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VOLUME 49, ISSUE 37

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 2016

WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG

SAN DIEGO

STUDENTS

CAFFEINE IN GEISEL, FINALLY PHOTO BY CHRISTIAN DUARTE /GUARDIAN

REPLACE YOUR GREEN EGGS AND HAM, FOR FAIR TRADE COFFEE AND LOCALLY MADE SANDWICHES. THE SPRING OPENING OF AUDREY’S CAFE IS ONE OF MANY UPDATES TO THE ICONIC LIBRARY. FEATURES, PAGE 7

PRIORITIZING BUSINESS

SEXIST BINDING OF CONTRACTS OPINION, PAGE 4

BASKETBALL PLAYOFFS TEAMS LOOKED POISED TO WIN sPORTS, Page 12

FORECAST

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TUESDAY H 68 L 57

10 Teams Advance in Innovation Competition Each team received $2,000 to compete in the second phase of UCSD’s Proof-ofConcept Competition. Canadian rockband Metric hosted their concert at the House of Blues in downtown San Diego last Thursday night. Photo by Kenji Bennett /UCSD Guardian

U

IS YOUR INTERNET HISTORY SOMEWHERE BETWEEN “HUH, THAT’S EMBARRASSING” AND “I WOULD GLEEFULLY GIVE UP MY FIRSTBORN CHILD IN ORDER TO HAVE THIS DEMOLISHED IF IT WERE TAKEN FROM ME”? DO YOU HAVE A MILD INFATUATION WITH AMISH PEOPLE?”

- LIVE OFF THE GRID How-To Guru OPINION, PAGE 4

INSIDE BIOINFORMATICS ............ 2 QUICK TAKES .................. 4 SPYWARE ....................... 7 CROSSWORD .................. 9 SOFTBALL .................... 11

See ISRAEL, page 2

See CONTEST, page 3

News Editorial Assistant

CSD held its annual Black History Month Scholarship Brunch this past Saturday, during which Chancellor Pradeep Khosla revealed a new scholarship initiative for African-American students. The brunch took place in the Price Center West Ballroom and featured humanitarian, producer and actor Danny Glover as the keynote speaker. Before Glover took the podium, Chancellor Pradeep Khosla announced a new $30 million scholarship plan called the Black Academic Excellence Initiative, which will help expand the existing Black Alumni Scholarship Fund. The initiative aims to increase the number of black students at UCSD by lowering the apprehension they might have about the cost of tuition. “One of the main components of this is the expansion of scholarships for African-American students,” Khosla said. “We want to ensure that African-American Students can pursue a UC San Diego education free of financial worries.” Following Khosla’s announcement, Danny Glover delivered the keynote speech on sites of African-American

memory, which corresponds with this year’s Black History Month theme “Hallowed Grounds: Sites of AfricanAmerican Memory.” One of the sites that Glover discussed was Dexter Avenue King Memorial Baptist Church, recalling the church’s historic significance to the civil rights movement. “Standing just near feet away from the Alabama state capitol, where entrenched opposition to desegregation was fortified, Dexter Avenue Baptist Church was steadfast in its righteous indignation in the literal face of injustice,” Glover said. “As Martin Luther King Jr. and a host of other activists planned the Montgomery bus boycott in the church’s basement, they initiated a movement that brought unprecedented social and political change to the United States.” During the brunch, Assistant Vice Chancellor of Admissions and Enrollment Services Mae Brown received an award for her 42 years of service at UCSD. Brown began working at the university as a senior clerk typist, after which she became the Director of Undergraduate Admissions in 1995 and transitioned to her current position in 2004.

See SCHOLARSHIP, page 3

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VERBATIM

a field that depends on hardware, software and systems to change the way archaeologists operate in the field,” Ramsey said. “Professor Levy has been closely involved with our previous cyber-archaeology efforts, so it was a logical next step to partner with Social Sciences on the new Center for Cyber-Archaeology and Sustainability led by [him].” The archaeological survey data includes basic site information, more than 17,000 photographs, site plans and artifact drawings. It will be added to the DAAHL as a node of the Mediterranean Archaeology Network, an online archaeological atlas that is easily accessible to the public. Levy explained that the methods of data collection use the techniques found in the fields of computer science, engineering and natural

UCSD Hosts Black History Month Scholarship Brunch

WEDNESDAY THURSDAY H 68 L 56

The Proof of Concept Competition declared 10 teams of undergraduates the victors of Phase One of its innovation contest on Feb. 22. Sponsoring the program, the Basement and the Office of Innovation and Commercialization asked groups to propose product ideas for a chance at winning up to $2,000 in Phase One and $3,000 in Phase Two to develop their concepts. The competition attracted hundreds of applicants from all areas of learning with its broad guidelines, only requiring that teams submit a three-page paper to a committee of alumni and members from the Basement, OIC, and Entrepreneursin-Residence. The winning teams presented a variety of ideas spanning from medical technology to philanthropic endeavors to Legobased toys. According to Paul Roben, Associate Vice Chancellor for Innovation and Commercialization, the PoC Competition is centered around supporting student innovation and promoting campuswide entrepreneurship. “The first [reason for the contest] was we knew there were a lot of teams out there who would love to be able to [design products] but do not have the resources to do it, and the second was to support some of the teams that were already going through the Basement’s accelerated program,” Roben told the UCSD Guardian. “The third purpose for any of these programs we do is to raise awareness for the entrepreneurship agenda across campus.” One of the contest winners, Earl Warren College senior Joseph Slaton of the SitRight team, which designed a posture pad that tells users how to correct their seated posture, had similar thoughts on the value of the competition to students. He stated to the Guardian that the competition fostered student enterprise. “I feel like competitions like this are very important to students, not only because they provide the relatively small amount of funding that can be a barrier to entry for many students, but because they send a message that entrepreneurship is a worthy and attainable goal,” Slaton explained. Warren freshman Yohann Samarsinghe, lead designer of the ReViSe product, which recycles rejected materials from tire manufacturing, explained to the Guardian that winning the PoC contest benefits his group and teammates by

CAMPUS

By Maria sebas

UCSD

Professors Preserve Data from Early Civilization The Israel Antiquities Authority has collected data from approximately 18,500 sites. BY REBECCA CHONG

Two of UCSD’s professors in the anthropology department are working with the Israel Antiquities Authority to preserve archaeological sites in Israel that are threatened by both violence from extremist groups like ISIS and by development. Their collaborative efforts will update the Digital Archaeological Atlas of the Holy Land, the largest internet repository of archaeological data from Israel. As the director of Qualcomm Institute’s Center for Cyber Archaeology and Sustainability, Professor Thomas Levy will lead the project alongside department research associate Steven Savage. Levy expressed enthusiasm for the unique opportunities that partnering with the IAA will foster.

“We want to work closely with the IAA and other scholars and institutions from around the Mediterranean world to share data and build scholarly bridges between communities,” Levy told the UCSD Guardian. “Having our students and faculty engaged with Israeli researchers and those from the neighboring lands in one of the most fascinating historical regions in the world is a great opportunity for them and the way forward to new discoveries and learning.” Director of Communications at the Qualcomm Institute Doug Ramsey emphasized the CCAS’s creation as a way of advancing the innovative use of computing in the social sciences. “[The Qualcomm Institute has] several partnerships with the Division of Social Sciences, and by definition cyber-archaeology is

BY Lauren holt


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