Week eight: ‘Game of Thrones’ analyzed, CARE to lose director, Denove sentenced

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.

Week eight has been chock full of transitions for the UCLA community, the CARE program, Resident Government Councils and Game of Thrones fans. Here’s the Quad’s rundown of this week’s biggest news.

Winter has come: UCLA community evaluates ‘Game of Thrones’ impact, explores what’s next

About 17 million fans tuned in for the season eight premiere of HBO’s “Game of Thrones,” and continued to tune in to new episodes each Sunday. The third episode of the final season won the title of most tweeted-about episode of scripted television ever, with nearly 8 million tweets.

Not only has the show garnered over 52 million tweets in four months, but it also captured the imaginations of viewers for eight years now with its fantasy medieval setting and representation of trans-temporal human conflict. UCLA Byzantine art and archaeology professor Sharon Gerstel said that medieval power struggles within the series are used as a lens for viewing human conflict, a topic that transcends time.

Medievalist Kersti Francis further connects the show to the modern age, adding that the wall separating the people of Westeros from the wildlings in “Game of Thrones” can be seen as an allegory for Donald Trump’s immigration policy. The medieval lens makes it easier to view familiar concepts without appearing overtly political.

CARE program undergoes transition period in search for new director, staff

Former Campus Assault Resources & Education director Alicia Oeser’s contract was not renewed earlier this month, leaving CARE to interim director Nicole Green.

Some students and staff who have interacted with Oeser at CARE feel that her work has been left unfinished. They voiced concerns that such an important role has been left to a contracted position rather than a permanent one.

Green, the UCLA Counseling and Psychological Services executive director, said students can email her to join the search committee for a new director once the position is open for hire. CARE is also looking to hire more staff with experience in social work and psychology, and administrators hope to finalize personnel by fall.

UCLA professor emeritus sentenced to eight years in prison for sexual assault

Former UCLA professor Thomas Fairleigh Denove was sentenced Tuesday to six years in state prison for long-term sexual abuse of one child and an additional two years for a lewd act on another child. Both children were under the age of 14.

The sentencing took place at Van Nuys Courthouse West. The survivors’ grandmother read a statement from the survivors’ mother stating that justice has been served.

Denove was a professor in the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television and had been out on $2 million bail since November 2018.

Amendments to housing, residential councils’ constitution include change to stipends

Over the summer, ResLife eliminated around seven student representative positions under each Resident Government Council. With this restructuring came more money and more responsibility for the remaining council positions.

The constitution was ratified to include retroactive stipends for members, effective fall 2018, increasing individual compensation from $300 to $400 per quarter, and to $500 with fall training.

Some On-Campus Housing Council positions, such as financial director, will also be paid less in the future. However, stipends will not be retroactively retracted.

ResLife publicly discussed the changes, but they also claimed that not many students expressed interest in attending open meetings concerning the amendments.

New UCLA policy requires gender-inclusive amenities on campus

Proposed Policy 890 will require gender-inclusive facilities in every building on campus, according to Tuesday’s emailed announcement from assistant vice chancellor of Facilities Management Kelly Schmader. These facilities will be marked with textual signs, rather than gender-referencing pictograms.

Under the policy, existing one-person, gender-specific restrooms will be renovated to become one-person, gender-inclusive restrooms. Additionally, all new buildings must plan for multiple-occupancy, gender-inclusive restrooms and gender-inclusive changing rooms and showers in buildings where gender-specific changing rooms and showers are available.

UCLA women’s tennis doubles team continues on to compete in NCAA semifinal

The Bruins may have been eliminated from team competition, but individual players are still squaring off in Orlando, Florida.

UCLA women’s tennis (21-8, 8-2 Pac-12) saw its season come to an end after falling to North Carolina, but four Bruins still travelled to Florida to participate in the NCAA doubles and singles championships.

In the first round of doubles, freshman Elysia Bolton and redshirt junior Jada Hart faced off against Tennessee’s Sadie Hammond and Kaitlin Staines. The Bruins defeated the pair in a 7-6, 6-1 victory to advance to the second round of the competition.

Hart and Bolton’s run came to an end in the round of 16, as they fell 6-2, 7-6 to Michigan’s Kate Fahey and Brienne Minor.

Bolton also competed in the singles bracket and recorded a 6-1, 6-3 win over Florida’s McCartney Kessler in the first round. Bolton later carded a 4-6, 6-3, 7-5 victory over Texas’ Anna Turati to advance to the round of 16.

Bolton did not advance any further, as she fell to North Carolina’s Cameron Morra in three sets.

