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Column: The little things

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Ask any person for relationship advice and they’ll all tell you the same thing: You need things like communication, loyalty and honesty to maintain a lasting relationship.

Those are some pretty big words – and sure, they’re nifty to share with your partner. But if you were to ask me what a strong relationship needs, you wouldn’t hear me mention any of those things. The way I see it, you can communicate or be honest with just about anyone. To me, it’s the little things that make or break a relationship.

So, my little honeybees, I’m about to give you the good stuff. Here are some “little things” that will keep your relationship going strong and steady:

1. Invest in a good backscratcher.

After a long day of work and school, there’s nothing more relaxing than a good, warm back scratch. Next to the first-kiss-butterflies, a loving back scratch is the best tingly sensation one can ever experience. And who better to bestow such a pleasant act upon you than your boyfriend or girlfriend?

It’s the perfect recipe for romance: A person you trust and love takes you in their arms and alleviates the pains of your day with a simple scratch on the back. (By the way, don’t forget to return the favor – your baby’s had a hard day, too.)

2. Buy two of everything.

You two are grown people who are fully capable of finishing your own meals. There’s no need to be cheap and share a milkshake or a basket of French fries – you both know damn well that won’t fill you up. They may say “sharing is caring,” but I say this: In every pair that shares, there’s a hog.

I learned that the hard way. I was lucky enough to get a sip from any soda I’ve ever shared with my boyfriend Arthur. Curly fries from Jack in the Box? He’s halfway down the carton after I’ve opened the packet of ranch dressing. (Sorry, babe, but let’s be real. I’m not saying it’s a bad thing, but we just need to get our own sodas and fries.)

You don’t want to be the hog. Even worse, you don’t want to end up resenting the hog. So to make things easier for the two of you, just buy two sodas – it’ll keep you from hating each other.

3. Don’t ever criticize your partner’s singing-in-the-car voice.

So your baby boo might buy you lavish gifts and take you to dinner in their Mercedes, but they sound like a dying bison while they’re singing along to “Bad Romance” in the car. The best thing to do is just grit your teeth and smile at them whenever they think they’re hitting the high note. Or better yet, harmonize with them. Sing just as obnoxiously as they are. It’ll feel good.

Thankfully, Arthur has a pretty voice. He tends to overpower the radio sometimes, but at least he doesn’t suck.

4. An orgasm a day keeps the doctor away.

I read that in a copy of Glamour once. I think it’s pretty self-explanatory.

5. Get trashed together.

Don’t be afraid to party with your honey. I understand how important “girls’ nights” and “guy times” are to us, but every now and then it’s a good idea to include your partner. Whether you hit up a house party or just end up chilling around the hookah with some close friends, it’s fun being a mess with your boyfriend or girlfriend. It makes for good memories.

6. Don’t trust anyone who doesn’t laugh.

Laugh with your partner. Tell him or her a funny joke. Laugh about something that happened to you today. Laugh at a movie. Laugh at each other. Just laugh at stupid shit. You’ll be happier.

7. Take turns.

If you picked to watch Finding Nemo last night, let your partner watch some Godfather tonight. If your boyfriend doesn’t want to drive to dinner because he always drives, grab the keys and get behind the wheel because you’re driving.

Return favors and do things for each other. It’s just like I said before: Your baby will scratch your back if you scratch his.

Which gets me to my last – but certainly not least – piece of advice:

8. Be flexible.

A relationship only works if you work to be a reasonable partner. A “perfect relationship” doesn’t mean two people fall madly in love without ever getting mad at each other. A perfect relationship is staying madly in love even when you want to kick your beloved in the neck. When you learn to keep your cool with your sweetie, you learn how to love.

MARIO LUGO is big on the little things. The biggest smile can come from the littlest e-mail to mlugo@ucdavis.edu. Make it happen.

Aggie Daily Calendar

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TODAY

The Spanish Major: In School and Beyond

4 to 5:15 p.m.

53A Olson

Learn about what you can do with a Spanish major and what career paths you can explore!

Project Compost

6 p.m.

43 Memorial Union

Attend the Project Compost volunteer meetings and learn how you can help them divert organic waste around campus.

Southeast Asian Graduation Meeting

6 to 7 p.m.

South Hall Conference Room

Join a passionate group of students working to celebrate the achievements of graduating Southeast Asian students through an intimate cultural ceremony for the Southeast Asian community.

THURSDAY

Entertainment Council’s Free Prescreening of Countdown to Zero

8 p.m.

194 Chemistry

Watch the recently premiered Sundance Film Festival movie for free!

To receive placement in the AGGIE DAILY CALENDAR, e-mail dailycal@theaggie.org or stop by 25 Lower Freeborn by noon the day prior to your event. Due to space constraints, all event descriptions are subject to editing, and priority will be given to events that are free of charge and geared toward the campus community.

Educators march in favor of tax reform

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Slug: 100425_ci_future

Headline: Educators march in favor of tax reform

Layercake: California Federation of Teachers optimistic about changes

By JANE TEIXEIRA

Aggie News Writer

A 365-mile journey came to an end at the capitol on April 21 for the six core marchers and their supporters in the March for California’s Future.

Along with raising awareness about California’s educational crisis, the marchers, organized by the California Federation of Teachers (CFT), wanted the legislature reform the state’s tax system. Currently California is the only state that requires a two-thirds majority to pass a budget and to change tax rates. The marchers are looking to establish a simple majority vote for budget concerns as a means of ending gridlock in legislature.

“It’s great to be able to spread the message of unionism,” said Jim Miller, a University of San Diego professor and core marcher. “I think our message was well-received and I’m happy to think that we’ve been part of laying down the building blocks for change.”

Miller said about 10,000 people attended in Sacramento to support the march in spite of bad weather.

