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Vice Provost Patricia Turner to leave UC Davis for UCLA

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Patricia Turner, UC Davis’ Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education, will be joining the Bruin team as Dean and Vice Provost of Undergraduate Education at UCLA. Turner will be succeeding Judith L. Smith, UCLA’s current Dean and Vice Provost of Undergraduate Education, who will be retiring after 16 years of service to the University.

Turner has been active within the University of California system,  beginning her career as a Ph.D. graduate student from UC Berkeley in 1985.

“We all recognize that undergraduate education is of paramount importance to UCLA, and I am confident that Pat will provide outstanding leadership as vice provost and dean,” said UCLA Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost Scott Waugh in announcing the appointment on July 11 in the UCLA Newsroom.

Turner joined the UC Davis faculty  in 1990 as a faculty member in African American and African studies. She has held her current position as Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education for 10 years, serving as interim dean of Humanities, Arts and Cultural studies (HArCS) for a short time during from 2004 to 2006, before returning to the position of Vice Provost of Undergraduate Education in the spring of 2007, her biography on the UC Davis Undergraduate Education website states. In addition, Turner served as director of the American studies program from 1997 to 1998 and director of African American and African studies from 1998 to 2000.

Turner’s research is focused on racial dynamics as reflected in folklore and popular culture, states Cynthia Lee of the UCLA Newsroom. Turner’s fourth book, Crafted Lives: Stories and Studies of African-American Quilters, was published in 2009.

Turner maintains two additional positions in the UC system as chair of the UC Education Abroad Program and as a member of the UCDC Academic Advisory Council.

“Pat has been a tireless advocate for our students, and one of the most effective. It is hard to see her go, but there is some consolation in knowing that her talents will remain in the University of California,” said UCD Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor Ralph J. Hexter.

Though her move to UCLA will likely face new, difficult challenges under the limited UC budget, Turner is pleased to continue her work within the UC system.

“I’m delighted that the next chapter of my career will be at a UC campus. I’ll be keeping all my Aggie T-shirts, just adding some Bruin shirts to the mix,” said Turner in UC Davis’ Dateline News for Faculty and Staff.

GHEED SAEED can be reached at campus@theaggie.org.

News in Brief: Davis Amtrak Station to close for four days

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From Friday, Aug. 24 to Monday, Aug. 27, the Amtrak Station on Second Street will be closed for maintenance.

During this time, passengers will not have access to the station’s building, which includes the waiting area, lobby and restrooms. In addition, the ticketing services and Quik-Trak ticketing kiosks will not be available. Checked baggage service will be suspended as well.

In the meantime, it is recommended passengers use eTicketing, although conductors will be available outside the station to accept credit card payments, and cash payments are accepted on board the train.

— Claire Tan

City of Davis encourages neighborhoods to use Nextdoor

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On July 18, the City of Davis launched its Nextdoor site — a free, private social network that allows for neighborhood and citywide communication. Together with Nextdoor, the city established 33 neighborhoods.

“It gives neighborhoods the ability to create their own private website, to talk to their neighbors about what’s important to them, whether it’s crime and safety, civic issues, reporting lost pets or exchanging advice and recommendations,” said Nextdoor’s senior communications manager Kelsey Grady. “We’re really just giving neighborhoods ways to meet each other and communicate with each other.”

According to Grady, when a city gets on board with Nextdoor, they get a Nextdoor city page that lets the city target messages to certain neighborhoods, if, for example, there’s a water main break that affects particular neighborhoods in Davis.

“It allows us another communication mechanism to talk to the residents,” said Stacey Winton, community partnership coordinator for the City of Davis.

To date, about 21 neighborhoods in Davis use Nextdoor. Although 33 were initially set up, a couple have broken out into smaller areas.

“At least two-thirds of the city has been claimed by a leader and have people signing up,” Winton said. “It really started with Davis Neighbors Night Out, to get people out into the street and have a block party to meet people.”

Winton said sometimes block parties don’t help with curbing the anxiety people may have when going out and meeting new people.

“Nextdoor is kind of like a step back from that,” Winton said. “You get to know people, who they are, where they live and what kind of things are being talked about.”

Additionally, the City of Davis’ funding has been cut back dramatically, so the city has been looking for no-cost or very low-cost means to get the word out to people about different city issues, Winton said.

“It doesn’t cost us anything; it doesn’t cost the city anything,” said President of the Old North Davis Neighborhood Association Steve Tracy. “The city just wanted us to try it out. We’re probably the first organization to take it on.”

Founded in October 2011, Nextdoor is currently active in over 4,000 neighborhoods across 48 states.

“We see that Nextdoor is working in urban areas and suburban areas on the West Coast and East Coast,” Grady said. “There’s a lot of data online that shows a lot of people don’t know their neighbors and we’re trying to change that.”

