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California bill may ban helium-filled metallic balloons

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California became the first state to ban helium-filled metallic balloons under a bill unanimously approved by a California state senate committee Tuesday.

The bill’s sponsor, state senator Jack Scott (D-Altadena) implemented this bill to prevent further power outages caused by metallic balloons tangled in power lines.

Lorinda Ferrell, a partner at Continental Sales, a professional wholesale balloon distributor, said she is against the bill and believes it won’t solve the problem.

“All that Senator Jack Scott is trying to do is prevent power outages,” she said. “It’s something we would like to do, but outlawing sales on helium-filled metallic balloons won’t accomplish that.”

Instead, outlawing salesof these party balloons can lead to bigger problems and they may be filled unprofessionally, she added.

“If they’re sold deflated, anybody can just buy any disposable helium and inflate it on their own,” Ferrell said. “This law isn’t going to solve the outage problems and taking inflation away from the balloons can potentially make the problem worse.”

The material on metallic balloons conducts electricity and can cause damage to the power lines, said UC Davis physics lecturer Rod Cole.

“[The metallic balloon] is basically a conductor and what happens is that you have high voltage lines and there’s a potential difference measured in volts between the lines,” he said. “The balloon passing between the conductors on the lines shortens the path between them and cancause an electrical arc. This causes a big voltage spike in the power lines, which burns out transformers and causes power outages.”

Cole said the process is similar to a thunderstorm.

The potential difference between the cloud and the ground becomes large so that it is able to rip electrons off the air molecules, ionizing it. When this happens, the free electrons flow in the air, making a conducting path, he added.

Banning metallic balloons may also hurt businesses and grocery stores.

“About half of the profits come from foiled balloons,” Ferrell said. “It certainly would have an impact on grocery stores that carry foiled balloons. At the professional market, I don’t think it would have much of an impact because there are a lot of ways to work around or with it.”

UC Davis first-year biochemistry major Huy Phan said he found the bill surprising.

“Although the state is trying its best to make California a better place with such a random law, I don’t think our state politicians should spend time and money on such a trivial issue,” Phan said. “We have far more important issues to tackle down.”

 

JANET HUNG can be reached at city@californiaaggie.com XXX.

UC Scoop

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Archaeologists work to uncover peace

Efforts by Ran Boytner, an archaeologist at UCLA, and Swartz Dodd, an archaeologist at USC, could aid the peace process in the Middle East.

The two have led a team, comprised of highly regarded Israeli and Palestinian archaeologists, in creating an agreement as to the disposition of historical artifacts if a Palestinian state is formed.

“Israelis and Palestinians never previously had sat down to achieve a structured balanced agreement to govern the region’s archaeological heritage,” said Dodd in a press release. “Our group got together with the vision of a future when people wouldn’t be at each other’s throats and archaeology would need to be protected, irrespective of which side of the border it falls on.”

International law holds that in the event of the formation of a Palestinian state, Israel would have to return all archaeological artifacts. Because of this, such artifacts could be a sticking point in any future peace process.

“If we can deal with archaeology, we can help create a stable peace process that will be respected by both sides for years to come,” said Boytner in a press release.

The agreement reached by the team should be able to guide negotiators when talks reach that point.

Palestinian archaeologists have said they support the provisions made by the team’s document, which is now on file with all the relevant Middle East peace envoys – the United Nations, the European Union, the United States and Russia.

Some of the provisions include tripling the footprint of the part of Jerusalem that would qualify for special protections as a UNESCO World Heritage Site and supporting the establishment of museums and storehouses so that if a peace agreement is reached, artifact repatriation is not held up by a lack of facilities.

The six prominent archaeologists from the region that agreed to be part of the team may face reprisals for negotiating with their “enemies,” according to experts.

Only two of the team members, Rafi Greenberg, a lecturer at Tel Aviv University, and David Ilan, director of the Nelson Glueck School of Biblical Archaeology at Hebrew Union College in Jerusalem, have chosen to come forward, the rest opting to remain anonymous.

“Even though we are archaeologists, we are peacemakers first,” Boytner said.

 

Name that species!

For those that already adopted a highway and had a star named after them, there’s another way to get your name out there: marine species.

The Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego, a widely regarded institution for marine biology, is now allowing donors to have newly discovered marine species named after them.

The changes come on the heels of budget cuts that have been rising for several years, and consequently the cost of having a marine animal named after you is not cheap. There are currently several species available: a rare hydrothermal vent worm for $50,000, two types of worms found on whale bones for $25,000 and an orange nudibranch for $15,000.

Species are usually named by the person who discovered it. When someone makes a donation to Scripps, they are allowed to have the species named after themselves, a friend or a family member, after which the species is introduced in a scientific journal, toestablish it permanently.

