Rebuilding ahead for w. basketball

Rebuilding ahead for w. basketball

UCLA returns just one starter from ’93 season

By Melissa Anderson

Daily Bruin Senior Staff

Members of the UCLA women’s basketball team have their work cut
out for them.

The Bruins lost four starters ­ including Pac-10 Player of
the Year Natalie Williams ­ to graduation. Less than two
months later, top freshman recruit Chrystal Pakootas tore her
anterior cruciate ligament and will not see action in 1994-5. Yet
somehow, head coach Kathy Olivier has remained confident in the
young squad.

"Last year was different because we knew what to expect. We had
some expectations because we were older," Olivier said. "This year
we are young but the returners have worked hard in the off-season
and the freshmen have high expectations of themselves.

"We are going to see some good basketball."

As the only returning starter, junior center Zrinka Kristich
will have to take on the role of team leader and provide
consistency in the frontcourt.

Averaging 5.8 points and 5.7 rebounds per game last season,
Kristich will need to improve those numbers to take UCLA to the
level of play it needs to be competitive in the Pac-10.

* * *

Freshmen recruits Jamie Oenning and Tawana Grimes should see
playing time in the backcourt with junior Ricarda Kuypers and
sophomore Nikki Hilbert. Grimes averaged 16 points per game last
season at Lynwood High School and helped lead the team to a CIF
Division IIA title. Oenning averaged 13 points per game and 5.7
rebounds for Woodbridge High School in Irvine.

Newcomer Aisha Veasley, a product of Valley Christian High
School, will see limited action in the frontcourt. The
5-foot-9-inch forward averaged 16.6 points per game while shooting
.556 from the field.

* * *

As a National Player of the Year candidate last year, Williams
was an obvious leader for the Bruins. This season, Olivier is
looking for all of the returners to step up and help lead the team
to what she hopes will be a winning record.

"I think that on certain days and on certain nights we’ll see
somebody stand out and on another night, it might be somebody
else," she predicted. "I think we have the potential to have, in
each game, different people to a good job for us."

With conference powerhouses Stanford, Washington and Oregon
State returning the majority of players from last year’s teams, the
Bruins’ are going to have a tough time gaining respect in the
conference.

"Stanford is probably favored to win it all because of the
people they have returning and the people they added, and
Washington and OSU will be strong too," Olivier said. "But most of
the other teams are pretty much in the same boat as us, so I think
we’ll be OK."

* * *

Kristich may be the only returning starter, but Olivier shies
away from labeling the ’94 season one of rebuilding. UCLA returns
five players who saw playing time last year and are familiar with
the level of play they will face.

"I feel like we’re rebuilding, but in a way we are not," she
said. "We have a lot of people who have played a lot of
minutes.

"I think if we continue to work as hard as we have in the
off-season, we’ll surprise a lot of teams."

Breaking on through

Breaking on through

Two years ago, Joe Christie was questionable ­ this year he
has become crucial for the Bruins

By Tim Costner

Daily Bruin Senior Staff

It’s hard to believe that Joe Christie almost vanished from the
UCLA roster after one year with the men’s soccer team.

Then again, his first year with the Bruins didn’t exactly go as
he had hoped, and as a walk-on, Christie’s stint with the team
appeared as though it was going to be rather brief.

But he managed to remain on the team another year, and UCLA head
coach Sigi Schmid gave him a second chance to prove himself.

"My first year I had a nightmare," said Christie, who redshirted
in 1992. "I wasn’t playing confidently, and when the next

year came, I just wasn’t getting any playing time. So I pulled
Sigi aside and said, ‘Hey, Sig, do you think I can contribute to
the team or what?’ Basically play me or I’m out."

Schmid ultimately allotted Christie more playing time that year,
and Christie emerged as one of the surprise players of the season
­ earning a share of the Bruins’ Most Improved Player Award in
1993.

And this year, Christie has made even greater strides, earning a
starting role at the right wing and leading the team with seven
assists, including three in the last three games.

"I’ve been getting a fair amount of assists lately, but I pay
zero attention to stats," admitted Christie. "I’m glad I’m leading,
I look to get assists because I’m just as happy when I cross the
ball over as when I score a goal. It’s all cool."