Each neighborhood’s site operates similarly to Facebook, with its interface taking cues from the widely used social network. Every site has a wall, as well as the option to form groups and events and upload pictures, with each household also having their own profiles. In addition, Grady said each neighborhood site can post updates on crime and safety and has functions similar to Yelp and Craigslist.

“The neighborhood map is a big thing that attracts people into using Nextdoor,” Grady said. “We’ve seen a lot of people give up Yahoo! groups or a LISTSERV and get on Nextdoor because it’s kind of the new, more updated way to connect to their neighbors.”

Grady said Nextdoor is more of a utility network instead of a social network.

“It’s more about solving problems,” she said. “We use ‘social network’ a lot because more people understand what it means now.”

Tracy said one of the values of using Nextdoor is not having to find a webmaster to maintain or structure the neighborhood website.

“The value is higher for the other neighborhoods where they only meet when there’s a crisis,” Tracy said. “I think it’s a good thing for the city if more neighborhoods use it.”

CLAIRE TAN can be reached at city@theaggie.org.

News in Brief: UC payroll increases by 6 percent

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The University of California (UC) payroll grew from about $10 billion in 2010 to $10.6 billion in 2011, according to the UC Report on Employee Pay, released August 9.

The report is produced annually to honor UC’s commitment to transparency and accountability to the public and is arranged by employees’ pay, personnel category and fund
sources.

The six percent increase can be seen in the rise in student enrollment by almost one percent in 2010 to 2011 and research expenditures that increased by over five percent. The UC workforce also increased by less than one percent in 2010. UC was also able to pay for a number of 2011 merit increases as well.

“This increase is likely attributable to a combination of factors, including restoration of furlough reductions, increased research activity and market pressures for more competitive compensation, particularly in the areas of health care, instruction and research,” the report stated.

An estimated 36 percent of systemwide compensation funding stemmed from “clinical revenue” and sources affiliated with UC medical and teaching hospitals. Less than 26 percent stemmed from tuition and general funds, and four percent came from Summer Session and University Extension student fees. The final amount came from private contracts and gifts as well as sources from the federal government and state and local government appropriations.

Top-earners on the UC payroll, who earn over $1 million, are mainly athletic coaches and health science specialists.

Due to continuous declining state support, many employee salaries are lagging behind market, according to the report.

“With the exception of contractual obligations to union-represented employees, salary increases were either eliminated or sharply curtailed … In addition, furloughs for UC faculty and staff in 2009-10 translated to salary cuts that ranged from 4 percent to 10 percent,” the report stated.

A larger plan to achieve higher employee pay has been delayed by the Board of Regents due to the state’s financial crisis. This brings about the risk of not being able to retain or attract talented faculty and staff.

— Muna Sadek

Aggies finish first week of preseason practice

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Summer is a time for fun, which for many college students involves sleeping in and relaxing.

However, there are some who define fun as waking up at six in the morning and working tirelessly in the hot August sun.

The UC Davis football program recently completed its first week of practice, in a season that is already under unprecedented circumstances.

The 2012 season marks the twentieth and final year with Bob Biggs at the helm of the program. Almost as if they are just passing each other by, Terrance Tumey will assume his role as the UC Davis Athletic Director in 2013.

The Aggies sported a 4-7 record last season, with notable victories over rival Cal Poly in the Battle of the Golden Horseshoe and over Sacramento State in the Causeway Classic.

Looking forward, UC Davis has shown hints of a promising season in its first season in the Big Sky Conference in its first week of practice.

“We take care of what we can control and that’s how we come out and work each day, it’s how you practice, how you prepare, how you push each other, how you support each other,” Biggs said.

“Our mantra is ‘win the day,’” he said. “If we do, the rest has a tendency to take care of itself and so far, the leadership and attitude has been terrific.”

The Aggies have plenty of leadership to go around, since 22 seniors and nine All-Conference players from 2012 will return to Jim Sochor field.

“I feel this team came in with some goals about how they want to practice and improve,” Biggs said. “We’ve improved within the first 11 days and made progress and that’s what you want to see.”

According to the schedule, each Big Sky team will play eight of the other conference teams. The Aggies were predicted by the Media Poll to finish 11 out of the 13 teams in their new conference.

UC Davis and Cal Poly will join familiar foe Sac State in the Big Sky, where they will face off with teams such as two-time defending conference champion Montana State and the powerhouse Eastern Washington.

The Aggies have had quite a situation at the quarterback position, one that can only have positive payoffs.

Red-shirt third-year Randy Wright and red-shirt second-year London Lacy have been taking a majority of the snaps this pre-season, as was the case last season.

Wright has been impressive in practice and has gained a lot of experience over the years, experience that may give him the nod as the regular starting quarterback.