Hart also participated in the singles draw. Hart defeated Duke’s Meible Chi 6-1, 6-1 in the first round of play. She replicated her success in the next round, beating Stanford’s Michaela Gordon 6-4, 6-1 to earn a berth in the round of 16.

After defeating Oklahoma State’s Katarina Stresnakova, Hart’s run came to an end in the quarterfinals, falling to Georgia’s Katarina Jokic 3-6, 6-4, 6-3. Hart was the last Bruin to be eliminated in the singles bracket.

Seniors Ayan Broomfield and Gabby Andrews are the only two UCLA players left in competition. The pair won its first match of the tournament by notching a 6-3, 2-6, 10-7 victory over Florida’s Victoria Emma and McCartney Kessler.

The two faced off against Broomfield’s former school Clemson in the second round. The Bruins tallied a 7-6, 7-6 victory against Clemson’s Marie Leduc and Fernanda Navarro. The team’s win earned it a berth in the quarterfinals of the competition. In the quarterfinals Broomfield and Andrews defeated North Carolina’s Makenna Jones and Cameron Morra 4-6, 6-1, 10-7.

UCLA had participants advance to the quarterfinals in each bracket – the first time the Bruins have accomplished this feat since 2008.

Broomfield and Andrews will play for a spot in the finals Friday.

Softball prepares for battle of pitchers against James Madison in super regional

The Bruins will compete in the round of 16 for the sixth year in a row.

No. 2 seed UCLA softball (49-6, 20-4 Pac-12) will host James Madison (51-8, 20-1 Colonial Athletic Association) – the lone unseeded team still alive – in the super regionals of the NCAA tournament.

“They’re a great team and they’ve had a great year and a great record,” said assistant coach Kirk Walker. “I think they could’ve easily been a seeded team, so I don’t know if they’re a full Cinderella story, but they are definitely a team we have to respect.”

JMU outlasted Saint Francis, DePaul and the host team No. 15 seed Michigan in the Ann Arbor regional.

After beating DePaul in its first game of the regional, JMU went on to battle Michigan three times last weekend. The Wolverines took game one in a 1-0 win, setting up their chance to advance to the super regional. But the Dukes were the last team standing, winning twice to reach their second-ever super regional.

UCLA played four games in the regionals – three of them against Missouri – and had to play two of them on Sunday before advancing.

The Bruins collected just five hits and recorded a single run in their 5-1 loss to the Tigers in the first game Sunday, forcing a winner-take-all elimination game the same day. UCLA turned it around in the next game, though, doubling their hit total from the first game and run-ruling Missouri 13-1 to clinch its spot in the super regional.

Redshirt sophomore utility Aaliyah Jordan said the Bruins know how to get off to a good start by pressing on the other team early and often.

“I think our energy wavered a little bit (during Sunday’s first game) and we just have to sustain our confidence in knowing that we can get the job done,” Jordan said. “We always play a lot better when we score first and we’ve obviously been able to come back from losing before, but to have those insurance runs early shows that we have our pitchers’ backs.”

The super regional matchup will feature two of the top-three finalists for USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year – JMU’s pitcher Megan Good and UCLA’s redshirt junior pitcher Rachel Garcia – as well as pitching staffs with numbers that are nearly identical.

Garcia, the reigning Collegiate Player of the Year, is this year’s Pac-12 Player and Pac-12 Pitcher of the Year awardee with a 23-1 record, 238 strikeouts and a 1.02 ERA. At the plate, she’s hitting .340 with eight home runs and 43 RBIs. Good, the four-time CAA pitcher of the year, is hitting .342 with 16 home runs and 58 RBIs along with a 21-6 record, 200 strikeouts and an ERA of 1.38 in the circle.

Pitchers Odicci Alexander and Good lead the Dukes and CAA in wins this year with 24 and 21, respectively. Alexander earned her second straight conference Player of the Year honor and became the eighth JMU player in a row to win the award. Good is the second player in the CAA to win Pitcher of the Year four times. Pitcher Payton Buresch rounds out the staff and was named to the All-CAA Second Team.

A super regional win would mean a fifth straight Women’s College World Series for UCLA. Freshman left fielder Kelli Godin said the Bruins cannot take the Dukes or any team lightly from here on out, but knows what the Bruins are capable of.

“You never know what game could be your last,” Godin said. “What we’ve learned all season is that really the only team that can beat us is ourselves. If we lose, it’s on us, and we know what we have to do to win.”

Around the League: May 24

Baseball
Jared Tay, Daily Bruin contributor

The regular season is coming to a close for the Pac-12.

