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Saturday, December 27, 2025
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UC Davis emeritus professor’s work focuses on Picnic Day

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Picnic Day is a staple of Davis culture. In its 99th iteration this year, it remains a timeless way to celebrate the unique qualities of the fine city and campus. In fact, one painter has chosen to transport Picnic Day onto his canvas, and he brings with him his first exhibition in the area since the late 1990s to the Elliot Fouts Gallery in Sacramento.

Roland Petersen, a former UC Davis professor, is one of the founding members of the Art Department, which started in 1956. From there he taught at UC Davis until 1992. Known for his focus on Picnic Day, Petersen’s work defies traditional conventions.

“The subject matter is unique. It’s a purposefully confusing manner; it requires the viewer to think. The way that he portrays a simple subject in a complex way makes the subject his masterpiece,” said Michelle Satterlee, 2010 UC Davis art history graduate and director of the Elliot Fouts Gallery.

Petersen’s work is rife with contrasts that form his unique style of printing and painting. From the way he uses shadow and light to portray his subjects to the mood that his work evokes, his paintings twist standard ideas and show Picnic Day in a whole new light, as well as celebrate the uniqueness of the event.

“Picnic Day embodies the values of Davis: family, friends and reunion. It allows people to celebrate campus and the community,” said Jonathan Wu, a fourth-year neurobiology major and Picnic Day chair. “While the event has picked up some negative stigma, especially since the incident in 2010, we’ve had much more community support in the last couple of years.”

Indeed, Petersen’s works, both new and old, remain an example of the Davis community and alumni being involved in Picnic Day. The theme for this year is “Snapshots,” something that Petersen’s work embodies.

“Picnic Day is an opportunity for people to showcase the university,” said Chris Hong, 2013 alumnus and Special Event director. “The community has become much more involved.”

The Elliot Fouts Gallery’s new exhibition, Roland Petersen: A Journey Through Time, is being held now through May 7 and will have 20 of Petersen’s works on display.

“The show is significant in that Roland hasn’t had a formal exhibition in the area since the late ’90s,” Satterlee said on the significance of this particular exhibition. “He rose to national attention, and has influenced other UC Davis graduates. The works span from 1950 until 2013.”

Besides the exhibition, Petersen’s work can be seen a bit closer to home. Shields Library contains several of Petersen’s paintings, including a large mural near the circulation desk.

BRETT BUNGE can be reached at arts@theaggie.org.

Picnic Day Essentials

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Backpack: You’ll need a lot of things to survive Picnic Day and you’ll need something to carry them in. A backpack can also double as a pillow during your mid-afternoon nap.

Water bottle: Do not fill this with alcohol. Bring water to stay hydrated throughout the day, especially in the Davis heat.

Chapstick: This goes hand in hand with staying hydrated. Protect your lips!

Sunglasses: It will be sunny, so wear sunglasses to prevent sun damage.

Snacks: Along with eating a full breakfast, don’t forget to bring snacks for the rest of the day. On-campus food can be expensive, and no, beer does not count as food.

Emergency numbers: Be sure to have important emergency numbers and your friends’ numbers programmed into your phone. Keep in mind, however, that cell phone service can be spotty on Picnic Day, so make a plan with your friends before you start your day.

Advil: You never know how you might be feeling, so make sure to have some painkillers on hand.

Aggie Band-uh! gears up for Picnic Day

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As the clammy frosts recede and winter sits down to slumber, a ray of light shines out over the crisp, golden fields of UC Davis. Songbirds roost and let forth their joyous noises, viscous, green mucus rolls out between the itchy membranes of insufferable allergy-ridden nasal cavities, freshmen stumble drunkenly out into the morning sun and vomit on the J-line.

Spring Quarter is upon us.

And if you look closely enough, you just might see throngs of sweating students tooting their horns for eight hours a week until April 20. These are the members of the California Aggie Marching Band-uh!, and they practice so fervently for one simple reason: to make some music on Picnic Day.

“It’s our favorite event,” said Brandon Rojas, third-year biological sciences major. “It’s the pinnacle of our year.”