“Randy is in a terrific rhythm the way he’s throwing the ball right now,” Biggs said. “There’s a confidence about the way he’s playing and he’s a much different player even from the one he was last year.”

Though this is a year of many firsts, it will be the end of Biggs’ colorful career as head coach of UC Davis football. Yet, Biggs is approaching this season the same way he has so many times in the past: with goals and determination to achieve them.

“I’m not approaching it any different but I’d be lying if I didn’t say I’m savoring every moment,” Biggs said. “Every moment I’m on the field or in meetings or interacting with players and coaches is a joy and as you wind down a career, you get much better perspective about how lucky you are to do something you enjoy.”

The Aggies will continue to practice until they kick off the season against Azusa Pacific on Aug. 30 in Davis.

MATTHEW YUEN can be reached at sports@theaggie.org.

Linnea Lomax search effort continues

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Forty days, four hours, 32 minutes ago. According to the website helpfindlinnea.org, this is the length of time since Linnea Lomax walked out of an outpatient clinic in Sacramento without her wallet, cellphone or medication.
Lomax, a UC Davis first-year from Placerville, has been missing since June 26. A human development major with a GPA exceeding 3.8, she is described as a cheerful, caring girl with “curly blond hair crown[ing] her slender 5’2” frame” and twinkling blue eyes.
Her disappearance follows in the wake of a series of episodes related to her mental state in dealing with the rigors that come with life after high school. This culminated with a nervous breakdown during Spring Quarter finals.
Subsequently, Lomax was encouraged to seek treatment for the illnesses that had begun to plague her. Between June 14 and 25, she was placed in inpatient psychiatric care.
On June 26, Lomax was scheduled to attend a full day of outpatient therapy. However, at around lunch time, she walked out of the clinic and has not been seen since. She was last seen wearing a black hooded sweatshirt with the word “Sweden” stenciled across in red, a pair of faded green skinny jeans and black flip flops.
An extensive search effort has since been conducted with support pouring in from all over the country. Nearly 6,000 users have shown their support via Facebook with hundreds volunteering their time or money. The effort continues with a benefit concert held on Aug. 5 at Cold Springs Community Church in Placerville. In addition, search parties are still combing the Sacramento area.
Linnea’s father, Craig Lomax, believes Linnea will be found, although he acknowledges that there will be a long road ahead for the family in nursing Linnea back to her prior state.
“All the possibilities seem to be increasingly unrealistic,” Lomax said.
He recounted that Linnea was never the type of student who was able to skip class and still get A’s.

“She had to work her butt off to excel,” he said. “[But] suddenly in a few weeks, all of that means nothing because she’s suppressed by her own mental faculties. The real Linnea is in there somewhere.”

Lomax wanted to emphasize the fact no one could have predicted this outcome for Linnea. Up until a few months ago, there hadn’t been the slightest hint of her deteriorating mental state. Lomax went on to theorize that many students are probably dealing with the same issues that Linnea did, but simply go home for the summer and choose to ignore or repress them.
He said mental illness isn’t something that happens in a day. You don’t wake up with a cough and suddenly realize you’re sick. It’s a slow process that could take months to fully reveal itself.

Lomax urges students to take a look at their lives realistically and to confide in their parents to be certain that history does not repeat itself.

El Dorado County Sheriff John D’Agostini made a statement one month into the search, stating that he believed Linnea was still alive.

“She was, and still is, considered at-risk and needs regular medication,” D’Agostini said.

All fronts are still holding out hope for the safe return of Linnea as the search efforts diligently forge onward. Linnea’s family recognizes that even if she is found, the healing process is going to be yet another arduous and taxing journey.

“If anyone can overcome it, it’s going to be Linnea. She’s just that kind of girl,” Lomax said.

ANDREW POH can be reached at city@theaggie.org.

Aggies at the Olympics: Scott Weltz and Kim Conley

Sure, UC Davis is now an NCAA Division I school, but it doesn’t produce athletes of the same caliber as the top athletic programs right?
Not so fast. A couple of UC Davis alumni went to London to participate in the 2012 Olympic Games.
Swimmer Scott Weltz, a UC Davis graduate in the class of 2010, has made his mark as one of the best in the world in the 200m breaststroke.
Weltz posted a time of 2:09.02 in the London Olympic finals, which was fifth overall. The San Jose, Calif. native earned his spot on the USA Olympic Swimming team when he pulled out a victory in the trials.
Out of the water, current volunteer assistant coach and 2009 UC Davis graduate Kim Conley gave the Aggies another source of pride when she qualified for the women’s 5000m run at the USA Track and Field Olympic Trials.
Weltz is finished competing in London, but Conley’s work has not yet begun.
Conley will compete in the first round of competition on Tuesday Aug. 7 and then on Friday Aug. 10, should she advance.
Her first round will be at 2:55 a.m. Pacific time. The final will be held at 12:05 p.m. local time on Aug. 10. There will be a Watch Party at the Davis Graduate for the finals of the 5000m run, an opportunity for locals and Aggie fans to cheer on the UC Davis alumna as she competes at the largest stage in the world.