The money gained by Scripps for this service will go toward maintaining the Scripps Oceanographic Collections.

To find out more about being a donor, call the Scripps Development Office at (858) 822-1865 or reach it by e-mail at supportscripps@ucsd.edu.

 

UC Scoop is compiled by RICHARD PROCTER, who can be reached at campus@californiaaggie.com.

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 clock at the Apr. 10 meeting location, the Memorial Union’s Mee Room.

 

Meeting started at 6:15 p.m.

 

Ivan Carrillo, ASUCD president, absent

Molly Fluet, ASUCD vice-president, present

Rebecca Schwartz, ASUCD senator pro tempore, present

Andrew Bianchi, ASUCD senator, present

Sergio Blanco, ASUCD senator, present

Chris Dietrich, ASUCD senator, present

Erica Oropeza, ASUCD senator, present

Ramneek Saini, ASUCD senator, present

Lula Ahmed-Falol, ASUCD senator, present

Chad Roberts, ASUCD senator, absent

Rebecca Lovell, ASUCD senator, present

Jesse Rosales, ASUCD senator, present

Joe Chatham, ASUCD senator, present

Tracey Zeng,ASUCD senator, present

 

Appointments and confirmations

Environmental Policy and Planning Commission

Tracy Chang, member

Will Klein, member

 

Presentations

Devon Lee, chair of the committee for the Davis Police Department, announced a Strategic Planning meeting for Apr. 21 in Wickson Hall from 3 to 5p.m.

 

Theresa Montemayor, assistant director of student affairs from Campus Unions, announced a new drop-in express service at the Memorial Union.

 

Old legislation

Senate Resolution 11, authored and introduced by Dietrich, in support of the UC Davis Gmail program passed unanimously.

 

Senate bill 34, authored and introduced by Schwartz and coauthored by Brent Laabs, to amend the jobs of ASUCD Outreach Assembly members, passed unanimously.

 

SB 43, authored by Christine Pham, coauthored by Dietrich and Paredes, introduced by Dietrich, to allocate $519.54 from Capital Reserves for directional signs and miscellaneous items for Picnic Day, passed unanimously.

 

SB 38, authored by Laabs, coauthored by Mark Champagne, introduced by Bianchi, to revise history of the opening day of theASUCD Coffee House, passed unanimously.

 

SB 39, authored by Paul Harms, coauthored by Laabs and Matt Shannon, introduced by Saini, to change the Administrative Plan process, passed unanimously.

 

SB 41, authored by Fluet, coauthored by Izzo, introduced by Schwartz, to allocate $150 from Senate Reserves to fund the Academicians and Politicians Ignore Worlds Poor and Oppressed talk, passed unanimously.

 

SB 42, authored by Peterson, introduced by Zeng, to allocate $100 from Senate to fund 100 Icees from the Aggie student store for ASUCD resource faire, was tabled.

 

Public announcements

Rosales announced the Rail Jam event at Aggie Stadium for Wednesday from 5 to 8 p.m.

 

Pham of the Student Activities commission announced activities for the Picnic Day preview week and the last lecture series by Professor Wendy Ho on Apr. 16.

 

Fluet announced a talk by Professor Aquiline Tarimo on the Future of the International Human Rights Debate on Apr. 16.

 

Other business

Max Mikalonis, announced a Davis College Democrats and Davis College Republicans debate and asked for a moment of silence for the lost lives in Iraq.

 

Meeting adjourned at 9:09 p.m.

 

ANGELA RUGGIERO compiles the senate briefs and can be reached at campus@californiaaggie.com.

Art department receives original Warhol photographs

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Art students will soon be able to make use of a unique donation to the department – a time capsule of 21st century pop culture.

On Friday the Nelson Gallery, the art department’s faculty-run teaching museum, opened a donation of original photographs from the Andy Warhol Foundation valued at $188,000. The package was opened Friday in the small space of room 125 in the art building, with an anxious audience huddled around.

About a year ago, the Nelson Gallery Registrar and Collection manager Robin Bernhard explained, Nelson Gallery director Renny Pritikin received a peculiar letter in the mail f

rom the foundation asking if UC Davis would like a portion of the $28 million donation of the American pop artist’s work that would be distributed to around 200 universities for academic use. Pritikin filled out a form and returned it to the foundation, and on Apr. 8 received a sealed package, which remained unopened until Friday so that it could acclimate to its new western atmosphere.

Very carefully, Bernhard sliced the edges of the package in white gloves and using a box cutter, only to find another sealed package within it.