With performances in two parades, one special concert for alumni and duking it out in the Battle of the Bands, the numerous bandsmen certainly know how to get around. They hold the annual celebration to be their finest hour, not only practicing eight hours a week starting the first day of Spring Quarter until Picnic Day, but also having seven-hour practice on the second Saturday of the quarter as well as specific sectional practice for three hours a week.

With such a heavy time commitment, many Band-uh! members opt to take a lighter course load in the spring, arranging their schedule to accommodate the rehearsal demands.

While attendance is mandatory, some leniency is afforded for students with conflicting schedules. Only two of the eight practice hours, excluding the additional sections, can be missed in order to march in the parade.

“Sometimes people have conflicts that they just can’t get out of, but they will go to extra practices during the week,” said Bryan Jones, third-year wildlife, fish and conservation major. “If you plan on marching, you usually try to schedule around those practices.”

Picnic Day itself is a crowded event for the band. They wake up at six in the morning and take formal pictures in full-dress, step off for the parade at 9 a.m., perform their show in multiple stations downtown along the route, load up onto a truck for an additional performance, then repeat the parade at 11:30 a.m. Their evening ends whenever the noise ordinance laws demand they cease sometime later at the Battle of the Bands, which they participate in each year at Lake Spafford in the Arboretum. There are two key rules for determining the victor:

Rule 1: The last band to play their fight song wins the Battle.
Rule 2: The Band-uh! always plays their fight song last.

Alumni are invited to participate in the day’s events and even attend several practice sessions to recharge their musical chops.

“It’s a wonderful opportunity because I still live in Davis,” said Stephanie Hartfield, who graduated in 2011. “ Whenever we [alumni] are invited, I take every opportunity. It’s just a nice place to come back to play my trumpet.”

Catch the Band-uh! as they do their thing in their many locations this Saturday. For further information, check out their Facebook page.

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

Campus custodians, groundskeepers earn time and half for Picnic Day work

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All throughout and following the events of Picnic Day 2013, campus custodians and groundskeepers will be on site to sort through the mess that will most expectedly be left behind.

David Chulick, senior custodian and UC Davis custodian of 15 years, will begin his day at 6 a.m. along with another custodian to retrieve the master keys. Opening all of the buildings will take an hour and a half.

Before the day’s start, bathrooms will be stocked and waste receptacles will be set up by a number of other custodians.

“The difference between 30,000 people being here and 100,000 is quite a bit. The bathrooms are messier than a normal workday,” Chulick said.

During Picnic Day, two custodians will work a 6 a.m. to 3 p.m. shift, then other custodians will opt to work the wing shift (3 p.m. to midnight). Many of the day’s earliest events begin at 8 a.m.

On Picnic Day, custodians can work an additional eight hours for time and a half, Chulick said.

Campus custodians can be paid up to $14 an hour, depending on their expertise, which can equate to up to $21 an hour on Picnic Day.

Saleshni Singh, assistant superintendent of Custodial Services, said the division ensures that enough supplies are ordered before the event and that all custodians are met with to ensure that they are aware of what areas they will be tending to.

In total there are 162 custodians in the division.

“They have to rush throughout the end of the day to make sure the lobbies and first floors are presentable for Monday,” Singh said.

Custodial Services has also been active in supporting the campus zero-waste initiative, which aims to make the campus waste-free by 2020. Custodians will place zero-waste bins around campus that allocate sections for compost materials, recyclables and landfill-bound items on the morning of Picnic Day. Singh said there have been past instances where bins would be full mid-day because they were stationed the day before the event. Custodians had to then revisit and empty them.

UC Davis groundskeepers also assist in campus zero-waste efforts by managing zero-waste zones on the Quad, according to Facilities Management Grounds supervisor Tyson Mantor.

“The Quad may produce zero-waste, but with zero-waste comes extra work (mostly accounting for the compost generated) — work that we are happy to perform,” he said in an email interview.

Picnic Day teams, organized by the Picnic Day Planning Committee, are also assigned to make sure there are labeled trash receptacles for people to use.

“It all comes down to mutual respect for the campus. As long as people are aware and conscious of the cleanliness of the campus, we shouldn’t have a problem,” said Jonathan Wu, chair of the board of directors of the Picnic Day Planning Committee.

