37.8 F
Davis

Davis, California

Monday, December 29, 2025
Home Blog Page 1019

News in Brief: Free holiday blues workshop on Wednesday

0
Need to battle bouts of the holiday blues? Attend a free workshop hosted by Child Care Services on Wednesday from 6 to 7:30 p.m. in the Veterans Memorial Center Game Room, located at 203 W. 14th Street.
David Hafter, a marriage and family therapy counselor from Victor Community Support Services, will give advice on how to manage the stress during the holidays and how to access community resources.
The workshop will identify holiday stressors, such as stress from visiting family or having a tighter budget, and offer ways to minimize them.
To register for the workshop, contact Libby Wolf of Child Care Services at (530) 747-8236.

— Claire Tan

Column: Facebook me maybe

0

When I was a kid, we had these things called yellow books. They were mundane, archaic-looking items that people would use to contact their local pizza joint, orthodontist or occasionally the guy they met once at a party whose number they were too afraid to ask for.

As I approach adulthood, I realize we’ve traded in our yellow book for a more up-to-date novel —  a Facebook, to be exact. A yellow book was fine and dandy when people still used their phones for communication — but in the age of sparkling technology and the ability to contact people with the click of a button, Facebook has become the obvious bestseller.

But with great power comes great rejectability. Now the mystery of dodged calls has turned into the mystery of dodged friend requests — a familiar but equally aggravating sequel.

As we ask ourselves where our friend request has gone for the past two weeks, we only have one question left: Has Facebook become the new rejection hotline?

I once knew this girl in high school. She was this strong, independent type who wouldn’t take crap from anyone. She was a tough cookie — up until she liked a boy.

One summer she traveled to Cancun and surprisingly fell into a deep infatuation with a Chilean accent and the boy who spoke with it. All was going well — she even added the boy’s brother on Facebook. She left the South Pacific cheerful and optimistic, believing that the romance she experienced while on vacation would continue once she returned to the States. Apparently, no one warned this poor girl that though she left the country, the devastation of rejection was still international.

She added the boy on Facebook within the following week of her return. When he hadn’t replied two weeks later, she added him again. And a third time. Eventually she attempted to message the brother to find out why her Chilean romance hadn’t accepted her friend request yet, only to find out that the brother had deleted her as well. She began to say the same lines all daters say when they take a trip down denial road.

“Maybe it just didn’t go through. I’ll just try it again.”

“Maybe he just wasn’t online that day, or week, or year.”

“Maybe he doesn’t even know how to use Facebook.”

No matter how many maybes she said, she just couldn’t face the fact that maybe he just wasn’t that into her.

Along with the delusional rejection that Facebook has to offer, Mark Zuckerberg forgot to mention this newly added feature that wasn’t included on his social network’s terms and conditions.

Let’s pause for a second and imagine a moment when we are miraculously added as a friend and become accepted into our love interest’s elusive inner circle. Are we entirely free from the wrath of rejection?

Not quite.

With Facebook, an entirely new realm of rejection takes place. In this day and age, nothing is private. His, yours and everyone else’s answering machines are broadcasted to the world in the form of wall posts, where one can read an untouched message for days all while experiencing the slow pain of lunacy.

If the transition into psychotic isn’t painful enough, we’re also no longer free from the anonymity a guy gives us when he deletes our number off his contact list. A removed friend off Facebook can be even more menacing than not being accepted as a friend at all.

Why do we continue on in this crazed cycle of perpetual denial, when we know the answer lies right in front of us? Is our hopefulness actually what makes us hopeless?

History shows that while technology evolves, the behavior of daters has been able to withstand the test of time.

With history seemingly about to repeat itself yet again, maybe this is the generation where this behavior stops.

Maybe instead of wondering where our friend request has gone, we can log off Facebook and look for someone who’ll actually accept us. We can finally be able to face the facts that maybe if they’re ignoring you, it’s maybe because they don’t like you. And if they don’t like you, then maybe they’re not worth your time.

Then, after all is said and done, maybe, just maybe, we can stop using the word maybe.

Email JASON PHAM maybe at jpham@ucdavis.edu.

Column: -bleep-

0
I still haven’t seen all of Eddie Murphy Raw. Not because I couldn’t sit through it, but because I saw it on TV. Of course, they cut a good portion of it so it can fit within a time frame — but what I really missed out on is the adult language.

It was hardly “raw” anymore — censored, no doubt, for my benefit as an underage viewer. What is gained from censoring the TV audience from bad language? Besides solidifying TV’s role as a third parent and role model, censorship is not for our benefit.
So, what is the purpose of censorship?
Ideally, TV censorship would create a program that most people could watch, would want to watch and would feel comfortable watching. It would set the standard for the ideal TV-viewing experience in which the audience could feel safe from offense and parents could let their kids watch unsupervised, without fearing they would see something annoyingly imitable.

In practice, censorship misses the mark entirely.

Thirteen Ghosts was all over cable TV for a while a couple years after its release. I saw the censored version a number of times and the unedited movie at least once. This was one of the stand-out moments in which I saw a strange trend in TV censorship.

A minor character is sliced in half vertically by a falling sheet of glass, and we see the whole thing. We even watch as the half facing us slides down faster than the other side, giving us a short anatomy lesson.

In the same two and a half hours of viewing, we see the hilarious antics of Matthew Lillard, who can’t get out a sentence without a few words getting “bleeped” for the sake of not offending the audience with his dirty mouth.

My personal favorite is when they digitally alter one scene so that instead of showing us an extended middle finger, we see an angry fist that seems almost surreal in its innocence.

