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Commencement 2012 looks back and ahead

UC Davis will celebrate its graduates with 13 commencements from May 17 to June 17. The theme of history will certainly run a bloodline through this year’s speeches, as both students and professionals think about how UC Davis can connect to its past and future.

Kathryn Hempstead, a College of Letters and Sciences (L&S) commencement speaker this year, columnist for The Aggie and senior sociology major, wants us to remember Socrates and his sage words when thinking about how extraordinary a place Davis is.

“I’m pretty sure Socrates said, ‘The unexamined life is not worth living,’ and while it’s not generally a goal of mine to live by the precepts of dead Greek guys, I think that the purpose of a grad speech is to do a bit of examining and a bit of inspiring. So I hope very much I live up to my own expectations,” Hempstead said.

Aaron Heuckroth, one of two College of Biological Sciences (CBS) speakers and winner of the 2012 CBS College Medal, may not be thumbing through history books, but he will revive students’ memories through song.

“I don’t know how much I can reveal about the song without spoiling the surprise, but it’s called ‘The Ballad of UC Davis,’ and it’s meant to be a humorous look back at our experiences as biology majors here at UC Davis and the things that make this university really special. If I can squeeze even a little bit of entertainment and humor into the long commencement ceremony, I’ll feel like I’ve done my job,” Heuckroth said.

Daniel Turner, another L&S speaker and senior psychology major, similarly thinks back to all the times he spent with fellow students and is most enamored by a very existential idea: parts coming together as a whole.

“I think what I find most exciting about commencement in general is the idea that all the students who I’ve shared classes with (considering we’re in the same grade) are all convening in one room at one time. It’s a unique experience to think that each separate relationship you created with your peers in each different classroom will all be coming together now,” Turner said.

When asked if his speech will be any different from any other graduation addresses, he answered, “No.”

“It shouldn’t be. I feel my job as the commencement speaker is to be a representative of every graduate and so I try not to deviate from that expected role,” Turner said.

Neal Van Alfen, dean of the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences (A&ES) said that their commencement speaker, Secretary-General Chris Buijink of the Ministry of Economic Affairs in the Netherlands, is the type of leader that will help students understand the importance of intellectual diversity. Van Alfen’s perspective is not just on UC Davis’ previous accomplishments, but on what lies ahead.

“Secretary-General Buijink leads a ministry that combines economic development, innovation and agriculture. As we look to the future, countries such as the Netherlands serve as a model for what is possible in economic development based on innovation in food and agriculture while maintaining very high environmental quality standards,” Van Alfen said. “Inviting a leader from another country demonstrates to our students the global connections of UC Davis and importance of UC Davis in addressing global issues.”

Austin Sendek, the third L&S speaker and senior applied physics major, had a similar message as Dean Van Alfen.

“The basic message of my speech is a reminder that what we’ve learned outside the classroom during our college experience is just as important as what we’ve learned inside the classroom,” Sendek said.

Heuckroth already knows how to get students up out of their desks and onto the international stage.

“I think the trick is to just keep saying ‘yes’ when cool opportunities present themselves — UC Davis is full of them. It’s an amazing feeling to take classes with people who care about the material as much as you do. We love this stuff, and it shows,” Heuckroth said.

In regards to actually performing their speeches, some are nervous, while others dread the more mundane aspects of graduation.

Hempstead admitted forthright that nudity may unintentionally be involved during her address.

“I fear I’ll trip over my own feet and expose my undergarments to a stage full of professors and administrators. But on another level, I also fear I’ll pull my punches. I want to be honest about how scary real life is, and the fact that in many ways we will undoubtedly fail, and not achieve what we set out to do. Hopefully I don’t chicken out,” Hempstead said.

She plans on reciting her speech to trees or ducks in the Arboretum, and sleeping with her speech under her pillow. She will also most likely have a “panicky cry” in the bathroom earlier in the day, but said it’s less a ritual and more a neurosis.

Both Turner and Sendek aren’t looking forward to some of the traditional, albeit less interesting, practices of commencement.

“[What’s most boring is] hearing countless names of people you have no clue who they are. And realizing that the only real opportunity for excitement is that you’ll hear a name you know be called,” Turner said.

Sendek said he will work hard to make the event as exciting as possible.

“I guess I was mostly driven by the desire to make commencement memorable for my class. I didn’t want us to have to suffer through a boring speech with too many Dr. Seuss quotes that we’d all forget within a week. Graduation is a celebration of our accomplishments, so I just want to make everybody smile at least once,” Sendek said.

Jean Wigglesworth, who has been an event manager at the Office of Ceremonies and Events for 11 years, choked up a bit when asked about her favorite part of commencement.

“I actually love each and every one because it’s an ending and a new beginning. I can cry even if I don’t know anybody walking! They celebrate what they’ve done in four or five years and then they also think about what is coming,” Wigglesworth said. “For me, it’s about the people, the kids, and making it a good experience for everybody.”

CHELSEA MEHRA can be reached at features@theaggie.org.

Column: To recap

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This is actually the last column of the year, so I guess you can say I have the last word, or I guess I could say. My goal this past quarter has been to provide my readers with valuable insight into the things we find entertaining. I’ve always believed pop culture can be talked about in a smart way because the things that we use to entertain ourselves often reveal something important about our society.

Because there are just so many things that I didn’t have a chance to cover, I wanted to use this last column as an opportunity to provide some tips, and tell you what to care about and look out for in your dealings with pop culture in the future.

You should care about the representation of women in popular culture. Don’t laugh at thoughtless, dumb sexist jokes; instead, point out stereotyped roles that women play in commercials to your relatives. Don’t be on #teambreezy; don’t buy his albums and try as best you can not to dance to his songs.