No. 4 Stanford baseball (39-11, 20-7 Pac-12) and No. 12 Oregon State (35-17-1, 20-7) sit 2.5 games behind first place, with two games left to play for each. No. 1 UCLA (46-8, 23-5) is on top of the Pac-12 standings – its win against Oregon on Thursday clinched the Pac-12 title for the Bruins.

Stanford traveled to Arizona State for its last regular season series. Stanford holds a 98-103 all-time record against ASU and completed a 3-0 sweep over the Sun Devils last year. ASU boasts a 0.527 slugging percentage and 88 home runs on the season, good for the highest in the conference.

The Beavers opened their final regular season series against the Trojans on Thursday. Oregon State is closing out its season at home for the fifth consecutive year and had tallied a 16-8 home record before Thursday’s loss to USC. The Beavers’ team ERA of 3.08 ranks second in the nation.

UCLA will close out their regular season on the road at Oregon. UCLA is riding a nine-game win streak that began May 7 against Long Beach State. Since then, UCLA has swept both Washington State and Washington, and posted a 7-0 victory over UC Irvine on May 14.

Softball
Coral Smith, Daily Bruin staff

With postseason play starting last weekend, the Pac-12 saw mixed results.

Five Pac-12 teams qualified for the NCAA tournament, but only three made it past the regionals and advanced to the next round.

Arizona State and Stanford both failed to make it out of their respective regionals. Arizona State won its first game to make it into the winners’ bracket, but then fell twice in two days to No. 8 seed Alabama, which went on to win the regional.

Stanford, on the other hand, fell into the losers’ bracket early and could not claw its way out, losing to Boise State in two consecutive games to be eliminated.

On the winners’ side, No. 2 seed UCLA will be joined in the super regionals by No. 3 seed Washington and No. 6 seed Arizona.

Washington swept through its regional, not dropping a game and giving up only one run over the weekend, while Arizona also went undefeated in their region, putting three Pac-12 teams in the super regionals.

With the UCLA facing James Madison at home this weekend, Arizona and Washington will also host their opponents in Tucson and Seattle, respectively. Arizona State will face No. 11 seed Mississippi, and Washington will play No. 14 seed Kentucky, with the winners moving on to the Women’s College World Series starting Thursday in Oklahoma City.

Men’s Tennis
Jason Maikis, Daily Bruin reporter

The Pac-12 has nine singles and four doubles pairs competing at the NCAA individual championships.

Four Trojans, three Bruins and seven other athletes from the Pac-12 are competing in the tournament, held in Orlando, Florida, from May 20 to May 25. There is only one Pac-12 entrant left standing after the first four rounds of singles and three rounds of doubles play: the duo of senior Maxime Cressy and sophomore Keegan Smith of UCLA.

The No. 2-seeded pairing has won three straight matches to reach Friday’s semifinals. They have yet to drop a set in defeating teams from Old Dominion, Belmont, and San Diego.

No. 5 seed Brandon Holt of USC reached the deepest point in the tournament of any Pac-12 singles player. Holt claimed two straight-set victories Monday and Tuesday, before earning a three-set comeback victory over seeded Yuya Ito from Texas.

Fellow Trojans Tanner Smith and Daniel Cukierman, along with UCLA’s Smith and Utah’s Dan Little, all reached the second round of singles. Stanford’s Alexandre Rotsaert and Arizona’s Jonas Ziverts lost their opening round. UCLA’s Cressy and freshman Govind Nanda also fell in their first matches.

Other than Cressy and Smith, the only Pac-12 team to win a doubles match was Jacob Brumm and Yuta Kikuchi from California. Teams from USC and Arizona State both fell in the first round.

Play will continue with the semifinals Friday, with the championship set to conclude Saturday.

UCLA women’s basketball forward makes USA team for Pan American Games

Cori Close received a text from Michaela Onyenwere last weekend.

“I didn’t make it,” the sophomore forward wrote.

Close, the UCLA women’s basketball coach, said she was shocked that Onyenwere didn’t earn a spot on the 2019 U.S. women’s basketball team for the Pan American Games.

But before Close could think too much about Onyenwere’s performance at the tryout, she got another text.

“Just kidding,” Onyenwere wrote. “I made it.”

“They’re looking for gold-medal habits – you compete every possession, and you always put your country above yourself,” Close said. “That’s what (Onyenwere) does for us at UCLA, and I think that’s what she’ll do for USA basketball.”

Thirty-five players were invited to try out for 12 spots on the USA Basketball team that will compete in the Pan American Games this August in Lima, Peru.

Onyenwere said the athletes trained twice a day for four days in Colorado Springs, Colorado – just about an hour drive from her hometown of Aurora – before the committee made its decisions.