A voice from the back of the small crowd shouted to her, “Normally you don’t have all these people around watching you, are you nervous?”

Bernhard answered with a laugh, “[It’s] not too bad. A hand shaking is not too good with a knife.”

Under plastic and tape was a matte cardboard 3-ring binder filled with photographs in Mylar sleeves. The format of the donation was both the older 4×5 format of Polaroid prints in color as well as 11×14 silver gelatin prints in black and white.

As Bernhard gently flipped through the sleeves, the news media and Nelson faculty alike stood in silence and wonder. Both posed and candid photographs of subjects like Debbie Harry, nude models and unidentified miscellaneous portraits were among the donated collection.

“[Andy Warhol] was an obsessive diarist,” Pritikin said. “He used the camera as a diary as well.”

The highlight for the majority of spectators, however, was the donation of several black and white photographs of Arnold Schwarzenegger and Maria Shriver’s wedding. In this miniseries was a close up candid portrait of Shriver coyly licking wedding cake from her fingers.

Over the next month, Bernhard said, the photographs will be scanned, archived and sent back to the foundation. This was one of many conditions outlined for the acceptance of the gift, according to a letter the foundation sent to Pritikin.

The Nelson Gallery plans to hold an official exhibit of Warhol’s work in the next year, but Bernhard said that in about a month’s time the photos will be made digitally available on the Nelson Gallery website, nelsongallery.ucdavis.edu under the “collection” section.

 

NICOLE L. BROWNER can be reached at arts@californiaaggie.com.

Students of Diverse Affiliations to sponsor anti-bias training

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In an effort to address campus cultural barriers, the Students of Diverse Affiliations are sponsoring anti-bias training in an all-day event Saturday titled “Lost in Colors.” The event will begin at 9:30 a.m. in Hart Hall.

Students of Diverse Affiliationscoordinator Hanh Le said the program is a series of workshops to teach students how to properly communicate with all cultures and identities.

The Women’s Resources and Research Center, Student Recruitment and Retention Center, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Resource Center, Cross Cultural Center, and Counseling and Psychological Services will make presentations during the event. UC Davis chemistry lecturer Bryan Enderle, the keynote speaker, will discuss how to communicate inclusively.

Though many students might perceive the event as just another cultural sensitivity training program, Le said “Lost in Colors” will have a practical emphasis which caters to all students. Specifically, students who complete anti-bias training will be better prepared for interaction at work, she said.

“We hope that students would realize that common language is offensive to some people – especially in interviews, because when you say something that offends somebody, that pretty much ruins the interview,” said Le, a community and regional development major.

Housed in the Cross Cultural Center, Students of Diverse Affiliations aims to promote dialogue between different cultural communities. It is “that channel of communication across identities and groups that don’t normally interact with each other,” Le said.

As a faculty advisor to the Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, Enderle said he has experience training and taking students overseas and to inner cities. He said he will talk about “how to functionally interact within a diverse society and workplace.”

“Similar people tend to interact with each other,” Enderle said. “When groups are forced to mix in class or the workplace, it’s easy to have miscommunication and misunderstanding.”

One of the central themes of the event will be privilege of all types, Le said.

“There are different dimensions of privilege,” Le said. “We’re not [only] talking black, white, or Asian, if they’re heterosexual or homosexual, rich or poor. Everyone has privilege in some areas and not others.”

The LGBT Resource Center will present “That’s So Gay,” a workshop to discuss “how words contribute to a climate that supports hate,” said Sheri Atkinson, the unit’s director.

“This is an interactive program that encourages audience members to participate in this important discussion. It also goes beyond homophobia and addresses all issues of oppression,” she said in an e-mail interview.

Le said the event also aims to introduce students to the offerings of the attending organizations.

“Whatever students need are provided at one of these centers,” she said. “We’re hoping to make a personal connection to these people.”

PATRICK McCARTNEY can be reached at campus@californiaaggie.com.XXX

Women’s water polo preview

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Teams: No. 10 UC Davis vs. No. 19 Santa Clara

Records: Aggies 21-8 (11-1), Broncos 16-9 (13-4)

Where: Schaal Aquatics Center

When: Saturday at noon

Who to watch: For the first time all season, an Aggie earned the nod for Western Water Polo Association Player of the Week.

Senior attacker Christi Raycraft was the choice after she led UC Davis to a perfect 5-0 record last weekend with 12 goals, eight ejections drawn and nine steals. It was the second such honor of the Davis native’s career.

Did you know? This year is all about record-breaking.

Raycraft has broken not only the season total of 71 exclusions drawn, but she also snapped Tiffany Hodgens career record last weekend. Senior defender Jessica Soza is now the school’s career minute leader with 2,738, averaging over 20 minutes a game throughout her four-year career.

