Yearly Archives - 2008
2008 Archives
Artsweek
Arts & CultureApril 10, 2008
LIVE MUSIC Internal Conflict, Plead the Fifth, Knuckle Puck, Wipeout Friday, 7 p.m. Turtle House I always enjoy a good movie reference, especially from a childhood classic like D2: Mighty Ducks. What’s more enjoyable about Vacaville’s Knuckle Puck is that they
belong to the dying breed of two-step, thrashy hardcore like the Bay
Area greats Ceremony and Sabertooth Zombie or the classics, Infest and
Minor Threat. Keep shredding, brothers. Whole Earth Benefit Dance Party Friday, 8 p.m., $3-5 Delta of Venus Help
WEF build up some funds for the festival you all know and love by
coming out for a night of electronica and more. Here’s the breakdown of
genres by DJ: Tao will cover the dubstep, drum ‘n bass; Kelly D will
spin the electro, breaks and tech-house; N’Demik has a change of pace
with psychedelic and progressive and Ian Lesperance brings the funk. Half-handed Cloud, LAKE, G2 Friday, 7 p.m. Scrambled Eggs House Berkeley’s
interesting soloist John Ringhofer will be entertaining Scrambled
Eggers with both song and side notes tomorrow evening. The Asthmatic
Kitty Records artist sounds pretty odd, he works part time and is a
doodling addict. Hopefully he will share some of these stories at the
show. Aftershocker, Shayna and the Bulldog Friday, 10 p.m., $3-5, 21 The G St. Pub It’s
locals’ night for this G Street Concert, matching two very different
acts. Aftershocker’s (you guessed it) hair rock meets Shayna’s
charismatic pop rock, which has taken a surfy side on their Basement
Love Explosion EP, due out next week and can be picked up at their
Burgers ‘n Brew release party Apr. 18. Preview the EP Friday night! Apple Pie Hopes, Katie Delwiche, Pete Bernhard, Connecticut Saturday, 7 p.m., $5 Delta of Venus Apple
Pie Hopes… you’ll eat it? That’s my best guess about this
happy-go-lucky Americana band from Oakland. If the idea of a pirate
anthem scares you, then the opening acts are the ones you’d like to
see, such as the pleasant townies Katie D and Pete Bernhard (fans of
Willy Mason or M. Ward will dig him!). They’re likely to slow down the
evening with bluesy-folksy-perfection.
Upcoming Seminars
Science & TechnologyApril 9, 2008
Today “Determining the Mechanism of Transmission of Xyellla fastidiosa by Sharpshooters” Elaine Backus 122 Briggs, noon to 1 p.m. Sponsored by the entomology department “Cling Peach Mechanization – Chapter 2: Thinning, and the Rest of the Story” Kitren Glozer 3001 Plant and Environmental Sciences, 12:10 to 1 p.m. Sponsored by the plant sciences department
Unitrans considers bus tracking systems
Science & TechnologyApril 9, 2008
You
hit your snooze button for the third time and suddenly realize you have
10 minutes before your next class starts. You clamber out of bed,
jumping around and stabbing a leg through each pant leg while
attempting to read the blurry lines of numbers on the bus schedule. As
you try to figure out which bus you could catch, you take a chance and
hope the bus that arrives in less than a minute will be late. This game of chance could soon become a distant memory, as Global
Positioning System mass transit tracking systems are beginning to be
launched through the country’s university campuses.
UC Davis students share their light
Campus NewsApril 9, 2008
The
Community Outreach Club is sponsoring a quarter-long campaign to raise
awareness about the Solar Electric Light Fund, a non-profit
organization that brings solar power to underdeveloped nations. The community service based club became inspired to work with SELF
after learning that over 2 billion people in the world are living
without electricity. SELF’s mission is to bring solar power and modern communications to
developing worlds, said King Tong, president of the Community Outreach
Club.
Science Scene
Science & TechnologyApril 9, 2008
Leading physicists say “God particle” soon to be found Forty years ago, British physicist Peter Higgs argued that there was a
force that gave mass to the universe, enabling life to exist. From this
invisible force, named the Higgs field, comes a particle called the
Higgs boson. Now, as a particle accelerator in Geneva is nearly ready
to begin functioning in May, Higgs says he is 90 percent sure that the
particle will be found.