Wu said that there are many volunteers from different campus or community organizations — including the Picnic Day Board — that come to the campus on Sunday to help finish cleaning.

Most of the cleaning by Custodial Services is finished before Sunday, according to Chulick. One person is assigned to each building to clean the day of the event.

Chulick said much of the mess is in Rock Hall, formerly called Chem 194. There is usually trash in the whole room, including the seats and lecture area. Plus, the Chemistry Club Magic Show, an annual Picnic Day staple, usually leaves a blanket of confetti on the floor.

The Grounds Division of UC Davis Facilities Management is also integral in the Picnic Day cleanup process. They place extra trash and recycling receptacles around campus and then service them throughout the day, where they are needed, according to Mantor.

“Groundskeepers are responsible for keeping the campus neat and tidy, all while helping ensure a safe environment — a campus [steward] of sorts,” Mantor said.

On average, about 10 emergency work order calls are placed on Picnic Day. Singh said that many of the calls concern work in one of a handful of buildings that Custodial Services does not maintain (ARC, Alumni Center, Freeborn Hall, Memorial Union, Memorial Union Lodges and the Silo). Calls include issues such as spilled coffee, locked doors and clogged toilets. The emergency line is attended until 3 a.m.

Chulick said that some buildings have different cleanliness specifications than others and are cleaned by exterior companies.

Campus work orders can now be reported using a smartphone on the CitySourced application. Users can take photos, link the GPS coordinates and submit the report.

A full list of UC Davis facility services can be found at campus-care.ucdavis.edu/services.

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

Islamophobes

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Some readers might take my statements against Sam Harris, atheist author and pseudo-philosopher, as an indication that I am a theist. I am not. In fact, I take any opportunity to assault religious thought to its maximum. However, some anti-religious arguments are absurd, and much worse, others accidentally endorse extremely anti-human thought.

That second category has been skillfully, masterfully brought to a glorious apex by Harris, most of all in his recent writing on Islam. The mainstream discourse on the topic of religion, especially in regards to what is “politically correct,” is very blurry. Before excavating the blatant stupidity of Harris’ writing, it will be necessary to dispel some of the falsities built into the discourse in which he and most Americans are operating.

It is a credit to the propaganda machine of elite institutions that such confusion can exist in a society of literate people. One glaring and ridiculous mistake is that people either assume that criticizing Islam is always Islamophobic or it never is. The real answer — that some criticisms are, while others are not — is somehow never conceived.

This is at the core of many arguments. When someone calls a certain analysis Islamophobic, the automatic response is something like, “Oh, so we can’t criticize Islam, eh? You are the PC Police, blah, blah, blah…”

The trick in that response is that they force the false assumption mentioned above, that either all analyses are Islamophobic or none are. Most people aren’t quite quick enough to beat this dirty move in the heat of an exchange, so it wins.

Clearly, certain types of analysis are Islamophobic; this is beyond question. So, now that we have this stock response of Harris and his ilk out of the way, we can ask the two natural next questions — what is Islamophobia and what are the characteristics of an Islamophobic analysis, as opposed to an enlightened critique?

Both of those questions yield so much fruitful thought that I will not come close to answering them in full. But briefly sketching out what a reasonable answer might look like will show the horrors and the lack of rigor in Harris’ thinking.

Islamophobia is not merely a hatred of the religion of Islam and what it preaches. Harris, Fox News pundits and other American imperialists will insist that their hatred is merely directed at the views in the Quran, and if that is Islamophobia, then they’re happy to be Islamophobes. Their mistake is that they end up attributing barbarism to Muslims broadly, and they slip between criticizing the belief and the belief holder, probably without realizing it.

One week ago, on April 11, the UC Davis campus was disgraced by the Ayn Rand Society’s “Islamist Rising” event. A quick search on theaggie.org for “Islamist Rising” will show a list of the hate-filled, xenophobic, racist zealotry of some of our fellow students, those that put on the event. Like Harris and the Fox News pundits, they don’t know that they’re racists. They’re sure they aren’t.