— Matthew Yuen

Police Briefs

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WEDNESDAY
Sitting Pretty
Someone reported a prostitute sitting alone on Russell Boulevard, concerned that her pimps were nearby, though they were unable to say why they thought she was a prostitute.

Home Run
A person in a baseball cap was believed to have stolen the “For Sale” sign at an apartment complex on Sycamore Lane.

THURSDAY
Eggcellent Aim
Someone was hit in the face by an egg thrown by a group of people in a passing car in the Save Mart parking lot on Anderson Road.

Holy Ghost
A group of people were ghost-riding a vehicle while several others watched near a church on Mace Boulevard.

SATURDAY
A Midsummer Day-mare
A woman was taking a nap under a tree when she was awoken by a passerby who said two men had been watching her sleep on Anderson Road.

Carjacking
Someone stood outside their vehicle in the drive-thru throwing items at the employees at Jack in the Box on G Street.

Police briefs are compiled from the City of Davis daily crime bulletins. Contact EINAT GILBOA at city@theaggie.org.

UC Davis researcher to cycle 585 miles for tree research

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On Sunday morning, with her trusty bike and fellow tree lovers, UC Davis urban forestry researcher Julia Bartens began her seven-day, 585-mile Tour des Trees ride through Oregon. The fundraising event will last Aug. 5 to 11.

The annual Tour des Trees is organized by the Tree Research and Education Endowment (TREE) Fund and sponsored this year by STIHL. Participants were required to raise at least $3,500 to take part in the seven-day event, or $600 per day for part-time participants. Bartens said money raised for the event will primarily go to the TREE Fund as well as funding the event itself.

“This fundraiser is from a nonprofit that funds research and education on urban trees,” Bartens said. “And they funded part of my Ph.D.”

Bartens said she became interested in urban forestry in graduate school. Initially, she studied horticulture, but when she worked on an urban forestry project while pursuing her master’s, she found it to be fascinating.
The tour is held at a different location every year. Bartens said it’s usually held where the International Society for Horticultural Science annual conference is held.
“I was thinking of participating [in the tour] last year, but I hurt my knee,” Bartens said. “Unless my body fails or my bike fails, I’m going to try to do it for the whole week this year.”

Bartens initially lived in Virginia and the Tour des Trees took place there last year. However, she moved to California a year ago to do research at UC Davis.

“It’s in my neck of the woods again, so that’s kind of handy,” Bartens said.

According to Bartens, she has a twofold reason for participating in the Tour des Trees event.
“The athletic part of it – one of the biggest athletic accomplishments of my life – riding almost 600 miles in seven days, that’s huge for me. The other part is raising money and awareness for urban trees.”

Bartens explained when it comes to research budgets, urban forestry is usually the first one to get cut.
“Any federal grants or anything, urban forestry is never as important as it should be,” she said. “But I kind of get that — do you want to fund police or firemen, or do you want to fund urban trees?”

For Bartens, riding in Tour des Trees is her way of helping to getting to the word out about urban forestry.

“Urban forestry is trees in urban areas,” she said. “To me, it’s more of trees that are influenced by human development. There’s a lot that can be done to improve the level of benefits the trees provide to us.”

Bartens said we’re still focused on grey infrastructure – sidewalks, roads, buildings – and we don’t want any of them to be “hurt” by tree roots.

“But how to find the compromise of giving the trees what they need and getting out of the grey infrastructure of what we want, we’re kind of far away from that,” she said.

According to Bartens, the great thing about the event is anyone can participate, but the vast majority of participants are in the same industry.

“So we’re all tree folks who ride their bikes for a week,” Bartens said. “I think it’s a great feeling of community; you’re surrounded by people who think alike and do it for the same reason.”

Currently, Bartens has raised about $3,000 of the $3,500 she needs in donations for the fundraiser. She has until the end of September to raise the money, but would like to achieve this goal by the end of August.

“It’s not a race; you can’t win anything,” Bartens said. “You’re raising money, raising awareness and having a good time.”

CLAIRE TAN can be reached at city@theaggie.org.

NASA astronaut Stephen Robinson joins UC Davis faculty

Stephen Robinson, a UC Davis alumnus who acted as a mission specialist on four space shuttle missions, recently announced that he is leaving NASA to become a professor at UC Davis.

Robinson started as an undergraduate at UC Davis in 1973 and graduated with a double major in mechanical and aerospace engineering in 1978.

Robinson had initially been rejected by the admissions committee at UC Davis that had screened his application.