But it almost never happened, since Christie was prepared to
leave soccer behind after high school, and attend Cal after
graduation.

"I wasn’t even sure that I was going to play soccer after high
school," Christie said. "I was going to Berkeley, but then I
started getting recruited for soccer. I wasn’t even looking to get
recruited, but then I remember the day Sig called. It was at the
time when I thought he was some mystic figure and some god of
soccer. I was just trying to be cool on the phone."

That phone call eventually led to Christie’s arrival in
Westwood, and from that point, the 5-foot-11 -inch native of
Mission Viejo has battled for his position on the team.

"I remember coming in and guys like Eddie Lewis and Ante Razov
were the players ­ like wow these guys are good," Christie
said. "I never played for a good club team and my high school team
was never that good. Luckily, they’re my friends now and we just
play soccer together."

And that’s all because Christie has dramatically improved his
ability to create scoring opportunities from the right side.

"The one quality that he’s really developed is the ability to
cross the ball," Schmid said. "He’s the best crosser on the team
now. He has the ability that a lot of players don’t have, where he
can get crosses over with a bend when the ball is to the outside of
his body. It’s something that comes natural to him, and it’s
something that he’s worked on because he realizes that it sets him
apart."

Like many of his teammates, Christie has been shuffled around in
the lineup this season, but has recently become a fixture on the
right wing.

"I like it a lot on the right," Christie said. "I feel the most
comfortable there. Sometimes I don’t get the ball as much as I’d
like, but I think every player thinks like that. When I get the
ball I know my role ­ I’m just a role player out there. I
think people are starting to learn what I do and what they can do,
so we can help each other out."

And for Christie, that means just to continue doing what has
brought him this far.

"Generally I think my role is to simply be the guy down the line
who can get the ball across to the forwards," Christie said. "I’ve
changed my game a little bit, so we’ve figured out how to get the
ball to the forwards ­ the more they get it the better. I
think we’ve done a good job with that so far."

Arizona faces surprising Oregon in key game

Arizona faces surprising Oregon in key game

With just four more weekends to go, the Pac-10 race to the Rose
Bowl now has Arizona leading a resurgent USC and two surprise teams
in Oregon and Washington State.

This weekend, No. 11 Arizona (6-1 overall) will take its 4-0
conference mark to Eugene, Ore., where head coach Rich Brooks have
his Oregon Ducks playing inspired football.

The Ducks (5-3 overall) are at 3-1 in the Pac-10. With a victory
over the Wildcats, which will be Oregon’s first over U of A since
1970, the Ducks will be tied for first in the Pac-10.

Oregon has won some impressive games. Led by quarterback Danny
O’Neil, the Ducks shellacked California after they beat USC in Los
Angeles, 22-7. Then, last weekend, the Ducks held Washington’s
Napoleon Kaufman to 102 yards rushing and beat the Huskies, 31-20,
with a 97-yard touchdown off an interception in the waning moments
of the game.

Meanwhile, the Wildcats haven’t looked as invincible as the
pundits once had described them, way back in September. Oregon
State, the wishbone school, passed for 101 yards against U of A,
and Colorado State gained 314 yards in total offense in their 21-16
win over the Wildcats in Tucson Oct. 8.

Arizona coach Dick Tomey knows his team has been playing to the
level of the competition. To keep his ‘Cats atop the Pac-10, Tomey
needs the Desert Swarm, to, well, swarm on the Ducks.

"Oregon has probably the two most important wins in the league
this year ­ over USC and Washington," Tomey said. "Our play
has to reflect the circumstances of the game ­ the urgency of
the situation. In all cases, it didn’t happen last week (in a 34-24
win over UCLA).

"It has to this week. If we’re first and they’re (UCLA) last,
this is a great league. Oregon has that belief that they’re going
to win. We have it, but we’re not playing that way."

* * *

Oh, how the mighty have fallen …

Well, sort of. Oregon State got out of the conference cellar
with an impressive victory over UCLA two weeks ago, but the Beavers
couldn’t keep things running, as OSU dropped a 35-29 decision to
Stanford in Corvallis, Ore.