You should watch premium cable TV shows because they are becoming better story-telling mediums than movies. People now talk about television shows the same way we talk about books, and though this may sound like a bad thing, it really isn’t. These shows are rich in plot and character and provide for deep, multifaceted stories that make our minds work. We simply need more than two hours to develop these complex characters and form relationships with them. We’re not replacing books; we’re replacing TV shows like “Miami 5-0” and movies like Man on a Ledge. Have a three-hour conversation about the season four finale of “Breaking Bad” and you’ll understand. It’s not a coincidence that the best four television shows of all time have come out in the last 10 years. Get on this, now. Go.

You shouldn’t knock something just because it’s popular.  Popular things are popular because people really enjoy them. You’re actually the minority. Ease up. If you’re worried about ruining your rep by listening to Katy Perry, then your rep isn’t very stable in the first place. “Swing” by Savage is the seventh most-played song on my iTunes.

Give other music genres a chance. Everyone has their preference, but I promise your ears can handle diversity. Don’t be the person at the party who has never heard the rap song because you’ve been too busy downloading indie folk-rock. That doesn’t make you cool or hip, it makes you one-dimensional. You won’t meet a successful indie music writer who can’t break down all of Drake’s Take Care.

Respect DJing as an art form. You wouldn’t ask Rembrandt to paint a Jackson Pollack; stop asking the DJ to play a different song. Don’t complain or ask for something else; simply nod your head, shuffle your feet and hope there’s some artistic statement being made.

Don’t be Republican on social media. It looks weird.

You should care about and read content on the internet. This Web of ours contains some of the best writing man has ever produced. And it keeps on coming. Every day when you wake up there are 30 new articles talking about exactly your interest, whatever that may be. Please find blogs and sites that write about the things you care about. I promise they are out there. There are people like me who want to compare Don Draper to Lil Wayne and this just isn’t possible if you guys only read the Yahoo! stories about the “10 best places to live if you have allergies.”

Stop complaining about reality television and enjoy it. There’s never been a show more about escapism than “Teen Mom.” Don’t waste your time criticizing something that’s so clearly meant to be criticized. Enjoy the absurdity.

A song enters a state of staleness for about 4-5 years after it becomes popular.  At a certain point it becomes cool to play that song again. Right now, I’m getting back into the Justified album.

I can’t believe I have to say this, but stop posting the Gotye video.  Try as hard as you can never to wear sandals. You can’t say swag ever again. Don’t brag about unpaid internships and better yet, don’t take unpaid internships. Get a Twitter. Stop referring to yourself as a foodie. Santa Fe chicken salad till I die. Oscar Wilde once said, “You can never be overdressed or over educated.” Don’t ever accidentally sit in the wrong seat at a sporting event.  Don’t do the wave at a sporting event.  Vote for stem cell research.

If you want more ANDY VERDEROSA you can e-mail him at asverderosa@ucdavis.edu or follow him at @andyverderosa, andyverderosa.tumblr.com and andyverderosa.wordpress.com. Get at ur boy.

Explore the nooks and crannies of Yolo County this summer

As summer seeps into Davis, almost the entire campus population is gearing up to head home and not come back until September. But what about the ones who are sticking around, working in the area and looking for things to do during the summer in Yolo County?

There are so many nooks and crannies in the area offering one-of-a-kind entertainment, especially during the summer. More importantly, the history of Yolo County is so intertwined with these activities that one is also bound to learn something new while having fun.

For starters, the Sacramento River Train has been conducting murder mysteries, romantic sunset dinners, relaxed Sunday brunches and the old west Great Train Robberies since 2005.

“A train is a great venue for a Murder Mystery show,” said Chris Hart, president of the Sierra Railroad Dinner Train. “The show is a fun, sometimes over-the-top whodunnit where you try to figure out who killed who.  And while this fun show takes place in your car, you are served a delicious three-course dinner while you ride through the countryside.”

The Great Train Robbery is another classic show.

“The trip features a trip back to the old west with sheriffs and bandits,” Hart said. “There is usually a lot of action around Robber’s Roost so keep your head down!  The train stops at a park along the Sacramento River where an [old-fashioned] barbecue lunch is served.”

The Sierra Railroad has just recently added some new trips to the Sacramento River Train’s summer schedule such as the Sunset Happy Hour Trips and the Graduate Train, which is on June 9. All new graduates ride the train for free.

To learn more about the Sacramento River Train, go to www.sacramentorivertrain.com.

Another Yolo County attraction is the Barnyard Theatre.The 120-year-old Schmeiser barn is located off County Road 31 between Davis and Winters. During the summer, the barn is completely renovated by the Barnard Theatre production team. The barn becomes a theatre, hosting plays for the Yolo County Community as well as workshops for next year’s play. This year’s play will be Psyche by Meghan Brown.

“There’s the excitement of theatre, the excitement of seeing new theatre, the elaborate production itself; then there’s the strangeness of seeing theatre in a barn, then there’s whatever it is to be out in the country,” said Briandaniel Oglesby, the literary manager of Barnyard Theatre and organizer of the Nights of New Plays Festival (NNPF).

Besides attracting audiences for a unique showing of an original play, Barnyard Theatre also welcomes people who have a passion for theatre to attend the NNPF workshops.

“NNPF pieces may be written by emerging or professional playwrights, Barnyard folks, UC Davis students or other members of the community,” Oglesby said. “Artistically, I believe that it’s important to develop and celebrate new work. I find original work by living playwrights exciting. We’ve built a playwright-centered workshop model over the years. Last year, we workshopped Psyche during the NNPF, and the results are a phenomenal script and excellent relationship with the playwright.”

To learn more about the Barnyard Theatre, visit  www.barnyardtheatre.org.