“I was actually really, really nervous when they brought us into the gym to read off the names,” Onyenwere said. “I wasn’t really sure if I’d make the team – you play well, you try to do your best, but there are a lot of good people around you, so you don’t really know.”

But Onyenwere heard her name called.

The sophomore said she stifled her initial reaction to spare the feelings of those who didn’t hear their name called, but internally, Onyenwere was excited to play with her new teammates.

Five players on the selected team have earned medals with the U-17, U-18 and U-19 teams. Onyenwere is one of three players with experience at previous USA Basketball trials, but had never made a roster.

“I personally have never made a team for USA,” Onyenwere said. “So just being around those players who have that type of talent and that type of work ethic that is enough for USA – and some of them have won gold medals – … it’s a great honor to be with them.”

Despite lacking international experience, Onyenwere has played in every UCLA game since joining the Bruins in 2017, and earned a spot on the Pac-12 All-Freshman Team. This year, the forward led UCLA in rebounds and points with 298 and 642 respectively.

Junior guard Japreece Dean said it’s not just Onyenwere’s contributions to the stats sheet that make her a valuable player – it’s her team-first mentality.

“(Onyenwere) gives,” Dean said. “She gives to other people and she contributes to the team. She knows how to connect with people and she treats people right.”

Close agreed with Dean and said Onyenwere’s relentlessness sets her apart in a field of 35 of the nation’s best players. The coach followed the tryouts closely and pointed out that Onyenwere was one of the only players who never got a sub in a lot of the games.

The team will attend training camp in Colorado Springs from July 23 to Aug. 5 before traveling to Peru for the Pan American Games, where Onyenwere will represent her country and her school.

“I think it’s a good opportunity for (Onyenwere) and for our program to show what we develop and what kind of kids we get here,” Dean said.

Onyenwere will have a chance to prove herself on the world stage this summer, but on a team with three other high-level forwards – including two that have medaled with the U.S. – she said she will have to do more than just rebound.

“My rebounding is something I do really well, but along with a lot of great post players already on the team, (I’m) just trying to find a way to contribute in any way I can, whether that’s scoring or rebounding,” Onyenwere said. “Whatever I can do is what I’ll do.”

Baseball seizes Pac-12 title with win over Oregon, ending three-year drought

The Bruins have won the Pac-12 title for the first time since 2015.

No. 1 UCLA baseball (46-8, 23-5 Pac-12) defeated Oregon (27-28, 10-18) on Thursday night 4-2 to win its ninth straight and record-setting 23rd Pac-12 game of the season. With Stanford’s loss later in the night, UCLA clinched the top conference record.

The decisive blow came in the top of the eighth with the game tied 2-2. After senior designated hitter Jake Pries ripped a one-out single down the left field line, junior first baseman Michael Toglia stepped to the plate and sent the first pitch over the left field wall to give the Bruins the lead.

Toglia has now homered in three straight games and has 14 homers on the season, the most by a UCLA hitter since Cody Decker in 2009.

The Bruins got on the board in the top of the second after freshman catcher Noah Cardenas drove in junior right fielder Jeremy Ydens with a single to left.

UCLA added another run in the following inning on a Pries double that plated junior shortstop Ryan Kreidler.

On the mound, junior right-hander Ryan Garcia ran into trouble in the bottom of the second when he walked three batters to load the bases for shortstop Sam Novitske, Oregon’s leadoff hitter. However, Garcia got the fly out to center field to keep the runners from scoring.

The Ducks broke through an inning later, tying the game 2-2. Third baseman Spencer Steer doubled in the first run for Oregon and later scored on a groundout to the right side to even the score.

Garcia settled in after the third and did not allow a base runner through his next three innings of work. The Ducks put a man at second with one out in the top of the seventh, but Garcia struck out the final two batters to finish off his night having thrown a career-high 122 pitches.

“In the beginning of the game, I was missing low,” Garcia said. “Later in the game, I was missing up. It was just about finding that middle release point, and it got better as the game went on.”

With the win, Garcia finished the regular season with a 9-0 record in 11 starts. He also ended with a 1.42 ERA, the lowest for a UCLA pitcher since 2015.

Oregon starter left-hander Robert Ahlstrom kept pace with Garcia after the third, tossing four scoreless innings and allowing just three baserunners between the fourth and seventh innings. He was pulled in the eighth after giving up a single to Pries, who later scored on Toglia’s decisive two-run shot.

Working with a 4-2 lead, junior right-hander Kyle Mora pitched a scoreless eighth and sophomore right-hander Holden Powell tossed a 1-2-3 ninth to notch his league-leading 15th save of the season.