Censorship allows TV to play out a fantasy in which the audience can escape reality and not be subject to the harsh ends of an emotional outburst or an expression of colorful language. We are protected from offense by the helpful agents of some anti-cussing organization, in order for us to live in the fantasy that is ideal TV. And what a sick fantasy that is.

I can watch a dog sever another dog in half in a bloody car accident and trip out on drugs with a horrifying string of hallucinations — all at a time that underage viewers are likely to watch TV. I’m sure the writers of “Family Guy” are in a constant struggle with censorship, but for the battles they win that allow them to put some of the most disturbing images on TV, they constantly lose in the war on profanity.

So this fantasy world endures — angry outbursts are reduced to whimpers of childish insults, but the violent results are in plain sight.

Who does TV censorship protect, and from what? Children will hear dirty words outside of the television set — what they’re not likely to see on a regular basis is graphic violence and other elements of horror movies.

Is this choosy censorship a way of protecting the audience from the unpleasantries of reality, while at the same time introducing them to the horrors and tragedies prevalent, but not often witnessed, in the real world?

I don’t think television censorship is some big conspiracy to make people accept the world as a dangerous place, but rather to make them feel safe from the annoyance of bad words. I just think it’s broken, outdated and ineffective.

In the end, television is a source of news and a form of entertainment. It doesn’t attack its audience with foul language — it puts on a show for us to enjoy. The fun we can have laughing at the awful ways a program is censored is limited. The censorship is frankly made useless by its obviousness, its failure to recognize highly offensive images and our own creativity filling in the blanks.

So, to that audience member that we are afraid to offend — I think we’d all appreciate it if you grew up.

NICK FREDERICI can sometimes be offensive; cuss him out at nrfred@ucdavis.edu.

UC Davis men’s soccer falls in Big West Conference Finals

0

In an intense game for the Big West Conference title, the UC Davis men’s soccer team’s run came to an end at the hands of Cal State Northridge.

The game was a marquee matchup between the two top teams in their respective divisions, the Aggies from the Big West North Division and the Matadors from the South.
UC Davis was taken down by the single goal of the game, which was knocked in by CSU Northridge in the 15th minute to give them the 1-0 lead that they would hold onto for the rest of the game.
“I’m very proud of my team; I thought we played well but unfortunately we gave up a nice goal,” said head coach Dwayne Shaffer. “We couldn’t recover from it, but overall I thought my team played very well and did all the things necessary to score a goal but it just didn’t go our way.”
The lone goal of the game came when CSU Northridge converted an opportunity in the middle of the box. The Matadors took a shot that shocked the Aggies, bouncing off the cross bar and down into the goal.
The best chance for the Aggies probably came about five minutes later. UC Davis had an opportunity in the goal box that, after some ball movement, found the goalie out of position at the edge of the box. Sophomore Ian Palmer fired a shot from outside the box that clanged off the crossbar and CSU Northridge escaped with the lead.
Both teams threatened throughout the game, playing with the feeling of urgency that came with the fact that the season was on the line.
“We created numerous opportunities to put pressure on Northridge, but unfortunately one didn’t go in for us today,” Shaffer said. “I thought we had the game in the second half but I tip my hat off to Cal State Northridge.”
The game got chippy as the intensity level rose in the high-stakes game. It seemed like just a matter of time that the Aggies would convert on one of their 14 shots, but the goal never came.
The Matadors got off only eight shots with three shots on goal, compared to UC Davis’ five on goal, but those numbers don’t mean as much as the 1-0 statistical advantage CSU Northridge had over the Aggies in goals.
Junior goalie Omar Zeenni played a good game in the goal, despite the one blemish on his record that was the impressive CSU Northridge goal that can hardly be pegged on Zeenni.
The UC Davis lack of goals shouldn’t necessarily be put on the Aggies’ offensive struggles, but is more of a credit to the Matador goalkeeper. Michael Abalos had several beautiful saves on shots that easily could have been goals for UC Davis.
This was the first time in the Big West Conference finals for the two teams that ended the regular season with identical 7-3-0 records in league competition, but Shaffer gives credit to the Matadors.
“Maybe the nerves got to both teams to start the game, but once we settled in, I felt like we played the same style and system that got us here,” Shaffer said. “They’re a good team, and I coach college soccer for a living so I know how tough it is to win 15 games in a college season [like CSU Northridge did].”
The Aggies fall to 10-7-4 on the year with an 8-4 Big West Conference record, while Cal State Northridge wins the automatic bid into the NCAA Tournament that comes along with the Big West Conference Championship title.
UC Davis still had a chance to receive an at-large selection into the NCAA Tournament due to its first-place conference finish and several wins over strong teams in the season. The NCAA committee announced their selections on Monday.MATTHEW YUEN can be reached at sports@theaggie.org.

(Not) the same old road woes

When UC Davis headed to Oklahoma last Friday, they forgot that they were the underdogs, slated to lose by a serious margin. Road games were not kind to the Aggies last year, but there is a new roster and a new energy this season.

The game was a sparring match from start to finish. Oklahoma State was consistently ahead on the scoreboard but the Aggies kept the margin thin by winning the rebound advantage 43-29.

Every Aggie that hit the court grabbed at least one rebound Friday night, but senior Ryan Howley was the standout contributor, earning a total of 13 rebounds in the game.

That is the kind of hustle head coach Jim Les has been emphasizing this season.  He wants a squad with an unmatched work ethic on the defensive side of the paint and he saw the fruits of their labors on Friday night.

“The players were ready to work hard and compete against a talented team,” Les said.