As a team, UC Davis has already broken a record with 214 assists on the season. The Aggies’ exclusion drawn total (224) is just two shy of the season record, which they will surely surpass this weekend.

And if they win out, including the WWPA tournament, it will break the record for wins in a single season.

Preview: With only two regular season games remaining, UC Davis will meets its last conference challenge before the WWPA Tournament when it faces a scrappy Santa Clara team.

The Broncos have beaten defending conference champion Loyola Marymount University this year, along with impressive victories over UC San Diego and Cal State Bakersfield.

The Aggies will meet the Broncos with not only stars but depth this weekend.

“In the Colorado State game it was mostly Laura (Uribe) and Raycraft,” head coach Jamey Wright said. “But the rest of the weekend we got a lot more balanced scoring. It makes us a much more difficult team to defend.”

The two senior standouts combined for 24 goals last weekend while the rest of the squad helped UC Davis outscore its opponents 61-28.

With a win, UC Davis clinches the top seed of the WWPA Championships, which are to be held Apr. 25 to 27 at LMU.

 

 

Women’s lacrosse preview

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Teams: UC Davis vs. Cincinnati

Records: Aggies, 4-8; Bearcats, 2-9

Where: Nippert Stadium – Cincinnati, Ohio

When: Saturday at 11 a.m.

Who to watch: The UC Davis women’s lacrosse team has had trouble defending its own goal recently. Sophomore defender Molly Peterson will look to have a key impact when the Aggies play rookie program Cincinnati on Saturday.

The Lafayette, Calif. native is second on the team with 18 caused turnovers and third on the squad with 24 ground balls.

Did you know? Saturday will mark only the third time that UC Davis has traveled to the state of Ohio to play a lacrosse match, and both of its previous appearances resulted in two completely different outcomes.

On Apr. 13, 2007, UC Davis traveled to Columbus, Ohio to play Ohio State, where the Aggies left the field feeling deflated after a 17-4 defeat.

Two days later, UC Davis made its way to Springfield, Ohio to take on Wittenberg University. The Aggies were victorious by an 18-0 margin as then junior midfielder Katie McGovern set a UC Davis record with six assists. She also added three scores.

Preview: After returning home from a three-match East Coast swing to be blown out 21-10 by California, the Aggies will set out on another three-game road trip starting Saturday.

For this trip, UC Davis will be headed to the Midwest. The first of these three contests will come against Cincinnati. Having posted only two wins so far in its inaugural season, the Bearcats are coming off of a recent 16-4 win over Howard.

Ten different Cincinnati players found the back of the net as sophomore attacker Shannon Lynes led the way with three goals of her own.

For the season, the Bearcats are spearheaded offensively by junior midfielder Lindsey Marshall.

A native of Hilliard, Ohio, Marshall is first on her team with 19 goals and 24 draw controls while ranking second on the squad with 14 caused turnovers.

Protecting the goal, sophomore Jen Mott stopped five of seven shots against Howard to post her second victory of the season.

 

Softball preview

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Teams: UC Davis v. Cal State Fullerton

Records: Aggies 16-26 (1-5); Titans 18-20-1(2-4)

Where: Anderson Family Field – Fullerton, Calif.

When: Saturday at noon, 2 p.m.; Sunday at noon

Who to watch: UC Davis will be looking to jump start its offense this weekend, and there is no better place to start at the top of the order.

Enter Michelle Espiritu.

The sophomore Aggie leadoff hitter is a proven headache for the opposition when she gets on base, leading the team with 12 stolen bases. She will look to provide the spark for an offense that has scored an average of 1.2 runs in its last 13 games.

Did you know? On Apr. 18 the softball team will host its annual home run derby at La Rue Field. Each swing is $1 and is open to everyone.

Proceeds will go towards the UC Davis softball program. For more information, visit the UC Davis softball athletic website.

Preview: The derby may begin Apr. 18, but the Aggies aren’t planning to wait before breaking out their big bats.

This weekend they will be looking to recapture their hitting stroke when they travel to Fullerton.

With the Titans’ starting pitching staff, however, it is easier said than done.

Christine Hiner (9-10) and Jessica Doucette (9-9) hold the fourth- and seventh-best ERA in the Big West Conference at 2.20 and 2.40, respectively.

Still, the Aggies are up for the challenge, and will bring a task-oriented approach to Anderson Family Field.

“Our focus will be to produce with runners in scoring position,” said head coach Karen Yoder.

Opposing the Titan duo will be junior Jessica Hancock (11-15) and freshman Alex Holmes (5-11).

Hancock leads the conference in strikeouts (172) and is fifth with a 2.36 ERA.

