Baseball boasts successful start in opening day comeback win over St. John’s

Coach John Savage started sophomore right-hander Zach Pettway knowing he was made for Fridays.

“Pettway is a competitor,” Savage said. “That’s the one thing he’ll give you day in and day out. He looked like a Friday-night guy to me.”

No. 5 UCLA baseball (1-0) started its season with a 3-2 comeback victory over defending Big East conference champion St. John’s (0-1) after rain delayed the start of the 2019 season by 35 minutes.

Junior right-hander Ryan Garcia’s flexor injury left the No. 1 rotation spot open for the Bruins, who turned to Pettway to make the opening night start. The sophomore gave up two unearned runs and struck out nine batters through six innings.

In the fourth inning, he gave up a two-out RBI-single that put the Red Storm ahead 1-0. The very next at-bat, Pettway balked to move designated hitter Mitchell Henshaw into scoring position after he knocked in the go-ahead run. But Pettway battled back and a struck out the next batter on a 3-2 fastball.

“When you realize you’re down and you are in a red zone, (you) treat it like a stoplight,” Pettway said. “Realizing when you are there, to then step off, catch your breath and then get yourself into a green light so that you’re ready to go.”

At the plate, the Bruins managed three hits through just over five innings against right-hander Sean Mooney – who struck out eight batters. UCLA’s second, third and fourth hitters as a group went a combined one-for-eight against the righty, with the trio’s only hit being an infield single by junior second baseman Chase Strumpf.

“Sometimes we’ll go barrel after barrel and the results aren’t there and so we kinda just get frustrated,” said Strumpf. “But you know we’ve gotten better over time at sticking to that approach that we’ll get rewarded eventually.”

In the sixth, the Bruins scored their first run run thanks off a pinch-hit RBI-triple by senior outfielder Jake Pries minimizing the Red Storm’s lead to 2-1. After a pitching change going into the seventh inning, junior third baseman Ryan Kreidler reached on an infield single and eventually scored the tying run when Strumpf walked with the bases loaded. With two out and the bases still loaded, freshman center fielder Matt McLain gave the Bruins the lead for good when he drew a walk after a nine-pitch battle with lefty Nick Mondak.

“(McLain) fought, he fought right in the middle of that at-bat,” Savage said. “It goes to show you how mature he is. I think there was some good patience there and vision … and it changed the game.”

Sophomore right-hander Holden Powell closed out the game in the ninth and earned the save to secure UCLA’s victory.

“I’m happy with (the result),” Savage said. “It wasn’t perfect but it was a good start.”

UCLA will continue its series with St. John’s on Saturday at 2 p.m.

Women’s basketball yields to Stanford, ceding its 6-game win streak

It was a roller-coaster game for the Bruins.

UCLA women’s basketball (15-10, 8-5 Pac-12) snapped its six-game winning streak in its 65-51 loss to No. 10 Stanford (20-4, 10-3) on Friday. The Bruins held the Cardinal to under 10 points in both the first and third quarters, but coach Cori Close said UCLA was unable to play consistently.

“We didn’t match the urgency of (Stanford’s) focus,” Close said. “I just wish we executed the game plan I know we’re capable of on a more consistent basis.”

UCLA held Stanford to a season-low eight points on 23.5 percent shooting in the first quarter and took a 13-8 lead heading into the second period. But the Cardinal opened the second quarter with an 11-0 run and closed with a 13-0 run.

The Bruins shot 2-of-16 from the field in the second frame while the Cardinal went 10-of-13 and ended the period with three consecutive 3s.

Close said the defense’s inability to stifle Stanford’s scoring led to UCLA’s offensive troubles.

“(It was a combination of) not getting enough stops so that we can play to (getting) the kind of shots we want,” Close said. “(Also) they wouldn’t have been able to set their 2-3 zone so perfectly and neatly and cleanly if we got stops and (had) gotten out and running.”

UCLA entered halftime trailing Stanford 35-19.

Sophomore forward Michaela Onyenwere – who led UCLA in scoring with 21 points – opened the second half with an and-one layup, sparking a 17-2 run.

“Just in the locker room, coach (Close) emphasized to us that we have more in us,” Onyenwere said. “She was disappointed with how we played in the first half. I think we knew that too and we gave up 27 points in the second quarter. … That’s just something we don’t pride ourselves on.”