Offensively, the Aggies were impressive but they were just behind the Cowboys for most of the game. UC Davis did manage to tie it up with five minutes left to play, but the Cowboys went on a late-game scoring streak that gave them the 73-68 win.

Redshirt freshman Corey Hawkins debuted his talents against the Cowboys on Friday and led the Aggies in scoring, earning 13 points in his first collegiate game.

Hawkins is the kind of explosive talent UC Davis has been craving. He adds an incredible amount of talent to an already loaded offense, but more importantly he brings a spark to a defensive unit that struggled all of last year.

The newfound depth of the roster had a profound impact Friday night. Many of the starters were sidelined by cramps or foul troubles and when Les called on his bench, they rose to the occasion.

Freshman Darius Graham scored seven points and snagged five rebounds in his collegiate debut. Graham is another new addition to Les’ roster, and the Sacramento native looks to be another tenacious contender on the court.

Meanwhile, junior Tyler Les continues to hassle defenses with his shooting accuracy. He went 2-4 on three-point attempts, scoring six points and nabbing three rebounds during the game.

Junior Josh Ritchart continues to work hard in the paint and he managed to grab five rebounds for UC Davis on Friday. He also scored 10 points, which including sinking another three-pointer from the perimeter.

The team is still a long way from rejoicing, but this was the best road performance the Aggies have had in about a year. Oklahoma State is a notoriously loud arena with some serious crowd influence, but UC Davis was able to ignore the shouts and play their game.

“Even though the loss may sting, I told my players that they should be proud of their efforts. If we can continue playing like that, we will become a tough team to play against,” Les said.

The Aggie defense certainly kept this game within reach. Unfortunately, some of UC Davis’ shots failed to fall in the basket, which caused the loss.

The Aggies will win if they can keep up the work load. Also, the big men in the middle need to avoid foul troubles, which sidelined sophomore J.T. Adenrele on Friday night.

Defensive rebounds lead to more offensive scores and that is the formula coach Les has been hammering home this year.

Luckily, the Aggies will have the crowd on their side when they come home to face Northern Arizona University next Sunday afternoon.

KIM CARR can be reached at sports@theaggie.org.

Recipe: Slow Cooker Minestrone

We may have had some unseasonably warm and sunny days in the past two weeks, but the days of cloudy skies and chilling rain storms that we all know and love here in Davis are just around the corner. We are also about to hit the ever-dreaded, end-of-the-quarter home stretch of nothing but papers, midterms and lab reports.

So, in order to help you with that, I present this minestrone soup recipe. Perfect for cold weather and easy enough to make with little time on your hands.

My mom recently bought me a slow cooker for my birthday, so I was beyond excited to try making soup for the first time. Minestrone is probably my favorite soup, and I adapted this recipe from Food Network’s Robin Miller, found here. Not only are the ingredients super cheap (I got everything at Safeway for under $25), but you can dump all of your leftovers in some Tupperware, stick it in the fridge and enjoy it all week!

Preparation time: 15 minutes
Cook time: 3 hours
Serves 4

Ingredients:

2 carrots
2 celery stalks
1 cup chopped yellow onion
2 red potatoes
¾ cup cannellini beans
¾ cup dark red kidney beans
3 cups chicken broth (or vegetable if you prefer)
1 tsp. dried oregano
½ tsp. salt
½ tsp. ground pepper
2 (14.5 oz.) cans diced tomatoes
1 medium green zucchini
1 medium yellow zucchini
1 cup chopped fresh spinach
2 ½ cups short pasta of your choice (I used shells)
Shaved Parmesan cheese

Wash and chop carrots, celery, zucchini, onions and spinach (I like more “rustic” soups, so the chunkier the pieces, the better). Set aside.

Wash, peel and chop potatoes, set aside.

Measure out cannellini and kidney beans, empty into a strainer, run under cold water to wash and set aside.

Put broth, potatoes, carrots, celery, onions, tomatoes, beans, oregano, salt and pepper into slow cooker, set cooker to HIGH and let cook for 3 hours. I spent this waiting time watching “The Proposal,” but you can also use it for studying, playing a Wii tennis tournament with your roommates, etc.

After about 2 hours, boil 6 cups of water. Add the pasta to the boiling water and cook on medium heat until it is al dente (it’ll cook fully once it’s in the slow cooker).

Add the cooked pasta, zucchini and spinach to the slow cooker, stir and let cook for another 40 minutes. Ladle the soup into bowls, top with Parmesan cheese and eat up!

Note: You might want to add more than 3 cups of broth if you want your minestrone to be “soupier”; mine was mostly vegetables, beans and pasta with some surprise chicken broth at the bottom. But still delicious!

KATIE MORRIS looks forward to bringing you tasty, easy recipes every week that work with the typical college student’s time and budget. Contact her at kemorris@ucdavis.edu.

Davis Mural Team brings more color to city

0

In partnership with the John Natsoulas Gallery, located at 521 First St., the Davis Mural Team presented to the City of Davis 35 new sculptures and murals.

The team is comprised of 12 artists from throughout California. It is one of the top mural teams in the country because of the amount of artworks completed in a short time period, said Kerry Rowland-Avrech, a local resident and artist of the Davis Mural Team.

All of the artwork is located within the Downtown Davis, allowing the public to easily walk from piece to piece. Each piece of art has a QR code which allows those with smartphones to view a video about the artists and their works.

Among the 35 works of art is “Splash” by Rowland-Avrech. “Splash” is located on the Davis Ace Housewares back wall facing the Amtrak station at Second Street.

“It was a way of putting the paint and the artist together,” Rowland-Avrech said. “It’s about bringing painting to life.”