The marchers are also advocating higher taxes for higher incomes and re-establishment of commercial property taxes. They estimate that re-assessing the values of non-residential real estate could raise $3 billion. Returning the very top tax brackets to 1992 levels for incomes over $250,000 and $500,000 a year could raise an additional $4-6 billion.

CFT Secretary Treasurer Dennis Smith, joined the last leg of the march.

“Higher education is under attack and as the fees go up, the average person can no longer afford to go to college,” Smith said. “The cuts have also undermined access to kindergartens and preschools.”

Smith is an accounting professor at Sacramento City College and, like Miller, has seen increases in class sizes from 30 people to 40 or more per class. He estimates that approximately 200,000 people are currently barred from getting a higher education in California due to the fee increases just at the community college level.

“I see young teachers with terrified looks on their faces wondering whether they will have a job come next year,” Smith said.

School districts around the state have sent out over 23,000 pink slips to teachers notifying them that they may not have jobs next year.

Janet Bass, spokesperson for the American Federation of Teachers, said that it is time for the federal government to step in for California.

“The problem of education goes to the heart of democracy and economy,” Bass said. “We need an educated populace and the right resources for teachers and students to succeed.”

Bass said that there is not enough cooperation among the various levels in most education systems.

“It’s important for teachers, unions and school leaders to corroborate on decisions about instruction and the teachers definitely need to be part of the discussion,” Bass said. “We all know that we need solutions, we just don’t always agree on the best way to get there.”

Smith said he thought the march would have long term benefits.

“I don’t think I could have marched 365 miles,” Smith said. “The people doing it are very inspirational to me and to others.”

Allan Clark, President of the California School Employees Association, joined the marchers at the capitol.

“On April 21 an important march ended, but that date also marked the beginning of a movement,” Clark said in an official statement. “The movement to take California from the state with the lowest per pupil spending to one that values public education by elevating our funding to the top 10 in the nation.”

JANE TEIXEIRA can be reached at city@theaggie.org.

‘Eaters devour Aggies

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The Aggies needed a break.

Before this game, UC Davis had five games in six days and, as a result, was short on pitchers.

“We needed the rest,” said coach Rex Peters. “I’m not really pleased with the way we played but physically it’s not good to be tired.”

Fortunately for the Aggies, they used only seven pitchers during the weekend series. The downside is that they were swept by the Anteaters by a total score of 31-5.

“We have to just face reality,” Peters said. “They’re a better team than us. They’re bigger, faster, stronger and play the game better.”

Friday – UC Irvine 8, UC Davis 1

Daniel Bibona is pretty darn good.

The Anteater pitcher, who will likely be playing professionally a year from now, shut down the Aggies in the first game of the series as he allowed just three hits, one walk and one earned run while striking out eight in eight innings pitched. The most impressive statistic is that Bibona faced only 28 UC Davis batters.

Despite the strong performance from UC Irvine, this game was closer than it appeared.

After seven innings, the Aggies trailed by a score of just 3-1 as starter Sean Watson was at the top of his game.

“He was throwing strikes,” Peters said. “He didn’t really walk anybody all game. He gave us a decent start and a chance to win.”

The 6-foot-9 southpaw out of Lafayette, Calif. returned to the mound in the eighth inning when the Anteater bats came alive. Thanks to an early error UC Irvine scored five unearned runs on both Watson and reliever David Popkins to blow the game open. The eight UC Irvine runs would prove to be too much for UC Davis to overcome.

“We just didn’t do enough offensively,” Peters said.

Only three Aggies recorded a hit as shortstop Justin Schafer, second baseman Scott Heylman and third baseman Paul Politi had one base-knock apiece.

Saturday – UC Irvine 13, UC Davis 0

The Aggies weren’t sure if things could get much worse after losing 8-1 in the first game of the series.

Unfortunately for UC Davis, they did.

Not to be outdone by his Friday counterpart, UC Irvine’s Saturday starter Christian Bergman dominated as he twirled a complete game one-hit shutout. UC Davis leadoff hitter Daniel Cepin [cq] singled on the first pitch of the game but was then caught stealing on a pitchout. Bergman then set down the next 26 consecutive batters, facing the minimum of 27 hitters in total.

“[Bergman] is like all their guys,” Peters said. “They’re not overpowering but they know how to pitch. We didn’t have a very good approach at the plate so we didn’t do much offensively.”

UC Davis starter Dayne Quist’s struggles continued as he lasted only five innings while allowing 11 hits, 10 earned runs and two walks in addition to recording four strikeouts. The large difference between Quist’s performance at the beginning of the year and now leads the Aggies to believe that he may be giving information away to the opposition.

“He might be tipping his pitches,” Peters said, “They had some pretty good swings on some pitches that you don’t normally see.”

Scott Heinig came in to relieve Quist and completed his longest outing of the season as he lasted four innings while allowing four hits, three runs and two walks.

“In a game like this you need a guy to come out of the bullpen and give you some innings,” Peters said. “That’s why he went a little bit longer than normal.”

Sunday – UC Irvine 10, UC Davis 4

While the final game of the series was more of the same, the UC Davis bats began to come alive.

In the end, the Aggies out-hit the Anteaters 11-9 but UC Irvine made the most of its opportunities as it won by a score of 10-4.

“They only walked three guys all series,” Peters said. “We walked seven alone in this game. You’re going to have a tough time winning if you do that.”

The Aggie hitters improved as Heylman, Politi and first baseman Eric Johnson each recorded two hits.

The UC Davis pitching staff, meanwhile, could have been better.

Starter Scott Lyman had trouble putting the Anteaters away as he allowed eight earned runs on seven hits and three walks while mixing in two strikeouts.

“He’s struggled with his command,” Peters said. “He’s not consistent enough. He hasn’t put together good starts on a regular basis.”

