Bruin Tea: Why is the layout of Boelter Hall and Mathematical Sciences so confusing?

Complaint: Why are Boelter Hall and the Mathematical Sciences Building so confusing?

South Campus students criticize the layout of the connected Boelter Hall and Mathematical Sciences Building. They say its dead-end hallways and rooms accessible only from certain routes make it difficult and nonintuitive to navigate.

Kelly Schmader, assistant vice chancellor of Facilities Management, said the two buildings were integrated to reduce construction costs, to be space-efficient and to ease travel between them. He added the original structures of the buildings and the Boelter Hall Annex contribute to the buildings’ complex layout.

Mathematical Sciences was finished being built in 1957; Boelter Hall was built two years later to be integrated into Mathematical Sciences. At the time, Mathematical Sciences consisted only of what is now its eastern wing. Its western wing was constructed in 1966.

The Boelter Hall Annex, surrounded by concrete walls, is located in the northwest corner of Boelter Hall. In 1995, it was renovated to host a plasma laser and additional engineering space. Schmader suggested the concrete walls of the annex may have hindered the accessibility between the two buildings.

Schmader said modifying the buildings would be too expensive to justify any potential benefits.

In addition, he said the numbering of the buildings’ floors is relative to their position on the western side of the hill on which they are built. The first floors of the buildings are at the bottom of the hill. Thus, students entering from the Court of Sciences enter on the fifth floor, despite this being “ground level” from this height.

Weekend in Preview: April 12

Men’s golf
Michelle Murakami, Daily Bruin contributor

The Bruins look to build momentum as they near the end of the regular season.

UCLA men’s golf will be playing at the Papago Golf Course for the ASU Thunderbird Collegiate from Friday to Saturday.

The Bruins have placed first in each of their last two tournaments. Junior Hidetoshi Yoshihara finished first with a 13-under 200 at the Chambers Bay Golf Course for the SeattleU Redhawk Invitational. Senior Cole Madey also placed first earlier this week at the Wyoming Cowboy Classic in Chandler, Arizona, finishing with a 13-under 203.

Madey said the team has built up momentum over the past two events – even claiming UCLA will emerge on top of the Pac-12 – but says he has room to improve as the regular season winds down.

“I think that we’re going to win the Pac-12 this year first and foremost, and I think we’re going to have a lot of momentum moving forward,” said Madey. “Something that I want to work on is my chipping – it was really yippy and I didn’t chip it well out there. Working on that hopefully will help me sharpen up my game.”

Coach Derek Freeman said that minimizing mistakes will put the Bruins in a good stance to perform well down the stretch.

“I think it’s more than just every single shot makes a difference,” said Freeman. “Maybe it’s from a missed opportunity to make birdie on a par-5, maybe you get up and down on par-4 or hold out a bunker shot, you really just don’t know what that one shot is going to be. But if you can save all of those shots up then your team is going to have a good chance.”

The Bruins will tee off for the final time before the Pac-12 tournament Friday.

Women’s tennis
Andreas Papoutsis, Daily Bruin contributor

The Bruins will head up north to square off in two of their last three matches of the regular season.

No. 10 UCLA women’s tennis (14-5, 6-1 Pac-12) will travel up to Washington this weekend to take on No. 42 Washington State (17-7, 2-5) on Friday before squaring off against No. 15 Washington (16-2, 6-1) on Sunday. The Bruins have three conference matchups remaining before they head to the postseason.

Washington State is entering the weekend on a two-match losing streak and defeating a top-10 opponent in the Bruins would allow it to shift back into the win column.

Coach Stella Sampras Webster said the team might have to play indoors for their first matchup, citing weather as a concern for outdoor play.

Despite the uncertainty surrounding the conditions of play, Sampras Webster said the team will prepare for any situation that may arise.

“It’s going to be quicker indoors,” Sampras Webster said. “So we’re going to be standing closer to the line.”

UCLA’s trip to Washington comes after it defeated both Utah and Colorado on senior weekend, and Sampras Webster said the seniors’ contributions to the team have created a sense of family that will aid the Bruins through the remainder of the season.

“They’ve done a great job and have worked really well together,” Sampras Webster said. “They’ve made a really positive impact on the team.”

Friday’s match will begin at 1:30 p.m., while Sunday’s fixture will start at noon.