“I fought it,” Robinson explained when asked how he got admitted. “I borrowed my parents’ car and drove up from the Bay Area to Mrak Hall. I met with someone in Mrak Hall in the admissions office and somehow talked them into it.”

As an undergraduate, Robinson learned about a “cooperative,” or “co-op,” program that allowed students to experience an extended period working as a student at NASA. He got the call to work at NASA’s Ames Research Center at Moffett Field in Silicon Valley after another student declined the position.

“It was a springboard for almost everything that came afterwards,” he explained. “It also gave me some real-world experience. I actually did better in my grades at UC Davis because of having the NASA co-op experience.”

David Morse is the current Dean of Students at Ames.

“When former Ames co-ops, like Robinson, say his NASA Ames co-op experience was the springboard to his entire career, it is nothing short of thrilling,” Morse said.

Students from the NASA co-op and internship programs often go on to become NASA astronauts, taking part in world-changing missions.

Edgar Mitchell is one of the small group of 24 men in Earth’s history who have visited another planetary body. Of those 24 who traveled to the moon, he is one of 12 who have walked on its surface.

Mitchell said humans would go to Mars “in due course.”

“It depends on the equipment we have. We don’t have anything that can take humans to Mars right now,” said Mitchell.

While Mitchell was part of the fifth group of men chosen by NASA to be astronauts in 1966, Robinson was part of “Group 15” who were selected in 1995.

As a professor at UC Davis, Robinson will be able to apply his experience in creating a new research center. The center will study the way humans interact with vehicles, including space vehicles.

Robinson says the center will provide an “opportunity to use engineering to extend the human presence into hazardous environments.”

He thinks UC Davis has unique strengths to contribute to that effort.

“There’s quite a collaborative atmosphere at UC Davis. Not all universities have such an environment that’s conducive to collaboration,” Robinson said.

Robinson is eager to seek out new co-researchers.

“A vision starts out usually with one person, but as more people become part of the effort, then it becomes a shared vision and it grows organically,” Robinson said.

Philippe Spalart was a co-worker of Robinson’s at NASA Ames in the early 1990s when Robinson was working full-time and writing his dissertation.

“[Robinson] combined experiments and numerical simulations, which was unusual,” Spalart said. “He knows how to build a [theoretical] bridge.”

UC Davis also has two other astronaut alumni, Tracy Caldwell Dyson, a mission specialist, and Robert Phillips, a payload specialist. Caldwell Dyson graduated in 1997 with a Ph.D. in  physical chemistry. Robert Phillips, who graduated from UC Davis in 1965 with a Ph.D. in physiology and nutrition, was trained by NASA to be a payload specialist.

Phillips served on the back-up crew for the STS-40 mission of space shuttle Columbia in 1991 and taught for many years as a professor at the University of Colorado.

Ninety-eight NASA astronauts who have flown missions into space held an earned doctorate. Of these, Robinson was number 73. A number of Russian cosmonauts have held doctoral degrees as well.

Of the astronauts who have flown into space, 15 have held positions as university professors. Robinson will be number 16 when he begins work at UC Davis in September.

BRIAN RILEY can be reached at science@theaggie.org.

The search is over

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It has been a long road. But the search is finally over.
On July 5, Terrance J. “Terry” Tumey was announced as the next Athletics Director for UC Davis.
Tumey travels from Dominican University of California, which is in San Rafael, after a three-year stint there.
As the Aggies put the finishing touches on their transition to becoming an official Division I school, they are caught at an interesting crossroads. UC Davis has been operating without an Athletics Director ever since Greg Warzecka officially left his position in July 2011.
Nona Richardson had been acting as interim director since Warzecka’s departure. Tumey went through an extensive process that spanned the entire 2011-12 school year and more, as did the three other candidates for the job.
The decision time was delayed several times, since the Athletics Advisory Committee had not determined its choice by its goal of January, then by commencement in June. The committee was comprised of students, faculty, staff and alumni.
“In Terry Tumey, we’ve found the perfect person to take UC Davis athletics forward,” said Chancellor Linda P.B. Katehi on the announcement.
Katehi’s decision was affected by a multitude of input, including students, faculty, staff, alumni, the Academic Senate and Cedric Dempsey.
Former Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs Fred Wood, who has since accepted a position as chancellor of the University of Minnesota at Crookston, was also one of the leaders in the search for Warzecka’s replacement.
UC Davis held a reception for the community in which it officially introduced Tumey as the director of athletics on July 10 on campus.
At the reception, Tumey cordially thanked those involved in the process and gave a short statement on his welcoming.
“This day is not about myself or this position, but this is about what it’s always been about: this great institution,” he said.
“Davis lives excellence every day,” Tumey said. “I look forward to the heavy lifting; it won’t just be me alone, but it will be all of us.”
It would seem anyone with enough patience to sit through the year-long process — as Tumey did — is determined and has the desire to fulfill the duties pioneering the next step in continuing UC Davis’ history of excellence.
Tumey closed the short speech with a battle cry to ring in the new era of UC Davis athletics, one that was so simple, yet spoke to so many across the globe. And it will not be the last time we hear this from Tumey, or anyone else for that matter.
“I think there’s only one thing I would like to say and I’m very proud to say this in my first stance here, and that is ‘Go Ags,’” Tumey said.
MATTHEW YUEN can be reached at sports@theaggie.org.

