Monthly Archives - April 2008
April 2008 Archives
Campus organizations to recognize Holocaust Remembrance week
Campus NewsApril 30, 2008
This
week Hillel, the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity, and other organizations
along with other UC Davis students will remember the Holocaust and
raise awareness against genocide. Two events will be occurring this week including collaboration from the
UC Davis Jewish community, Student Anti-Genocide Coalition (STAND), and
the Baha’i communities. STAND and members of the Jewish community will
be tabling in from of the Memorial Union today and handing out
pamphlets. “We thought that this might be a good opportunity to approach random
people walking past the Quad and tell them information on different
cases of genocide,” said Mahrad Enayati, senior sociology major and
intern for Hillel who helped organize this event.
Campus judicial report
Campus NewsApril 30, 2008
Theft A
first-year student was referred to Student Judicial Affairs for
stealing a CD player from the bookstore. The student displayed
suspicious activity while shopping in the bookstore, which alerted the
attention of the security monitors. After purchasing a textbook from
the bookstore, the student was asked to show his receipt and refused to
do so. The student and his accomplice proceeded to make threatening
remarks and then discarded the electronic device in a nearby restroom.
The student agreed to pay for the damaged device and will be on
deferred dismissal status until fall quarter 2008.
Bikes blessed at Davis Bike Church
City NewsApril 30, 2008
The
Davis bike paths are a hazardous place. With high traffic density
between classes and frequently messy roundabouts, divine intervention
on the road sounds like a good idea. The Davis Bike Church offered the next-best thing Saturday with a bike
blessing. It was the Bike Church’s first blessing with more to
potentially follow in the future, said Chris Congleton, who helped
organize and officiate the event. The event was based on the annual bike blessing at the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine in New York.
Beyond the Small Talk with…
Science & TechnologyApril 30, 2008
Name: Gordon Ng Major: Biological Sciences Year: Senior What got you interested in your major? I
took a general education course, SAS 20 – Genetics and Society, in my
freshman year and that triggered my interest in the sciences. From
there on I took more science classes and developed a curiosity for
molecular biology and how the human body functions.
Artificial turf may contain lead chromate
City NewsApril 30, 2008
Schools
and cities across the country are closing athletic fields in response
to reports of a lead threat in artificial turf, but turf manufacturers
say there is no health risk. The wave of field closures began two weeks ago when health officials in
New Jersey discovered elevated lead levels in two synthetic turf
fields. This prompted the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission to
begin a national investigation. “We are in the very, very initial stages of our investigation,” said
commission spokesman Scott Wolfson. “The key point for all parents and
school administrators is that there is not a cause for alarm and panic
at this time. It is not an issue where fields need to be shut down
immediately.”
UCD physicists join the race toshow dark matter
Campus NewsApril 29, 2008
In an abandoned gold mine inSouth Dakota,physicists are building a way to test for dark matter– invisible particles that affect theexpansion of the universe. The Large Underground Xenon Apparatus (LUX) is a collaboration of seven universities,including UC Davis.Physics professors Mani Tripathi and Robert Svoboda are designing part of the experiment that will be transported fromDavis toSouth Dakota. “Our role is that we are helping to build part of the instrument itself,” Svobodasaid. Dark matter got its name because though it has a gravitational force,it is not visible to humans.The name is also a pun,because the particles are a mystery to physicists,said Hitoshi Murayama,professor of physics at the Lawrence National Laboratory at UC Berkeley.
UC Davis falls in Indian Wells at Big West Championships
SportsApril 29, 2008
Head coachBill Mazefelt it,too. Sophomore Herzyl Legaspi told assistant coach Sara Morenc she felt like she had just wonafterthe UC Davis women’s tennis teamlostFridayin the first round of the Big West Conference Championships. “It’s funny because it kind of felt that way,” Maze said. “It was such a great experience,to be legit,to play such a gutsy match in the conference tournament.The result wasn’t that important,believe it or not.It was almost like the experience was bigger than the score.I know it may sound a little cheesy,but it did kind of feel that way.
Titans prevail in weekend series over Aggies
SportsApril 29, 2008
A
date with conference-leading Cal State Fullerton at Goodwin Field this
weekend gave UC Davis a chance to make a good impression against the
four-time national champions. The Aggies (26-15,7-5) played threeclosely-decided contests with the15th-ranked Titans (26-15,11-4) and managed to take oneof three in the weekend set. “We knew going in thatwe could compete with them,“ saidhead coach Rex Peters. “We would’ve loved to win a series on the road against a quality program likeFullerton, [but] we did get one.We felt like we had to at least do that.“
Tangible solutions
OpinionApril 29, 2008
In
the past weeks, I’ve been dishing out a fair amount of criticism
regarding our elected and appointed educational administrators without
providing a whole lot of possible solutions. This is because, for the
most part, I have tried to focus mainly on pointing out the problems,
rather than turning people off with a solution that caters to a
specific political ideology. For example, if I were to propose a solution of raising taxes across
the state to make up for the $4.8 million deficit in educational
funding, I would probably cause a couple of people to ignore me, and my
views on the education system, completely. However, this week I have decided to break away from my standard mode
of operations and provide my readers with an opportunity to make a
small, but valuable, difference in our current educational crisis.
Police Briefs
City NewsApril 29, 2008
FRIDAY Backpack brigade A window was reported smashed and a backpack was stolen onF Street. Lethal weapon An assault with a deadly weapon was reportedatSycamore Lane andWake Forest Drive.
Moms and dads on campus
FeaturesApril 29, 2008
Changing diapers,picking up toys and checking an8-year-old’s homeworkaren’t the typicalresponsibilities ofan undergraduate. But forsome UC Davis students,that’sjust part of an average day. From morning to night Cedric Papa’s day starts at5:45a.m.The27-year-oldsenior exercise biology major – and father of three – usually starts his morning at the gym,andthen studies before his kids wake up. Papa then goes to campus at7a.m.,where he attends classes and studies until6p.m.on weekdays. “Bysix I’m ready for a change– be with the kids and to forget about the books,” he said.
Migrant activists to speak today
Campus NewsApril 29, 2008
Two
Mixtec migrant activists from Oaxaca, Mexico will be speaking today in
an event titled “Indigenous Mexican Migration to the U.S. and its
Impact on the Communities of Origin,” from noon to 2 p.m. at the HIA
Conference Room, located at 5211 Social Sciences and Humanities. Bernardo Ramírez Bautista is an indigenous lawyer, and the other, Centolia Maldonado Vásquez, is an activist. They will be talking about the situation of indigenous
migrants in California and Mexico, and sharing their own stories of
struggle. Both have been very active in looking intoissues of social justice and the legal issue of migration. Stefano Varese, professor of Native American Studies, said it is a great opportunity to hear them share their own experience.