This week, the Beavers have the unenviable task of trying to
stop Kaufman. Washington (5-2, 2-2) is on probation, so the bowls
and the championships are out of the question. The next best thing?
Oh, maybe kick everybody’s ass and get the Heisman for
Napoleon?

"It seems like every time we get ready to play a game this
season, (the other team) has a special reason to play well against
us," OSU head coach Jerry Pettibone said. "I am sure that will be
the case this week.

"I thought after the Washington-Miami game that the Huskies
proved they had the best football team in the Pac-10, and I still
feel that way. I think they have the most complete football team,
on offense, on defense and on special teams. Now they will have an
additional incentive to play even harder because of their upset
loss to Oregon."

And, what about Mr. Kaufman?

"Kaufman’s explosiveness, not only from scrimmage, but from
special teams, is a concern," Pettibone said.

Quake victims pick up pieces

Quake victims pick up pieces

Months after temblor, displaced Valley residents continue with
adjustments

By Brett Pauly

Los Angeles Daily News

Isabelle Silverman has been missing work with a broken wrist
since tripping over the food bowl of her daughter’s pooch.

Julienne Hardy is readying her family for another year in a
cramped camper in their Granada Hills driveway.

And Stella and Nicholas Boyias’ baby boy is raring to crawl but
has no suitable floor space in the trailer parked outside their
Northridge house.

Home away from home has perhaps never been so distressing for
the San Fernando Valley residents and countless numbers of their
neighbors still displaced more than nine months after the
Northridge Earthquake.

The contradictory living situation has turned lives topsy-turvy
but, at the same time, lent a new closeness to some families who
have found a silver lining in the upheaval caused by the Jan. 17
temblor.

”It’s been stressful ­ five people living in a 29-foot
trailer,” said Stella Boyias, 31, mother of Coula, 5, Angela, 2,
and Vasilis, 8 months. ”We had no idea it would take this
long.”

”We’re basically camping out in the street, but you couldn’t
get any better bonding,” added her husband, Nicholas, 45, owner of
a video-distribution company.

”We’re stronger for toughing it out. It’s made our marriage
stronger, too. My wife and I have found we’re good partners. We can
handle danger. We can handle adversity.”

But relaxing "at home" isn’t what it used to be. There’s little
room, and less privacy. The kids’ clothes must be kept outside in a
dresser. Emotional fuses are short. Occasionally, shouting matches
erupt over stupid things.

Vasilis is busting to get out of his playpen and start crawling
but must wait another month until the family is back in their
rebuilt house. Angela must do with hard dirt and the blacktop of a
cul-de-sac for areas to play while big sis is off at school.

But Nicholas Boyias said he and his wife come from ”tough
stock” ­ they’re descendants of Greek immigrants who walked
to school barefoot in the old country ­ and that he believes
their children will prosper from the ordeal.

”They’re troupers,” said family friend Joyce Sapon of Reseda.
”I don’t know if I could do it.”

Retaining-wall rubble is piled along the curbs and fences of
empty homes, painting constant reminders of the quake’s dreadful
power, in a nearby Northridge neighborhood where Silverman also has
learned to take adversity in stride.

”It’s lonely at night,” she said. ”There are no neighbors
here.”

Her cast-clad wrist, broken last week, is keeping the weaver
from her loom but not from her lighthearted charm.

She recalls how she and her husband, Leonard, took in their
daughter, Laura, and two dogs ­ ”big ones, 80 pounds” ­
the day the temblor ravaged Laura’s Tarzana condo.

"We’ve been joking around, thinking that she’d never be living
with her mom again after 30,” the Philadelphia native said. ”And
her dogs, they’re so big they help themselves to food off the
table.”

The Silvermans have two pooches and a pair of cats of their own,
and are awaiting house repairs as well.

”It’s not good, but we’re getting along as best we can,”
Silverman said of the living arrangement. ”There are personality
clashes, but nothing that can’t be resolved.