By repeatedly denouncing those views as necessarily barbaric, Harris ends up saying that everyone who holds these beliefs is barbaric. Now, once again, Islam can be critiqued in a way that does not do this, but these shifts between critiques of ideas and critiques of people are the core of racism.

When he says “all civilized nations must unite in condemnation of a theology that now threatens to destabilize much of the Earth,” in his piece “The Reality of Islam,” he does imply very clearly that being a Muslim necessarily entails holding militant, terroristic views.

Furthermore, a speaker is responsible, even if he does not mean his view to be taken as hate-speech, to ensure that it will not. Even if I critique Islam in a legitimate way, it is upon me, so long as I live in such a xenophobic society as this one, to ensure that I am not legitimating Islamophobic views.

For example, if I say to an audience that Islam can be a catalyst for terrorism, in fairness I must qualify it with a statement that informs the audience that this should not lead us to believe that many Muslims support jihad or that “those people” are terrorists. Extensive polling shows that only a small fraction of Muslims support terrorism.

Glenn Greenwald, in his recent column in The Guardian, already elucidated the implicit racism espoused by Harris. But reframing the discourse is a must for any of us who are interested in challenging illegitimate power.

The real payoff for the elites is that Islamophobia legitimates murderous, criminal U.S. policies in the Middle East. This is what hate-speech towards Muslims does. It makes killing their kids with drones seem legitimate. It isn’t.

BRIAN MOEN hates religion, but he also hates racist versions of anti-religious thought. He can be reached at bkmoen@ucdavis.edu.

Pest control

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My folder hit the head of the gentleman in front of me with a thud. To be fair, I was attempting to save him from malaria.

I am a regular traveler on the Unitrans J-line. The other day I was sitting in my seat, looking over my transcripts to ensure I had met all my graduation requirements. The bus was packed, and I sat enraptured in my planning for a majority of the ride.

However, a sudden motion caught my eye as the bus entered a roundabout. A massive mosquito had just landed on the head of the passenger directly in front of me. I watched as the bug tucked in his wings and allowed his mud-brown legs to rest upon an unsuspecting college student’s head. I knew it would only be seconds before the young man would become a meal that would allow this large insect to subsist.

A million thoughts raced through my head as I contemplated my course of action. Should I ignore the insect? Would I allow this gentleman to contract malaria or West Nile virus? This was unfathomable. Yes, I know malaria isn’t really present in the United States. Still, I was concerned.

I could swat away the creature, but that would leave other bus passengers in danger. I could attempt to warn the passenger and ask permission to touch his head, but there just was not time for this. In my mind, this was a life or death situation and I had a nanosecond to make a choice.

I decided I was going in for the kill. I raised my manila folder and sent it swooshing towards this stranger’s head without warning. My folder hit the young man’s black hair and the mosquito with force.

The traveler turned around and stared at me. Although I don’t encourage judging people on their appearances, from what I could gather, this young man was a relatively shy, studious individual. He looked at me quizzically, as I suppose anyone who had just been hit on the head by a stranger would. I replied, “There was a mosquito on your head. But don’t worry, I gots it.” Apparently I was under the impression that more informal speaking, in the form of improper grammar, would ease the tension.

The gentleman replied, “Oh, thanks,” though I questioned the sincerity of that statement. As he said that, another motion caught my eye. I hadn’t done away with the creature! Again, my duty to be a good citizen forced me into action. I screamed, “Oh I don’t gots it!”

At this point, a majority of the bus passengers in my section were watching the encounter. Apparently, swift movement and loud exclamations are a good way to garner attention while on a bus. I stared as the mosquito landed on the window next to me.

With all the swiftness of a lioness going after an antelope, my manila folder hit the mosquito, crushing it against the window pane. To all the mosquito-lovers out there, I would like to formally apologize. I did it for the greater good. Someone has to protect J-line passengers from malaria. I screamed, “I GOTS IT!” again — apparently when in hunting mode I automatically forget the conventions of the English language.

There is now a prominent brown smear on my human development advising folder. I view it as a battle scar, making that folder much more interesting than the rest of my files. It has served a purpose far nobler than organization.