Last but not least is the Yolo County Basin Foundation’s Bat Talk and Walk 2012.

Every summer, a little more than a quarter million Mexican Free-Tailed Bats sleep under the three-mile-long Yolo Causeway during the day, flying out in great colonies during every summer sunset.

It is possible to watch the bats fly out around the west end of the bridge on your own accord. But the Bat Talk and Walk provides a 45-minute indoor presentation on the local history of bats as well as an offroad tour to see the 250,000 bats that fly out at the east end of the bridge. Yolo Basin asks for a $10 donation for adults age 16 and over.

“All the live bats that we show at the indoor presentation come through the wildlife rescue,” said Corky Quirk, the Yolo Basin Foundation’s education associate and founder of Norcal Bats. “The presentation helps people to understand the importance of these animals for the ecosystem, and watching their movements and interactions kind of helps to get rid of those preconceived notions that are produced by big Hollywood movies.”

To learn more about the Bat Talk and Walk, visit www.yolobasin.org.

DOMINICK COSTABILE can be reached at features@theaggie.org.

Editorial: Davis Police

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A UC Davis student was Tasered by Davis City Police, May 23, for allegedly resisting a police arrest when confronted during a verbal altercation between himself and friend Tatiana Bush. The police attempted to detain the male subject in the car, who, according to a police press release, broke free of his handcuffs and punched the officer in the face. Bush also inserted herself between police and her friend, which resulted in her being detained against a police car which said lead to large bruises and a concussion.

It is unsettling when police officials, who have sworn to “serve and protect” citizens, continue to act inappropriately in seemingly harmless situations. After the notorious incident of November 18, we should be wary of any event that brings about police involvement, especially since many a time it appears unwarranted.

The attempt to arrest the male student later led to the summoning of a grand total of nine police cars. This was unnecessary, considering both students involved were unarmed. It seems as though the police are willing to make a production out of any event, regardless of its severity, to justify any possible arrest, or in this case, the use of a Taser. Tasering of students in a situation such as this, without full knowledge of what was going on, is not okay.

However, being the skeptical reporters that we are, we realize that the police have yet to state the findings of the investigation looking into the use of force. We are waiting for a report and bad cell phone videos from the group of onlookers that were attracted by the allure of excessive police lights.

Investigation is good, unless we have to wait another five months. Hopefully, the report is released promptly without bias, so the public can make their own judgments.

Column: Out of California

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“When are you leaving?”

Nowadays that’s the most common question you hear at exchange students’ get-togethers. We’re going home very soon and everyone’s freaking out. If you thought it was bad two months ago when I started writing this column, imagine what’s happening now.

So how are we coping? Mostly by doing all the things we like to do together: socializing, dancing, eating, watching movies. There are also other things to worry about: planning last trips, all our stuff fitting into our suitcases, selling stuff that has accumulated throughout the year. And finals, of course! But there’s always someone to remind us that something is our last this or last that. You know, just to keep things in perspective.

In three weeks I’ll be back home in Lithuania. No more biking home at night from pool parties, ice cream from Baskin Robbins, sunbathing on the Quad and studying at the Student Community Center. And just like that there will be no more California while those who made it that much more special will be scattered all over the world.

Although we always knew that this wouldn’t last forever, there are moments when we wish that it would. Yes, we’re excited about going back to our normal lives, but just like we’re still outsiders here, we will now be outsiders back home, too. At least for a while. Because we lived here for so long, we’ve grown close to California and its people and we created this close-knit international family. The transition will be painful and not only because of the jet lag.

Before coming here I wasn’t really thinking about making friends or having fun. That part simply slipped my mind. Applications, course choices, visa nightmares, booking plane tickets, accommodation searching and most of all the thought of going away for 10 months were the only things I could think of.

Then I got here and suddenly I didn’t have to worry about any of that stuff anymore.  My constant over-thinking normally would have messed it all up. But being totally unprepared, I was thrown into this whirlwind of everything new: new relationships, new activities, new environments — and only for the better. But now it’s all familiar and the sheer thought that I might never come back to Davis or see some of the people that I’ve grown so close to in these past nine months is unbearable.

But then again, there are so many people who would kill to come here and be in our place and do what we did. As my mom says, the last thing we should do is mourn having to leave. We happened to be in a right place at a right time and we made an effort to take this opportunity. We should only appreciate and celebrate that, and look forward to future adventures.

Last fall, a column about experiences of an American student on exchange in Belgium made me realize that the lives of international students in Davis are just as interesting and that I really wanted to share it with others. Since I began this spring, I have had a great time writing these columns, from the very moment I was hired on the phone while standing in some back street of University District in Seattle, WA.

I feel like writing these columns was a way for me to reflect on my year in Davis and record not only my personal experiences, but also those of the people that were closest to me throughout my stay.

There was so much of us, us foreign exchange students, in these columns. I quoted directly from our conversations, built upon the topics that we’ve talked about among ourselves, included various references that only we would get and used my friends’ experiences as examples. Without them, there would have been no column to begin with.

I want to thank them for the inspiration, but most of all for making me feel as if I were on Friends. I’m sure that in 20 years when we’ll have our reunion here in Davis that feeling will still be there.

KRISTINA SIMONAITYTE is hoping that her columns were an inspiration to another budding writer or future foreign exchange student. Also if you’re interested in a U-lock, bike helmet or large comforter you can reach her at ksimonaityte@ucdavis.edu.