UC Davis Police Lt. John Pike fired by newly appointed police chief

Lt. John Pike, the campus police officer who most notably sprayed seated UC Davis students in a Nov. 18 protest, has been fired.

According to documents obtained by the Sacramento Bee, newly appointed UC Davis Police Chief Matt Carmichael fired Pike Tuesday, rejecting findings by an internal affairs investigation conducted last November that declared Pike acted reasonably in his decision to employ pepper spray.

Pike, who had served the UC Davis Police Department (UCDPD) for 11 years, had been on paid leave since the incident.

UC Davis spokesperson Claudia Morain explained that she is unable to comment further on Pike’s departure because it is a personnel matter.

“Consistent with privacy guidelines established in state law and university policy, I can confirm that John Pike’s employment with the university ended on July 31, 2012,” she said.

The Sacramento Bee reports that Carmichael wrote Pike to explain his impending termination.

“The needs of the department do not justify your continued employment,” the letter stated.

About three months after the Nov. 18 pepper spraying, 21 students and recent graduates who were pepper sprayed and arrested filed a civil rights suit through the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) against the University, as well as Pike, Chancellor Linda P.B. Katehi, former Chief of Police Annette Spicuzza, who stepped down shortly after the incident, and a number of other police officers and administrators.

“What we’re trying to achieve for this case is to make sure that the university improves its policies, training and its procedures to ensure that nothing like this ever happens again and that [UC Davis] is an institution that doesn’t just tolerate free speech but realizes the importance of free speech to a university environment and to our political system,” said Michael Risher, an attorney for a plaintiff in the suit.

The lawsuit, which was filed in federal court, is about to enter mediation with the University around Aug. 15, Risher said.

He explained it would be incorrect to assign all blame to Pike.

“The unlawful arrest, the unlawful use of force and the unlawful disruption of a political demonstration on Nov. 18  were a culmination of a series of bad decisions by people all up at the chain of commands at  [UC Davis],” he said. “The University should not pretend that terminating Lt. Pike has done anything to absolve it of its responsibility of what happened on Nov. 18.”

Like Risher, Brett Lemke, a senior evolutionary anthropology major and a lifetime member of the ACLU, said that punishing one person will not solve the problem of police brutality in the future.

“I believe that accountability is the issue that we should be dealing with here, and that ultimately, this accountability should trickle its way up directly to the top. We need accountability for the people who gave the orders, starting with Linda Katehi,” Lemke said.

Lemke, who is also affiliated with Occupy UC Davis, explained that other factors played into the events of Nov. 18.

“In terms of the overall systemic issue; the militarization of campus police, lack of democratic student control over UCPD and the privatization of public education were the structural causes of the events that led to the … tragedy,” he said in an e-mail interview.

Muneeza Rizvi, a senior international relations major, explains that Pike’s termination is in large part an attempt by the administration to divert attention from the Davis Dozen, a group of 11 students and one faculty member presently facing 11 years each in jail and $1 million in fines for the alleged blockade and closure of a campus branch of US Bank.

“‘Excessive force,’ whether as pepper spray, punitive legal measures, or academic dismissals, is the necessary violence of privatization. Pike, as an individual, is less consequential than the structural realities that made the ‘pepper spray incident’ possible (and perhaps even unsurprising),” Rizvi said in an e-mail interview.

According to the report, Pike said that he believed the use of pepper spray was “appropriate.”

“I take my job very seriously,” the report quoted Pike as saying. “… Any application of force… it’s not a thrill ride, it’s not, ‘Woo hoo, this is gonna be fun, I get to hurt somebody.’ That’s not it,” the report stated Pike to have said. “Grappling [with students] would have escalated the force, whereas pepper spray took ‘the fight out of them,'” the report quoted Pike as saying.

ACLU attorney Risher explained that a reason he did not wish to speak specifically on Pike’s termination is because, like much of the public, he does not know the internal process that lead to it, as the State of California offers law enforcement officials strict privacy measures, including the Public Safety Officers Procedural Bill of Rights.

“We have no idea how the disciplinary process works in police departments, whether it’s doing its job … we simply cannot rely on the fox to guard the hen house,” Risher said. “Police departments simply aren’t in a position to conduct the type of neutral, independent, unbiased investigations of their own officers when necessary.”

