VOLUME 49, ISSUE 48
MONDAY, APRIL 18, 2016
WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG
WOMEN’S WATER POLO
CALIFORNIA
MAKING THE MOVE ILLUSTRATION BY CHRISTINA CARLSON/GUARDIAN
Prescription No Longer Required for Birth Control Women can now go to select pharmacies to obtain contraceptives without visiting a doctor beforehand. BY lauren holt
Living off campus for the first time can be a hassle. Read our annual housing guide to learn which housing units have the best rent, best communities and best commute. Make an informed decision for next year. Features, Page 6
USUALLY OPINION TEASE
BEBAS NEEDS TWO SPACES SECTION, Page _
WOMEN'S WATER POLO Tritons escape lancers sports, Page 12
FORECAST
MONDAY H 79 L 59
TUESDAY H 75 L 59
WEDNESDAY THURSDAY H 73 L 57
H 71 L 56
The UCSD women’s water polo team defeated California Baptist University 7–6 on Saturday at Canyonview Pool. Photo by Megan Lee /UCSD Guardian
UC SYSTEM
UC Davis Pays to Remove Negative Online References
U
By promita nandy
C Davis administration spent at least $175,000 in an attempt to cover up the 2011 incident in which university police pepper sprayed students participating in the Occupy Movement. Campus officials hired consultants to optimize Google’s search engine to remove results that contain negative information regarding the protest. The documents describing the actions and expenditures were released to the Sacramento Bee as the result of a public records request on April 13. According to the agreement made with Nevins and Associates, UC Davis signed a contract with the company to remove negative search results associated with the university and its chancellor. Specifically, Nevins offered to carry out the “eradication of references to the pepper spray incident in search results on Google for the university and the Chancellor.” “Nevins & Associates is prepared to create and execute an online branding campaign
staff writer
designed to clean up the negative attention the University of California, Davis, and Chancellor Katehi have received related to the events that transpired in November 2011,” Nevin’s proposal to the university stated. “Online evidence and the venomous rhetoric about UC Davis and the Chancellor are being filtered through the 24-hour news cycle, but it is at a tepid pace.” After the contract with Nevins and Associates ended, the university hired other consulting companies to continue the work. UC Davis’ Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor Ralph Hexter explained in a press release on April 15 that the university hired the consultants to increase the number of positive search results associated with UC Davis as opposed to removing the negative ones. “The campus hired outside consultants, using no public or student funds, to optimize search engine results in order to highlight the achievements of our students, faculty and staff,”
See DAVIS, page 3
VERBATIM
“
THE REAL CRISIS AT UCSD IS THE FACT THAT SIX YEARS AFTER THE COMPTON COOKOUT, THE ADMINISTRATION IS ... STILL RELYING ON CANNED BOILERPLATE PR RESPONSES TO INCIDENTS THAT MAKE STUDENT OF COLOR ANXIETIES ON CAMPUS SPILL OVER.
- Letter to the Editor
PROFESSOR JORGE MARISCAL
OPINION, PAGE 4
INSIDE IT’S ON US ...................... 2 DEI REQUIREMENT .......... 4 DIVERSE HOUSING .......... 8 CROSSWORD/SUDOKU.. 10 TRACK AND FIELD ......... 12
CAMPUS
Hillel UCSD Receives Donation for Jewish Center Jewish community leader Joseph Glickman donated $5 million for the center’s construction. BY mario espinoza and josh lefler
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Hillel UCSD, a branch of Hillel of San Diego, announced that they received a $5 million donation towards the creation of their proposed Jewish community center last week. The donation came from Joseph Glickman, a local leader of the Jewish community and an avid supporter of Hillel of San Diego. The center, named the Beverly & Joseph Glickman Hillel Center, would be situated at the intersection of La Jolla Village Drive and Torrey Pines Road if approved by San Diego’s City Council. According to the Hillel UCSD website, the organization currently has no permanent location to host its programs. In 2000, the organization
purchased property across the street from UCSD with the intention of building a community center. Director of Hillel UCSD Rabbi David Singer spoke with the UCSD Guardian about the proposed student center and how it will serve as “the convening space for Jewish life on campus.” “[The property will serve as] the home for Hillel which will finally give us, after 15 years of struggle, a state from which to base our offices, our support resort for students [and] to provide a community space for religious gatherings and programs,” Singer said. Singer stated that the absence of a Jewish Community Center at UCSD is uncommon among universities. For instance, both San Diego State
University and California State University, San Marcos have their own Hillel Centers on campus. “It’s a real shame, a real tragedy that UC San Diego does not [currently] have a Hillel building,” Singer said. “It makes UC San Diego unique among any other major public university that I can think of off the top of my head.” Lawsuits and environmental concerns have delayed the start of construction. According to Singer, the construction plans for the Hillel Center have been redesigned in order to address these complaints and to ensure that the center will fit in with the rest of the neighborhood. “It’s been a delicate balance to build the proper facility within the See JEWISH, page 2
A California law allowing women of all ages to obtain selfadministered forms of hormonal birth control without a doctor’s prescription went into effect on April 8, the California Pharmacists Association announced. The state legislature initially passed the law in 2013, but the need to determine its regulations prevented it from being implemented until last Friday. The legislation, introduced by state Senator Ed Hernandez (D-West Covina) as SB 493, requires participating pharmacists follow the protocol approved by the California State Board of Pharmacy when distributing hormonal contraceptives, which includes birth control pills, transdermal patches, vaginal rings and depot injections. Under the protocol, before receiving their chosen form of birth control, patients must complete a selfscreening tool, a pharmacist review of the self-screening tool, a blood pressure test for combined hormonal contraceptives and training that covers administering the medication and other information such as side effects and dosage. Chair of the AS Women’s Commission Erin McMullen told the UCSD Guardian that the law is significant because it gives women, especially those in lower socioeconomic groups, better access to birth control and greater control over their reproductive health. “ The creation and implementation of this law provides more inclusive and necessary access to services for demographics who may not have the opportunity to receive health care services due to the currently high cost of health insurance and other socioeconomic barriers to health care services and health care delivery,” McMullen said. “On a broader scale, this law provides more women with a higher level of experienced agency and control over their reproductive health without having to face the stigma sometimes associated with using various reproductive health services from either a health care provider or their peers.” California, Oregon, and Washington are currently the only states, along with the District of Columbia, to implement such birth control laws. However, according to UCSD associate professor of ethnic See WOMEN, page 3