MFA Student Exhibition at Nelson Gallery

Art is an ever-changing form, especially when reviewing paintings and sculptures throughout the ages. There was Michelangelo, who created cherub angels and lush scenery. Leonardo da Vinci was renowned for his lifelike sketches of the human body as well as the eternal Mona Lisa, who has the faintest of a smile on her face. Vincent Van Gogh, plagued by depression, celebrated the brightness of life and the world around him. However, as the timeline for art goes on, everything begins to change. Artists began to take charge and create their perspectives to share with viewers, hence Warhol’s “Pop-Art” or Georgia O’Keefe’s abstract paintings of flowers.

Former UC Davis professor and painter Roy De Forest has observed how events could greatly influence art, especially war.

“In a time of social disruption, scientific rationalization, and political instability, the creation of art is an act of dangerous faith,” De Forest wrote in an MFA catalogue.

On Friday, the Nelson Gallery will celebrate its Master of Fine Arts Degree Exhibition in which seven students will be showcasing their work. The exhibition will run from June 8 to 29, allowing faculty, students and art lovers time to drop by and marvel at the students’ creations as well as see how today’s world, with its crumbling political regimes and tension, have impacted the artists’ perspectives.

The seven students who are featured in the exhibition are Dani Galietti, Daniel Brickman, Kyle Dunn, Katherine Nulicek, Terry Peterson, Erika Romero and Jared Theis. Renny Pritikin, the director of the Nelson Gallery, commented on the assortment of different focuses that the artists have.

“This is an unusually multidisciplinary group. There are two performance artists who make sculpture and video, two painters who also make sculpture, two sculptors who make installations and one artist who makes kinetic sculpture,” Pritikin said. “The end result is a jam-packed gallery full of surprises at every turn.”

In addition, Pritikin has written short essays about each of the artists.

“Dani Galietti is a young woman deeply invested in understanding the social roles women still have imposed upon them well into the 21st century,” Pritikin wrote. Galietti will be showing a video of her performances gathered from recent months at the MFA show.

Brickman’s work for the MFA exhibition is an enormous circle that is black and is around 15 feet in both diameter and height.

“Its crisp black line in space focuses the eye on the whiteness beyond; we’re forced to be a shrunken Alice looking through a keyhole at a gigantic world beyond, an art that we look through as much as at. Together his black objects are, like a murder of crows, both ominous and malleable in space,” Pritikin wrote.

They will also be showing a video of his performances in which he is wearing a costume made of netted ceramic trinkets and a headdress and sings about the outdoors.

“In performance, the erect piece is tethered to the ceiling, and the actor in the lower piece is free to nuzzle, sniff around at and flirt with it. The viewer is given access to a private reverie, a drug-free opium dream, an otherwise private playground of the artist’s memory,” Pritikin wrote.

Nulicek will be presenting a three-part exhibition that showcases the different elements in her paintings as well as her interests in sculpture, papermaking and even set design. Dunn, a sculptor and painter, will be showing his series of sculptures which are metal- and plastic-colored. Peterson will be presenting his kinetic sculpture, created from materials which include commercial plastic tarps and bags.

Romero, an artist who investigates illusion and reality through tromp l’oeil painting and minimalist sculptures, will be presenting a series of paintings and sculptures she has done so far. She also recently won the Miguel Velez Fellowship and is planning to continue her work overseas.

“Moving to a place where it is unfamiliar and unknown makes everyone uncomfortable. However, as an artist, I believe it can make my work move in unknown and more challenging directions,” Romero said.

MICHELLE RUAN can be reached at arts@theaggie.org.

Middle Class Scholarship act passed

On May 30, the Assembly passed the $1 billion Middle Class Scholarship with a vote of 55-17.

The Middle Class Scholarship, also known as Assembly Bill (AB) 1501, aims to provide approximately $1 billion in scholarships to California State Universities (CSU), University of California (UC) campuses and community colleges.

The Middle Class Scholarship would take effect, if Assembly Bill 1500 passes, by the next tax cycle according to University of California Student Association (UCSA) president Claudia Magaña.

“It’s based off the sales tax formula, one billion is what we have seen last year or so based on the performance from sales tax, but that’s just a projection at this point. It’s a projection based off of the revenues of state law when the loophole went into effect so we’re very confident that it will be a billion dollars and that if the economy improves in the out years, potentially more,” said spokesperson to California Assembly Speaker John A. Pérez, John Vigna.

The projected $1 billion for the Middle Class Scholarship would be derived from closing the corporate tax loophole.

“This isn’t just creating money out of nowhere. It’s using money that’s getting lost in the budget and the state,” Magaña said.

According to Vigna, it is more beneficial to close the corporate tax loophole instead of keeping it because the outcome would be an investment in California students’ higher education.

Students from middle-class families with an income between $70,000 and $150,000 will be eligible to receive the scholarship, according to former Davis College Democrats president Sam Mahood.

AB 1501 would save an estimated 150,000 CSU students over $4,000 annually and up to $8,169 for approximately 42,000 UC students. Community colleges would also benefit from Assembly Bill 1501 by receiving an estimated $150 million.

“For the folks at the very top of the spectrum — over the $150,000 mark — they will not be eligible because again they are doing well in a difficult era … The flip-side to that is students who come from low-income backgrounds are already to a very large extent subsidized mostly or completely through Cal Grants for their education. So it’s really for families in the middle, where their families make too much to qualify for any meaningful financial assistance but too little to simply write a check for their kids’ education,” Vigna said.

In order for the Middle Class Scholarship to be disbursed to help middle class students, AB 1500, which is what will provide the funding for AB 1501, must pass with two-thirds of the vote.
“I feel like this legislation is about helping people and too often you hear opponents say ‘Oh, we can’t, closing this tax loophole will hurt jobs.’ Well, the governor needs to stand up for people instead of corporations,” Mahood said.

The distinction between AB 1501 and 1500 is that AB 1501 is the scholarship that proposed to cut tuition while AB 1500 will fund it.