MUNA SADEK can be reached at campus@theaggie.org.

Clarification 8/6/12: While the Davis Dozen do technically face a maximum of 11 years in jail, university officials and the Yolo County DA both have said this is unrealistic. University officials have maintained that the $1 million figure is unrealistic, too. Morain also said that the Davis Dozen does not correlate with as to why Pike no longer works at UC Davis.

Case against UC for failing to address alleged anti-Semitism dismissed

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UC Berkeley announced that on July 11, alumni Brian Maissy and Jessica Felber dropped their lawsuit accusing UC Berkeley and the UC system of failing to address anti-Semitism on campus during 2010 protests.

The lawsuit originates from an incident on March 5, 2010 when Felber, plaintiff and member of Tikvah: Students for Israel, was allegedly assaulted by former Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) leader Husam Zakharia with a shopping cart at an Apartheid Week event. At the time, Felber was holding a sign stating “Israel wants Peace.”

The lawsuit accusing the university of not assuaging a harsh environment against UC Berkeley Jewish students was filed in March 2011.

In December 2011, U.S. District Judge Richard Seeborg dismissed the case with the ruling that the university did not infringe on the constitutional rights of the plaintiffs and that it was not legally obligated to intercede in political campus disputes. However, the case continued through an appeal of the court’s ruling.

Felber and Maissy agreed to dismiss the lawsuit with the understanding that the university will consider implementing two possible changes to its policies on campus demonstrations after gathering campus opinion. The university is not required by law to do so.

In June, UC president Mark Yudof assembled a group of 17 people to comprise the Advisory Council on Campus Climate, Culture and Inclusion. The members include students, faculty and administrators from UC campuses as well as leaders from various racial and religious groups.

According to a July 13 press release from the University of California Office of the President (UCOP), the group was tasked with identifying, evaluating and sharing “promising practices” at institutions across the state and nation. They monitored the progress and method of each campus toward ensuring healthy conditions that supported the university’s mission and provided equal opportunities for all UC constituents.  Many of the factors that were discussed and evaluated dealt with race and religion.

“Both groups of students said UC could provide more and better accommodations for religious and cultural practices on campuses,” the release stated.

This included having space available for meditation or prayer, more halal and kosher food options and appropriate gender-specific living space for Muslim women.

“The report found that negative experiences for both groups of students were most common when outside speakers — known for their provocative stances toward Israel and Jews or for their fiery anti-Islamic rhetoric — participated in campus events… Both groups said they thought that UC administrators were biased against them in how they responded to or enforced campus regulations during some of these incidents,” stated the release.

The two feasible alterations the university will consider regarding demonstrations stem  from the UC Berkeley “Apartheid Week,” during which mock checkpoints that are organized by SJP and the Muslim Student Association (MSA) are established. Students carry fake weaponry and question classmates about their religious backgrounds to simulate conflict at checkpoints on occupied Palestinian territory.

One of the alterations is limiting the use of mock firearms on campus to only when “it would be obvious to a reasonable observer that the imitation weapon is not a real weapon.”

According to lawyer Joel Siegal, the fact that members from SJP or the MSA did not carry imitation firearms at Apartheid Week 2012 demonstrates one of the aspects in which the lawsuit was successful.

The demonstrations protesting Palestinian treatment by Israelis are staged at Sather Gate, a crowded area on the UC Berkeley campus. The second potential policy change would be to allow pedestrians an unimpeded path during protests at Sather Gate.

The efforts by UCOP to make UC campuses healthier learning environments for Jewish and Muslim students are not effective, according to former SJP Co-President at UC Davis Lyla Rayyan, who was a member of the student group that met with UCOP earlier in the year.

“They admitted that there is nothing much they can do, other than make recommendations that we all knew wouldn’t amount to much. UCOP turned a political discussion into a Muslim-Jewish problem and there are many Jewish students that have come out saying their testimonies and experiences were left out of the report because they were not pro-Israel,” Rayyan said. “All in all, the UCOP’s efforts were probably a nice gesture that will do nothing for the issue at hand.”

The settlement also acquits the university from reimbursing the plaintiffs for their legal costs and paying them monetary damages.

Once the lawsuit was settled, both plaintiffs were graduated alumni and therefore did not retain the ability to seek redress from the court, thereby leading to the Title VI complaint filed by Joel Siegal and Neal Sher — Felber and Maissy’s lawyers — to the U.S. Department of Education and Department of Justice on June 9.

“The university needs to be consistent. When the republican club sold baked goods at different prices the university issued a statement acknowledging it being offensive or after Compton cookout [called] for town meetings to acknowledge that offense,” Siegal said. “Yet year after year, the university allows the Apartheid Week performance and other anti-Israel demonstrations which go beyond the vale of criticism of Israeli government policies, but instead demonize Jews and attempt to delegitimize the very right of the existence of Israel as a Jewish state.”