UC Davis will host California on Tuesday before another Big West series this weekend.

MARK LING can be reached at sports@theaggie.org.

UC Davis professional schools surge in rankings

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Praise for both the UC Davis School of Law and School of Medicine followed the anticipated release of U.S. News and World Report’s graduate school rankings.

The UC Davis School of Law climbed seven spots from the previous year, gaining the 28th slot out of nearly 200 accredited graduate programs. Not to be outdone, the UC Davis School of Medicine ranked 20th in primary care and 47th in research.

As the youngest law school in the report’s top 30 rankings, the UC Davis King Hall School of Law has gained attention from prominent firms throughout the country.

Morrison & Foerster, a global law firm employing over 1,000 lawyers and ranked among the top 20 U.S. firms in The American Lawyer’s A-List, currently employs 26 UC Davis law school graduates.

“We have some UC Davis [School of Law] grads among our most successful partners,” said Keith Wetmore, chair of Morrison & Foerster. “We’ve had tremendous success recruiting Davis graduates.”

Director of the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Center and Davis law school alumna, Monika Kalra Varma, said one reason for achievement in careers following graduation is the sense of community that accompanies being the smallest accredited UC law school. The average entering class wavers near 200, which Varma said gives the school a close-knit community of students, faculty and alumni that other larger universities are unable to achieve.

Thanks to aspects such as this support system and a 90 percent bar passage rate for first-time test takers, the UC Davis School of Law deserves such recognition, said King Hall Dean Kevin R. Johnson[cq].

“I think that nationally we’re growing in terms of our reputation, scholarly and otherwise,” he said. “U.S. News is starting to take that into account and recognize that something is going on here.”

Fellow UC Davis graduate school, the UC Davis School of Medicine, achieved praise for its climb of 15 spots from the previous year in the primary care category.

Mark C. Henderson, professor, vice chair and residency program director and associate dean for admissions and outreach, believed the substantial increase is due to the school’s improving reputation throughout the nation.

The discrepancy between the medical school’s primary care and research rankings, 20th and 47th respectively, is not an accurate reflection of the university, Henderson said. In his opinion, the Davis medical school’s research ranking should have been higher.

The large difference between the two categories in the rankings can be attributed to the weight the U.S. News report places on a school’s perceived reputation instead of certain verifiable factors, such as the amount of faculty research funding, he said.

This year the medical school received over 4,500 applications for approximately 100 spots. But the quality of applications has multiplied, said Henderson. Incoming medical students bring more than high GPA’s and MCAT scores. They possess additional skills, such as experience and leadership, he said.

Although he was pleased with the UC Davis School of Medicine’s impressive rankings, Henderson was hesitant to put too much emphasis on their importance.

“[The rankings] aren’t exactly perfect; I don’t think any rankings are. For us, it’s a nice piece of news but I wouldn’t want to get overly excited about it,” he said. “I am hopeful though that this represents an improved reputation of Davis [medical school] among other institutions across the nation.”

KELLEY REES can be reached at city@theaggie.org.

ASUCD Senate Briefs

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ASUCD Senate Meetings are scheduled to begin Thursdays at 6:10 p.m. Times listed are according to the April 22 meeting location, the MU Mee Room.

Meeting called to order at 6:11 p.m.

Jack Zwald, ASUCD president, absent

Previn Witana, ASUCD vice president, present

Abrham Castillo-Ruiz, ASCUD senator, present

Adam Thongsavat, ASUCD senator, present

Alison Tanner, ASUCD senator, present,

Andre Lee, ASUCD president, present, returned late from a break scheduled to end at 8:07 p.m

Bree Rombi, ASUCD senator, pro tempore, present

Don Ho, ASUCD senator, present, returned late from a break scheduled to end 8:07 p.m

Joel Juarez, ASUCD senator, present

Levi Menovske, ASUCD senator, present

Liz Walz, ASUCD senator, present

Osahon Ekhator, ASUCD senator, present

Ozzy Arce, ASUCD senator, present

Selisa Romero, ASUCD senator, present

Presentations

Lobby Corps Director Christopher Lewis said Lobby Month will start next month. He added that Lobby Corps is looking for volunteers and invited ASUCD members to join in meetings.

Appointments and confirmations

Sabastian Belser confirmed unanimously as Specialized Transportation Services manager.

Unit director reports

Bike Barn Unit Director Steve Burkel reported that the Bike Barn has opened the bike garage in the North Entry Parking structure. Burkel also said he worked with Senator Andre Lee on a safety video for Student Housing to show during Freshman Welcome Week.

Public discussion

Former ASUCD Senator Shawdee Rouhafza and other student athletes told the ASUCD Senate that they were looking into recent cuts to Intercollegiate Athletics. Senator Tanner said student athletes should inundate media and the administration about the sports closures. Senator Thongsavat said that Student Affairs Vice Chancellor Fred Wood may have a larger role in the decision.

Consideration of old legislation

SB #42, authored by Chen, co-authored by Freeman, Lee, St. Cyr, Williams, introduced by Lee, an ASUCD Senate Bill to implement the Long-Range Plan for Bike Barn, passed unanimously.

SB #54, authored by Rombi, co-authored by Shotwell, Tabke, introduced by Rombi, an ASUCD Senate Bill to allocate $4,808.00 from Capital Reserves to purchase a new binding machine for Campus Copies/Classical Notes, passed unanimously.

SR #31, authored by Schaefer, co-authored by Gibson, introduced by Ekhator, an ASUCD Senate Resolution in Support of Senate Bill 970, tabled for further discussion.

Consideration of urgent legislation

Senate Bill to allocate $1,500 from Senate Reserves for La Raza Cultural Days, to encourage the Chicano/Latino community, passed unanimously.

