-high three interceptions — all in Nevada territory.

He passed for 278 yards and a late score, but the fifth-year senior looked far from comfortable.

Riley sailed a number of throws, fumbled an exchange with Vereen, and committed a costly delay of game penalty in the final quarter when Cal faced fourth-and-4 inside the Wolf

Pack 10-yard line.“Compared to our losses last year,

our offensive output was a lot better,” Riley said. “We just have to execute when it matters down in the red zone ... If we did, that would gave been a different game.”

All week, it was Riley who dis-missed the importance of his squad’s’ No. 24 ranking.

On Friday, Kaepernick and Nevada did the same.

Ed Yevelev covers football. Contact him at [email protected].

Christina Jones covers volleyball. Contact her at [email protected].

Byron Atashian covers men’s water polo. Contact him at [email protected].

7SPORTS & MARKETPLACE Monday, September 20, 2010The Daily Californian

Page 8: Daily Cal - Monday, September 20, 2010

SPORTS late heroics94th-minute goal gives Cal co-championship in Bay Area Classic.

See online

B e r k e l e y, C a l i f o r n i a M o n d a y, S e p t e m b e r 2 0 , 2 0 1 0 w w w. d a i l y c a l . o r g

reNo 911: KaePerNicK torches cal iN 52-31 WiNBears

Running Out Of Answers

EdYEvElEv

RENO, Nev. — Mike Mohamed could only stand on the sideline and watch.

Held out of Friday night’s contest against Nevada with a sprained big toe, Cal’s senior linebacker saw the Bears stub their own toes on the road at Mackay Sta-dium.

In front of an energized, sellout crowd of 28,809, Nevada (3-0) rolled to a 52-31 home rout, hanging the most points on a Jeff Tedford-coached Cal team since Arizona amassed the same total in November of 2002.

The Wolf Pack piled up 165 of their 497 offensive yards in the game’s first 18 minutes, decimating a Bears de-fense that allowed an average of just 161 over its first two games.

329 of Nevada’s yards came courtesy of quarterback Colin Kaepernick.

“They run (the offense) with such precision,” Cal coach Jeff Tedford said. “The quarterback has been playing in it for a long time and is excellent at what he does.”

Indeed, the 6-foot-6, 225-pound Kaepernick masterfully triggered his team’s pistol offense all evening. He constantly beat defenders to the edge with his long strides and exploited gap after gap in the Bears’ secondary with his arm.

Kaepernick finished an efficient 11-for-16 for 181 yards and two scores, while adding three more touchdowns on the ground.

Running back Vai Taua actually paced the team with 151 rushing yards, but Kaepernick made the Wolf Pack’s opening statement — finding Tray Session in the endzone to cap a 12-play, 80 yard scoring drive.

On its very next drive, Nevada’s of-fense marched 85 yards in another 12

by Ed YevelevContributing Writer

oNliNe PoDcastKatie Dowd, Jack Wang and Ed Yevelev discuss where Cal went wrong.

The NorCal Invitational should retroactively be named the SoCal In-vitational considering that the finals featured the USC-UCLA rivalry. The Trojans scored the go-ahead goal with four seconds left to seal the champion-ship, 11-10, yesterday evening.

No. 1 Cal (5-1) fell in the semifinals to No. 4 USC by a single goal, 12-11, but went on to win the third-place game 11-8 against Stanford.

The pivotal game was an almost epic comeback story. The Bears were down 5-10 in the third quarter before staging a 5-0 rally in under five minutes, tying it up at 10 goals apiece.

“The guys really fought back and played with a lot of heart in the second half,” coach Kirk Everist said. “(It) was unconventional, frantic water polo.”

While the Bears matchup against the Trojans wasn’t Cal’s brightest point in the tournament, it was the most tell-ing. The freshman squad rose to the occasion of the season’s first true test.

“We had a lot of big moments from

by Byron AtashianContributing Writer

198Career-high rushing yards by Shane Vereen, who also scored three touchdowns

3Career-high interceptions

thrown by senior quarterback Kevin Riley

161Average offensive yards allowed by Cal defense through first two gamesnumbers...

by the 297Offensive yards gained by Nevada through the first

half alone

Standing outside the visiting lock-er room of Nevada’s Mackay Stadium, Kevin Riley searched for a silver lin-ing in his team’s 52-31 loss to the Wolf Pack.

He found it in Shane Vereen.“He was breaking tackles all over

the place,” Riley said of Vereen’s 198-yard, three touchdown effort.”

Riley added: “That’s what Shane does.”

His statement was supposed to be one of encouragement after Cal’s 11th loss in 14 games as a ranked team.

Nevertheless, there was something disconcerting about that final sen-tence.

Friday featured the Shane Vereen that everyone knew — the burst, the elusiveness, the patience, and most importantly, that unrelenting effort for positive yardage.

Problem is, the rest of his team is once again an enigma.

When pundits picked the Bears to finish seventh in the Pac-10 this pre-season, it wasn’t because of the steady Vereen, whose eight total touchdowns now place him among the nation’s top individual scorers.

Rather, everyone’s doubts about Cal revolved around two main ques-tions:

Will Riley, in his final season in Berkeley, provide the stability and consistency at quarterback that has eluded the Bears in recent years?