Men’s tennis
Jason Maikis, Daily Bruin contributor

The Bruins have a chance to continue their undefeated conference run.

No. 13 UCLA men’s tennis (12-4, 4-0 Pac-12) will face No. 48 Oregon (13-5, 1-3) and Washington (6-13, 1-3) this weekend. UCLA has a one-match lead over USC in the regular season Pac-12 standings, which coach Billy Martin said helped the team stay grounded this season.

“We have to stay focused and not look too far down the road,” Martin said. “Hopefully we get by Oregon, get ready for Washington and then stay healthy. Winning these matches can make us conference champions, which has been a goal for this team since day one.”

Martin said the players and staff of the team know their upcoming opponents well, but cannot overlook them.

“We know these teams well because they have a lot of returning players,” Martin said. “There aren’t a lot of new faces on the Oregon or Washington team, but they’re always tough matches when we play. We have to take one match at a time.”

Freshman Govind Nanda said he has recognized the overall quality of college tennis as he has played more and more matches.

“Everyone can play. Every person on every team can play,” Nanda said. “They’re going to come here hungry to play their best and beat us.”

Senior Maxime Cressy credited the entire staff and team as the reason the Bruins are riding an eight-game winning streak.

“As a team, we are really well prepared for this weekend,” Cressy said. “The coaches and players keep grinding every day and work hard on our games. We’re on fire right now, and we’re not going to let these teams take matches on our home court.”

Track and field
Peter Frederick, Sports reporter

UCLA track and field is hosting its last home meet of the season this weekend.

The Bruins will be hosting the 17th annual Rafer Johnson/Jackie Joyner-Kersee Invitational on Saturday at Drake Stadium.

“Almost the whole team will be competing this weekend which is great. We haven’t really had a full squad out to compete at the same meet yet this year,” said senior thrower Justin Stafford. “Being a UCLA track and field athlete, this place has a lot of history, so everybody is really locked in and ready to perform their best for home meets.”

The No. 22-ranked women’s team recorded eight event wins in the Bruins’ last meet, including a trifecta of wins by sophomore thrower Alyssa Wilson in the hammer throw, shot put and discus. Other winners include sophomore distance runner Christina Rice in the 10K run, freshman distance runner Sophie Scott in the 1500-meter run and senior sprints runner Suzie Acolatse in the 200m dash.

The No. 25-ranked men’s team recorded nine event victories at the same meet, including two event wins by redshirt senior thrower Dotun Ogundeji in the shot put and discus. Other winners include junior distance runner Robert Brandt in the 10K run, junior thrower Simon Litzell in the javelin and an event win by the men’s 4x400m relay team.

“The team is more prepared for outdoor (season) since we train outdoors all year – the expectations are higher and we plan to exceed them,” Stafford said. “Everybody’s been working hard all year and we’re excited for that work to pay off.”

Men’s volleyball sets up to soar past Eagles en route to MPSF semifinals

The Bruins will begin their chase for an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament.

No. 2 seed UCLA men’s volleyball (18-8, 8-4 MPSF) will host No. 7 seed Concordia University Irvine (14-18, 3-9) in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation tournament quarterfinal match Saturday.

UCLA defeated Concordia in each of its matchups this season, both in straight sets. The Bruins averaged 6.5 aces, eight blocks and hit for .339 across the two matches – while Concordia posted an average of four aces, 5.75 blocks and .106 hitting percentage.

Junior middle blocker Daenan Gyimah, who averaged 12.5 kills and 4.5 blocks against Concordia this season, said UCLA has to be aware of the different factors that come with playing in the postseason.

“Just knowing that anything can happen,” Gyimah said. “It’s playoffs and it’s crazy. There are a lot of things we can’t control, so we just have to try to control the things we can.”

Concordia lost its last two road matches in straight sets and holds a 1-10 overall record on the road this season. Outside hitters Jordan Hoppe and Raymond Barsemian helped lead the Eagles offensively in the regular season hitting for .271 and .227 with 317 and 206 kills, respectively. Hoppe also finished the regular season with a team-high 35 service aces.

Sophomore middle blocker Grant Maleski – who recorded three kills, three aces and two blocks in UCLA’s last win against Concordia – said the Bruins have to focus on executing their strengths.