“If that bill doesn’t pass, the scholarship is not funded; both bills have requirements within the language of the bill that say they don’t take effect unless the other one does because they don’t want to create this and then not have the means to pay for it,” Vigna said.

Although AB 1500 will pass by senators’ votes, students can help make sure the bill goes into effect by voicing their concerns and opinions to assembly members and senators.  Students and parents can ensure that their voices are heard and that senators comprehend the importance this scholarship will have in helping higher education be more affordable for middle-class students by contacting senators and assembly members. They can also upload their stories to the Middle Class Scholarship website and sign the petition.

“We need to do something to address the tuition increases for all of California. We’ve seen that too often the middle class is left out and that’s the real engine for California; that’s what made the state great … and if we don’t do something to change that our generation might not have the same prospects that our parents did,” Mahood said.

For more information about the Middle Class Scholarship please visit middleclassscholarship.com.

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

Best Quotes

“We were sitting there peacefully. I didn’t even hear a warning for the spraying, just by the students telling us all to turn around, and then we turned and we were sprayed, just like that. One of the cops was yelling at a guy saying he’s going to spray him in the face and then grabs him in the face and sprays him. They grabbed one of the protesters and sprayed it directly in his mouth. We were there peacefully, the tents were down, they had no reason to spray us.”
Fatima Sbeih, senior international relations major
on the Nov. 18 pepper spraying of students

“I’m pretty sure I saw Hagrid once, with a full beard, hat and trenchcoat, but he was wearing a Hawaiian print shirt.”
Paige Minichiello, senior religious studies major
on people-watching at the Quad

“I really like the idea that we don’t have one set of goals. To me it’s more of a wake-up call … It’s about all these issues we think we’ve overcome … but the truth is, we haven’t.”
Sophia Kamran, senior philosophy and comparative literature double major
on the Occupy movement

“This will come as no surprise to anyone who spent more than three minutes with me this weekend, but ‘Call Me Maybe’ by Carly Rae Jepsen may just be the crowning achievement of the human race.”
Andy Verderosa, Aggie columnist
on Jepsen’s hit song

“The pepper spraying incident that took place on Nov. 18, 2011 should and could have been prevented.”
Former California Supreme Court Associate Justice Cruz Reynoso’s pepper spray task force report

“Students should come for the sultry singing. I have seen all of these groups perform and they are sexy good.”
Omri Kruvi, sophomore landscape architecture major
on Occupella: LocalTones 2012

“There’s obviously something much bigger here than just me. The Delta has her own vibe to her. I’m interested in her becoming everything that she’s trying to become and helping her, more than me dictating her life.”
Lee Walthall, owner of Delta of Venus
on Delta of Venus’ evolution

“Personally, though, I’d avoid doing more damage than you’ve already done. 1) Maybe the insect will recover, depending on how damaged it is. 2) Some faiths do forbid taking animal lives, so why go out of your way to kill? 3) You’ll stain your shoe.”
Matan Shelomi, Aggie columnist and UC Davis entomology Ph.D. student
on what to do if you injure an insect

“It’s a more exciting time. The environment has completely changed. All of the genres are breaking their own rules.”
Steve Aoki
on the future of house music

“My awareness of people’s general ability to suck becomes especially heightened while working on the receiving end of the rotating dish return.”
Dylan Gallagher, Aggie columnist
on his job in a dish room

“I am here to apologize. I feel horrible for what happened on Friday. If you think you don’t want to be students in a university like we had on Friday, I am just telling you, I don’t want to be the chancellor of the university we had on Friday.”
Chancellor Linda P.B. Katehi
at the rally on the Quad after the Nov. 18 pepper spraying

“If you took everything away and just left nematodes in place, it would
outline the world.”
James Carey, UC Davis entomology professor
on the importance of nematodes to the ecosystem

— Compiled by Erin Migdol

First-generation graduates reflect on journey to commencement

Friends, family and mentors will gather this weekend to witness graduation, an event of such grandiosity that attendees might forget the complexity of what it symbolizes for many students.

Although graduates will be grouped together in massive commencements to receive their diplomas in identical caps and gowns, the feeling of accomplishment will be different to each. Some students have faced challenges, first in the process of getting to college, and then while navigating their path towards graduation.

For students who are the first in their families to graduate from college, in particular, completing their bachelor’s degree means reaching a milestone yet to be surpassed, serving as role models and paving the way for future family generations to go to college.

“Growing up, my parents always told me that education was important, but didn’t have a reason why,” said Ricardo Buenrostro, senior economics and psychology double major, whose parents immigrated from Mexico after completing a middle school education. “So I always wanted to go to college, but didn’t have the know-how to make it happen. Today, graduation is important, but not just for me; I have a younger sister and three brothers, and I now have the knowledge and experience to help them.”

Lauren Ilano, psychology and women and gender studies double major and student director of the Bridge Program at the UC Davis Student Recruitment and Retention Center (SRRC), said that graduation for students like Buenrostro is significant not just for the students, but also creates a lot of pride for the mentors that helped to get them there.

“They do want to strive for higher education, it’s just structural things that get in the way,” Ilano said. “There are parts of the process such as SATs, finances, that they don’t have anyone to guide them through with because they are first-generation. In this way the students’ graduation is an accomplishment for the community that assists them as well.”

Ilano acknowledged how broad the challenge of recruiting first-generation students is. To help mitigate it, the SRRC aims to promote all forms of higher education to underrepresented groups, with the message that a college degree is attainable and that resources do exist to help get there.

“Some students work, or are involved in their communities and families to the extent that they don’t consider college as an option,” Ilano said.

The outreach on behalf of the SRRC to bring kids to college works in tandem with the knowledge and experience of teachers, who serve as a primary inspiration for those trying to move into the university setting.