Runner-up, reason
OpinionApril 9, 2008
Something
I’ve come to realize about UC Davis, the public school system and
perhaps the whole of American intellectualism is just how much emphasis
there is on reason, so much so that I believe that there is an
over-emphasis on it. A quick word of caution to all you rationalists
out there – stop for a second, take a few breaths into a little brown
paper bag and read the rest of this before you decide to somehow reason
me into a small poof-cloud of nonexistence. In order for any claim or argument to be accepted by our community, it
must first be logically proven or at least sound enough to provide a
working foundation to build upon with further claims to knowledge. In
many cases, this is rightly so because it’s not wise to take anyone’s
word on just anything. In the process of learning, being scrupulous is
fundamental. However, I wish to distinguish between learning and
discovery.
Recession or just a low? Weighing in on the nation’s economic downturn
Science & TechnologyApril 9, 2008
Employment
opportunities are shrinking, food and gas prices are rising, houses are
being foreclosed and banks have stopped their liberal lending policies.
Does this mean our economy is in a recession, that daunting word that
strikes fear in the hearts of the government and consumers alike? Not
necessarily. Does the Federal Reserve System, the central bank of the
United States, have a plan to help stimulate the economy beyond a
temporary fix? Only time will tell, say economists. First of all, it must be noted that recession has a complicated
definition, and can only be officially announced by the National Bureau
of Economic Research, said Kevin Salyer, professor of economics at UC
Davis, in an e-mail interview. “A rule of thumb definition is two quarters (6 months) of negative GDP
growth,” Salyer said. “We are not technically in a recession yet (but
some economists believe we are … and today’s jobs data suggests that
they might be correct).”
Michelle’s Law helps seriously ill or injured college students
Campus NewsApril 9, 2008
Senate
Bill 1168, known as “Michelle’s Law,” was passed last week by the
Senate Health Committee without opposition. Authored by state Senator
George Runner (R-Antelope Valley), the bill will allow dependent
college students to continue receiving health insurance for up to one
year due to serious illness or injury. Michelle’s Law is named after Michelle Morse, a New Hampshire college
student who contracted colon cancer. The doctor’s request that Michelle
cut back her course load raised a dilemma: losing full-time student
status meant she would need to pay monthly continuation premiums of
approximately $550 to keep her policy in effect.
Hidden in shadows
OpinionApril 9, 2008
There’s
this picture that sometimes rotates as my desktop background – the
shadows of four girls splayed against a nondescript sidewalk somewhere
in residential Willow Glen. I’m the one in braids and a skirt raising
my hands like claws; my best friend is the hooded figure (this was
during her Little Red Riding Hood phase). I guess everyone has a
picture like this – one where the faces are not visible, but the
memories are. I keep it there because it’s one of the few pictures I have of my
friend Krystine where she’s not covering her face (probably because you
can’t actually see her face). I keep it because the four of us used to
call ourselves Los Banditos and roam the quiet residential streets in
bandit masks and plaid skirts. And perhaps there’s some part of me that
likes it because there’s a lack of clarity there – the blurred outlines
of our 16-year-old knees and elbows serving as the only markers to a
specific memory.
Delta smelt could cause dry summer
City NewsApril 9, 2008
Despite average precipitation this year, Californians might be experiencing a water shortage. As snow melts in the Sierra Nevadas this spring, that water collects in
the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers, which traverse the state to the
San Francisco Bay. Pumps at the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta supplies
water to the California Aqueduct, which provides water to agricultural
fields in the Central Valley and large parts of Southern California. However, the pumping stations have been limited this year by a court
order, the result of a legal case brought against the federal
government by the Natural Resources Defense Council. In December of
last year, a judge in Fresno ordered restrictions placed on pumping in
2008 to protect the delta smelt.
Daily Calendar
FeaturesApril 9, 2008
TODAY Farmers Market 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. East Quad Get fresh fruits, veggies and snacks at this convenient farmers market. Career advising for women Noon to 1 p.m. 104 North Hall Still
trying to figure out what to do with your major, career or life in
general? Drop in and talk with an Internship and Career Center
counselor.
Campus Judicial Review
Campus NewsApril 9, 2008
Stumbling drunk A
senior was spotted stumbling on Howard Way. After stumbling for a
while, he fell down and passed out. A concerned witness called the UCD
Police and requested a welfare check on the student. The student could
not walk without the help of others and reeked of alcohol. Unable to
care for himself, the student was arrested for public intoxication and
was transported to the Yolo County Jail. After meeting with SJA, the
student agreed to a censure and counseling at the Alcohol, Drug Abuse
Prevention and Treatment program. A censure is an official reprimand
and warning given to the student from the university.