The Bruins chipped away at the 16-point halftime deficit and brought the Cardinal lead within one after a step-back jumper from Onyenwere. But Stanford forward Alanna Smith drained a 3-pointer midway through the third quarter, halting UCLA’s comeback opportunity.

“(The 3) was late in the shot clock,” Close said. “We had played pretty good defense for a long period of time. Those are really tough plays – give credit to (Smith). It was a big shot. And yeah, I think that was a real backbreaker. We lost a little momentum at that point and we sort of never got our mojo back.”

The Cardinal iced the Bruins with a 10-0 run following a Stanford timeout at the beginning of the fourth quarter.

Senior guard Kennedy Burke said the changes in momentum hindered UCLA’s offensive tempo throughout the game.

“When we’re playing good defense it leads to good offense,” Burke said. “The fact that we just had those dips – it wasn’t really good for us because we didn’t really have a rhythm on offense, so we just had to change our defense.”

UCLA will face California (14-10, 5-8) for the final time of the regular season Sunday.

Bigger than basketball

The Bruins and the Cardinal represented the Play4Kay initiative of the Kay Yow Cancer Fund for funding cancer research during Friday’s pregame ceremony.

Both teams warmed up in T-shirts supporting the cause and participated in a silent walk around the perimeter of the court, holding signs written with the name of a loved one who has been affected by cancer.

“I asked our team how many players or staff have been directly affected by losing someone to women’s cancer,” Close said. “Almost 90 percent raised their hand.”

Cancer survivors walked out with each player during pregame introductions, including freshman guard Ahlana Smith’s mother and gymnastics coach Valorie Kondos Field.

Close said she takes Kay Yow’s message to “never let the urgent get in way of the important” to heart.

“As a leader, I want to respond and help our team get better and attack that,” Close said. “But in the big scheme of things, … when you just pause for a second and go, ‘You know what, this (loss to Stanford) hurts our heart, but you know what, cancer hurts a whole lot more people than that.’”

The Quad: A forgotten massacre in the heart of LA echoes through history in extant prejudices

We rightfully want to learn from history’s mistakes, but navigating the uglier results of history can often be both difficult and muddled. However, interaction with history doesn’t have to be stagnant: in Hidden Histories, Daily Bruin staffer Alexandra Ferguson will reflect on various aspects of Los Angeles’ history.

One of the largest lynchings in U.S. history didn’t happen in the South – it happened on the same ground on which Union Station stands today.

In the 1800s Los Angeles was still considered the “Wild West.” Though it was small, it was a dirty, violent city with a higher murder rate than that of New York or Chicago at the time. With a population of only about 6,000, mob and vigilante justice were commonplace in the city that only employed six police officers.

Los Angeles was small but growing, and much of this growth came from immigration. The 1800s brought a wave of immigration to the U.S. from Europe and Asia. Chinese immigration through San Francisco that began in the 1850s was immediately met with suspicion and distrust from white Americans; but, though the Chinese population took on much of the hard labor and low-paying jobs, they were still able to open businesses and establish networks to try and lift up their communities.

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(Ashley Phuong/Daily Bruin)

By 1870, the Chinese population in Los Angeles was 172, or about 3 percent of the city’s 5,728 people. More than half of the 172 Chinese people in Los Angeles lived along a single street: Calle de Los Negros. Calle de Los Negros was one of the most infamous and dangerous places in the state, with many brothels, gambling halls and saloons. The stretch of street where the 101 Freeway stands today was, at the time, labeled a “sinkhole of depravity.

A rivalry between two powerful Chinese tongs, or group organizations, led by Yo Hing and Sam Yeun came to a conflict over the kidnapping of a woman married to one of Yeun’s men. On Oct. 23, 1871, Ah Choy, one of the workers sent from San Francisco to retrieve the woman, shot at Yo Hing while he was walking down the Calle. Both were arrested and then bailed out. That same night was spent in preparation for an open conflict between the two groups.

The next day, a shooting broke out at 4 p.m. on the Calle. Patrolman Jesus Bilderrain heard the commotion and rushed outside to find Ah Choy shot through the neck. As Bilderrain tried to separate the fighters, he was hit with bullets, causing saloon owner Robert Thompson to rush to his aid. Gunmen inside an adobe house then fatally shot Thompson.

