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UCSD
HISTORICAL TRIVIA
Mascot
UCSD uses a
"Trident" (a three-pronged fishing spear carried by Neptune as
a symbol of power over the sea) as its symbol in graduations and
other ceremonial events. The symbol originated with Scripps Institution
of Oceanography, incorporated in 1912, out of which the UCSD campus
grew and was officially established in 1960. The campus "mascot"
is a variant of the Trident--a brawny Neptune, hoisting a trident,
used by the UCSD Athletic Department. Additionally, four "Triton
trumpet shells" (large conch shells) were used as fanfare to open
Revelle College commencements for the first several years. Four
students stationed around the platform blew into the shells to
emit the large hollow blasts, which opened the ceremonies.
Famous
Alumni
Susumu
Tonegawa, '68, Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1987, for work on
molecular immunology.
Guy Tribble, M.D., Ph.D., '75, principal architect of the
original MacIntosh and co-founder NeXT Inc.
Nathan
East, '78, musician, composer.
Steve Peace. '75, California State Senator
Craig Venter, '72, '75, gene scientist, Celera Genomics.
Achievements
in Athletics
- In the
fall of 2000, UCSD moved up to the NCAA Division II level and
joined the 12-member California Collegiate Athletic Association,
its first comprehensive conference affiliation.
- Since
1981, UCSD has won 28 national championships, its most recent
coming in December 2000 when the women's soccer team captured
the NCAA Division II title. In 2000-2001, UCSD finished fourth
in the NCAA Division II Sears Directors' Cup competition which
annually ranks the top overall programs in the nation at each
level. This was accomplished despite the fact that UCSD is the
only Division II team in the country that does not award athletic
scholarships.
- UCSD does
not have a football team, although the subject is raised almost
annually. One year, in the early 70's, a team actually got as
far as uniforms and a schedule, but this attempt was nipped
when Cal Tech ended its 14-year losing streak by beating the
UCSD team.
- UCSD graduate
Julie Swail ('95) was captain of the USA Women's Water Polo
team that won the silver medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics in
Sydney, Australia.
Official
and unofficial campus song
There is no
official or unofficial campus song, but folk singer Sam Hinton,
former Dean of Admissions, was asked to write a song specifically
for a universitywide surfing gathering. A copy of the song, to
the tune of "Vive la Campagnie," is available. He notes that it
certainly did not attain any sort of status as an official campus
song.
Most
(and least) beautiful campus building
The
Geisel Library building, often compared to a spaceship taking
off, is regarded nationally as the symbol -- and most architecturally
powerful structure -- on the UCSD campus. Designed by famed architect
William Pereira, it contains six glass-enclosed floors of book
stacks, widening and then narrowing as the structure rises. Completed
in 1970, the space was nearly doubled when 200,000 square feet
was added, entirely underground, in 1993. The building has been
featured in movies, television shows, and countless commercials
by advertising maestros or producers who want to photograph a
building that evokes the rare style of the Crown Jewels elegantly
melded with E.T.'s cosmic minivan.
Several
barracks, left from WWII when Marines trained at what is now
the UCSD campus, are still in use as classrooms or offices and
are regarded by some as unattractive. Others see the revamped
buildings as charming connections to past history.
Strangest
gift ever received
Artifacts
from a Spanish treasure galleon, which sank off the shores of
Key West in 1622, were received as dividends of stock given to
the UC San Diego Foundation. The UCSD "treasure" included 12 silver
coins, one gold coin, one gold bar, seven coin fragments, one
copper ingot and a light emerald. These were sold by the University
in 1990 for $15,500, which went toward educational support of
female medical students.
Unique
student, faculty or staff traditions
The "watermelon drop" is undoubtedly the longest lasting tradition
on this relatively new campus. It emanated from a class in physics
at Revelle College (1965), when an exam question centered on the
velocity on impact of a dropped object. Students then took a watermelon
and dropped it from the top (7th) floor of Urey Hall to measure
its splat. The Watermelon Drop now marks the end of the school
year at UCSD -- a king or queen is elected, pageants and parties
held before and after the main "drop" event.
Faculty
accomplishments
- Early discoveries
in superconductivity were made by Bernd Matthias, a UCSD physicist
and pioneer in superconductivity.
- Development
of new cultured human skin replacement for severely burned patient
- Isolation
of the gene for luciferase, the enzyme that causes insects to
glow (firefly glow).
- UCSD researchers
were the first to generate electricity by man-made photosynthesis.
- First direct
evidence of how a cancer gene works: Chemist Russell Doolittle
discovered that a gene that normally helps wounds to heal can
run amok to cause cancer.
- Greenhouse
effect: Scripps Institution scientists confirmed that carbon
dioxide was rising in the atmosphere from pre-industrial levels
- Black Hole:
Through measurements from a space satellite, researchers provided
the first compelling evidence that a black hole exists at the
center of the Milky Way.
- Earthquake
resistant bridges: UCSD engineers designed the retrofitting
for earthquake-resistant double-decker bridges now used by CalTrans
in seismically active areas of California.
- Origin
of earth theory: In a now-famous 1953 experiment at the University
of Chicago, UCSD chemist Stanley Miller and the late Harold
Urey showed that life on Earth could have been formed by lightning
bolts catalyzing the synthesis of chemicals in the ancient atmosphere.
Quaint
and curious bits of campus lore
- Utility
tunnels which lie under much of the Revelle campus were, according
to legend, used for parties, for student scares, etc. Now, according
to the Internet, they're used for skateboarding. (May be true,
in part)
- Thousands
of eucalyptus trees which mark the campus were planted originally
for use as railroad ties by the Santa Fe Railway. (True)
Anything
else:
- The one
feature which sets UCSD apart from most large universities (and
the other UC campuses) is the "small college" concept, patterned
after those at Cambridge and Oxford. Each of the six undergraduate
colleges at UCSD -- Revelle, Muir, Thurgood Marshall, Warren
and Eleanor Roosevelt -- has its own residence halls, student
services, requirements, educational philosophy, traditions,
even graduation ceremonies. So, while the undergraduates remain
part of one university, they also develop a sense of identity
with the smaller family of their chosen college.
- Ted (Dr.
Seuss) Geisel, a resident of La Jolla, gave the commencement
address, in verse, for Revelle College seniors in June, 1978.
A major portion of the Seuss/Geisel collection of original sketches
and verses is housed in the Special Collections section at The
Geisel Library.
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