Victory rains down on Bruins in golf win after one-year drought

The Bruins have ended their yearlong drought.

UCLA men’s golf placed first out of 18 teams, finishing with a 37-under 815, at the SeattleU Redhawk Invitational in University Place, Washington, on Tuesday for its first win since February 2018. The Bruins were coming off their worst finish of the season at the Southern Highlands Collegiate, where they placed 13th out of 15 teams.

The Chambers Bay Golf Course hosted the U.S. Amateur Championship in 2010 and the U.S. Open in 2015. Coach Derek Freeman said the course was challenging but the Bruins were able to navigate it well.

“It was a U.S. Open golf course, it was very challenging and we set it up in a way that was scoreable,” Freeman said. “Any time that you can win in a sport on this level, it becomes really special – it’s really hard. And we’ve been knocking on the door, we’ve been working hard, we told our guys we’ve gotta be aggressive and we came out firing on all cylinders and I’m (really) proud of them.”

Junior Hidetoshi Yoshihara placed first with a 13-under 200, his second collegiate win at UCLA. In the second round, Yoshihara shot a 9-under 62, which tied Roy Moon’s second round at the 2003 TaylorMade Classic for lowest in program history. Yoshihara became the third Bruin to record a score of 9-under or lower, along with senior Cole Madey in 2017 and John Merrick in 2003.

“More than anything, we’ve been trying to get (Yoshihara) to have a solid foundation with his swing and to understand where to place the ball,” Freeman said. “I think when he does these things he’s really successful.”

Sophomore Devon Bling tied for second and finished with an 11-under 202, good for his best performance the year.

“I was really proud of the way I played, on all aspects of the game,” Bling said. “I hit the ball really well and I had a lot of good strokes on my cuts. The course wasn’t too hard, the fairways were wide but it really did punish you for hitting bad shots.”

Bling, after finishing as runner-up in the 2018 U.S. Amateur Championships, earned invitations to this year’s Master’s and U.S. Open tournaments. Bling said this week’s tournament was good preparation for next week’s Master’s tournament.

“This tournament was really good for me to see that everything in my golf game was firing on all cylinders,” Bling said. “I hit really well, I had a lot of good strokes putting and it gave me a lot of confidence going into next week knowing that I performed in a tournament atmosphere at this level.”

Freeman said while Bling has always been a power hitter, his recent focus on control helped him round out his game ahead of the tournament.

“We had him learn how to control the golf ball, he’s got so much power and he can hit it so far that we have to teach him how to monitor that,” Freeman said. “When he’s completely in control of his swing, he shoots really good scores. Any time you play well it gives you confidence and I think that will really help him going into next week.”

Freshman Sean Maruyama shot a 7-under 206 and tied for seventh, becoming the third Bruin to finish inside the top 10. Madey also placed in the top 20 with a finish of 5-under 208, tying him for 13th.

UCLA will play its next tournament at the Wyoming Cowboy Classic at the Whirlwind Golf Club in Chandler, Arizona, from Monday to Tuesday.

 

UCLA football ready to spring with positive outlook on upcoming season

There is a different vibe surrounding the Bruins this spring.

Rising sophomore defensive lineman Atonio Mafi said that last season was difficult at times for UCLA football, but he felt a new wave of chemistry come across the team when they came out for spring practices.

“We’re just a lot more experienced this year and the team camaraderie is definitely way higher than it was last year,” Mafi said. “There’s a lot of trust going on in the locker room.”

Mafi said he has also built a strong relationship with rising senior center Boss Tagaloa, someone he has been looking up to since his days in high school.

Mafi, who arrived at UCLA before the start of last season weighing in at over 400 pounds, said Tagaloa has been an instrumental figure in helping him shed nearly 50 pounds in the past year by motivating him to keep at it.

“(Tagaloa) is kind of like my big brother,” Mafi said. “We would come in together everyday in the evening and work out together, so pretty much just following behind him. Some days I didn’t want to go out there but I’d see him go so I was like, ‘Alright, I got to go out too if he’s going to go.’”

Tagaloa is no stranger when it comes to grinding toward a goal. He made the transition from defensive lineman to center last season and ended up becoming the team’s starter by the end of the year.

While Mafi said he would still like to drop an additional 20 pounds before the season begins in August, he expects to be a much more effective player than he was a year ago thanks to his slimmer frame.

“It’ll definitely help me move easier and just be more comfortable in space because that’s the one thing – moving around within all our blitz packages and stunts and stuff,” Mafi said.