Title VI prohibits discrimination based on race, color or national origin in programs or activities which receive federal financial assistance. A breach of Title VI by schools can result in loss of federal funding.

Most recently, the group Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) released a statement asking President Yudof to table the report “until a methodologically sound and even-handed report can be conducted.”

Tikvah: Students for Israel at UC Berkeley, Aggies for Israel and the MSA were unable to be reached for comment.

The report findings can be seen at Universityofcalifornia.edu/news.

LILIANA NAVA OCHOA can be reached at campus@theaggie.org.

Raber dabbles in professional tournaments over summer

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Tyler Raber, the Aggie golf sensation, has been all work and no play this summer. The UC Davis red-shirt senior’s phenomenal performances in the four amateur tournaments held these past two months is a reflection of the hard work and countless hours he spends on the green every day.

Raber’s awe-inspiring summer journey began with the British Amateur Open in Scotland. He became the first American to advance into the round of 16, where his run came to an end.

Raber narrowly missed a chance to win the first hole, missing an eight-foot birdie shot. He regrouped with a birdie on the fourth hole, but Toby Tree went back up after another birdie on hole six. On the par-4 15th hole, Raber hit a seven iron to eight feet, only to see his putt fall to the left. He needed par on the 17th hole, but his putt just missed.

Upon reflection, Raber takes away nothing but positive thoughts and ideas from the experience.

“It was a fun tournament,” he said. “The course was firmer and faster, but it was interesting to see the talent around the world. It gave me confidence for the rest of the summer because the competition there is as hard as it’s ever going to be.”

With only one day of rest, Raber competed in the 101 California State Amateur Championship in Santa Barbara. He lost to his seeded first-round opponent, a friend from Bakersfield.

“The biggest challenge was adjusting to the courses here,” Raber said.

In July, Raber was selected to participate in the Sahalee Players Championship in Washington, which, unfortunately, did not go in his favor. He finished 44th.

“It was a fun course,” Raber said. “But the courses were very tough. “If you don’t get the ball off well, it is hard to get a good score, while in other tournaments you can compensate for poor shots.”

Raber quickly recovered from that tournament to win the Trans-Miss Championship in Iowa on July 13. He held off Iowa’s Steven Ihm by a single shot with a final-round score of 1 over 72. Raber’s victory marks the biggest non-collegiate tournament win in UC Davis men’s golf program history.

Raber led the field after his first two rounds, posting scores of 70 and 65, respectively. He shot a solid first round, parring his first eight holes.

His second round was even more impressive as he moved to six under with birdies on five of his first nine holes. He opened and closed his back nine with bogeys, but a birdie on hole two followed by six pars sealed his victory over Ihm and the rest of the field.

“It was very close to finish,” Raber said. “I tried not to think about the pressure or the stakes. I focused on my game.”

“He is an incredibly hard worker,” said coach Cy Williams. “He deserves all of the success he gets.”

Over the past several months, Coach Williams and Raber have been working to fine-tune Raber’s golf performance. They have simply worked at removing the kinks from his game rather than employing new strategies and techniques for upcoming championships.

The next destination for Raber is Erin Hills, Wisconsin on Aug. 13. He captured the third qualifying spot. This will be his second time competing in this tournament.

“Hopefully, my experience from last year and success this summer will give me more positive results this year,” Raber said. “I am pleased to get the spot and having been practicing a lot.”

Finally, in September, Raber will participate in the Sacramento Championship with college players. Raber anticipates this tournament, as it will be a great opportunity for him to get ready for the college season.

Between mid-August and September, Tyler Raber will spend long-awaited time with his girlfriend, family and friends with afternoon practices on the green with the help of Coach Williams.

“This is what he loves to do,” Williams said. “I couldn’t be prouder of him.”

VEENA BANSAL can be reached at sports@theaggie.org.

News in Brief: Yolo County Fair to run from Aug. 15 to 19

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This year’s annual Yolo County Fair is showcasing its theme “Sheep Thrills and Muddy Wheels,” featuring a wide range of livestock, agriculture and antique exhibits. Additionally, there will be local entertainment, commercial and concession vendors and a carnival. Arts and crafts booths are also available for children.
Attendees can pay $25 per person for unlimited carnival rides. All other events are free except for the Yolo County Bounty Gala on Aug. 15, Live Pro Wrestling on Aug. 16 and the Auto Destruction Derby from Aug. 17 to 18.

The fair is located at 1125 East St. in Woodland, officially opening to the public on Aug. 15 from 6 p.m. to midnight. From Aug. 16 to 19, the fair is open from noon to midnight.

For more information, visit yolocountyfair.com.

CLAIRE TAN can be reached at city@theaggie.org.