“I had great teachers who told me exactly what I had to do to get into a university,” said Bree Rombi, senior communication and Spanish double major, whose parents never had the opportunity to finish college. “For this reason, I’m doing the Teach for America program after graduation — I want to be able to be a motivation and inspiration for students the way that my teachers were for me. Knowledge is power.”

But even after getting to UC Davis, many students have found that staying at UC Davis is an equally, if not more daunting, challenge. To help retention rates, the UC Davis Educational Opportunity Program (EOP) leads the Special Transitional Enrichment Program (STEP), a month-long orientation for first-years coming from low-income households or who are first-generation college students in their families.

“Dropout rates are high among first-generation students,” said Al-Jerometta Chede, junior biochemistry and medical biology major who participated in STEP and now works as a peer counselor for the EOP. “Students can come and not know how to balance classes, and their parents don’t have the knowledge to help them.”

To help guide students to succeed with a rigorous course load, counselors put on mock classes run by tutors at the Student Academic Success Center, lead skill development workshops and provide academic advising during the month of STEP. Such a network of social and academic support, which continues to be available throughout the year, has made the difference in students’ success at Davis, Chede said.

“[With our help], they’re not homesick, they don’t feel like they don’t belong here, or doubt that they can do this,” Chede said. “I got a lot out of the program when I went through it, so I wanted to be able to give that to someone else, to let them know that they can do it.”

Evelyn Garcia, senior community and regional development major, took advantage of resources the EOP had to offer and said that it certainly helped her plan out her college career.

“During my freshman year I was really worried about things like not being able to write at the college level,” Garcia said. “I was worried it might not be for me. One of the challenges is definitely being confident in yourself. I went to the EOP peer counselors before my pass time every quarter before I figured out what I really wanted to do.”

Persevering through the challenges that the college experience presents can be difficult enough even if students are following in the footsteps of their parents and older siblings, which makes this weekend’s commencements the recognition of not only the milestone it is for all graduates, but for some, one that is unprecedented.

“For me it was just about surviving, finding something I was good at and to get to the end,” Buenrostro said. “My grandparents and younger siblings will be here [at graduation], and for most of them, it’ll be the first time they’ve ever stepped onto a college campus.”

Rombi said that her invaluable experience at UC Davis has shaped her into a better person in the four years since high school.

“There’s something about coming to a university that keeps you in it,” Rombi said. “It shapes you. I got away from home and made a new community here.”

So, for many, the endurance paid off. Graduation, for first-generation students, is a symbol of success for a community, for those who made the resources available for them to complete a higher education.

“It’s going to feel really good,” Chede said. “The whole time, you’ve got this burden when everyone’s just looking up to you to finish, so when you do, it’s amazing because you’re doing it for something bigger than yourself.”

LANI CHAN can be reached at features@theaggie.org.

Column: Against all odds

The outgoing Editor in Chief of this newspaper is a white male former sports writer. The Chief before him? White. Male. Former sports writer. The Chief before him? White. Male. Former sports writer. The Chief before him? White. Male. Former campus news writer, but later, turned sports writer.

What have I gotten myself into?

Maybe you can’t tell by my little mug shot, but I am a female minority who has a writing background that spreads across news, features, art, opinion and food. I’m the first female Editor in Chief in at least a decade. I’m not accusing anyone of being sexist here — I am merely stating facts and I am merely proud.

A few weeks ago, I returned from a year abroad in Brussels, Belgium. I learned a lot there — how to navigate public transportation, how to avoid confusion when reading signs that are in both Dutch and French, how to live off of waffles for a day without feeling sick and plenty more.

Obviously I can use these skills in leading The California Aggie. Along with my new international perspective. And experience at The Aggie as former Campus News Editor, who has completed various daunting tasks like reporting on ASUCD Senate meetings that last from 6 p.m. to 2 a.m., covering protests at the Capitol or trying to explain “technocultural studies” to UC President Mark Yudof.

Part of me, though, is nervous. Maybe I’m not qualified enough. Can I even do this job without bailing on an afternoon of editing for the Super Bowl? What if I don’t want to work for the Sacramento River Cats after I graduate? Is my one-year stint as a co-Sports Editor for my high school newspaper enough to prepare me for next year? I apologize profusely if my office in Lower Freeborn does not bear a single San Francisco Giants poster. Truly.

That said, my office door is open for you. Yes, you.

The California Aggie is not some weird, secret club full of vampires out to make you look bad. If we look pale, it’s only because our office is in a basement. And if you have concerns about our coverage, I want to discuss them with you.

There is no journalism department at UC Davis, so The California Aggie is the best way for students interested in the field to obtain that learning experience. Key words: learning experience.

We’re all learning here. We are students, not professionals. In fact, most of our writers don’t even get paid. We’re a financially independent newspaper, and like most financially independent newspapers in the world right now, we’re kind of broke.

On that note, we’d probably like to hire you.

Are you a UC Davis student? Do you like to write? Edit? Read? Talk? Listen? Learn?

Do you like to create? Photograph? Design? Graphically excite?

Are you on Facebook all the time and consider yourself to be a social media expert?

Do you have not-so-secret dreams of being Don Draper?

Do you have not-so-secret dreams of working alongside Don Draper and then secretly sleeping with Don Draper in a secret darkroom not secretly known as The Orgasmatron? I’m not condoning such behavior, and please be advised that you would really, really need to keep such activity a secret.

Or maybe you just like the idea of having a boss who bakes you cookies! (Me.)

I’ll admit to being sad leaving Belgium and my year studying abroad. But I’m more than excited to be starting this venture. I came back because I love the UC Davis community and The Aggie, and I want to see them thrive. I came back because I strongly believe in free student media, and after the events of Nov. 18, it has never been more important.