On the other side of the ball, rising redshirt junior wideout Demetric Felton is also expecting a breakout year from the team’s experienced receiving core, one that will bring back each of its top three receivers from a season ago – rising senior Theo Howard, rising sophomore Chase Cota and Felton.

“I think there’s a huge potential for us to be great this season,” Felton said.

Howard led the group last season with 677 yards on 51 receptions while Cota caught 13 passes for 168 yards as a true freshman.

Felton – who hauled in 20 catches for 207 yards and a touchdown last season – said he is also hoping to see more time at running back after appearing at the position on a number of occasions last season.

“I’m not sure myself, but I do hope that it carries over to the season,” Felton said. “I would like to do both and be used wherever I can help the team out.”

Felton carried the ball five times for 30 yards last season.

Women’s tennis seeks to draw on doubles success in rematch against Pepperdine

The Bruins will be back on the courts for the fifth time in 11 days.

No. 8 UCLA women’s tennis (12-4) will face No. 9 Pepperdine (11-3), who is riding an eight-game winning streak, at the Los Angeles Tennis Center on Wednesday afternoon.

“We had a really good weekend against Cal and Stanford,” said coach Stella Sampras Webster. “I was really pleased with the way our team competed and the level of play.”

UCLA suffered its first conference loss against Stanford on Friday. The matchup was decided in the third set on the fourth singles court, where senior Alaina Miller was bested by No. 22 Emily Arbuthnott 6-3, 3-6, 6-3. The following day, the Bruins trounced the Bears 6-1.

Jada Hart, who was named Pac-12 Player of the Week last week, has won four straight singles matches, including two victories against top-30 opponents. The redshirt junior is also on a four-game winning streak in doubles, playing three of the four matches with freshman Elysia Bolton on court one.

“I really like our one and two doubles teams,” Sampras Webster said. “Third team is still in (the) air. We’ve had some good wins and it’s been solid. We might mix (freshman Taylor Johnson) in there and see what that brings.”

UCLA is one of two programs in the nation – along with No. 2 North Carolina – to boast two top-15 doubles combinations. Hart and Bolton are ranked No. 11, while the senior duo of Ayan Broomfield and Gabby Andrews is ranked seventh.

The Bruins have secured the doubles point in their last four matchups, after a stretch in which they dropped the doubles point in five out of seven matches.

The last time UCLA dropped the doubles point was in its first encounter of the season against Pepperdine at the Ralphs-Straus Tennis Center on March 13. Across the six singles courts, UCLA only managed to win three sets.

“I think I didn’t play that well in doubles,” said No. 98 sophomore Abi Altick. “Also, in singles, I can look at the match and make some adjustments.”

The duo of Altick and Bolton fell 6-4 on court three in the Bruins’ first match against the Waves. Altick’s match in singles was unfinished, knotted at one set apiece.

Wednesday’s match will be the third of UCLA’s six-game homestand and third consecutive matchup against a top-15 team.

“We love playing at home and we have a good support system so we’re looking forward to that,” Johnson said.

Economics concentration offers students small class sizes, professional skills

A concentration in the economics department aims to enable undergraduates to explore the field of value investing through a specialized curriculum.

Students must apply to join the concentration, which allows them to take three courses that focus on value investing through fall and winter quarter. The concentration, which is in a three year pilot phase, accepts a maximum of 40 students every academic year. Students apply in spring quarter, typically in their second year, and start in the fall quarter of the next academic year, said Humberto Merino-Hernández, the founding manager of the concentration.

Merino-Hernández, a Riordan MBA Fellow at the UCLA Anderson School of Management, said he and the other founders developed the idea of a value investing concentration in December 2017. The program officially began in February 2018.

Since then, the concentration has given students access to smaller class sizes and opportunities to interact with investment firms.

William Simon, one of the program’s co-founders and a law and economics professor, said that although the concentration aims to introduce students to investing as a whole, the concentration places emphasis on value investing, a school of investing founded by Columbia Business School professor Ben Graham in the 1930s.

“The idea that (Graham) set forth is that it is possible to purchase securities that are selling for less than their true value … It’s somewhat of a science and somewhat of an art to determine what is true value,” Simon said.

Merino-Hernández said courses in the concentration have a lower student-to-faculty ratio than other economics courses.

“(The economics major) is a very impacted major, where not a lot of students get that individualized support. What a concentration allows us to do is reduce the class sizes,” Merino-Hernández said. “Some classes have upwards of 200 students, while the (concentration’s courses have) a maximum of 40.”

Merino-Hernández said smaller class sizes would not only help students academically, but professionally as well.