She also said in Davis Mural Team, a book about the pieces of art, that the concept behind the painting was to create the outlines of other artists on the team. She said the artwork gave a “highly personal yet universal approach to the mural.”

All art pieces are primarily painted or situated on private businesses, but two pieces are on public property. One of the works of art on public property is Charlie Schneider’s mural “Color Study for Cyclists” inside the Richards Boulevard bike tunnel.

“I used this idea of the speed of light to make the mural change. As you ride by, you [can] see the blue and the yellow creating a green,” Schneider said.

Schneider is a long-time resident of Davis and has had work featured at art shows at the John Natsoulas Gallery. He was approached by the City of Davis, two hotel owners near the tunnel and Natsoulas to be part of the team to create a piece for the tunnel.

According to Carrie Dyer, community services supervisor of the Recreation and Civic Arts Department of the City of Davis, in order to get an artwork on public property, a proposal must be submitted to a subcommittee that is composed of the Civic Arts Commission and city staff.

“The city was very excited that there was a group of people in town to do something beautiful with it [the tunnel],” Dyer said.

Each artist came up with an idea of what they wanted for their mural. With the help of fellow artists on the team, the murals were completed within two to three days. These murals were made possible through donations and fundraisers held by the John Natsoulas Gallery.

According to Davis Mural Team, Natsoulas wanted to make Downtown Davis an art destination. He got together with friends and artists to create art for private businesses. One of the first murals was created by Rowland-Avrech in 2010 when she made “Windows” for the Anderson Bank building, located at 203 G St.

The John Natsoulas Gallery has been in Davis since the 1980s. The gallery was originally a house that was purchased by Natsoulas, who later added two stories. Today, the gallery has a small café with a deck in the front.

“It’s a labor of love. We’ve been doing it for free to put the community spirit back and to make Davis an art destination,” Rowland-Avrech said. “In the long run, it makes a happier environment for the artists and the public to enjoy them.”

MEE YANG can be reached at city@theaggie.org.

Review: Wreck-It Ralph

0

You know you’re watching a movie aimed at the families-with-kids demographic when animated flicks dominate the previews, as was the case when I saw Wreck-It Ralph with someone special in a cozy Elk Grove theater (which was, in fact, filled with families and kids). I’m not complaining, though: Upcoming DreamWorks fare Rise of the Guardians (opening Nov. 21) and The Croods (opening March 2013) looked promising, the latter even more so.

My point: Wreck-It Ralph will make it painfully obvious that you’re watching a movie created in the “kids will love it and parents will get the references that go over the kids’ heads” vein. It also adds an extra-sugary vibe to its mix, which many people won’t expect. If that makes you sick, you might want to avoid Wreck-It Ralph. But if you’re OK with that, then you’ll find a well-crafted animated flick — yes, one you can enjoy sans family or kids.

Wreck-It Ralph isn’t mainly a film of video game references, even though it’s peppered with them in a living, breathing arcade world. Rather, its meat and potatoes is a story of a guy wanting to be loved.

The movie has a unique take on the concept, since its main character isn’t a good guy who’s a loser, but a bad guy who’s a loser — a double whammy that makes us want to root for the emotionally bullied Ralph (John C. Reilly, who is arguably the best person the filmmakers could have cast for the role). But as Street Fighter’s Zangief says, Ralph’s not really a bad guy. He only plays one in his day job, which requires him to be the villain in Fix-It Felix, a game in which he’s perennially overshadowed by his colleague Felix (voiced dynamically by Jack McBrayer).

Ralph sets out to become loved and admired. Along the way, he meets Vanellope von Schweetz (you’ll swear she’s the kid version of Sarah Silverman, by whom she’s voiced), a girl whose ambition mirrors Ralph’s. You can describe the relationship between Ralph and Vanellope as “heartwarming with an edge,” and it’s a relationship that propels the film through an engaging and twisty plot. I think the filmmakers did a great job unfolding the surprises, expertly refraining from foreshadowing too heavily.

The non-video game references (mostly to sweets) are a bit forced at times, but they’re far more welcome than not, and they’re presented in a lighthearted manner. And the video game references are well-timed and superbly rendered. The filmmakers obviously did their homework, and their attention to detail will be much appreciated not only by video game fans, but also by people who simply love desserts.

The sweeteners top off a stellar offering aimed at families and young kids. Will that audience enjoy the film? For sure. But the viewing coalition should be broader than that. Wreck-It Ralph is a quality animated flick, and the other sort of kids — us college kids — will find much to enjoy as well.

JOEY CHEN can be reached at arts@theaggie.org.

Column: 50 years of 007

0

Let’s take a break from the prevailing political concerns of the week to examine something of a cultural milestone. Friday’s opening of Skyfall, the 23rd installment of the world’s longest continuously running film franchise, also marks the 50-year anniversary for the series.

In 1962, a fairly successful Dr. No was released to mixed reception. The story was a short and brutal space-age thriller, based on one of a series of novels written by Ian Fleming. Fleming had developed his star character in a romanticized atmosphere of sex, well-made cocktails, cold-blooded murder, fine dining and exotic locales, all out of step with and yet intoxicating to the ’50s generation of salesmen and homemakers.

The Vatican denounced the initial film’s unrepentant sexuality, while the Soviet Kremlin attacked it as an epitome of Western capitalist decadence. Such sensational publicity ensured a larger budget for successive adaptations, and by 1965, Bond was shattering box office records while simultaneously coming into stride with the times, leading one critic to remark that, “The Cinema was a duller place before 007.”