JANELLE BITKER genuinely hopes you are not more concerned about the fate of The California Aggie after reading this column. Be reassured by e-mailing editor@theaggie.org.

Proposed ASUCD senate bill to restructure Student-Police Relations Committee

A proposal for an ASUCD senate bill is currently underway, pending legislation, to restructure the Student-Police Relations Committee. Senate Bill 112 would add two other at-large members alongside the current chairperson.

The Student-Police Relations Committee was created in 2005 to address police issues on campus and to foster relationships between the UC Davis community and the UC Davis Police Department (UCDPD) as well as the Davis Police Department. The committee serves as a forum for various groups and organizations on campus to discuss student-police relations.

Current chairperson and sophomore managerial economics major Daniel Connor stressed the importance of communication.

“The committee’s goal is to connect students and police more fluidly, taking ideas and opinions from each and sharing them in order to get a more unified campus, as well as a more informed campus,” Connor said. “The relations are very distant and students are very reluctant to put their faith in the police force after what they have seen and heard, so it is my job to help give the students a direct voice to influence how the police carry out their interactions with students.”

By adding two new members, ASUCD members hope to increase the amount of communication between students and police officers.

“It is crucial more students have the opportunity to get involved with such an important committee,” said Sergio Cano, senior applied mathematics major, Internal Affairs Commission (IAC) chair and author of the bill. “This allows more ex-officio members to be involved with student-police relations, such as the chairperson of Gender and Sexuality Commission (GASC) and the chairperson of Ethnic and Cultural Affairs Commission (ECAC), which generally bring up valid concerns at the ASUCD senate meetings in regards to police issues on campus.”

Current ex-officio members include those from the Cross-Cultural Center (CCC); the Collegiate Panhellenic Association; the Interfraternity Council; the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender Resource Center (LGBTRC); among others.

“The bill [would] give me two other committee members in order to accomplish more in the department of communication with the other organizations on my committee,” Connor said. “There are nearly 20 organizations that are a part of the committee, and it is difficult for one person to manage the communication from all of them.”

In addition, the bill proposes that the committee be required to hold meetings at least twice a month.

“This [would] allow students to have more opportunities to bring up concerns, questions and suggestions to the UCDPD and Davis Police Department,” said Kabir Kapur, sophomore political science and philosophy double major, ASUCD senator and co-author of the bill.

Students are encouraged to attend the meetings and bring forth concerns or ideas for the committee to address.

Currently, the Student-Police Relations Committee operates on a $200 budget, which the committee uses to put on programs and projects that educate students regarding their rights, police procedures and safety practices.

“The overarching goal is to better the UC Davis campus by having a spectrum of opinions from different areas of campus bringing issues to the meetings,” Cano said.

STEPHANIE B. NGUYEN can be reached at campus@theaggie.org.

Senator Zokaie plans to continue with ASUCD from law school

After receiving a full scholarship to University of San Diego Law School, ASUCD senator Yara Zokaie has decided not to defer her admission, but also has chosen to remain in her position as an ASUCD senator.

“When running for senate, I had already applied for law school, but had planned to defer. I told the senate and then should have resigned; however, I am not resigning,” Zokaie said.

Zokaie ran for ASUCD on the BOLD platform with current president Rebecca Sterling, and originally planned to defer any admissions she received to law school. She has decided not to, because she would lose the full ride to law school.

“Yara has chosen not to resign … as an ASUCD Senator, but instead to simply leave the Association with one fewer representative for the student body.  Not only does this leave the Association in a lurch with fewer individuals to serve on hiring committees and other areas of necessary representation, it more significantly acts as a disservice to the student body who are left with one fewer elected official serving them and working to better campus life and represent student interests,” Sterling said.

Though they ran on the same platform previously, Zokaie does not agree with everything Sterling is doing.

Zokaie plans to attend about half of the meetings and Skype in for the others. ASUCD Senators are allowed to remain in their positions a quarter after they have graduated, according to the general UC policy regarding UC jobs.

Senators will only receive their paycheck if they attend meetings. According to Zokaie, money from senate would be used to pay for gas in making the trip to Davis.

“I respect senator Zokaie and her decision, which I believe helps to uphold our values of democracy. If she were to resign, and a presidential appointment made for her seat, it would disrupt the delicate balance of power within ASUCD. This would be severely detrimental to the student body,” Senator Jared Crisologo-Smith said.

Zokaie said she feels Sterling would not necessarily appoint someone she’d be satisfied with to her position. She also said she has lived up to her platforms so far.

“I don’t want to give power [to Sterling]. I still have my seat and I will be there half of the time,” Zokaie said.

According to Zokaie there has been a divide between people who support Rebecca, but there is also a group that is in favor of her keeping her seat.

To those who disagree, it seems as though Zokaie should have resigned, because she will not be in Davis. However, ASUCD is moving on without allowing the change to affect them.

“Our role as an Association is to best represent the student body as we can, put our personal interests aside and work to further this mission in any capacity we can. I fail to see this action following in line with this mission; however, it will not hinder our Association and the current elected officials from keeping this main goal in mind,” Sterling said.

DANIELLE HUDDLESTUN can be reached at campus@theaggie.org.

Female Athlete of the Year

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It is rare for an athlete to take conference titles in multiple sports during the course of a single school year, but that is just what Sarah Sumpter did.

The junior distance runner anchored both the women’s cross country team and the women’s track and field team as they both won Big West Conference championships. And all of that came after sitting out the 2010-2011 campaigns for medical reasons.

“It’s a testament to her work ethic and her perseverance,” said cross country and track and field head coach Drew Wartenburg. “She’s an example of someone who sets high goals and then does the work necessary to achieve them.”