He added that although the lessons taught in the value investing concentration were based on finance, accounting and economics, many of the courses’ underlying lessons taught students soft skills necessary for their careers.

“(The concentration focuses on) things like picking your partners for business and relationships … We talk about things like ‘a circle of competence,’ like focusing on one or two things rather than spreading yourself thin across a bunch of topics and career paths.” Merino-Hernández said.

The concentration is launching a new course called “Field Projects in Investing” this quarter, which groups students into teams to work with an investment company.

Students’ main objective in the course is to execute a research project for a real company, Merino-Hernández said.

“You can think about it as a senior thesis, where the students are working under a professor, but instead of that, they’re working under an actual investment company where they flesh out an investment idea over the course of a quarter,” Merino-Hernández said.

“Field Projects in Investing” is a component of the Simon Fellowship, a program that allows students in the concentration to continue with their specialized coursework for another year.

He said the concentration program aims to add Chartered Financial Analyst exam preparation to the Simon Fellowship’s curriculum as well. This would allow the concentration to sponsor students who are interested in taking the CFA exam by waiving their exam fees.

Merino-Hernández said the economics department plans to offer more concentrations in the future and model them after the structure of the value investing concentration if the pilot program is successful.

“Once the pilot phase ends, which would be Fall 2021, then we would expand our model that we’ve created into the other concentrations like entrepreneurship, wealth management and technology, and so on.” Merino-Hernández said.

Simon said although the concentration focuses on investing, it could help prepare students for careers in other fields as well.

“Another group of careers students may decide that they wish to be in would be investment banking … When you invest, you have to understand the particular business that you’re looking at,” Simon said. “As an investment banker, you also have to understand the business that you’re looking at, but rather than investing money, an investment banker provides advice.”

Several students said the concentration has enabled them to develop professional skills they can apply directly to their future careers.

Michael Mapes, a third-year business economics student, said that as someone who always wanted to go into finance, the first course at UCLA where he felt he learned something of tangible value was one of the courses in the concentration.

“We learned everything from Buffett to Graham,” Mapes said. “It really got me excited for a potential future in finance.”

Angela Chen, fourth-year business economics and German student, said although the content of the concentration didn’t exactly align with her career aspirations, she thinks it fosters a beneficial environment for her career development.

“What I found really valuable is to be able to be in the concentration and study alongside a lot of people who have similar goals as me … I think the connections with those students in the concentration as well as some of the guest speakers will be very beneficial to me down the road,” Chen said.

Allison Walker, a fourth-year economics student, said the value investing concentration’s key benefit lies in the fact that its material had real world applications.

“I was learning stuff that was really relevant to a lot of work in the real world,” Walker said. “(The Economics major is) a lot more theoretical, so sometimes it doesn’t directly apply to a lot of the jobs that we’ll be working in right after graduation.”

Walker said she hopes the value investing concentration will continue to expand and offer opportunities to more students.

“Although it is a smaller program right now, the more students that get involved, the more (that) would enjoy and get a lot out of it,” Walker said.

Chancellor Gene Block supports switching UCLA to semester system

Chancellor Gene Block said he thinks UCLA should change to a semester system.

At a meeting with the Daily Bruin editorial board during week 10 of winter quarter, Block said he thinks changing from a quarter system could reduce stress for students. In a semester system, classes could have reading days before exams and give students more time between midterms, he said.

“It’s a different way to teach,” Block said. “It’s a different way to learn.”

Block said he thinks it is time to move away from the quarter system.

“The quarter system, in my view, is a failed system,” Block said. “Most schools have moved away from it, and it’s really mostly a West Coast phenomenon now and time to change.”

UCLA representatives did not state whether this is Block’s personal view or that of the UCLA administration.

Some students said they supported the quarter system.

Heba Shanaa, a third-year business economics student, said she thinks the quarter system offers more excitement than semesters.

“You get to restart and have new classes and have a first day again so I like that,” Shanaa said. “You don’t get bored.”

Yasmine El-Tayeb, a fourth-year theater student, said she likes taking a wider variety of class subjects under the quarter system.

“And you get rid of the classes you don’t like faster,” El-Tayeb added.

Reem Karmouta, a fourth-year human biology and society student, said she thinks the quick pace of the quarter system holds students accountable.

“You’re always forced to make sure you’re on top of your work and not falling behind which might happen in the semester system,” Karmouta said.

Others said they would prefer semesters.

Yash Lala, a first-year computer science student, said he thinks the quarters can feel rushed because he has little time between midterms.

Shawn Avidan, a first-year chemistry student, said while he likes the quarter system, he feels students have less time to digest material than they would with semesters.