Men’s tennis preview

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Teams: UC Davis vs. Portland State; Nevada; UC Irvine

Records: Aggies, 8-10 (1-3); Vikings, 5-12; Wolf Pack, 4-13; Anteaters, 8-12 (1-1)

Where: Marya Welch Tennis Center; Galena High School – Reno, Nev.; Marya Welch Tennis Center

When: Today at 2:30 p.m.; Saturday at 1 p.m.; Sunday at 1 p.m.

Who to watch: Despite what may be going on around him, senior No. 5 singles player Daniel Elefant always has winning on his mind.

Last week against UC Santa Barbara and Cal Poly, Elefant was the only victorious Aggie, boasting back-to-back wins in singles play.

Did you know: This will only be the second time all season the Aggies have competed in three consecutive days.

The only other time came from Feb. 2 to 4 when UC Davis went a combined 1-2 on the road against Portland, Portland State and Montana.

Preview: The Aggies haven’t won three-straight matches since the beginning of the season.

This weekend, they will have their chance.

UC Davis will face three teams with lower winning percentages than it this weekend, beginning today with Portland State.

The Viks are suddenly reeling after three straight-losses. Before the skid, they had won four of five.

The Aggies, meanwhile, are riding a losing steak of four, but that streak will end if past performance is any indicator.

On Feb. 2, they dominated the Viks on the road, 7-0. Four of six singles matches were decided in straight sets, including a 6-1, 6-0 victory by Elefant over Portland State freshman Jeff Cero.

Then on Saturday, UC Davis will travel across state lines to face Nevada, which is fresh off a 6-1 victory over UC Riverside.

When the two programs last met on Apr. 8, 2007, the Wolf Pack was victorious, 6-1. Justin Garcia picked up the lone UC Davis win, defeating Arzhang Derakhshani at No. 4 singles, 7-6 (4), 6-2.

On Sunday the Aggies will attempt to improve their 1-3 conference record as they face UC Irvine in Big West Conference action.

The Anteaters are 4-4 this season outside of Irvine compared to their sterling 8-3 home record. In their most recent action, they defeated Loyola Marymount 4-3 on Wednesday.

 

 

 

Dempsey’s RBI single in 12th downs No. 10 Stanford

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Headline: Dempsey’s RBI single in 12th downs No. 10 Stanford

Layercake: Aggies open road conference play today in Santa Barbara

By RAY LIN

Aggie Staff Writer

In last season’s “farm vs. farm” battle between the UC Davis and Stanford baseball teams, a little bunt single by outfielder Sean Ratliff helped the Cardinal walk off in 13 innings over the Aggies.

This time around, UC Davis returned the favor in 12.

After tying the game with a pair of ninth inning runs, the Aggies finally put it away with an RBI single from senior second baseman Matt Dempsey in the top of the 12th to win the 9-8 thriller.

“Stanford is a quality team with a lot of tradition, and we recognize that and respect what they’ve accomplished,” head coach Rex Peters said. “It seems like we really get up for these games and always play them tough.”

With UC Davis (21-10) trailing 8-6 in the ninth, freshman Aggie shortstop Scott Heylman walked, and senior outfielder Ryan Royster was beaned to put the potential tying run at first.

Sophomore third baseman Ty Kelly then advanced the runners with a sacrifice bunt, and senior Cardinal right-hander Rex Petrill walked Evan Hudson to plate the first run.

With the bases loaded and one out, senior outfielder Kevin James was hit by a pitch to even the contest, 8-8.

Over the next three innings, Aggie right-handers Justin Fitzgerald and Jeff Reekers combined to blank the Cardinal and set up the storybook finish in the 12th.

Freshman UC Davis outfielder Rikki Foster, who had gone 0-for-9 to begin his rookie campaign with the Aggies, delivered a leadoff double for his first career hit.

Two at-bats later, Dempsey came through with the clutch, game-winning hit, and Reekers (3-2) retired three straight batters to seal the deal.

“To come into Sunken Diamond and get a win is a good accomplishment for us,” Peters said. “Now we’ll just focus on this upcoming weekend.”

Today UC Davis will kick off its first Big West Conference road series of the year at 2 p.m. with UC Santa Barbara at Caesar Uyesaka Stadium. The series will extend into the weekend with 1 p.m. contests on Saturday and Sunday.