Indeed it was. James Bond became a model for the new action genre as well as a ’60s icon using a framework of highly stylized espionage to turn the spy into the modern anti-hero, a smirking killer whose idea of doing good is getting the job done and getting as much pleasure out of it as possible. This suave, hedonistic image made an impression, and early Bond films boosted everything from tourism to bikini sales and a curious obsession with the manner in which martinis were made.

Over the years, 007 has reached many high and low points without ever stopping for more than a few years at a time. It has collected myriad fans, while altering its format to reflect changing times. The inclusion of Judi Dench as Bond’s first female boss in 1995’s Goldeneye marked one of the more radical changes in the narrative. In her first on-screen conversation with the storied agent, she cuts him down to size as a womanizing, dinosaur relic of the Cold War.

Since that moment, the series has been toying with ways to make the final jump into contemporary self-reflectiveness without sacrificing its classic appeal. The latest film will no doubt take cues from some of the more serious genre exercises of the past few years such as The Dark Knight, and will benefit highly from the inclusion of an acclaimed dramatic director, Sam Mendes (American Beauty, Road to Perdition).

The official acceptance of 007 as a transgenerational hero, who is undoubtedly here to stay, is an exciting thought for longtime fans. It’s also a reason for everyone else to take a second look at this fictional universe, either as a historical curiosity or a voyage into our changing ideas of politics, sex, culture and heroism.

ANDREW RUSSELL can be reached at arts@theaggie.org.

Editorial: Where are the students?

0

Student Regent Jonathan Stein and Student Regent-designate Cinthia Flores went on a UC-wide tour to educate students about Proposition 30 and what it means to the UC system this past month. The two came to UC Davis on Friday as part of this tour.

The turnout was abysmal. Less than half of the seats were filled for the conference. Of those seats filled, most were members of student government. This is not acceptable. It is more important now than ever to be informed of the issues that directly affect us as students.

The regents rarely come to campus. ASUCD must make a bigger effort to publicize those events. Simply providing a venue for the regents to speak is not enough. ASUCD has the resources at its disposal to reach students on a mass scale. A campus-wide email to the student body informing them that the regents were coming could have dramatically increased student turnout.

On Tuesday, Prop. 30 passed with a vote of 53.9 percent to 46.1 percent. While this is a step in the right direction, state investment in higher education has decreased to unacceptable levels in the past 10 years. The student regents are one of the best ways we can fight further cuts to education. They represent us on the UC Board of Regents, and we must take the chance to learn and be informed.

We cannot feign surprise and anger when tuition and fees increase in the future if we do not make the effort to educate ourselves. We’re all in this together.

Column: Pike’s Piece

0

What is history?

Is history always told by the victor?

And can history be overcome, despite its repetitiveness?

In George Orwell’s 1984, the author wrote that “Who controls the past now controls the future. [And] Who controls the present controls the past.”

So then is the triumph over oppression just about control?

And are we simply to overthrow one power and its violence to replace it with our own?

I ask these things because tomorrow, the University of California will stand a year from its assault of the Golden Bears at Berkeley. Only nine days after that, it will stand a year from its assault of our fellow Aggies right here at Davis.

And I’ll be honest, at first I wanted to write a column ripping the administration apart.

But that’s already been done, and it got little done.

Then I wanted to write an article simply asking people to remember, but I wondered, how much do people really care?

Class continues.

The day will come and it will go. So will this article.

But still, I am an optimist.

And then even if it means nothing — like “voting” the other day — I’m going to give it a shot.

First, history is an idea preserved.

And it’s important to preserve the memory that on Nov. 9 and Nov. 18, 2011, UC officials decided to violently silence peaceful protests at UC Berkeley and UC Davis. I encourage all parents, students and anyone else connected directly or indirectly to simply YouTube the revolting police assaults. Officials have cited the reason for the attacks as a lack of proper communication between the administration and police forces, but regardless of how true that is, those concerned should be asking the administration where it stands with communications now.

I also encourage those concerned — or interested — to also Google the Robinson-Edley report, a May report one can learn from to question where the administration’s progress lies on the most recent recommendations for policy changes today. Robinson-Edley contains data gathered from students, administrators and even police regarding protest and its components at UC.

And while I’d argue that reports ultimately fail at their purpose, as did the “Brazil Report” following protests at UC Berkeley in 2009, reading them at least informs argument. It would be particularly wise for students to read the report as in getting lost in the fervor of movement — especially that of civil disobedience — we can easily overlook costly repercussions.

And in a future of more budget cuts with more protests, many students will have to make a choice. The individuals faced with that choice should be informed about the options. It’s important to learn of those choices to share with our less-report-savvy friends, relatives, sons and daughters, etc.

Secondly, I think that even if history is told by the victor, the future belongs to those who can listen and make the best out of what’s heard  — even if what’s heard is a lie. In accepting that there’s no ultimate truth but fighting for one we believe in, we find something worthy and help others find something worthy too.

Third, of course history can be overcome. I am writing to the world instead of falling to statistics that would see me flipping burgers for a living or calling out numbers in a prison jumpsuit. Old friends of mine are doing these things, but now they are memories which encourage me to encourage others to defy history.

Finally, as a student, my main concern is gaining knowledge to better the world, not to control it, but to free it from control of powers hostile to it. I believe the students and faculty who peacefully stood their ground last year did so for that same aspiration in the very face of that hostility.

I also understand, however, that we all have different ways of going about that bettering of the world. I think this is important to consider, but it’s even more pressing to consider how powers can and have reacted to the aforementioned aspiration. If the memory of last year’s events is not preserved, if it does not bring forth new questions and criticisms, those Golden Bears and fellow Aggies might not be the only students met with hostility when trying to stand up for something they believe in.