And could Cal’s defense prevent the giant chunks of yardage that op-ponents racked up last season?

top-ranked cal hosts Norcalinvitational, sinks to third

our younger guys,” Everist said.Among those mentioned were fresh-

men Giacomo Cupido and Perry Short, who contributed to the 5-0 run against USC.

“(Cupido) is extremely athletic, it’ll take a while for people to adjust to how he plays,” Everist said. “He gave us a good two meter (defense) and got a lot of ejections so I was happy with the way he played.”

Additionally, the win that got away against the Trojans forces Cal to focus on the areas in which it was lacking.

One of these fields is drawing ejec-tions. Seven of USC’s 12 goals came off of power plays and it drew seven ejec-tions before the Bears earned one.

“We didn’t get very many calls, but some of that we have to look and see how we’re playing,” Everist said. “We have to figure out what we’re not doing.”

The other major aspect of the game Cal must refine is its defense, closing out the nooks and crannies of its cage.

“They’re big guys, when they get up high in the water that cage gets real small,” Everist said of his team. “(Sun-day morning against USC) they were low and there were a lot of holes.”

Despite how close the Bears were to defeating the tournament champion Trojans in the semifinals, they have yet to reach their full potential.

According to Everist, the under-classmen are only improving and time will improve team chemistry.

“We’re not nearly as good a team as we’ll be at the end of the year,” he said.

plays. Kaepernick’s two touchdown scrambles put the Wolf Pack up, 21-7, in the second quarter.

As devastating as Kaepernick was early, Cal faced a manageable 24-14 deficit at halftime, thanks to a stand-out performance by Shane Vereen.

After being bottled up against Colorado, the Bears’ junior tailback broke out for a career-high 198 rush-ing yards and three scores.

The Valencia, Calif. native now leads the Pac-10 in rushing yards and total touchdowns.

“He was breaking tackles all over the place,” quarterback Kevin Riley said. “That’s what Shane does. He

stepped up big, kept us in it.”Vereen touched the ball on six of

the team’s first eight snaps, scoring from 50 yards out in the first quarter to tie the game, 7-7.

Keith Browner’s forced fumble at the Wolf Pack 21 paved the way for Vereen’s one-yard plunge to pull Cal to within 21-14.

On his third carry of the second half, Vereen broke loose again, taking a pitch and weaving through defend-ers for a 59-yard touchdown.

That play cut the third quarter lead to three, and Cal was poised to strike after forcing a three-and-out on the ensuing Wolf Pack possession.

Instead, disaster struck.Nevada cornerback Marlon John-

son pounced on Riley’s quick pass to Alex Lagemann, returning it 65 yards to give the Wolf Pack a 31-21 lead.

“That was really a game-changer,” Riley said of the interception. “That’s why they call it those. It was just a complete momentum shift.

“(I was) just rushing the play at the line. I saw the clock running down, I just tried to quick hitch it and the guy just complete jumped it. It’s a good play by him, bad play by me ... That should never happen.”

Cal never got closer than a touch-

Kevin Riley takes one of his two sacks against Nevada. The senior’s third-quarter interception turned into a 10-point Wolf Pack lead.lara brucker/staff

>> m. Polo: Page 7

Bears Bury gaels to end PreseasonMORAGA, Calif. — In its first eight

games, the Cal volleyball team’s play drastically varied between sets. In their two tilts this weekend, however, the No. 10 Bears’ play varied between matches.

On Friday at War Memorial Gym in San Francisco, Cal (10-0) looked like the unfocused squad that has shown up frequently in the second set of match-es. This time, the team’s lackluster play finally resulted in a dropped set.

San Francisco (1-9) capitalized on the Bears’ errors — hitting, serving, and receiving — to snap Cal’s 24-set winning streak in the first frame.

“It was kind of like a wake-up call,” sophomore Correy Johnson said. “We really need to start playing our game and not play down (to our opponents).”

The Bears won the next three sets, the final offering a glimpse of the team that would take the court the next night at McKeon Pavilion in Moraga, Calif.

Against No. 25 St. Mary’s, Cal was the doggedly determined team it usu-ally is in the first and third sets of matches. On Saturday, that steadiness stretched from beginning to end.

“We can play pretty darn consistent volleyball for about an hour and a half straight,” coach Rich Feller said. “Our serving and passing tonight was as good as it has been all year.”

The Bears’ near-perfect serving night allowed for better defense, Feller said, which was evident in Cal’s 50 digs on the night. Senior setter Carli Lloyd praised the passing, which allowed for better attacking opportunities and sus-

by Christina JonesContributing Writer

Adrienne Gehan and Shannon Hawari registered six kills each against St. Mary’s on Saturday. Cal swept the Gaels to maintain its undefeated record heading into Pac-10 play.

shannon hamilton/file

>> volleyBall: Page 7

m. poloCal 11Stanford 8

>> yevelev: Page 6>> footBall: Page 7

Bears Spot Trojans 8-4 Lead in First Half of Semifinals at Spieker Aquatics Complex

oNliNe viDeo See footage from

interviews with Kevin Riley and Shane Vereen.