RAY LIN can be reached at sports@californiaaggie.com. XXX

Cheeseburgers in paradise

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It wasn’t until the tail end of 12th grade that we realized how little our actions mattered. I’d already been accepted to Davis, and nothing outside of my getting arrested for treason was going to dissuade the campus from assimilating me. Cal Poly and Santa Cruz had similar designs on my buddies, leaving us coasting through our last classes – an impressive feat of laziness considering how ably we’d underperformed even beforehand. Once we’d impressed our revelations on our less scholastically-inclined friends, we were home free. To get a mental image, picture the Almighty reaching down and handing us a celestial get-out-of-jail-free card; that’s about what it felt like.

Since Alhambra High’s generous block scheduling allowed those of us wise enough to dodge seventh-period classes to go home around noon on block days, it was on a glorious Thursday afternoon that we mustered the troops in the school’s upper parking lot. Justin’s pickup truck played host, flanked by my ghetto-fabulous ’92 Sable and Adam’s 1970’s Shaggin’ Wagon. Out came the cooler. Out came knives, followed quickly by forks, plates, cups and napkins. And out came Justin’s half-sized grill, filled to the brim with charcoal drunk with lighter fluid.

Like a man running with the Olympic torch, Potato ran through the gate and up the lot wielding a rolled-up newspaper engulfed in flames. He passed to me, I passed to Kyle, Kyle passed to Justin and the grill was lit. It was burger time.

You see, a close perusal of the Alhambra rulebook had revealed a few important truths. Matches were not allowed on campus. Nor were lighters, torches, gasoline, sparkers, fireworks, lighter fluid or anything else that could be used to start a fire. But a gigantic firebrand wielded by a man literally too dumb to spell his middle name running at a velocity he’d never demonstrated in PhysEd? Turns out that hadn’t been expressly prohibited yet.

We spent the afternoon as kings, avoiding the cafeteria food and rocking out to my car’s blown speakers. It was like a Mastercard commercial. Beef and drinks? $20. Condiments, utensils, plates and cups? $32. Enjoying a freshly grilled pineapple burger covered in barbecue sauce and lightly seasoned with the looks of utter bewilderment on your classmates’ faces? That, loyal reader, is priceless.

We were bound to get caught eventually. Perhaps attracted to the enormous mounting haze of smoke, the campus cop rolled by in his patrol car. “What are you kids up to?”

We paused, wondering if he’d somehow missed the grill. “Are you serious? What does it look like? Hey Officer Ryan, you want a burger?”

“Sorry guys, I’m gonna have to call this one in.” He grabbed his radio. “Mrs. Taylor? (our principal) Yeah, this is Ryan. We’ve got some kids here in the upper lot that seem to be, um, having a barbecue.” (Long pause) “A barbecue. They’ve grilled up some hamburgers.” (Another long pause) He looked at me. “She says I need to take you boys to the office.”

I quickly explained the campus rulebook’s expert advice on the subject, and after an incredulous look Officer Ryan got back on the walkie-talkie. “They say it’s ok. It’s in the rules.” He replaced his radio and let us go with the understanding that we’d be up and gone by the time he returned with a little backup. We learned later that although Mrs. Taylor was royally pissed, the officer thought we were the height of comedy.

Two things happened as a result of our afternoon. One, my buddy Curtis, the student body president, went to bat for us and reduced our sentence from suspensions down to nothing. That was excellent. Better still, though, was a little notation that popped into the school agenda the year after we graduated. Just past the dire warnings against setting fire to the school, it reads, “Students are also forbidden from barbecuing on campus.”

 

CADE GRUNST likes cheeseburgers better than genetics homework. Distract him at cade@ucdavis.edu.XXX

Naturally negligent

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American culture is a toddler who has just made the transition from training wheels to big kid bike, accelerating like never before, redefining speed. Except we can’t feel the wind running through our hair as we move forward.

And unlike the undeveloped nations of the world, nature is not a big player in the way we define our culture. Take the tribal areas of New Guinea for instance, who live directly in accordance with their surrounding terrain. They’ve learned the forest like a roadmap and know exactly how to handle themselves in the various calls of the wild. If the world suddenly reverted to how it was 250 years ago (into the far more natural state before mass production), it would be these societies that would fare best. Likewise, if all industry were suddenly to shut down and wilderness were to grow over our machines, we would have to completely readapt for new sources of dependency and very few of us would be able to survive.

We identify ourselves with technology, industry and economic prowess, and sadly, nature has become nothing more than a fixture of setting, stagnant and neglected scenery only possessing aesthetic value. In some way or form, we all need to realize that there is more in nature, whether something of spiritual merit or pantheistic bliss.

Before you cite our abundance of urban greenery, manicured landscape is not nature; nor is anything paved, domesticated or engineered by our own hand. Nature is the cragged and sinister mountain heads, it is the dark tangled mess of roots and branches, it is the dirt and the ugly and the dead. But nature is also the benign and ever-clear, the pubescent freshness of dew, of pure blossoms and birth. Nothing else gives us this dichotomy – nature is one of the few naturally bipolar beauties.