JIMMY RECINOS is still reading; you can send him some useful links at jrecinos@ucdavis.edu.

Aggie Arcade

0

Game of the week

I have a confession to make: I’m not a fan of the Halo franchise. Despite a handful of fun online-play sessions with friends, I’ve never quite understood the appeal of spending countless hours with Master Chief (despite personally playing every entry in the series in an effort to get hooked).

Sometimes you have to give into the masses though, and that’s exactly the case with the game of the week: Halo 4. For the first time in the franchise’s history, development duties have shifted to a brand new studio – 343 Industries. There are sure to be skeptics due to the absence of former developer Bungie, but reviews seem to indicate yet another strong entry in the wildly popular first-person shooter series.

Master Chief makes his return as the main protagonist four years after the events of 2007’s Halo 3. Additions include a new enemy threat, new weapons and expanded multiplayer modes. Most notably, a story-driven “Spartan Ops” mode will replace the former co-op driven “Firefight” mode.

I imagine I’ll end up playing Halo 4 at some point, though I’m in no rush. But based on feedback so far, fans of the series will likely be satisfied.

This week in news

Remember The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim, the 2011 release that gamers poured hundreds of hours into? As if that wasn’t enough, developer Bethesda has announced new downloadable content (DLC) for the highly acclaimed RPG title.

Titled “Dragonborn,” the new DLC will feature dragon mounts. I can already imagine flying dragons over snowy terrains … there’s no way that won’t be awesome.

The plot involves an antagonist named Dragonbeast who attempts to retain his previous power as the first Dragonborn by consuming the souls of dragons. More importantly, the DLC will take place in a familiar environment — the island of Solthseim. This locale first appeared in the “Blood Moon” expansion for The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind.

“Dragonborn” will be available on the Xbox LIVE Marketplace on December 4 for 1600 Microsoft Points. No plans for a PC or PlayStation 3 release have been revealed yet.

ANTHONY LABELLA can be reached at arts@theaggie.org.

The thrill is (almost) gone

1

America bleeds the blues.

It is the music rooted in our country’s struggles and vindicated by our resolve. It is the encapsulation of hope and loss in three short chords, an art form that serves as the bedrock to our rich and ever-expanding musical history.

There are few men more formative to that art than B.B. King, who performed before a sold-out audience in the Mondavi Center on Sunday. A titan of his time, King revolutionized electric blues guitar with his lush vibrato, melodic phrasing and expansive library of classic songs. His work is a window to history, his influence present in every guitarist to have ever followed.

Well … they tell you not to meet your idols.

At the noble age of 87, King simply lacks the physical ability to perform on a level that such a large-scale show merits. While forgivable, the addition of shoddy production value on virtually every level  added insult to auditory injury in what unfolded as a night of bittersweet disappointment.

First and most surprisingly, a muddled house-mix in Jackson Hall destroyed any sense of harmony between King and the individual members of his talented ensemble. Trumpet tripped over tenor sax as keyboard strokes flooded over everyone else in an awkward orgy of sonic sadness.

In the most rookie mistake of the century, King’s amplifier was placed onstage without a sound check, too close to the drum kit. Subsequently, every time B.B. plucked a note in the middle and upper registers of his beloved ebony guitar Lucille, the snare drum rattled behind him involuntarily and dirtied his already indecipherable tone.

It might seem petty to gripe on the stagehands’ lack of inconspicuous apparel, but when a large man in a neon green T-shirt strolls down to the performers in the middle of “Every Day I Have The Blues” to distribute sweat towels, it’s difficult to determine whether or not you are capable of punching a baby seal in the face.

I’m also willing to bet good money the lighting technician for the evening was attempting to make the audience drop it like it’s hot. For whatever reason, he resolved to switch between dramatically dimmed colors to a full, illuminated house several times for each song without regard to the mood of the piece. Either way, it just made me sleepy and I’m sure some small child in the second row almost had a seizure. Statistically speaking, it’s possible.

King is a master minimalist, effortlessly expressing complex emotions with simple string bends and sparse, lyrical phrases. However, despite many of the evening’s classic tunes, including fast-paced boogies like “Rock Me Baby,” King continued to play as lethargically as ever, off the beat and often out of tune.

But in the most grievous of offenses, King continuously refused to do what his crowd of devoted fans came from far and wide to see him do — unleash a barrage of face-melting, gut-wrenching guitar solos like a motherfucking Mississippi boss.

Instead, King chose to use his solo time to dance in his seat, make several threats at his bandmates in what was hopefully a joking manner,  make sexual statements about his lost vitality and tell witty stories from his rich musical past. The latter might not have been so bad had the microphone been placed close enough to hear exactly what he was trying to say. Most of the time, all the audience managed to hear was, “Down … Missisp … used to … them girls … and sometimes … man didn’t come back.”

I’ll bet they did, B.B. I’ll bet they did.

I’m not saying I didn’t enjoy watching a childhood idol make masturbatory motions on stage from the grand tier. I’m more upset with the fact that, as I sat listening to my long-time musical inspiration complain about his inability to engage in deep and meaningful coitus, he didn’t at least provide a tissue.

Also, I totally don’t enjoy watching a childhood idol make masturbatory motions on stage from the grand tier.

It was some time between counting the number of people in my tier reading their programs mid-performance or leaving to the restroom (six and five, respectively) that I completely lost faith in the show.

Yet for one brilliant moment, in his penultimate song of the night, something unusual happened. The ensemble turned down their instruments to optimal levels. The snare drum ceased to rattle. The lights dimmed down to an appropriate blue hue and stayed that way. And suddenly, B.B. started to do his thing.