Introduction of new legislation

SB #X, an ASUCD Senate Bill to allocate $2,200 from Capital Reserves to purchase a used steel container to store Picnic Day event materials.

An ASUCD Senate Resolution in support of the proposed amendments to CALPIRG’s Pledge Contract.

Public discussion

Student athletes from wrestling discussed the impact of sports closure decision. Senator Walz said senators should follow senate etiquette. Senator Menovske said he felt that Picnic Day was becoming an unsafe environment.

Public announcements

Gender and Sexuality Commission Chair Sarah Raridon said the GASC is sponsoring an activist spoken word artist to perform at Delta of Venus and that next week is the Queer and Asian Conference. Senator Romero said there will be a women of color night on Tuesday at Wellman from 7 to 9.

Internal Affairs Commission Chair Sergio Cano said IA will be looking at two ballot measures that are to declare no-confidence in Mark Yudof and the University of California Regents.

Approval of past meeting minutes

Approved

Adjourned at: 12:12 A.M.

LESLIE TSAN compiles the senate briefs. He can be reached at campus@theaggie.org.

Student-initiated community center to emerge on campus

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Come May 2012, a nearly decade-long vision of a central campus hub for students from all UC Davis communities will become a reality.

The Student Community Center, created by students in a 2002 initiative, will be located at the corner of California Avenue and Hutchison Drive on the UC Davis campus, across the street from Chemistry 194. The location currently houses a number of small temporary buildings.

The Center will house the Cross Cultural Center, the Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Resource Center, the Student Recruitment and Retention Center, and several study lounges, student workrooms, offices, a media lab, a café, computer labs and an outdoor deck.

“The campus did a really good job partnering with the diversity groups to make this a space for everyone,” said Catherine Buscaglia, project manager with UC Davis Design and Construction Management. “[The project] will open up the core of campus, serving as a student life promenade.”

Students drafted the Principles of Community initiative in 2002 proposing the creation of a student community center uniting many groups on campus in one locality.

“The vision was to create a facility for student life community centers that currently have fragmented, poor or inadequate space to better integrate their service and resources for students,” said Griselda Castro, assistant Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs, in an e-mail interview.

The building will cost $30.4 million to construct and will have about 26,000 square feet of space. The 2002 initiative called for funding from student fees to help pay for the center, amounting to 13 dollars per quarter for each undergraduate student, beginning in fall 2004.

Campus communities expressed excitement about the new space, as many have been involved with the planning process for several years.

“The Student Community Center will be a wonderful opportunity for all of the future tenants to come together and truly build a united community on this campus,” said Leha Hawkins, program supervisor at the SRRC, in an e-mail interview.

Sheri Atkinson, director of the LGBTRC, echoed Hawkins’ sentiment.

“By being housed in closer proximity to the CCC and the SRRC, we will be able to continue the important work that we do around the intersection of identities and social justice to build a better campus for everyone,” Atkinson said.

Hawkins also hopes that the new center will bring more attention and publicity to the SRRC, which offers peer mentoring, tutoring, leadership retreats and other student programs.

“The students of the SRRC do feel that the university has not recognized the magnitude and impact of the work they do,” she said. “Despite all of our positive accomplishments, we still struggle to find space to do this work, are faced with outrageous costs to hold events on our very own campus and have students know about the center.”

In addition to providing a new home to campus groups, the Student Community Center will serve as a haven to all groups on the UCD campus.

The 28,000 square foot center is designed to feature multiple study areas, including a deck on the building’s second story. Designers created the space as a casual, more informal setting where students will be able to eat, drink and use their laptops, Buscaglia explained.

Builders also hope the center’s location between the Silo and Shields Library will attract students walking through one of campus’s busiest areas.

Demolition on the temporary classrooms currently housed on the project’s site is set to begin after July 4, though a groundbreaking ceremony for the center is scheduled for June 3.

MEGAN MURPHY can be reached at campus@theaggie.org.

10 Questions with Larry Berman

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The Academic Senate this month named political science professor Larry Berman its 2010 Faculty Research Lecturer.

Berman, who has been at UC Davis since earning his doctorate in 1977, has served as department chair, founding director of the University of California Washington Center and is currently completing his final term as director of the UC Davis Washington Program. He has written or co-authored 12 books, including Planning a Tragedy; Lyndon Johnson’s War; No Peace, No Honor; and most recently, Perfect Spy: The Incredible Life of Xuan Pham An.

Berman will give the spring Faculty Research Lecture at 4:30 p.m. on May 26 in ARC Ballroom A. The lecture, “The Past Has Another Pattern: Lessons Learned, Lessons Lost From Vietnam to Iraq and Afghanistan,” is free and open to the public.

1. What does it take to receive the Faculty Research Award?

The Faculty Research Lecture Award is the highest honor the Davis Division of the Academic Senate accords its members. Each year, the Academic Senate selects a Faculty Research Lecturer, who gives a public lecture under the auspices of the Chancellor and the Chair of the Davis Division. Since a single award is made for the entire Davis faculty, nominees are outstanding scholars and researchers, recognized as leaders in their respective discipline, both nationally and internationally. Candidates for the award should have been at Davis for at least 10 years. The recipient also receives $1000.

2. What have been the most rewarding classes for you as a professor, and which do you feel like students enjoy the most?

On the Davis campus I teach POL 106, The Presidency; POL 5, Problems in American Government, and POL 1, Intro to American Government. In Washington, I teach POL 193W, which is the research seminar in our Washington D.C. program. I also regularly teach freshman seminars on contemporary topics relating to the presidency. This quarter I’m teaching one on “The Obama Presidency at Year One.”

I most enjoy teaching my presidency class as well as mentoring students on their research papers in Washington. I believe that students most enjoy my presidency class, especially when taught in Washington, where many of our seminars meet on location in order to enhance the learning experience.