“I feel like you get less of a chance to learn and you get less support from more classes with professors or TAs,” Avidan said.

Tobias Higbie, a history and labor studies professor who has worked under both systems, said he prefers semesters. Humanistic learning requires time for students to struggle with material and find answers themselves, Higbie said.

“I call it the ‘hall of mirrors phase,’” Higbie said. “It is frustrating, but learning how to find your own way out of that phase is the hallmark of higher education.”

Higbie added while he thinks switching to semesters would be disruptive for faculty, the change would work out in the long run.

“Syllabi are set. Approaches to teaching are geared to the 10 week quarter,” Higbie said. “That said, I think after a few years of trial and error we would make it work and get the benefits of the semester system.”

In 2003, Academic Senate faculty voted to oppose changing to a semester system. Albert Carnesale, the chancellor at the time, abided by their recommendation.

Block said he thinks the potential change will generate discussion among students. He said he views a switch to semesters as a possible stress-reduction measure for students.

However, Higbie said he does not think student stress stems from the quarter system, but rather the high costs of tuition and housing.

“But don’t stop with tinkering around the edges. Go to the heart of the matter: decades of austerity budgets, low wage growth and insanely expensive housing,” Higbie said. “These things produce at least as much stress, perhaps much more, than 10 week quarters.”

Block said a potential change to semesters would likely take years and a lot of student support to implement.

“I think students can help lead the way by being strong supporters,” Block said.

800 Degrees pizzeria to reopen Westwood location after closing last year

This post was updated April 3 at 3:18 p.m.

A Westwood pizzeria is reopening Wednesday.

800 Degrees Woodfired Kitchen is relaunching its Westwood location with a new franchise operating partner after closing in October. It will remain at its original location on Lindbrook Drive in Westwood Village.

Anthony Carron opened the 800 Degrees franchise’s first location in Westwood in 2012, serving custom-made Neapolitan-style pizzas. The restaurant chain has three other locations in Los Angeles, as well as 11 more in Nevada, Florida, New York, Japan and the Middle East.

The chain updated its menu to include rotisserie chicken and other woodfired foods in February 2018. According to Eater LA, Carron said they originally closed the Westwood location because its infrastructure could not accommodate their expanded woodfired kitchen concept, but they planned to return to the area in the future.

Lenny Rosenberg, the new location owner and franchise operating partner, said 800 Degrees has planned to relaunch in Westwood for a while and has renovated the location to better integrate equipment necessary for producing woodfired goods.

“We’ve been retrofitting the store to have an expanded menu that included woodfired chicken to complement the woodfired pizza,” Rosenberg said.

800 Degrees has changed its menu to offer options beyond pizzas such as salads, salmons and more woodfired items. It will also offer vegan options that were not available before, Rosenberg said.

The restaurant will now also offer delivery through third-party services such as DoorDash, UberEats and Postmates.

Some students said they were enthusiastic about the pizzeria’s return, while others said they had not heard of it before but would consider giving it a try.

Kaley Powers, a fourth-year fine arts student, said she is excited to have the restaurant back.

“I loved 800 Degrees, I thought they had a lot of good quality ingredients and especially being vegan, they had a lot of great options and were really accommodating,” Powers said. “I also liked the vibe, and the location was really convenient.”

Varun Sivashankar, a first-year mathematics student, said he had been to 800 Degrees before they closed and plans on returning.

“I quite like the pizza, it’s one of the best I’ve ever had, and it has an interesting concept where you get to see the pizza being made right there,” Sivashankar said. “One of my friends wanted to try it out, so I’m probably going to go with them.”

Cristina Padilla, a first-year cognitive science student, said she had not heard of 800 Degrees before but will consider giving it a try.

“Since I have a food account on Instagram, I am interested in trying new food out. So if I could hit up the place that would be awesome,” Padilla said.

Rosenberg said he hopes for a great turnout on opening day.

 

MFA candidates draw inspiration from history, global perspectives

This post was updated April 3 at 3:53 p.m.

The second of four final MFA showcases by the UCLA department of art will take place Thursday through April 12 at the New Wight Gallery in the Broad Art Center. Presented works will include frescos of abandoned buildings, interdisciplinary compilations and photographs examining auto repair shops in the United States and within former Soviet countries.

Graduate students Amedeo Polazzo, Brannon Rockwell-Charland and Aleksey Kondratyev will have their work highlighted in the showcase. Hanna Hur and William Wasserman’s works will also be displayed, but the former declined to comment and the latter did not respond to requests for an interview.