It was the most beautiful four minutes of my life. His notes soared gracefully over the chord changes, brilliantly executing jazzy, soulful licks that both delighted and surprised. He told a story with his sound, a story that everyone in the audience could relate to. In his sonic expressions was the pain of a man unemployed, the remembrance of a forgotten lover and the struggle of the American people.

There was B.B. King, in his magical way putting my worst childhood memories, romantic frustrations, and shit grades in a sound that both mourned and understood. This was sadness and hope.

This was the blues.

Couples embraced, heads nodded and the small child seated next to me sat hushed and full of wonder.

But nothing gold can stay. Soon, the strobe lights returned, the band blasted away at each other, and King resumed his pining to some woman in the front row.

Yes, the evening didn’t go as planned. Yes, my roommate turned to me in a look of betrayal three times throughout the night. Yes, a personal idol played “just the tip” with my childhood memories.

Yet as I stumbled out into the cold, mourning my loss and listening to the little boy next to me ask for his first guitar, I realized something.

B.B. King had given us the blues.

Not in the way we anticipated, surely. But we could feel it in our bones, nonetheless.

Maybe the master still has a few tricks up his sleeve after all.

ADAM KHAN can be reached at arts@theaggie.org.

Shakespeare’s Globe Brings Hamlet to Davis

0

I’m squirming in my seat in anticipation of one of my favorite exchanges in all of Hamlet — the scene where Hamlet greets his old friends Guildenstern and Rosencrantz. I pause to look around and observe the faces of my fellow audience members. Given that the lights are still on inside the theater in an effort to replicate the Globe Theater’s Shakespearean tradition of open-air performances, I can see everything going on around me: the elderly couple in front of me is enraptured by Michael Benz’s (Hamlet’s) beautiful, talented face. A few of the high school students across the aisle giggle to each other as they translate Shakespeare’s dirty jokes into modern English. My friend nudges me to turn around and pay attention.

“Then you live about her waist, or in the middle of her favors?” Hamlet queries his friends about their relationship with Fortune. “Faith, her privates we,” Guildenstern snickers conspiratorially. “In the secret parts of Fortune? Oh, most true. She is a strumpet!” Hamlet shouts, before he, Guildenstern and Rosencrantz begin dancing and bust out some pelvic thrusts worthy of the elevator scene in the “Gangnam Style” music video.
Trust me — if you had been in the audience with me, you wouldn’t have needed a “No Fear Shakespeare” SparkNotes translation of the script in order to find scenes like these — with their snippy little add-ins and provocative gestures — utterly hilarious.

Of course, Hamlet is largely known as a serious drama filled with madness, incest, royal intrigue and brooding university students suffering from extreme indecision,  but that didn’t stop the cast from adding in pithy little one-liners here and there (such as when Polonius wandered off set to find the “Memorial Union Bar” to find some strong aqua vitae) to liven the mood and steal a laugh from the audience when appropriate.

Every element of the production was pared down and streamlined in order to speed the production along to a brisk two-and-a-half hour running time. The minimalist wooden set resembled an overgrown treehouse — a whirling tornado of planks, curtains and benches that rearranged themselves ever so slightly to fit the mood of each different scene. While waiting for their cues, various actors would wait partially out of sight within the shadowy cubbies built into the interior of the set, singing softly and playing various instruments to accompany the action on stage. Each act seamlessly segued into the next, yet it was always clear to the audience what exactly was taking place.

This sense of extreme efficiency even extended to the cast; each actor, save for Benz, who played Hamlet, multi-tasked and inhabited several different characters. Benz’s performance, to my delight, not only captured the obsessive and maniacal elements of Hamlet’s character, but also provided the audience a sense of what the Prince of Denmark must have been like before his father was murdered and his life was turned upside down. These glimpses into Hamlet’s previous characterization were most evident in his interactions with his former friends Guildenstern and Rosencrantz and his former flame Ophelia. The other actors also offered exceptional performances. Miranda Foster, who plays Queen Gertrude, among other roles, stole the show with her crudely hilarious performance as the queen in the play-within-a-play scene.

Carlyss Peer’s Ophelia was just as beautiful as she was tragic. In her final scene, she enchanted the entire audience with her sweetly sirenic voice as she wandered about the stage in the throes of a passionate fit of madness. At the end of the show, I was fortunate enough to have some time with Ms. Peer to talk a bit about the performance, the Globe’s world tour and her future plans as an actress. Although the Globe Theatre troupe left the Mondavi Center last Friday night, they will continue to perform in Southern California for the rest of November. If you know anyone in the area who would enjoy a quick, witty and streamlined rendition of Hamlet done in the traditional style of Shakespeare’s original Globe Theater, don’t get them to a nunnery ­— get them to their nearest theater!

Interview with Carlyss Peer:

The Aggie: How has the tour been going for you so far?

Carlyss Peer: It’s been absolutely amazing; we’ve had a wonderful time. We did three months in the UK before we started, and then we’ve come over to America in September, which has been amazing, and the reception over here has been great — everyone’s really enthusiastic, so we’ve been having a wonderful time. Here in Davis, we’ve been looked after particularly well. We’ve got wonderful food and lovely people so we’ve been having a great time; I wish we were here for longer.

Just out of curiosity, do you or the other cast members have any particular rituals like before you go on stage or after?