3. It seems like the Vietnam War has been a primary focus of your career. What is it about Vietnam that intrigues you?

The war was a tragic and polarizing experience. I was an undergraduate in Washington during a period of great political and social upheaval. The war expanded into Cambodia and Laos. We were sent home after the killings at Kent State. Nixon had promised “peace with honor” but there was nothing honorable about the way the war ended and, of course, there would be a long interval before peace came to Vietnam.

When I arrived in graduate school at Princeton, I was able to focus my studies on presidents and their advisory processes. I began by asking questions about the options presented to Lyndon Johnson in the spring and summer of 1965, culminating with the July 28 decision to Americanize the war.

My initial work focused on the American side of things, but I quickly learned that I needed to incorporate the Vietnamese perspective, that is, to see the American war through their eyes. I’ve now had the opportunity to take veterans back for their own personal reconciliation and I’ve developed wonderful friendships with Vietnamese on both sides of the Pacific. In many respects my work has helped younger Vietnamese understand the war, especially my two books that have been translated into Vietnamese; No Peace, No Honor and Perfect Spy, which continues to be a best seller in Vietnam.

4. What was it about your relationship with Pham Xuan An, the subject of your latest book, that precluded such revelatory information?

When I first met An, I was finishing my book No Peace No Honor: Nixon, Kissinger and Betrayal in Vietnam. He became a source for that book, providing me with valuable information. A few years later I told him I wanted to write his story, using his life as a window for understanding the complexities of the war. He said no, but our conversations continued. Shortly thereafter An was hospitalized with emphysema and had a large part of his lung removed. When he returned home, the prognosis was not good.

I beseeched An to recognize that his story needed to be told by a scholar like myself and not just by journalists in Vietnam. To my delight, An said okay because he respected my previous work and he hoped that young people in America and Vietnam could learn from his life about the war, patriotism, nationalism and freedom. An thought he had only a few months left, but he lived another two years, during which I made over a dozen trips to visit him for extensive interviews and documents. Take a look at larrybermanperfectspy.com.

5. Can you explain the lawsuit you filed under the Freedom of Information Act – were there precursors to that kind of legal action?

I’ve made use of the Freedom of Information Act and mandatory declassification requests since starting my research in the early 1980s. The lawsuit against the CIA pertained to the release of what are known as Presidential Daily Briefs (PDBs), the so-called crown jewel of intelligence. Pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), I requested disclosure of PDBs from August 6, 1965, August 8, 1965, March 31, 1968 and April 2, 1968. After being turned down in the formal request and appeal process, I brought suit against the CIA, joined by prominent academic groups, including the American Historical Association and the American Political Science Association as well as former Press Secretary Bill Moyers. I was very fortunate to be represented pro bono by the San Francisco law firm of Davis Wright Tremaine and by the National Security Archive. I lost the case on Appeal in the Ninth Circuit, but established precedent for the next generation of scholars to get access to these records.

6. If you could interview, unfettered, any figure in history, who would it be and why?

As it relates to the corpus of my research, I would want to interview the enigmatic Ho Chi Minh. There are so many things I would want to ask him about the Vietnamese revolution of 1945, his travels in the U.S., his contacts with the Office of Strategic Services, the wars against the French and Americans, the negotiations, his aspirations, vision and dreams for the Vietnamese revolution and his relationships with allies and adversaries.

7. You are the longest serving member of the UCD Political Science Department – what is it about Davis that has kept you here for over three decades?

Funny, it doesn’t feel that long. I’ve enjoyed the community, the friends I’ve made, the support I received as a junior member of the department from my senior colleagues and, of course, my students, many of whom I have stayed in touch with all these years. I’ve also played on some terrific intramural basketball and softball teams. Until the recent budget crisis, this really was the California dream for someone like myself who grew up in the Bronx, went to college in Washington, D.C. and attended graduate school in New Jersey. I still remember leaving Newark Airport for my Davis job interview in 1977. It was a blizzard-like day when I departed and when I arrived in Davis it was a beautiful, sunny day. I saw this wave of bikes and people wearing shorts and said to myself, “Don’t blow this interview.” The rest really is history.

8. Regarding your May 26 lecture – what kind of parallels do you see between Vietnam and the wars America is involved in today?

Despite the passage of time, America’s war in Vietnam remains an enigma: certainly a metaphor for defeat but also an experience from which curious lessons have been drawn for subsequent military interventions in distant lands. As analogy, the role of America’s war in Vietnam has permeated military and political thinking since April 30, 1975.

Even today, it is difficult to fathom the level of death and destruction, the maimed and wounded, in a country half the size of California. Most recently, President Obama rejected the Vietnam analogy, saying, “You have to learn lessons from history. On the other hand, each historical moment is different. You never step into the same historical river twice. And so Afghanistan is not Vietnam.”

In my talk, I want to focus on this idea of having the experience of intervention but missing its meaning. The United States is hoping to achieve in Iraq and Afghanistan what it failed to do in Vietnam, and I fear that Afghanistan will become Obama’s War, just as Vietnam became Johnson’s War.

9. If you could give advice to the student wondering if history is a relevant pursuit for him or her, what would it be?

I always tell students that they need to study history because there is much wisdom in George Santayana’s words that “those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat in.” History helps us understand other cultures and peoples and makes us better prepared for a life of intellectual engagement. I have tried to build a bridge from the walls of academia to the world of politics, people and events that shape history.

10. What are your goals for the future?

I cannot imagine retiring. There’s another George Santayana quote that I am fond of: “There is no cure for birth or death, save to enjoy the interval.” Being a professor has always been a dream job, living in a world of ideas and discovery and sharing it every day with students. And I’m working on a major new book that is already under contract with HarperCollins/Smithsonian, tentatively titled Big Z: The Life and Times of Admiral Elmo Russell Zumwalt, Jr. I’m already working through the Zumwalt papers and well into my interviews.