Amedeo Polazzo

The decay of abandoned buildings inspired Polazzo’s art.

The graduate student said he plans to present a combination of frescos and wall paintings in the showcase. His works, all untitled, feature places resembling suburbs, trailer parks or abandoned construction sites found in Central America or Southern Europe, he said.

“(These abandoned buildings are) never finished, so they remain in the middle of a city or countryside … in this state of in between, and that’s what I look more for. There’s nothing that can’t inspire you in a state like that,” Polazzo said.

One of his wall paintings depicts a ruined construction site with garden chairs lying on the floor and a little brick wall with rebars sticking out. A washed-out painting hanging atop the wall illustrates the decaying interior of an old villa with a person peeking through a bricked-up window.

Polazzo said he uses chalk pastels mixed with water to create the effect of a fresco painting with a light color scheme. Just like a construction site can become an actual building or fall into more decay, he said the washed-out color scheme could either vanish or become even more apparent. Polazzo said this creates the effect of an in between state that serves to disorient the spectator. Combining frescos with traditional paintings enabled him to play with the idea of intertwining inside and outside views, in which the inside becomes the outside, he said.

“Ideally, you’re disoriented and you have to replace yourself in this environment that you don’t know by looking at what is familiar to you,” Polazzo said. “This is an experience that you share with other people. … There’s a sort of equalizing moment that happens because everyone is in the same way replaced.”

[RELATED: MFA candidates showcase artwork inspired by unique backgrounds and interests]

Brannon Rockwell-Charland

Rockwell-Charland centers her artwork around family history and storytelling.

The graduate student plans to showcase an assortment of photographs, drawings, sculptures and personal documents. She said her artwork examines the roots of black history and feminism, relating them to her own life as a black woman.

One piece on display is a photo series called “Talking My Way out of the Paper Bag.” The photos document her trip to New Orleans where she researched the history of quadroon balls, brown paper bag tests and colonial sites. The brown paper bag principle was a test used to determine the degree of privilege an African-American had based on how closely their skin resembled the color of a paper bag. Rockwell-Charland’s photo compilation examines legacies of colorism connected to her research and how the issue relates to her own family and view of the world.

“The great thing about dealing with stuff that’s really deep and personal and has to do with family legacy is that it’s so gratifying to mine that history, but it also puts a lot of pressure on the presentation and the rendering,” Rockwell-Charland said.

Another piece, named “Suitcase Full of Gold,” features a suitcase which holds a silverware set that belonged to her boyfriend’s grandmother and was passed down. The sculpture is a family heirloom that Rockwell-Charland said she chose to present unaltered and in the context of art. She said she processes her place in the world through immersion in the history that defines everyday black women, like the ones who raised her – the family heirloom is a part of telling their story.

Rockwell-Charland said her works draw largely from the ideas of womanism – or black feminism – and minimalism. Because her artwork examines black history and race-related signifiers, she said she finds herself drawn to working with colors such as blacks, whites, grays, beiges and browns.

“I hope people will see something perhaps of themselves in (my artwork) or something maybe that prompts them to reflect on how they see or how they are seen,” Rockwell-Charland said.

[RELATED: Design media arts students put on rule-bending exhibit with mixed art forms]

Aleksey Kondratyev

Photographer Kondratyev initially traveled to Azerbaijan with the aim of capturing how countries around the Caspian Sea are connected to Southern California’s economy.

But he found the concept difficult to illustrate photographically, so instead, the graduate student shifted gears toward comparing auto repair shops between different post-Soviet countries and the United States. Kondratyev plans to showcase his ongoing project as a set of 16 framed photographs, with the four largest images focusing on auto repair workers. The other photographs are fragments of landscapes from the places he visited, such as the Caucasus Mountains.

Kondratyev said the combination of being born in Kyrgyzstan and having a father who worked in auto mechanics sparked his interest in the project. He grew fascinated by how traders can buy a totaled car in the U.S. and ship it internationally for repair in an eastern subsidiary economy, where the cost of labor is much cheaper, Kondratyev said. Through his photographs that illustrate auto mechanics, he aims to connect these different cultures and economies.

Kondratyev said it was his first time applying stain, or oil, to darken wooden frames. The frames serve to confine the photographs, and the countries they represent, as fragments of the larger work, he said.

“I like the kind of darker tone to it – it creates a frame like literally for the image in a way that I feel like light frames don’t,” Kondratyev said. “I’m interested in the spatial (aspects) of the landscapes as kind of these self-contained fragments of different parts of the world that are in the same physical space.”