Immediately after Thompson’s death, a report spread that a group of Chinese people were shooting at white people, which quickly attracted a huge crowd of about 500 to the street. The largely white mob surrounded the house where the unseen gunmen were shooting from. The first Chinese man to run from inside the house to the street was shot, and the second was dragged to Tomlinson’s corral at the end of the street and hanged.

The mob then began going from houses to businesses where Chinese people lived and worked, destroying their belongings, stealing their valuables and dragging some of the men and boys out into the street. Members of the mob climbed onto people’s houses, cut holes in their roofs and shot at families.

One of the first to be killed was Dr. Gene Tong, a respected doctor welcomed by both the Chinese and white communities. A local shoemaker was reported to have said, “God damn him, if you don’t put a rope around his neck, I’ll shoot him anyhow.”

As makeshift gallows were being set up at a wagon shop toward the end of the street, the owner John Goller protested and tried to stop the rioters. His cries were silenced when a member of the mob pushed a gun into his face and told him to “Dry up, you son of a bitch.” Five people were hanged at his shop. Ten more were hanged elsewhere, and at least four were shot in the street.

The mob searched for any Chinese people they could find, regardless of whether they were involved in the original gunfight. Two of those hanged were only 18 years old, and one was said to have only been in the city a few days. Only one of the victims of the lynching is thought to have been involved in the original gunfight.

In an outcry throughout the country, people called for the lawlessness of the “Wild West” to end, but it was difficult for prosecution to find perpetrators for specific murders because of the mob nature of the lynchings.

A grand jury returned only 25 indictments for the murders, but only 10 men were brought to trial, and out of those 10, only eight were ever convicted. Laws at the time prevented Asians from testifying against white people in court, and these laws in combination with suspect “legal technicalities” ensured those convicted got their charges overturned. No member of the mob was ever punished.

Not only did racist laws keep Chinese Americans and immigrants from fair trials, unfair and heavy monthly taxes were levied on Chinese people with the “Chinese police tax”. In expansionist America, both anti-Chinese and anti-immigrant sentiment was strong. White settlers and citizens believed Chinese migrants drove wages down and saw them as unassimilable, fearing for “American family values.”

Though lynchings were outlawed in Los Angeles after this, the city, hoping to attract people, quickly dropped all mention of the massacre, and soon the tragedy was nearly forgotten.

Now dubbed the Capital of Asian America, areas of Los Angeles County, like the San Gabriel Valley and Monterey Park, have the highest populations of Chinese Americans of any municipalities in the U.S. The Chinese population in California and the U.S. survived through unjust laws, unfair taxation, and hateful attacks to gain civil rights, increasing representation through advocacy efforts.

10 percent of Los Angeles’ entire population killed 10 percent of Los Angeles’ Chinese population Oct. 24,1871. The site of the massacre is where current-day Union Station is, in the historic, oldest part of Los Angeles.

A problem we face when learning about tragedies that happened nearly 150 years ago is one of empathy and connection. Making something that happened that long ago feel tangible and not just a generic part of history becomes harder when there is little to no mention of it in textbooks, or memory of it where it happened. Remembering events like these is important not only because the events happened, but because aftershocks can still be felt these many years later.

The 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act was the first piece of legislature to ban immigrants of a particular ethnic or national category, thus creating the concept of “illegal immigration” in America. Though this act was overturned in 1943, unconstitutional “Muslim Bans” and debates about “border security” remind us of our nation’s sordid past.

Concert review: Panic! at the Disco melds theatrics with sentiment in indelible live show

Brendon Urie makes a stadium of 18,000 people feel small.

Pop-rock band Panic! at the Disco is currently on a tour of the United States for their 2018 album, “Pray for the Wicked.” Frontman Urie, along with the band’s three touring members, took the stage at the Honda Center on Thursday night for the Los Angeles leg of the tour. The band played a whopping total of 28 songs ranging from early hits to a re-imagination of “The Greatest Show.” As Urie danced across the stage, belting out countless high notes, it became clear that he truly is the greatest showman.