“They’ve been playing really well and running a lot of back-row attacks super well,” Maleski said. “Our main focus is staying super competitive and knowing what we’re good at and really trying to do that well.”

The Bruins have won their last seven meetings against the Eagles, including a four-set win in the 2018 MPSF tournament semifinal match.

UCLA coach John Speraw said facing Concordia in the playoffs will be much tougher than its previous matchups in the regular season.

“We had a real tough time with them last year in the semifinal,” Speraw said. “They’re a well-coached team and they have the chance to come in here and get some confidence and make it a very difficult match and that is what we’re anticipating to happen.”

Should UCLA defeat Concordia, it will travel to Malibu to play in the semifinals at Pepperdine’s Firestone Fieldhouse on April 18.

“When everything’s on the line there are certain things that can always happen to put stress on your team,” Speraw said. “Teams come in with nothing to lose and they’re going to play hard, they have a lot of talented pieces.”

Football fosters versatility of players in preparation for new season

A year ago, Jaylen Erwin was enrolled in Hutchinson Community College.

But after two seasons with the Blue Dragons, the wideout decided it was time for a change.

The three-star junior transfer enrolled at UCLA this past quarter, joining the football team for this year’s spring practices. Erwin’s cousin Roman Phifer – a 15-year NFL veteran and three-time Super Bowl champion with the New England Patriots – was a second-round pick out of UCLA in 1991.

Erwin said Phifer – who is now a director of player development for the Bruins – helped him feel comfortable on his official visit last year. But while he may have a new home in Westwood, Erwin said coach Chip Kelly has been putting him all over the field in practice so far.

“I’d say just me being moved around a lot more,” Erwin said. “I’m not only an outside receiver – I can be moved inside. Coach Kelly has a real good way of just moving all his playmakers around and finding a way to get them the ball.”

Erwin reeled in 45 catches for 865 yards and 14 touchdowns in his two seasons at Hutchinson Community College.

The receiver went to Ardrey Kell High School in Charlotte, North Carolina, and said he was happy to be a moving piece in Kelly’s offense.

“I think I bring versatility,” Erwin said. “I can play inside in the slot and I can move outside and I can take the top off a defense, or I can do short and intermediate routes just to run versus the zone.”

Kelly’s philosophy of on-the-field player movement applies to the other side as well.

Rising redshirt senior linebacker Josh Woods – who missed the entire 2018 season because of a knee injury – is still not fully recovered. While he has not gotten any game action in Kelly’s system, Woods’ coach praised his adaptability.

“We’re always gonna try to get our best 11 (players) on the field,” Kelly said. “We haven’t really talked about what we’re doing with (Woods) until he fully gets cleared. He’s learned everything. He’s a really sharp kid. (Woods) can handle any position we throw at him.”

Kelly said Woods – who had been almost exclusively an inside linebacker under former coach Jim Mora – could potentially play outside linebacker when he reaches full strength.

Rising sophomore defensive lineman Tyler Manoa primarily played defensive end last season but said he was happy he has been getting snaps at other positions this spring.

“Coach Vince (Oghobaase) wants us to know every position just so if one guy goes down, the next man’s in just to fill in that position,” Manoa said. “I like it a lot – just to know different schemes and stuff – so it’s been really great.”

“Chip, meet Mick”

UCLA men’s basketball coach Mick Cronin said he got over 700 texts after he took the job Tuesday.

One of those messages came from Kelly.

“(Cronin) will do a really good job,” Kelly said. “His teams at Cincinnati were really fun to watch so it’s an exciting time.”

UCLA softball preps to put Ducks in a row in weekend home series against Oregon

The Bruins are coming home with a season-high 19-game winning streak.

No. 1 UCLA softball (35-1, 9-0 Pac-12) will take its home field this weekend in a series against Oregon (16-19, 1-8). Despite the high expectations put on the team by its ranking, senior utility Zoe Shaw said the team hasn’t been focusing on what others expect of them.

“Our expectations of ourselves are most important,” Shaw said. “Whoever ranks us whatever doesn’t really matter, we think we’re No. 1, it just so happens the outside world thinks we’re No. 1 too.”

UCLA is coming off three straight sweeps of Pac-12 opponents, most recently against then-No. 19 Arizona State. The Bruins outscored their opponents 35-5 in the series, run-ruling them in all three games and hitting .420 as a team.

