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WWPA CHAMPIONSHIPS PREVIEW P.12

VOLUME 47, ISSUE 48

THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2014

USED WITH PERMISSION FROM SAM HO OF PACIFIC ARTS MOVEMENT

You follow him on Twitter and like his memes on Facebook. Now read our exclusive interview with Sulu himself, the famous George Takei. weekend, PAGE 8

SUN GOD SAYS...

NEW SECURITY MEASURES opinion, Page 4

TENNIS FINISHES SEASON tritons close out with split sports, Page 12

FORECAST

H 69 L 59

SATURDAY H 61 L 57

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

UC SYSTEM

BEAMING UP IN SAN DIEGO

THURSDAY

WWW.UCSDGUARDIAN.ORG

FRIDAY

H 64 L 56

SUNDAY

H 64 L 57

VERBATIM

It was impossible for some of us to see eye-to-eye with each other on anything, even decisions as insignificant as which vendor to stop at for lunch.”

- Hilary Lee

RHYME OR REASON OPINION, PAGE 4

INSIDE New Business.................. 3 Letter to the Editor........... 5 Showdown...................... 6

Freshman Admission Rate Hits Record Low of 33.4%

Newly released data shows UCSD received more applications this year but admitted fewer students as admissions become more compeitive across the UC System. BY GABRIELLA FLEISCHMAN

NEWS EDITOR

24,552/73,437 4.13

9% More applicants than 2013

20.7% More applicants than 2012

U

Admitted Applicants

Total Applicants

Admission Rates

‘12

37.7%

‘13

36.8%

‘14

33.4%

13% 10%

fewer admitted

more admitted

African Americans

Hispanic Americans

Average GPA

Compared to the 2013 Average GPA’s 4.11

Average SAT

2018

Compared to the 2013 Average SAT Score of 1993

GRAPHICS REPORTING BY GABRIELLA FLEISCHMAN, DESIGN BY DOROTHY VAN

CSD admitted a record low 33.4 percent of freshmen applicants for Fall Quarter 2014, according to University of California Office of the President data released on Friday, April 18. Additionally, more traditionally underrepresented students are being admitted as a bigger percentage of the total number of admitted students. The data indicates that an increasing number of students are applying to UCSD while the university has begun admitting a fewer number of students. The university admitted a total of 24,528 out of 73,454

applicants and expects approximately 4,900 of them to attend as freshmen in Fall Quarter 2014. The University of California as a whole admitted 58.4 percent of applicants, down 0.8 percent from last year. The only two UC campuses with lower admissions rates than UCSD were UC Berkeley and UCLA, which admitted 17 and 18 percent of applicants, respectively. UCSD notably increased its admittances of underrepresented groups by 4.1 percent, largely due to See ADMISSIONS, page 3

Twitter Awards Researchers #DataGrants UCSD and CUNY researchers will analyze tweeted images to measure happiness. BY Karen to

Senior Staff Writer

A research consortium from UCSD and the City of University of New York Graduate Center was one of six teams to gain access to Twitter’s public and historical database for individual research purposes. Last February, Twitter announced the other winning teams for its first #DataGrant program, including research groups from other countries such as Japan, the United Kingdom, Australia and the Netherlands. The only other U.S.based team is from Harvard Medical School and the Boston Children’s Hospital. The four-member UCSD and CUNY team of researchers is comprised of two UCSD alumni: data scientist Mehrdad Yazdani (Ph.D., 2012), who works for the Software Studies Initiative at Qualcomm Institute, and 2012 alumnus from the Interdisciplinary Computing and the Arts program Jay Chow. The other two research members are CUNY Graduate Center professor of computer science Lev Manovich and University of Pittsburgh history of art and architecture Ph.D. candidate Nadav Hochman, who is currently working under Manovich as a visiting scholar. For their latest Twitter research project, the researchers will use open source tools, such as OpenCV See GRANT, page 2

TRANSPORTATION

Mid-Coast Transit Project Sparks Debate in La Jolla La Jolla community members disagree on the location of a crossbridge, but stops at UCSD will not be affected BY Yan Gao

Associate NEws Editor The placement of a bridge over Interstate 5 has set residents against a La Jolla area Mormon church in a debate over the future of the MidCoast Transit Project — which is slated to connect Downtown San Diego to the La Jolla community and the UCSD campus via extensions to the Blue Line Trolley by 2018. Progress has stalled as disagreement between Cape La Jolla Garden residents and members of the La Jolla Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints has arisen over which streets adjacent to I-5 will connect to a bridge planned as part of

the project. The debate over whether the bridge will be constructed farther north or south, however, will not affect where future trolley stations will be located on UCSD. According to the San Diego Association of Government, a trolley bridge across the I-5 is necessary for the Mid-Coast Transit Project, anticipated to begin construction in 2015, to create stations at La Jolla Village Square, around the UCSD campus and the Westfield University Town Center mall. An April 17 NBC 7 San Diego article stated that the Cape La Jolla Garden residents and leaders of the La Jolla Temple both believe they will be most affected by the construction process.

SANDAG Director of Mobility Jim Linthicum oversees the MidCoast Transit Project — which first came to fruition in 2013 — and hopes to get as much input from community members as possible before making the final decision. A presentation of the project will be held on May 9, and will be open to the public for feedback. “The Cape La Jolla folks believe the trolley should go a little bit further north than where it was shown in our environmental document,” Linthicum said. “The temple folks think it should go a little further south and we are trying to work through that now.” SANDAG expects to make the final decision on the placement of the bridge this summer. The County

of San Diego will approve the final location in a majority vote at a later date, according to NBC 7 San Diego. UCSD Vice Chancellor for Resource Management and Planning Gary Matthews supervises three to four major transportation Light Rail Projects, which are part of the Mid-Coast Transit Project. “I don’t think it will impact [UCSD] at all [and] we are not affected by that discussion,” Matthews said. There will be two stations on the school campus. One will be close to Pepper Canyon in Sixth College and another stop will be in the east campus near Preuss school on the opposite side of the I-5. See TRANSIT, page 3


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