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Betty Who was among the opening acts at the Honda Center Thursday night. (Amy Dixon/Photo editor)

Before Panic! performed, engaging openers Betty Who and Two Feet each took the stage. The lights faded out after both sets were complete, and a 10-minute countdown clock appeared on the screens – the main event was about to begin. When the clock struck zero, Urie was rocketed out from a trap door in the stage and started the show with an immediately upbeat energy. White streamers shot across the crowd, and Urie sang “(Fuck a) Silver Lining,” waving out to onlookers.

Urie strutted across the stage in a gold suit as he exhibited his outstanding performance ability with falsettos high enough to break glass. Ten songs into the show, after playing classic hits such as “LA Devotee” and “Nine in the Afternoon,” Panic! blessed the audience with one of their less mainstream songs, “Casual Affair.” Urie’s raw vocal talent lent him the ability to capture the vulnerable essence of the band’s slower song as a flood of green lasers surrounded him in a circle and projected over the heads of the crowd. Urie dancing and laughing with the bass and lead guitar players throughout this first half of the set showed a fun camaraderie about them that made the experience all the more personal.

Although the colossal venue had almost every seat filled, Panic! found a way to make each fan feel special. During “Dancing’s Not A Crime,” numerous fans were projected onto the stage screens as they grooved along with the song, and Urie took time to point to and acknowledge a fan holding up a light-up sign. But the ultimate audience interaction was yet to come.

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Two Feet took the stage to perform for the crowd before Panic! at the Disco's set. (Amy Dixon/Photo editor)

Urie did his signature walk through the crowd as he sang his 2016 hit “Death of a Bachelor.” The performance made it even clearer how much the singer loves and appreciates admirers, Urie smiling ear to ear while he hugged and high-fived some of them in the audience. The spectacle of a concert culminated in a single, small but important moment as I experienced the miracle up-close, reaching out for Urie’s hand from the seated section to the side of the floor.

Urie then made his way back to the stage while performing a mashup of Bonnie Raitt’s “I Can’t Make You Love Me” and one of the band’s originals, “Dying in LA,” playing a grand piano that hovered over the crowd members’ heads suspended by wires. The singer gently played the keys and sang the slow and emotional song, before standing up on the platform to wave to people sitting in the highest nosebleed seats.

And then came a shift in gears from slow ballads to the upbeat tune of “Girls/Girls/Boys.” Urie picked up pride flags from the audience and wore them around his neck. The crowd then lit up in a rainbow as audience members shone their lights through cut-out paper hearts distributed before the show by the fans who started the #PATDhearts project. The fans’ positive energy and goal of inclusivity made out to be one of the most memorable parts of the “Pray for the Wicked” tour. The moment they created was a heartwarming experience that strengthened the band’s preconceived stance as an ally to the LGBTQ+ community.

24 songs into the set and a backflip off a drum set later, Urie took on the ultimate challenge of covering Queen’s “Bohemian Rhapsody.” He made the high notes throughout the song sound effortless and gained obvious approval from the crowd, who loudly sang the lyrics along with him.

Just when the show seemed over, Urie confidently and playfully emerged shirtless from the stage for the band’s planned encore. The three songs ended with Urie giving a funny, yet endearingly inspirational message for the crowd to take home with them.

“It’s astronomically ridiculous and insane and amazing that any of us were born. You had to race millions of tadpoles to the finish line, and the only reason you’re here on this planet is because you already got first place,” Urie said. “I’m so glad you guys won – you’re No. 1 in my heart.”

A final explosion of confetti brought the show to a close. With a strong mix of crowd interaction, conversations with the audience, songs and visuals, Panic! at the Disco has fully nailed the concert game. And they certainly left with more than “High Hopes” that their performance left concert-goers with a show they would remember for years to come.

Week six: Breathalyzers for frats, facility for athletes, Kevin De León for Luskin

This Week in the News serves as The Quad’s space for reflection on current events at and around UCLA. Every week, Daily Bruin staffers will analyze some of the most significant stories to keep readers up to speed.

As midterms come to an end, a lot of us can’t help but feel the most important piece of news is UCLA students get to destress with a long weekend. As the temperature decreases and rain falls, the news keep coming in hot as a new lecturer joins the staff and a student-athlete academic center is unveiled, here are The Quad’s top picks for this week’s news stories.

UCLA Athletics announces plans to build center for student-athletes

In an effort to promote the cohesion of athletics and academics, UCLA Athletics announced its plans to build a new student-athlete academic center Wednesday.