BRIAN GERSON can be reached at campus@theaggie.org.

Cancer supporters, amateur cyclists try a taste of the Amgen Tour

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Yesterday’s Breakaway from Cancer event gave hundreds of cyclists the chance to ride the same 114-mile route that the professionals will race during Stage 2 of the 2010 Amgen Tour of California.

Cancer survivors and four-time Amgen competitor George Hincapie led the pack of amateur cyclists yesterday morning from Davis’ Central Park to Santa Rosa.

Cycling fans from all skill levels could choose to complete 50- or 22-mile segments. The Breakaway Ride, presented by Specialized, was founded in 2005 by Amgen and fundraises for nonprofit partners and those affected by cancer.

“We felt it would be a great opportunity for people who care about riding bikes to really see how hard every single stage of a professional race really is,” said AEG Sports President Andrew Messick at a VIP reception Saturday evening. “We’re doing this for Breakaway from Cancer, which is a charitable initiative that is near and dear to the hearts of our partners at Amgen. I can’t imagine two communities in the United States that are better and more supportive of bicycling than Davis and Santa Rosa.”

Local Davis sponsors of the Stage 2 Start such as Comcast, AT&T, Sutter Davis Hospital and Hallmark Inn, along with several inductees to the U.S. Bicycling Hall of Fame were present at the Third and B Street location, which held its grand opening on Saturday.

Hincapie is also an 11-time Tour de France veteran and 2009 U.S. Professional Road Race Champion.

“[Amgen is] not a new, upstart race,” Hincapie said. “It’s a race where people come to make their dreams come true. The new course is going to be difficult. We go into the mountains this year. It’s going to be exciting from the first day to the final kilometers down near Los Angeles.”

Hincapie’s major goal this year is to win Stage 2 and place in the overall, he said at the reception. He anticipates tough racing at Amgen this year.

“I went for a bike ride today – a nice two-hour ride. The roads are wonderful, bike paths all over the place, and it’s very fitting for the Hall of Fame to be in Davis.”

– Pooja Kumar

National puzzle hunt brought to Davis this Saturday

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Solving puzzles, running around Davis and Twittering don’t sound like activities that can, or should, be done at the same time. But for participants of the second annual Different Area, Same Hunt last Saturday, they were all part of the fun.

DASH is a puzzle hunt completed in 10 cities around the country on the same day. Teams of 4 to 6 people race around their town to solve a series of complex word, number and trivia puzzles. Each team pays a $30 fee.

If Davis residents saw four men running around town wearing yellow t-shirts and baby carriers with stuffed animals in them, then they may have seen the “My Four Dads” team. John Owens, UC Davis assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering, played DASH last year in San Francisco and on Saturday in Davis with his team. He said he enjoys the physical and mental challenges of the hunt that he doesn’t always get in day-to-day life.

“We’re all students at heart, and I think it’s always a little bit of a thrill whenever you learn something new and solve something,” Owens said. “It’s great to be able to do that just for fun, in a really creative environment that’s not just sitting down at a desk and writing stuff down.”

DASH was invented by Debbie Goldstein, a puzzle enthusiast who wanted to create an event that would connect members of the puzzle community.

“In the Bay Area there is something called the Bay Area Night Game,” Goldstein said. “I started playing that game, and there was this one game they were doing that they were simul-casting with Seattle. I thought, wow, this is really great and would be great to take nationwide.”

The first DASH was held in 2009 in 8 cities nationwide, including Los Angeles, Washington D.C. and San Francisco. This year, cities include New York, Portland, Boston, Austin and Santa Rosa.

“I was pleasantly surprised to see it was a great success, and I actually heard from representatives in the other cities that people were demanding another hunt,” Goldstein said. “I wasn’t expecting that this would be a continual thing, but now that’s what it’s turning out to be.”

Participants receive their first puzzle at a designated meeting spot in each city. The answer to the puzzle is the clue for the location of the next puzzle. Each participating city must contribute one puzzle to the hunt, though answers may be altered slightly to specify locations in each city.

After completing every puzzle, teams must use all of their answers to solve the “meta puzzle” – the clue to the final destination.

The final destination is usually a restaurant or bar, where participants can socialize and discuss the hunt. It is up to each city to determine if prizes will be given to the winners, Goldstein said.

Goldsein created a new, optional puzzle utilizing Twitter for this year’s hunt. Participants followed DASH and other teams on Twitter in order to gather clues to solve the puzzle.

This was the first year that Davis was one of the host cities. Participants met at the Memorial Union and traveled to the Silo, Davis Commons, the Arboretum and ended at Woodstock’s.

“I get to play with ideas and concepts that might be sitting around in my head that might not get much use, such as trivia, and I get to play with these ideas and let them come up to the surface,” said Francis Hsu, a UC Davis graduate student in computer science and coordinator of the Davis hunt.

Hsu and Yuan Niu, also a graduate student in computer science, decided to bring DASH to Davis after participating in the first 2009 event in Palo Alto, Calif.

“After getting to play in the first DASH I thought it was really fun, and I thought it was really cool that the exact same puzzle hunt was going on at the same time elsewhere in the country, too,” said Hsu. “Also, in the puzzle community it is a commonly accepted practice that if you participate, you should contribute back to the community.”

Hsu and Niu helped organize the 15 teams participating in Davis, and wrote Davis’ puzzle contribution. Keeping with this year’s television theme, their puzzle was based on the sitcom “How I Met Your Mother.” It involved a series of bad pick-up lines and rejections, and featured a message encoded in beer bottles lying around the scene, said Hsu.

For Goldstein, her reward is seeing new people develop a love for puzzle-solving through DASH.