”The worst part is that her dogs think they belong to me. She
works long hours and isn’t around that much. I’ve had a 79-pound
dog on my lap. He’s lonesome, wants somebody, and I’m it,” she
said.

The family menagerie isn’t expected to break up until the end of
March, when Laura Silverman’s home will be livable again.

The lengthy time frame for rebuilding isn’t uncommon, as
residents iron out insurance settlements, juggle incomes and
workdays, and wait for overburdened contractors.

”I’ve got 10 jobs I still haven’t started yet ­ people who
haven’t settled with their insurance companies,” said Lee
Hellinger, owner of a Granada Hills construction company. ”And I
have more people calling me from every part of the Valley.”

Hardy employs humor over hardship to deal with delays in her
rebuilding. She has lived for more than six months with her
husband, Tom Rumack, and 6-year-old daughter, Emily, in a
fifth-wheel trailer bought with insurance money ­ and expects
to be there until late next year.

”I don’t think I will ever take a vacation in this thing,
ever,” Hardy said. ”We don’t even own a truck to pull it. My
husband says we’ll put my mom in it when she comes to visit.”

Hardy, 38, said there are a lot of obstacles when it comes to
their reconstruction ­ overbooked contractors, dealing with
architects and financial worries stemming from limited
insurance.

”We’re not in a position to even think about seeking a bid,”
she said.

Meanwhile, her husband, a produce buyer, celebrated a quiet 40th
birthday Oct. 9.

”I wanted to surprise him with guests, but planning for a party
is like guessing how many people you can fit in a phone booth,”
Hardy said.

Even a normally simple task like washing clothes has become a
chore.

Hardy turns the water on at a main valve around the side of the
house, then twists another valve on a series of hoses that run
across the lawn and feed the washing machine.

”And I get cold only,” she said. ”The water heater isn’t
hooked up.”

At night, when the family cats jump up on the trailer’s
countertops, the rocking wakes Hardy. ”It moves like an
aftershock,” she said.

She has adopted a country song by Sammy Kershaw as her
creed.

”It goes, ‘You’re the queen of my double-wide trailer, with
polyester curtains and a redwood deck,”’ Hardy said. ”The
neighbors keep threatening to build us a deck. I already have the
polyester curtains.”

But residing in a 40-foot trailer while their house is rebuilt
is a heartache that affords little humor for Northridge resident
Marvin Zidel, 69, and his wife, Leona, 68.

”We don’t even joke about it,” Marvin Zidel said. ”All we
want to do is click our heels three times and go home.

”They say we’ll be in in another month. I’ll believe it when I
see it.”

The initial damage estimate was $65,000. Zidel expects repairs
to cost more than $250,000 by the time they’re complete.

The deductible on the retirees’ earthquake insurance was
$18,000. They’ll pay an additional $25,000 out of pocket, not to
mention the water and power bills that have increased by $550 a
month to cover construction needs.

”It hurts deeply,” Zidel said. ”It’s coming out of our
retirement. I worked 40 years to be able to retire and travel.
There isn’t that extra money to do these things. Best-laid plans of
mice and men, I suppose.”

Zidel has come to curse the slow-burning butane stove in the
rented trailer that his insurance covers.

”You can’t cook in there,” he said. They eat in restaurants
­ more dents in the retirement plan ­ and at a neighbor’s
home. The clothes are washed at a launderette. Their furniture is
in three large portable storage units and also in a neighbor’s
den.

Zidel was saddened two months ago when his wife came home from
cancer surgery only to recover in a camper.

”The stress makes it very tough,” he said.

Bylaw change put on hold

Bylaw change put on hold

Council waits to vote on proposal after much criticism

By Phillip Carter

Daily Bruin Staff

The undergraduate student council tabled a proposal Tuesday
night to redefine the contingency-funding procedure for student
groups after lengthy debate and heavy administration criticism.

The proposed bylaw change would require student groups to turn
in typed and itemized proposals two days in advance. Student groups
would also have to go through a formal hearing process.

Currently, no set application deadline or formal hearing
procedure exists.

An administrative representative challenged the suggested bylaw
change, arguing that its wording was too specific.