But industrialized “developed” countries brush off this beauty, eradicating it in lieu of the aforementioned businesses and technologies that we base our 21st century lives around. We like to move fast; we are continually unsatisfied with the speed of our feet, digestive tracts and general pace of life. Hypocrisy at its best: we rush through everything we do and then complain that it moves too fast. Time is money. Time is short. Time is unrelenting, and in many cases we make it our enemy.

Time only stops in the woods; just as the trees shed their bark, you may shed your years there too. When surrounded by the majestic wild, you may as well be in any time or space, for although nature changes it also possesses a consistency few other things do. Any virtue, meaning, or need can be found here, and the simplicity of survival purely rests upon Darwinian hierarchy and personal acclimation. This means you can discover your place in the isolated forest, away from influence and discourse.

Christopher McCandless, the man whom the film Into the Wild is based on, had the right idea. Living minimalistically and environmentally will force you to find new ways of confronting issues. We’ve become so dependent on plush, material externalities that we wouldn’t know what to do with ourselves if stripped of these things. Be wary of letting your material possessions define you or speak for your character, as that seems to be consistently happening today. More importantly, don’t be a prisoner of developed culture. There is too much to be seen and too much to experience outside of the sphere of comfort we create for ourselves.

For these reasons, I take nature to be the most important thing we have. It is the last remaining glimpse of a once native and pure world, and it is quickly being forgotten, bulldozed over. I urge you to go explore what’s left of the real beauty the world can still offer you – beauty that can in no way be replicated in a lab or on a screen. The mountains are calling, the remote trails are becoming overgrown, and time is falling away from us all as we rush through life. Use your hours however you wish, but I’ll be away from here as much as I can be, learning pragmatically rather than institutionally, living improvised and striving to better understand our Mother.

 

ZACK CROCKETT wants to be a part-time recluse and wallow in nature’s wonders. Join in at ztcrockett@ucdavis.edu.XXX

Dining in Davis: Jusco

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Jusco. That’s right, the place across from Fuji Chief has a real name. I wish to inform any readers that I actually planned to write this review of Jusco. I did not go to Fuji Chef, see the big line and then decide to go to the sushi place across the street.

In fact, as someone who has done that before, I would advise against doing so. Even entertaining the idea of going to Fuji Chef is setting oneself up for disappointment if one is going to end up at Jusco.

Although Jusco boasts a similar “all you can eat” lunch special, it costs approximately $2.50 less at $11.50. It seems like a gift from the sushi gods, yes. But it is a Trojan Horse, because for each piece of sushi you do not eat, you must pay 50 cents extra. I know this because the restaurant has posted this fact next to just about every table. I also know that Jusco does not plan on changing this policy, because the pieces of paper are laminated.

Jusco also has a dinner buffet that costs $14.99 Monday through Thursday, and $15.99 Friday through Sunday.

Now that the pleasantries are out of the way, it’s on to the bad stuff. The fried California roll is a lump of food to stay away from. Between the creamy inside and the scalding hot oil that saturates the rice, my senses of taste and decency beckoned me to spit the roll out. However, I placed the previous California roll on different places of my single napkin to get rid of the oil, which rendered said napkin useless as a vessel for spitting the roll into.

My friend also found wasabi in his eye afterwards. I can personally attest to his ability to keep wasabi out of his eyes, and I blame this problem on the main meat of this review: the sushi. Although I do love the taste of fish, especially the raw kind, the nori wraps changed the texture to that which resembles canned salmon bones: They’re edible, but offer an offsetting crunch. And even for raw fish, it had that sitting-out-for-two-hours taste. The specialty rolls were also only available for weekend dinners.

Now, the décor is to die for. The wall mural is aquarium themed. There are fish painted on the walls, which I assume were used in the food. There are tables designed for pairs and groups of four, but it was very difficult to fit into the two-person table, so my friend and I sat at the slightly larger four-person one.

The silverware was a little disappointing. I do love eating with my hands, but I stopped doing so when I was around 2 years old. Until now.

I have little culture, so when someone gives me tree rejects with which to pick up food, and does not offer any silver alternative, I get slightly offended. I also have poor hand-eye coordination, as anyone on my intramural teams can attest to. However, eating with my bare hands was better than trying to impress the owners by eating with tree branches. I suspect this is how the owners find out if a customer lacks culture.

Finally, they do not have orange slices, so I can only imagine that is the reason the restaurant is not as successful as Fuji. As noted before, I would not recommend going to this restaurant if you A) were looking for another place to eat after not getting to Fuji early enough, or B) have had good sushi lately. To get my friend to come with me, I offered to buy his meal.