“We started with eight cities last time and now we have 10 cities. We just got a huge demand. I think we’re on to something good,” Goldstein said.

ERIN MIGDOL can be reached at features@theaggie.org.

Schoolapalooza rallies for Davis K-12 schools

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On Saturday afternoon, Davis students and their families were still thinking about the school week at the third annual Schoolapalooza organized by the Davis Schools Foundation (DSF).

Part of DSF’s “Dollar-A-Day” campaign, Schoolapalooza was a day the entire Davis community – teachers and commercial businesses alike – came together to raise support and funds for Davis K-12 public education.

The day included a raffle, live music and performances and plenty of good deals at downtown Davis businesses, said DSF Board Member and Schoolapalooza Event Coordinator Lesli Chuck.

“Schoolapalooza is a fun way to check out new businesses, see people you know and hear some good music,” Chuck said.

DSF expects the grand total this year to surpass the $70,000 that the event raised two years ago, Chuck said.

Davis Downtown Business Association Director Joy Cohan said this is the first year DDBA has officially partnered with the event.

“We’re thrilled to be able to be a part of [Schoolapalooza],” Cohan said. “Good schools contribute to a good economy.”

Over 50 businesses participated, including Chipotle, Jamba Juice, Café Italia and Cultivé, all contributing to the fundraiser with discounts and other incentives to bring more proceeds to DSF.

Cultivé donated 100 percent of their earnings on Saturday afternoon. David Nguyen, Cultivé operations manager, said the owner Ross Hanstad[cq] has always been a bighearted giver.

“He is a really generous guy,” Nguyen said. “He is a big supporter of schools.”

Also new this year was a fashion show with six Davis High School girls sporting local Outdoor Davis and Lily’s clothing. Outdoor Davis Retail Manager Leia Matern said the students did a great job showing off hiking, yoga and other fashionable looks.

“The Davis community has been great to us by shopping downtown and we need to show them support as well,” Matern said. “We need each other to survive in these tough times.”

More DSF fundraising events are planned, including a few that college students would enjoy, said communications chair Kathy Adams. She said to look out for an upcoming chili cook-off and a dance recital.

SASHA LEKACH can be reached at city@theaggie.org.

Column: Dirty laundry

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“Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a hard battle.”

I usually can’t take Plato’s famous quote seriously. Every time I read it in a school agenda or book of inspirational quotations, I can’t help but ask, “Really? Are our lives that complex and dramatic?” It almost feels as if we use our “hard battles” as excuses for our words and actions.

How’s it possible that we could all have that much going on in our lives? Even if we did, it doesn’t mean people have to be kind to us. In one form or another, everyone has challenges in his or her life.

Every once in a while, a rough version of Plato’s quote will pop in my head. This usually happens when I sense that someone is annoyed or frustrated or whatever else on the spectrum of negative emotions. I try to remind myself that maybe there’s something going on that I just don’t know about, however minor or major. Then, I typically just ignore what I sense and try to act normal.

But “ignoring” was probably the opposite of what I did on Sunday afternoon in the laundry room. A girl came walking into the room and gave me that annoying death glare. Apparently she was furious at me (and possibly the girl next to me) for taking her laundry out of the washing machine.

I realize the act of moving someone else’s laundry isn’t nice, but there are exceptions. To me, it’s only wrong if one, the laundry hasn’t even finished being washed; two, the laundry has barely sat in the machine; and three, there are other machines available.

None of these applied to this incident. The laundry was sitting at the bottom of the machine for at least the past 40 minutes in a room with no available machines.

The girl turned a fiery red and chastised me, saying how “unprofessional” I was. Her rant was abundant with incoherently jumbled and condescending sentences.

Normally, I would probably just say sorry and explain my reasoning. But her yelling annoyed me to the point of me wanting to yell back at her. I wasn’t happy and I refused to fully listen and talk calmly to her because she was doing the exact opposite that.

It was as if she had all her anger bottled up and just couldn’t wait to unleash it. She could’ve calmly explained her situation and thoughts, but instead she chose to go on a one-woman strike.

Immediately after, I was almost identical to her – with anger bottled up – sick and tired of outcries over petty instances. Then again, maybe it wasn’t so “minor,” because at that spur of the moment it affected me so much. Basically, we burst each other’s bubbles.

Sometimes we’re living in our own little thoughts and within them are the “hard battles” that tend to create grudges and frustrations. When you personally feel grumpy, there’s a tendency to assume other people feel the same way.

When people refuse to escape from their own viewpoints and instead unleash their anger and assumption on others – no matter how tiny or big the situation may be – others want to retaliate and along the way, become just as annoyed.

Of course it’s always hard to fully understand someone else’s situation, but that doesn’t mean you stay within your own comforts and assume that everyone else is experiencing the same thing as you are – because they’re not. The act of taking someone else’s laundry out of a washing machine may appear horrible at first, but it isn’t inherently bad. There are always multiple factors to consider.

So when Plato says, “Be kind for everyone you meet is fighting a hard battle,” I take it as meaning to try to empathize with others, but don’t assume others will understand you. Don’t assume that people will put up with your behavior just because you’re experiencing something that they’re not.

TIFFANY LEW will never do laundry again on a Sunday afternoon after Picnic Day. Extra dirty laundry causes tantrums. E-mail her at tjlew@ucdavis.edu.

Aggie Daily Calendar

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TODAY

ASUCD Green Partying

10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.

Quad

Find out more information about green partying with the EPPC Commission for Earth Week.

Delta Delta Delta: Midnight Pancakes

9 p.m. to 1 a.m.

227 First St.

Delta Delta Delta presents an all-you-can-eat pancake buffet. Tickets are $3 presale or $5 at the door. All proceeds benefit the Make-A-Wish Foundation.