“I can’t say enough about the character and makeup of this team,” said coach John Savage. “They just won one of the deepest Pac-12 conferences I’ve ever seen. It’s the first step of our many goals this season.”

Westwood residents in disagreement over whether new soccer field should be built

Westwood residents debated adding a new soccer field to Westwood Park at a meeting Thursday.

Hundreds of residents packed the Westwood Recreation Center to discuss a plan to replace a large portion of an open grass field with a fenced, public regulation-size synthetic soccer field named after Tommy Mark, a youth soccer player who died in 2018. Nikki Mark, Tommy Mark’s mother and former executive director to the Los Angeles Football Club Academy, first proposed the plan in 2016 to address the growing shortage of soccer fields in Los Angeles.

The meeting was the second public hearing on the field, which has been in development since 2013. However, the proposal was first made public only around one month ago, and the first hearing was held shortly after May 7.

The proposal has drawn polarized responses from members of the Westwood community.

Community members have created competing petitions on Change.org for and against the park. The supporting petition has about 2,700 signatures while the opposing petition has 1,500.

Ted Stickney, a Westwood resident, said he does not support the new soccer field because he thinks the field will primarily benefit private soccer clubs instead of the general public.

“For us, it’s taking Westwood’s beautiful public park and turning it into a private soccer field,” Stickney said. “Some people said, ‘Well, it’s only $500 (to join a club),’ but for some of us, only $500 to be a part of the soccer club is something I can’t afford.”

Opponents to the proposal said they think Mark has worked with LAFC to secure the space in Westwood Park since 2016. However, Mark said the city already had plans to build a second turf field in the park since at least 2013.

“My only desire to go to Westwood Park was because it was so empty,” Mark said.

Alternative sites for the field, such as Cheviot Hills Recreation Center, were ruled out due to logistical reasons, said Tom Gibson, the city landscape architect.

Proponents of the soccer field said they think the area is currently underutilized and a new field would better serve the community. They also said they prefer turf over grass because a grass field will face the same problems as the current area, which they think is poorly maintained.

Mark said she discovered animals burrowing holes in the grass, which she thinks pose safety risks for park goers. David Ambrose, the regional commissioner for American Youth Soccer Organization Region 70, said he thinks a new grass field will also have these holes and patches of dirt without proper maintenance.

“That looks okay, but if we go walk around there, you’re going to step in some holes, and if you’re running and you step in holes, you’re going to twist or possibly break your ankle,” Ambrose said.

Ambrose, whose teams practice on a smaller turf field in the area, said although he probably won’t be able to use a new field because he will be outcompeted for permits, he welcomes any new soccer field in the city.

“While there is a level of self-interest for anyone in the soccer community, most of the people who have kids, who play club or play with us, they just want fields because they know how hard it is to find good ones,” Ambrose said.

Soccer clubs such as the LAFC Academy and the AYSO compete for usage permits to fields for games and practices and would benefit from a new field, Ambrose said.

Many residents and some soccer clubs were surprised when they heard about the plans for the new soccer field last month.

“I got an email from the park saying, ‘Hey, we’re having this meeting about a turf field in Westwood,’” Ambrose said. “Like a soccer field in Westwood? How is this the first time I’m hearing this?”

Stickney said he thinks the Park Advisory Board did not notify the public of the soccer field early enough.

“If they had sent out an email six months ago to the community saying there’s a proposal coming in to turn this grass field into a synthetic field,” Stickney said. “I think at that point would have been a great time for people to have some input.”

The late notice of the proposal caused some residents to speculate that city officials tried to minimize the public’s involvement by giving the public less time to provide input, Stickney said.

David Bartholomew, a resident of five years, said he had not previously heard of the proposal and that he does not support adding a synthetic field.

Several Westwood community members expressed differing opinions about the field.

Rick Johnson, a resident who first moved to Westwood in 1994, said he thinks the proposed field could bring fresh activity to Westwood.

“My honest opinion, I think it’s a good thing … for kids to be active, different people at different ages to play soccer,” Johnson said.

His wife Daina Johnson disagreed.

“I do like the open space,” Daina Johnson said. “(Our daughter) likes to run, so that’s gonna be gone.”

Both Mark and Ambrose said the soccer field is a donation to the community, but many residents remained unconvinced.

“If you really want to make a gift to the park, why not invest in making that the nicest grass area that you possibly can?” Stickney asked.

Ambrose said he thinks Westwood simply does not have the infrastructure to maintain a grass soccer field, so the neighborhood must develop a synthetic field instead.

The proposal is not final, and the input from the meeting will be processed by the Department of Recreation and Parks for further review, Gibson said.