Oregon is one of only two Pac-12 teams with an overall win record under .500. The Ducks are coming off a weekend in which they went 3-1 in two games each against Missouri and Pittsburgh. But before that, they had won only two of their last 16 games – a period which included three sweeps, two by Pac-12 opponents.

The Ducks have recorded a team batting average of only .266 – the second-worst in the conference. Oregon’s pitching staff sports a 5.05 ERA, also second-worst in the Pac-12.

But despite the Ducks’ poor rankings this season on both sides of the ball, coach Kelly Inouye-Perez said every team needs to be approached the same way because every team in the conference has the potential to pull off an upset.

“We respect every opponent in the Pac-12,” Inouye-Perez said. “It’s just an opponent, and the game doesn’t know who’s supposed to win, so we’ve got to be able to go out there and play UCLA softball.”

The Bruins will attempt to avoid the fate they suffered in last year’s series against the Ducks when then-No. 6 Oregon took two of the three games against then-No. 3 UCLA. The losses were the Bruins’ first of the 2018 season, breaking a 25-game winning streak.

“We need to just stay on our game and not … go down to their level,” said redshirt sophomore utility Aaliyah Jordan. “And we are the No. 1 team in the country, so it’s just sticking to our game.”

The three games will be UCLA’s first Pac-12 series at home when school is in session, as their series against California was played over spring break.

“One-hundred percent I love playing at home, as a senior it’s really just my home,” Shaw said. “The support of the UCLA student body is great, and it brings great energy, which I think the energy translates to us playing.”

UCLA baseball readies to sail into top-10 series with East Carolina Pirates

The Bruins are taking a break from Pac-12 play to face a top-10 team.

No. 1 UCLA baseball (24-6, 9-3 Pac-12) will host No. 8 East Carolina (25-7, 8-1 AAC) in a three-game series starting Friday night. This marks the only series the Bruins will play against an out-of-conference team in the latter two months of the season.

Coach John Savage said there is a level of unfamiliarity for both teams that will require extra preparation going into the three-game set.

“We might not know them as well as the people we play out here, so you have to do your homework,” Savage said. “They’re in the same boat as we are. … They don’t really know our players and we don’t know their players that well.”

The two programs last took the same field a decade ago, with the Bruins winning two of three games in Greenville, North Carolina. Both squads were unranked at the time.

The Pirates’ No. 8 ranking is their highest position this season. They were ranked No. 11 in D1Baseball’s Preseason Top 25 and haven’t dropped below No. 14 all year.

East Carolina is riding a three-game win streak after taking two of three against Houston and defeating UNC Wilmington on Tuesday. The Pirates have yet to lose a series this season.

A week removed from claiming a series victory at then-No. 2 Stanford, Savage said facing another highly ranked opponent is a good test for the Bruins and presents a chance for his team to improve.

“They’re another top-10 team. They’re a physical team (and) they have good arms,” Savage said. “It’s going to be very challenging and another good opportunity for us to get a little better.”

The Bruins, like the Pirates, haven’t lost a series this season and carry a three-game winning streak of their own heading into the weekend after defeating No. 18 UC Irvine on Tuesday. The upcoming series will mark the end of seven straight games against ranked opponents for UCLA.

Freshman right-hander Jesse Bergin said the focus is still on making internal improvements in practice, despite facing the high level of competition.

“Playing all these good players helps with preparation, but taking care of our craft and practicing how we practice (is important),” Bergin said. “We know once we take care of (our practices) it will leak into the games.”

First pitch will be 6 p.m. on Friday, followed by a 2 p.m. start time for the Saturday doubleheader.

After strike, Daily Bruin staffers meet with Communications Board

This post was updated April 15 at 2:32 p.m.

The Daily Bruin editorial staff met with The Bruin’s publishing board Wednesday to call for reforms in the policies governing the appointment of future editors in chief, after several Bruin staff members announced a strike Tuesday.

Forty-three staffers, consisting of editors and contributors, drafted and signed a letter announcing the strike against the Associated Students UCLA Communications Board, the publisher for The Bruin and nine other UCLA Student Media publications, after learning the board had appointed an editor in chief candidate other than the one the staff had endorsed.