UCLA Athletics unveiled plans to build the Mo Ostin Academic Center for Student-Athletes. With three levels, study and tutoring spaces, technology labs and a flashy new Hall of Champions displaying the Bruins’ 116 NCAA Championship trophies, the center aims to provide balance for student-athletes – a display of both academic and athletic achievement.The new building will be located on the east side of the J.D. Morgan Center, the main hub of student-athletics on campus.

The athletic department has launched a fundraising campaign to raise $35 million dollars along with music executive and alumnus Morris “Mo” Ostin, who donated $15 million. If the name sounds familiar, that’s because it is – Ostin’s name is also on the Mo Ostin Basketball Center and the Evelyn and Mo Ostin Music Center.

Interfraternity Council will issue Breathalyzers to chapters for use at parties

UCLA Interfraternity Council has updated its Risk Management Policy to include a new measure that dictates fraternity members will have to use Breathalyzers to maintain the health and safety of party attendees.

Attendees will not be forced to blow into the Breathalyzers if requested, and fraternities will not be required to use them. Instead, the policy states fraternities must have them during the pre-party check and their use will be at the discretion of each individual fraternity’s risk management team and the security guards at the door.

IFC, along with UCLA Student Health and UCPD, have yet to set a BAC limit at which fraternities will be required to contact emergency services.

The policy’s effectiveness has been debated by students. Some believe this will help promote safe drinking on campus, while others are skeptical of the vagueness of the bylaw, the power given to fraternity members, and how the Breathalyzers might serve to justify sexual assault and binge drinking.

Former state Sen. Kevin de León to teach public policy courses at UCLA

Former president pro tempore of the California State Senate, Kevin de León, will be joining UCLA’s faculty at the Luskin School of Public Affairs in the spring. Around the same time, the new public affairs undergraduate major will start accepting applications.

De León has experience in state Legislature, having worked in the Assembly and serving as the president of the Senate. Students may remember him from the midterm elections last year, as he ran against incumbent Dianne Feinstein for U.S. Senate. Accordingly, he will be teaching a class tentatively called “California Policy Challenges: A Policymaker’s Perspective” in the spring.

De Leon’s time at UCLA will also be spent conducting research on how domestic policy challenges affect Latinos with the UCLA Latino Policy & Politics Initiative.

UCLA Housing and Hospitality Services to combat slow Hill Wi-Fi in the future

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As UCLA students become increasingly connected with wireless devices, the Hill’s internet continues to slow down.

The UCLA Housing and Hospitality Services office has addressed Wi-Fi concerns for students living on the Hill. They plan to build infrastructure that promotes network efficiency by adding more network devices and cabling.

Valerie Vahling, director of information technology for Housing and Hospitality Services, said she recognizes UCLA networks are slow on the Hill because of increased number of wireless devices per student. Some UCLA residence halls were built before the prominence of electronics, and they lack the infrastructure to provide good connectivity for students.

Even though Hill residents find the Wi-Fi speed below average, Vahling assures some measures have been taken and points to The Study at Hedrick as a hotspot where the network works faster to allow students a better experience while studying.

Infrastructure projects in the residence halls can be long and strenuous, enough to disturb student activity. This is why finding a time to take on these projects has proven so difficult.

For those Hill residents in search of immediate solutions, the Office of Housing and Hospitality Services recommends reporting network problems to the Policy Review Board or the Student Technology Center in Covel Commons.

LA City Council members express opposition to new domestic violence definition

The Department of Jusice Office on Violence Against Women limited the definition of domestic violence on their website to only felony or misdemeanor violent crimes, excluding other types of domestic abuse previously acknowledged.

In response, three LA City Council members, including the representative for UCLA’s Council District 5, have spoken against these changes. They claim this narrowing of definition discredits victims and discourages them from seeking support.

UCLA officials, however, have assured that the change of the definition on the website does not change the law, which still sees domestic violence as a crime encompassing many types of abuse. Still, the council members have introduced a motion asking that the LAPD notify them of any difficulties in handling domestic violence caused by this definition change.

Even though the definition change cannot simply change the law or the resources organizations supporting victims of domestic violence, some believe this definition change is dangerous because it might affect society’s definition of domestic violence and thus change the nature of policies regarding the issue.