Sumpter finished second at the Big West cross country finals in the fall, leading the Aggies to victory. She then proceeded to place 28th at the NCAA Regional, where the team finished eighth.
She continued her tremendous run in the track season, as she was a constant force in the distance races.

Sumpter finished first in the 10,000 meter in the first day of the Big West Track and Field Championships, then followed that up with a first-place finish in the 5,000 meter the next day.
“Things have gone her way this season,” Wartenburg said. “She’s killing it on the track and she’s reaping the rewards, which is very gratifying to see as a coach.”

And even with all of her accomplishments, Sumpter’s season is still not over.

Her 12th place finish in the 10,000m at the NCAA Regional netted her a spot in the NCAA Finals, where she will compete today as the last UC Davis runner standing in the 2011-12 school year.

– Trevor Cramer

Game of the Year

UC Davis’s sports are improving, but what business do they have playing with perennial powerhouses like UCLA?

We may have witnessed the beginning of the end of statements like this one.

The UC Davis men’s soccer program pulled out one of the biggest upsets in school history, possibly in any sport, when it took down the then-No. 6 Bruins in a 2-1 overtime victory.

The Aggies were entering just their third game of the new season having posted an ugly 6-12 mark the previous year. Eight freshmen and five sophomores made it onto the field against UCLA while only four of the UC Davis players that saw playing time were upperclassmen. The Bruins were ranked No. 6 in the country. Enough said.

“UCLA is a very good team; they’ve got some pros on the team, but in the game of soccer, you always have a chance to win,” said head coach Dwayne Shaffer.

In a mismatch that could not have been more pronounced, UC Davis looked outmatched in the first half — it seemed like just a matter of time that the Bruins would squash the young Aggies’ hopes.

Sophomore Alex Aguiar knocked in a goal two minutes into the second half to give UC Davis a 1-0 advantage, but the Aggies could not protect their lead.

UCLA scored with three minutes remaining in regulation to send the game into overtime. As the first overtime period neared a close, neither team was able to pull ahead.

Then, the upset-minded Aggies pulled some late-game magic that would stun the college soccer world. Sophomore Alex Henry nailed a shot from the left side into the opposite corner of the net to give UC Davis the golden goal victory.

“Beating UCLA at our place is a huge win for our program as well as the entire athletic program,” Shaffer said. “If you looked at the players that played that game, they’re all young — it’s a young team that’s only going to get better and better as we go.”

— Matthew Yuen

City News Highlights

Brown signs final piece of DREAM Act
Oct. 10 — Gov. Jerry Brown signed the California DREAM Act, Assembly Bill 131, into law. The measure allows for undocumented immigrant students to receive scholarships and aid, including Cal Grants, at public universities.
— Originally reported by Angela Swartz

Occupy Wall Street groups continue organizing
Oct. 20 — Occupy became an international movement numbered in the thousands. Those in Davis began to meet at Davis’ Central Park to lend their voice to the Occupy protests. Tents were set up and an occupation of a part of the park began.
— Originally reported by James O’Hara

First Davis Flea Market brings crowds downtown     
Jan. 30 — The inaugural Davis Flea Market opened on Jan. 29 in E Street Plaza, continuing on the last Sunday of every month. It has since been moved to Central Park to allow for more vendors.
— Originally reported by Kelley Rees

Federal appeals court upholds gay marriage in California
Feb. 8 — A three-judge panel of the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals court ruled 2008’s Proposition 8, California’s ban on same-sex marriage, unconstitutional. The court voted 2-1 against the proposition.
— Originally reported by Angela Swartz

Davis residents to decide surface water project’s future     
Feb. 2 — The Davis City Council decided to allow city of Davis residents to finalize what direction the surface water project should take. The main debate centering on the water project is the cost. Additionally, there is the question of whether surface water is needed by 2016.
— Originally reported by Claire Tan

City council votes to extend Safety Enhancement Zone
March 8 — The Davis City Council approved the same Safety Enhancement Zone as 2011, with an extension to include the Old North Davis neighborhood. Fines for violations of certain municipal codes, such as public alcohol use, doubled in these areas.
— Originally reported by Einat Gilboa

Proposed Minor Alcohol Preclusion Ordinance put on the backburner     
March 13 — Amid strong opposition to the measure, the Davis City Council unanimously decided to postpone the alcohol ordinance until further changes could be made. The proposed restrictions to underage drinking would have granted Davis police the ability to cite those under the age of 21 who are intoxicated in public.
— Originally reported by Andrew Poh

Suspect arrested for string of residential burglaries in Davis    
April 5 — Davis police arrested 37-year-old Kyle Frank of Placerville, Calif. for a residential burglary on Layton Drive. He is suspected of being involved in at least two other burglaries in town. The suspect is considering a plea deal.
— Originally reported by Paayal Zaveri

Cooperatives reject City Council’s settlement offer in DACHA dispute
April 9 — Neighborhood Partners and Twin Pines Cooperatives refused Davis City Council’s settlement offers. The offers came in April 2010 for $300,000 and in January of this year for $280,000. They aimed to resolve the conflict between the city, Davis Area Cooperative Housing Association (DACHA) and the two organizations over dissolution of the co-op. A trial is set for October if a deal isn’t reached before then.
— Originally reported by Sara Islas

Legislation plans to lower federal Stafford Loan interest rates     
May 3 — Congress began working on legislation to prevent federal, or subsidized, Stafford Loan interest rates doubling from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent on July 1. Measures are still in the works.
— Originally reported by Claire Tan

CITY NEWS HIGHLIGHTS 2011-12 was compiled by ANGELA SWARTZ. She can be reached at city@theaggie.org.