Daily Archives - April 16, 2008
April 16 2008 Archives
Beyond the Small Talk
Science & TechnologyApril 16, 2008
Headline: Beyond the Small Talk Name: Ayn Reyes Year: Senior Major: Human development What influenced you to choose your major? I
was originally a genetics major, but I realized if I went on that path,
I would probably end up going into research. I’m interested more in the
human interaction aspects of genetics, and I want to go into genetic
counseling, so I can do that with human development instead.
Anthropology professor awarded Guggenheim Fellowship
Campus NewsApril 16, 2008
The
John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation awarded $8.2 million in
fellowships last week to 190 artists, scholars and scientists in the
United States and Canada. Out of more than 2,600 applicants, 18 of the selected few are
University of California faculty, greater than any other system with
just under a whopping 10 percent of the winners. “[The UC system is] very pleased that 18 members of our faculty have
been honored by this very prestigious award. The broad range of faculty
recognized and their specialties highlights the tremendous strength of
our faculty in a diverse set of fields,” said Chris Harrington,
spokesperson for the UC system.
Aerial spraying performed to eliminate light brown apple moth
Science & TechnologyApril 16, 2008
A
small plane whizzes by, hovering low to the ground. One might think
that the pilot is trying to have some fun, but in reality the airplane
is ejecting certain chemicals to try to eliminate a pest. This pest is the light brown apple moth, epiphyas postvittana, a non-native insect to North America. According to the California
Department of Food and Agriculture. It is an invasive pest of
California’s environment, natural habitat and agriculture. Because the
Department of Food and Agriculture is fearful that the moth is capable
of devastating California’s agriculture, an aerial spraying program has
been set up to eradicate the moth.
A call to question
OpinionApril 16, 2008
Being
in college, our metaphorical springboard into a vocational world with
options, the following question is all too pertinent for each of us:
What is my calling? “Vocation,” which comes from Latinvocare, meaning
“to call,” is a word that we don’t hear too often nowadays. In American
culture it has been deemed equivalent and synonymous with words and
phrases such as “career” or “successful life.” Certainly Americans
assume too much. In a discussion about priesthood, a student of mine asked a series of
questions like, “Do priests get paid? How much? Where do they live? Do
they have houses?” All of them were questions a person might ask about
a doctor, an offshore fisherman or a firefighter. The questions went on
like this until I had said, “Priesthood is not a career. It is a
vocation. It is a lifelong commitment to service in a community that is
not taken up for its pay but for the job itself.”