Every year, The Bruin’s staff members participate in a hearing to deliberate about the editor in chief applicants and cast a vote for who to endorse. The Communications Board then interviews all the applicants and makes the final decision on who to appoint, taking the staff endorsement into consideration. The Board had consistently followed the staff endorsement for nearly a decade until this year, when it diverged from the staff endorsement in favor of the nonendorsed applicant.

Following the notice of strike, the Communications Board wrote a letter in response stating the rationale for its appointment and reiterating its right to make the final decision. The letter was published in The Bruin as an op-ed, along with the initial staffers’ letter.

The board also agreed to meet with staff Wednesday to discuss their concerns.

During the meeting, of The Bruin staff and the Communications Board discussed how to reform the editor in chief appointment process and what considerations the board takes into account when appointing an editor.

The Communications Board was unable to disclose information regarding the specific considerations it made during the executive session because of rules in its constitution.

The staff also questioned why the Communications Board had the final decision given its more limited interactions with the applicants.

Tim Groeling, a communication professor and faculty member of the board, said The Bruin as an institution impacts everyone on campus, so these decisions should be made by people who can take these campus wide interests into account.

“There needs to be distance between the immediate interest of the people making the decision and the long-term interest of the organization,” Groeling said.

Groeling said he thinks the members of the board should not have a direct relationship with student media organizations to provide more diverse perspectives when deciding leadership.

Groeling added a solution would be to de-emphasize the staff endorsement or hold the results until the Communication Board votes.

Abhishek Shetty, an Opinion senior staff writer, said at the meeting not disclosing the staff endorsement reduces transparency and gives the Communications Board more power.

Amy Baumgartner, managing editor, said The Bruin’s section editors met to reach a consensus for the paper’s future actions.

Baumgartner said the goal of the strike has shifted from asking the Communications Board to respect the staff endorsement toward enacting institutional reforms of the board’s process for appointing future editors in chief.

“We think the strike did what it was supposed to do and now we’re moving to other ways to achieve our goals,” Baumgartner said.

Raunak Devjani, Arts and Entertainment editor, said the paper continued production even with a short-handed staff, with editors taking on more than their normal responsibilities.

The Communications Board, formerly named Publication Board, has made the final decision on the appointment of the editor in chief position since 1962. During the meeting, Groeling said the last time the Communications Board went against the staff endorsement was in 2002. In fact, the staff endorsed applicant in 2002 was selected by the Communications Board.

“What we disagree with is the Communications Board’s move to ignore the staff endorsement, its refusal to disclose their reasons for doing so and its denial of any avenue to appeal their decision,” the Bruin staff on strike said in the letter.

The Bruin editorial staff conducted a six-hour hearing last Friday and endorsed an applicant with 58% of the votes.

In an executive session, the Communications Board voted with two-thirds majority for an applicant the staff did not endorse, according to a response letter. Groeling said at the Wednesday meeting, while they considered the staff endorsement, the board did not find the 58% to be a significant majority.

Elysia Ouyang, an assistant Design editor who went on strike, said they felt the Communications Board’s decision negated the work they have done in the past three years with the paper.

“The way we voted was not arbitrary. It was deliberative and thoughtful and for the Communications Board to disregard that was a big slap in the face,” Ouyang said. “This decision is essentially silencing my voice on internal issues involving the Daily Bruin.”

Devjani said she recognized the need for reform but felt striking was not the right way to achieve reform.

“(The Bruin’s) mission first and foremost is to inform the UCLA and Westwood community with relevant and timely news, and striking would have hindered our ability to do so,” Devjani said. “I think we could have approached the (Communications) Board directly before any strike letter was released and requested for a platform to express our concerns with the process.”

Devjani added she understood the Communications Board could override the staff decision before the staff hearing and felt the process should be reformed prior to next year’s hearing.

Jacob Preal, current editor in chief, said he does not think the strike should cause a divide in the organization.

“While many of our staffers had, in fact, returned to work Thursday, we still stand collectively in solidarity with every member and eagerly await the opportunity to reform a process that many in the newsroom feel has failed them,” Preal said in a written statement.

Preal said the staff will wait until another meeting between section editors and the Communications Board this weekend before making a decision about how to move forward.

“The staff plans to use this upcoming meeting to formulate a future plan that benefits a unified front of both strikers and those who continued working this week,” Preal said. “While I cannot speak for every staffer, the Daily Bruin will continue working in its current, limited capacity in the interim.”