Sidebar:

In review:

Jusco

228 G St.

Hours: Lunch buffet 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.; dinner buffet 5 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.

Food:

Ambience:

Price: $$

Key

Food and ambience quality

I’m eating here everyday

Almost like eating at home

Better than my roommate’s cooking

Only if I’m starving

Budget

$$$$ chancellor $20

$$$ professor $15-$20

$$ graduate student/alum $10-$15

$ undergraduate $5-$10 XXX

Daily Calendar

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TODAY

 

Raptor Center field trip

8:30 a.m.

California Raptor Center

Join the CRC for a wildlife hike highlighting the raptors of Yolo County! Call 752-9994 to reserve a spot by telephone message.

 

California Indian basket weaving

Noon to 1 p.m.

3201 Hart

Learn about basket weaving at this Native American Culture Days presentation by Kathy Wallace.

 

Emerson Jr. High carnival

4 to 11 p.m.

14 Cannery Park St.

Help the Emerson Junior High School PTA raise funds for the school! Rides can be purchased individually and day passes are $25 at the door. Day passes are available for $20 at Carousel Stationary and Gifts at 706 Second St.

 

Summer abroad enrollment deadline

5 p.m.

Education Abroad Center, corner of Third and A streets

Secure your spot in a summer study abroad program and get extensions for important forms by visiting the EAC. Enrollment is first-come, first-served. The last day to enroll is Friday by 5 p.m.

 

Native American sunset ceremony

6:30 to 9 p.m.

Putah Creek Lodge

This ceremony closes Native American Culture Days and will feature Pomo dancers. Refreshments provided.

 

Film screening

7 p.m.

1322 Storer

Watch Against the Grain, a film about freethinking Peruvian artists.

 

Whole Earth Festival Benefit Dance Party

8 p.m. to midnight

Delta of Venus, 122 B St.

DJs Tao, Kelly D, NDemik and Ian Lesperance will have your feet tapping all night long. Donations of $3 to $5 suggested.

 

SATURDAY

 

Emerson Jr. High carnival

11 a.m. to 11 p.m.

14 Cannery Park St.

Help the Emerson Junior High School PTA raise funds for the school! Rides can be purchased individually and day passes are $25 at the door. Day passes are available for $20 at Carousel Stationary and Gifts at 706 Second St.

 

Filipino Fiesta

6 to 9 p.m.

Davis Senior Center, 646 A St.

Get a taste of Filipino culture at this fundraiser for the House of Love Orphanage in Manila. Tickets available at davisfilipinofiesta.com.

 

SUNDAY

 

9/11 talk

7:30 p.m.

Varsity Theatre

Architect Richard Gage will give a talk titled “Blueprint for Truth: The Architecture of Destruction” about the World Trade Center collapse.

 

To receive placement in the AGGIE DAILY CALENDAR, e-mail dailycal@californiaaggie.com 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. XXX

POLICE BRIEFS

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TUESDAY

Tempted by the fruit of another

Unknown suspect entered residence and removed food products from kitchen on Albany Avenue.

 

Taking out some aggression

Unknown suspect entered locked vehicle and damaged passenger side window on Sycamore Lane.

 

Hot box, and I don’t mean pizza

Two individuals were seen smoking marijuana inside a vehicle at the corner of Boston and Ashland terraces.

 

Crafty like Martha Stewart

A fence was spray-painted and sanded on Brown Drive.

 

I’ve always wanted one

Individual reported a shopping cart in the back of a pickup truck across the street on Glacier Drive.

 

WEDNESDAY

A little bit suspicious

Two people were seen pacing back and forth by reporting party’s vehicle on Alhambra Drive.

 

Kinda like in U Turn

Male subject walked into reporting party’s room and when confronted by her boyfriend ran out of the room and house on First Street.

 

So what – it’s springtime

A party was reported lasting for a few hours with subjects out on the patio.

 

Did he smell, too?

Individual was reported sleeping in front of a store and reporting party requested that he be moved along on West Covell Boulevard.

 

THURSDAY

It’s all about iPod decks, anyway

Unknown suspect broke into locked car and stole CD deck and system on Valdora Street.

 

Ladri de Bicyclette

A bicycle theft was reported on Fourth and G streets.

 

For bikes only

A slow-moving vehicle was reported on the bike path at Arthur Street and Russell Boulevard.

 

POLICE BRIEFS are compiled by ANN KIM from the public logs at the Davis Police Department and represent the official version of what happened. This segment appears Tuesdays and Thursdays. The DPD crime blotter can be viewed at cityofdavis.org/police/log. XXX