"I’d remove language like ‘must,’ ‘shall’ and ‘will,’" Lyle
Timmerman said. "These are things that you should be very careful
in using."

Timmerman went through the bylaw change line by line, finding
fault in almost every one of the proposal’s clauses.

Finance committee Chairman Matt Bianco, who sponsored the
motion, defended the proposal by saying that the strict language
was necessary to clarify the funding process.

Critics at the meeting said that the bylaw change could result
in abuses of finance committee power.

Critics added that the proposed two-thirds requirement for
overturning finance committee decisions could result in a council
minority being able to block the action of the majority. Currently
a simple majority is required.

Undergraduate President Rob Greenhalgh argued that a stricter
procedure would allow for less political bias to be introduced by
Finance Committee and council members.

The proposed bylaw change contains several additions and
deletions to current policy, which the proposal sponsors say is
inadequate.

"Groups aren’t really aware of how the finance committee comes
up with these numbers," Bianco said. "In the past, hearings have
not been open to members ­ it’s been a very executive
session."

One representative from a student advocacy group argued before
the board that the majority of the changes were beneficial, but
that some of the rule changes would be detrimental to the student
body as a whole.

"(The new protocols) would make a progressive step into
clarifying the process," said African Student Union spokesman J.
Jioni Palmer. "(But, item) i. challenges the authority and
integrity of this institution."

Item i. is the proposal’s section that would limit student group
appeals to issues of procedural fairness and due process, instead
of the group’s merit and activities.

"I do think we should keep in mind the intent of the appeals
process, however we shouldn’t limit it," Palmer said. "What’d be
the best way of remedying this is by using the current appeals
process."

Agreeing with Palmer, Timmerman also said that the appeals
process should remain at least partly based on merit.

"I’d be careful about taking (the undergraduate government
council) out of the loop when it comes to merit," he said.

Braunmuller thrives on coffee, Shakespearian lit and students

Braunmuller thrives on coffee, Shakespearian lit and
students

English prof revels in teaching, aims for an ‘intellectual
exchange’ of ideas

By Donna Wong

Daily Bruin Senior Staff

Sipping a cup of French Roast, leaning on a table outside the
North Campus eatery, English Professor A.R. Braunmuller, remembers
a time in 1971 when he loved the UCLA campus and students, but
wasn’t so crazy about the city.

Recalling his first months with the UCLA department of English
­ when he still held his northern California prejudice against
Los Angeles ­ Braunmuller talked about the time he was driving
home on Sunset Boulevard with the top down on his convertible, and
the sun on his face.

Cruising down the boulevard, he glanced at a Rolls Royce beside
him ­ an icon of the Hollywood glitz and pretension he held in
such disdain, he said.

But what he discovered on the other side of the car was
something that completely changed his mind about Los Angeles ­
a deer galloping along the grassy center divider keeping pace with
his car.

"At once I had nature and the highest of artifice on both sides,
and after that, (Los Angeles) has only gotten better," Braunmuller
said.

Awarded the 1994-96 UCLA Gold Shield Faculty Prize this year,
and entering his first year as president of the Renaissance English
Text Society, Braunmuller said he loves UCLA and the city.

"Los Angeles welcomes, and it accepts so many different values,
so many different people, that it just makes for a wonderful
environment," Braunmuller said.

A scholar of Shakespeare and Renaissance dramatic literature,
Braunmuller is now editing a version of Shakespeare’s
"Macbeth."

And after its completion, he plans to begin researching what
Shakespeare and his contemporaries revealed about societal
attitudes through literary and dramatic interpretations of the law,
Braunmuller said.

Originally, he planned to be an aeronautical engineer, but
during his undergraduate years at Stanford University, Braunmuller
quickly discovered his love for the concepts of representation,
enactment and action that Shakespeare’s dramatic works involved, he
said.

Calling them "pleasing to the ear, and comprehensible to the
mind," Braunmuller now teaches dramatic works with ease at UCLA,
and although he loves reading novels, he wouldn’t know how to teach
them, he said.

When he first introduces undergraduate students to Shakespeare
­ especially those in his lower division classes ­ he
begins by introducing them to all that happens at a theater.