Well, not rituals per se, but I suppose everybody has their own warm-up. So people do different things to get into the zone, as you say. Vocal warm-ups are really important in particular in a place like this because it’s massive. About articulation and diction and all of that stuff — so, lots of connecting with your breath and warming up your mouth and all of that. Other than that — rituals, I don’t think so. I guess because with this production, we’re changing characters quite quickly. There’s not the world of the play as with that of putting on a plan. It’s not the same intense preparation if you were in a Presidium Arts theatre where you were only playing one character.

I’ve noticed this play is very different from a lot plays I’ve seen. For one thing, the lights were kept on in the theater, and that was very interesting for me because I’m used to seeing plays where it’s dark but the stage is lit up. How does that affect you and the other actors on stage — when you can see the audience just as well as they can see you?

I think it’s brilliant; it’s really fun — because when you’re acting in complete darkness, you have to pretend that there’s someone to talk to, but whereas with this, there’s people, there’s faces. I think particularly when you have a soliloquy or monologue, it becomes about communicating still, which is much nicer than just speaking to black. And I think it’s really nice because it becomes a collaborative experience that the audience generally feels a bit more involved and sit back in the same way, like “Oh, we can see everyone, and you can see us.” And it’s part of the story which I think is great and makes it a lot more fun for us. Because people’s reactions form how you do the next bit of the play. Because some people sort of squirm and other people are doing it with you. And you know, it’s very different, so I think it’s really good.

Yeah, your company did give us that warning in the beginning: “You can see us, just as well as we can see you.”

I think it’s unusual, but it’s really fun, and it’s in the manner of the Globe. Because obviously it’s an open air theatre in London so you can see everyone. There’s natural light and we’re sort of trying to take that with us on tour.

What are your future plans after Hamlet is finished touring?

Well, I hope to continue acting. I don’t really know what that would be, I guess. The tour is so intense. I’d love to work love to work at the Globe again. I’d love to do more theater. I’d love to do film. I’d love to do TV. I’d love to work in the U.S. again. I just want to keep acting, and keep doing this stuff that we do.

How’s it like traveling with such a small company?

It’s quite — what’s the word? Like a little family. Because you get to know everyone.

Have you worked with any of the actors previously?

I worked with Peter Brae, who plays Rosencrantz and Fortinbras [in addition to] doing A Midsummer Night’s Dream earlier this year with the Globe. And we toured in the Middle East. We went to Abu Dhabi, Qatar and Dubai, which was amazing too. So thank you, Globe, who traveled with us around the world this year. It was very cool; I liked it!

EMMA LUK can be reached at arts@theaggie.org.

Women’s Volleyball Preview

0

Teams: UC Davis at Cal Poly; UC Davis at UC Santa Barbara
Records: Aggies, 13-13 (7-6); Mustangs, 3-21 (2-10); Gauchos, 13-14 (6-6)
Where: San Luis Obispo, Calif.; Santa Barbara, Calif.
When: Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 7 p.m.
Who to Watch: Although the Aggies suffered a home loss to the UC Santa Barbara Gauchos in their last matchup, junior outside hitter Devon Damelio had a noteworthy performance that she will look to repeat this weekend.

Damelio recorded 12 kills and 14 digs to complete an impressive double-double in her team’s 3-1 loss to the Gauchos.

The following night, the team pulled a quick 180 and followed the lead of Damelio en route to a 3-0 stomping of visiting Cal Poly. The junior outside hitter yet again recorded impressive stats with 12 more kills to go along with a .333 hitting average.

The Aggies will pair up with these two teams once more this weekend in back-to-back fashion. Damelio puts up big numbers against these two teams, so look for a big couple of games from this force to be reckoned with.

Did you know? UC Davis is three games above .500 on the road this year, going a respectable 9-6.

No, Aggies fans, this is no insult to your steadfast loyalty or unwavering enthusiasm.

Rather, it shows a gene of resiliency and toughness that is embedded deep in the core of this Aggie team. Some teams have it, others don’t, but it is safe to say it is not something that can be learned.

Some notable road performances this year include senior Allison Whitson’s 19 kills in the Aggies’ win against UC Irvine on Oct. 6. Junior setter Jenny Woolway recorded 36 assists in an impressive 3-1 victory over Cal State Northridge on Oct. 26 while Damelio hit a spectacular .579 average against UC Riverside the following night.

The Aggies will look to unleash this road rampage they have been on and avenge their home loss to UC Santa Barbara just under a month ago.

Preview: All right, Aggies fans, take a seat in your respective corners and wait for the bell to signal round two. The Aggies will be facing opponents Cal Poly and UC Santa Barbara back to back for the second time this season, this time on the road.

UC Davis will start off the weekend taking on the Mustangs, who they have fared quite well against in the past. But, don’t let last month’s sweep fool you. At this level, teams learn extremely quickly and can change their approach faster than you can correctly pronounce “libero.”

“Cal Poly is a team that has made a lot of changes in their player personnel and in their lineups,” said coach Jamie Holmes. “So for us, we’re scouting them like it was the first time we’ve played them.”

While Cal Poly may be experimenting with their approach, Holmes continues to preach the same fundamental, aggressive volleyball that she has trained her players with all year long.

“Serving tough will be important to take them out of system,” Holmes said. “They generally don’t force their middle attack, which will allow our outside blockers to put up a solid block.”

As for the Gauchos, UC Davis will hope to achieve some redemption against a team that got the best of them in their last matchup.

“I would like to take a lot more risks when it comes to Santa Barbara — just to take them out of system,” Holmes said. “The first time around we didn’t serve as tough as we could have and as a result they really forced their middles.”

An aggressive and frequent middle attack by any Divison I offensive can cause a headache for the opposing team’s blockers, so let’s hope the game starts and finishes with a serve.

— PK Hattis