SATURDAY

Perfect Plants for Pots Plant Sale

9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Arboretum Teaching Nursery, Garrod Drive

Enhance your garden with hundreds of beautiful spring plants, many which are unusual or hard to find!

Ben & Jerry’s Annual Vermonster Challenge

1 to 2 p.m.

Davis Commons, 500 First St.

Do you like ice cream? Compete in Ben & Jerry’s Vermonster Challenge and support Camp Kesem at the same time.


MONDAY

Project Compost

6 p.m.

43 Memorial Union

Attend the Project Compost volunteer meetings and learn how you can help them divert organic waste around campus.

Southeast Asian Graduation Meeting

6 to 7 p.m.

South Hall Conference Room

Join a passionate group of students working to celebrate the achievements of graduating Southeast Asian students through an intimate cultural ceremony for the Southeast Asian community.

To receive placement in the AGGIE DAILY CALENDAR, e-mail dailycal@theaggie.org or stop by 25 Lower Freeborn by noon the day prior to your event. Due to space constraints, all event descriptions are subject to editing, and priority will be given to events that are free of charge and geared toward the campus community.

News in brief

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Paid volunteers needed for website feedback

Fifteen participants are needed for a community meeting about a website, for which they will give feedback.

Participants must think critically and give honest evaluations about the material presented. The meeting will be April 29 from 6 to 8 p.m. in Davis.

Eligible participants must reside in Davis and must be at least 18 years old. They will be paid $50 and a light meal will be provided.

If you are interested in participating, please fill out an online questionnaire at surveymonkey.com/s/K26KT86 or contact Vanessa Fontana at the California Air Resources Board at vfontana@arb.ca.gov or (916) 322-2408.

Yamada presides over first of Assembly Aging and Long-Term Care Committee’s oversight hearing

Rep. Mariko Yamada (D-Davis), chair of the Assembly Aging and Long-Term Care Committee, heard testimony from the California Department of Aging on Tuesday.

CDA manages administration of both the federal Older Americans Act and the Older Californians Act, as well as contracts with the state network of 33 Area Agencies on Aging. Committee members were briefed on the organization of CDA by former state legislator director of CDA Lynn Daucher, who discussed improvement and efficiency of the department’s operations.

“The California Department of Aging oversees the provision of community services to millions of Californians,” Yamada said. “Accountability is crucial in delivering these vital services, and in these times of shrinking public resources in the face of growing need, we must be sure that all State departments are maximizing their state funding efficiently.”

State Inspector General Laura Chick gave an overview of the distribution of American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funds in the state. Witnesses testified, concerned about how CDA applies for and expends the funds.

The Aging and Long-Term Care Committee meeting will take place at the State Capitol on May 4. The focus will be the Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly.

Yolo County continues search for grand juror candidates

Each year on July 1, the Yolo Superior Court appoints members to the grand jury, which serves as part of the judicial system – although it is an independent body. The Court is now accepting applications for 19 grand jurors, as it extended the submission deadline.

The jury will review operations of city and county governments, as well as other agencies and districts. The grand jury will then publish a report a make recommendations to improve quality and effectiveness of local government.

For the 2010-2011 Yolo County Grand Jury, the term runs from July 1 to June 30. An average time commitment is 25 to 40 hours per month. The grand jury usually meets twice each month, typically in the evening. Reimbursement is offered at the rate of $15 per day and $0.55 per mile round trip for transportation.

Please submit applications by April 30.

For an application visit 725 Court St., Room 303, Woodland, yolo.courts.ca.gov, or call 406-6828.

POOJA KUMAR can be reached at city@theaggie.org.

Women’s Water Polo Preview

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Event: Big West Conference Championships

Where: 49er Campus Pool – Long Beach, Calif.

When: Friday through Sunday, all day

Who to watch: Senior Dana Nelson will be playing in the final tournament of her career.

The San Diego, Calif. native had a career season, scoring 30 goals and playing 505 minutes. The co-captain was a leader out of the pool as well, guiding some of the freshmen to a stellar season.

Did you know? Even if the Aggies were to win the Big West Tournament, they would not qualify for the national championships.

According to NCAA bylaws, a conference tournament needs to be in existence for two years before the winner of the event is given an automatic bid to the NCAA finals.

Because the Big West instituted the conference tournament just last year, the winner will not get the automatic bid. Therefore, even if the Aggies were to take the tournament this weekend, their season would be over.

Preview: It all comes down to this.

After nearly three months of matches, UC Davis will finish its season at this weekend’s Big West Tournament. The Aggies will enter as the fifth seed, but coach Jamey Wright isn’t worried about his team’s placement.

“There’s no real head of the pack in this conference,” Wright said. “It’s the right recipe for a lot of upsets, so it’s going to be an exciting tournament.”

UC Davis will play a familiar foe in UC Irvine to open up play. The Aggies lost to the Anteaters twice earlier this season, both one-goal games. Therefore, Wright is hoping the third time is the charm.

“I feel we have the advantage in playing them for the third time,” Wright said. “We know what we need to fix on our side to beat them. [The Anteaters] might think that they don’t have to change much in their game plan as they’ve already beaten us twice.”

Wright feels there will be a good chance the matches this weekend will be close one-goal affairs, so it’s important for his team to play mistake-free water polo.

“We need to limit the number of easy goals,” he said. “The past two times we met [UC] Irvine, we gave up a couple of goals due to lack of hustle. We can’t have any of those happen this time around.”

If UC Davis wins, it will match up against top-seeded Pacific, a team the Aggies topped earlier in the season 10-9. Wright, however, isn’t looking past Friday night’s game.

“To me, Saturday seems like next season,” Wright said. “We need to focus on one game at a time, and that starts with [UC] Irvine.”

– Jason Alpert