Knowing that many have never been to the theater, Braunmuller
explains to them what exactly constitutes the stage and what
exactly constitutes the spectators.

"After that, I just let them loose on any piece of Shakespeare
and they’re fine," Braunmuller said.

Calling students the university’s primary engine, Braunmuller
considers the drive for excellence at UCLA that pushes professors
to publish and contribute to the intellectual pool only a fact of
belonging to such an institution.

But ultimately, "no teacher is unaffected by the desire to
teach," he said

Once quoted in the Bruin saying, "What we’re doing is raising a
generation who is learning to spell relief r-o-l-a-i-d-s,"
Braunmuller likes to encourage critical and independent thought in
his classes.

He is unable to get away from the fact that there is only one of
him and scores of students at UCLA ­ pushing him to be as
inclusive as possible with his students, he said.

So if anyone ever happens to sit in on one of his classes, they
may think they are listening in on a languid conversation over a
cup of coffee.

First introducing an idea, then inviting members of the class to
take the discussion further, he tries to maintain a stream of
intellectual exchange, Braunmuller said.

And although the amount of information he gets across may be
less, students retain more than if he tried conducting class
standing behind a podium, he added.

"Being able to look critically at an article, book or play is
more important than knowing when Ben Jonson died," he said.

Braunmuller views literature and drama as "timely" not
"timeless," and he believes his area of scholarship has a somewhat
trans-historical existence.

"The (modern) culture has more or less decided that there are
plays worth talking about so they are a part of a continuing
cultural dialogue," Braunmuller said.

Toying with his half empty cup of coffee, he looks at his
present days in UCLA’s labyrinth of construction fences and dust
clouds as still very committed to scholarship and teaching after
nearly 23 years at UCLA.

"It’s a privilege to be doing what I’m doing," Braunmuller said.
"And as hard as it can be from day to day, I find it very
rewarding."

He fills out the rest of his life with jogging, traveling or
eating out with friends at the Japanese-French Cafe Katsu in Los
Angeles. He would ultimately like to travel to China or India and
just watch the people in those countries.

Maybe he’d even learn to use the railroad system in India ­
after all, travel is self-exploration as well as other-exploration,
he said.

And although he has visited virtually every country in Europe,
and traversed the United States to study at Stanford and then Yale
University in Connecticut, he still won’t admit what state on the
east coast he was born in.

"I won’t reveal the state because you’ll just make fun of it,"
he said.

Athletic department undergoes year-long study

Athletic department undergoes year-long study

By Allison Lefkowitz

Daily Bruin Staff

As part of a National Collegiate Athletic Association
certification program, UCLA’s athletic department is undergoing a
year-long study examining areas including academic and financial
integrity, rules compliance and a commitment to equity between
men’s and women’s sports.

Stemming from a pilot evaluation program in which UCLA took
part, the NCAA decided to examine all Division I schools over a
five year period and assign the equivalent of an academic
accreditation. Division I is a category of schools with large
athletic programs offering players scholarships.

The certification determines if the school’s athletic program
meets the association’s standards. UCLA is part of a second wave of
schools to be examined.

Chancellor Charles Young appointed UCLA administrators including
committee chair Peter Blackman, vice chancellor of capital
programs; Claudia Mitchell-Kernan, vice chancellor of academic
affairs and Edward Alpers, dean of the College of Letters &
Science, to the study’s steering committee.

The study, according to Young, "aims to ensure honesty and
integrity in athletics operations."

Subcommittees, some including the voices of student athletes,
are reviewing each area and will present written reports to the
steering committee in January.

The main committee will then evaluate these reports and pass on
the information to the NCAA. Evaluations will be made based on
standards, known as operating principles, defined by the
association.

At the conclusion of the study, a group of reviewers composed of
peers from other colleges and conference offices will conduct an
evaluation of the athletic program based on the reports and on
personal visits to the campus.

They will then report to the NCAA, and the athletic department
will be placed on one of three certification levels: certified,
certified with conditions or not certified. Depending on the status
conferred, each school will need to correct any problems or risk
possible NCAA ineligibility.