So, to the J-line passengers who I rescued from malaria, West Nile virus and red, swollen bug bites — you’re welcome. I’ll be on the J-line the rest of the school year to help you out with your insect needs. To the sweet gentleman who I hit on the head, I apologize for startling you.

MARCI MONTANARI encourages students with questions, comments or words of praise for her courage to contact her at mcmontanari@ucdavis.edu.

Students simultaneously connected, disconnected

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Upon introducing himself, third-year economics major Dao Ho usually gets the same response from every new friend he makes: “Why and how do you not have a Facebook?” He can’t receive event invites online or comment on the funny pictures everyone is talking about. However, Ho says that not having the social media platform makes him feel more in touch, rather than out of touch, with others.

Has our culture become so dependent on technology that face-to-face communication (FTF) seems to be the last resort behind sending a text or an email or using video chat? These mediums of communication that require technology fit into the category of computer-mediated communication (CMC) and may impact our ability to communicate in person normally.

Computer-mediated communication can be understood as interpersonal communication where two or more individuals interact with each other using computers.

Professor Catherine Puckering, a communication lecturer at UC Davis, says that CMC and FTF are often viewed to be at odds, and many people tend to believe that using CMC may result in lower usage of FTF.

“Social Information Processing Theory [created by Joseph Walther] tries to compare developing a relationship face-to-face versus developing a relationship online,” Puckering said. “[Walther] posited that people who communicate online — [such as with] email, online chat … text-based environment — had a much more positive view than his peers in the communication discipline.”

However, it is noted that communicating through text-based communication takes much longer than in-person, face-to-face communication.

“Text-based conversations take four times longer than a face-to-face conversation, so 15 minutes of face-to-face takes an hour of text-based communication,” Puckering said.

No nonverbal cues with CMC
“[With CMC] I can’t see your facial expressions, I can’t hear your voice, I can’t see your body posture, and so I miss a lot of the nuances of maybe who you are and maybe what it is you’re trying to communicate to me,” Puckering said.

Video streaming applications, such as Facetime or Skype, may communicate nonverbal cues better than text, but they’re still CMC.

“[Facetiming may be] more reliable than texting but … there’s still something about being able to see someone’s complete body language, and just being physically present — [and] it’s easier to get distracted because you can turn them off,” said Grace Scott, a first-year biological sciences major and frequent user of an iPhone and MacBook.

One way modern technology has become more personal to make up for the lack of nonverbal cues is through emoticons, or the Emoji language on the iPhone.

“The Emoji helps … communicate sarcasm, moods and joking so you can get an overall sense of my mood,” Puckering said.

Despite all those winky faces and colored hearts you can text through Emoji, communication experts like Puckering still agree that it is not the same — or as rich a medium — as a basic in-person conversation.

Emoticons can sometimes also be interpreted with the wrong tone. Scott feels that sometimes using too many emoticons is worse than using none.

“I think it’s just one of those things where I categorize [an emoticon] with an annoying laugh, as if after every time someone says something, there’s an annoying laugh,” she said.

Breeding self-doubt in the classroom
Katherine Grasso, a second-year communication graduate student, has witnessed a definite change in face-to-face communication due to students’ dependence on computer-mediated communication.

“It scares me … noticing college-age students being really reluctant and unable to speak up in class to give a synopsis of what they read (if they read) and form a critical opinion about [it],” Grasso said.

Not participating in class may be a sign that our minded generation can no longer speak confidently in face-to-face situations.

“It scares me that it might become the norm for people … I think that will have detrimental effects on people’s ability to communicate,” Grasso said. “I think that practice makes perfect and nobody has to practice anymore.”

Technocultural studies professor Jesse Drew, who currently teaches Media Archaeology (TCS 5), agrees that technology contributes to weaker social skills.

“Heavy users of technology [tend to] lack certain social graces [and] they confuse formal interaction with informal interaction,” Drew said. “People who are used to texting [and using] Facebook … are way too informal, and it can often be disrespectful.”

Not being able to distinguish formal communication manners can often impact students’ academic opportunities also.

“If students lose that [oratory] skill or don’t develop it, I think that’s going to have a negative impact on them,” Drew said.

This lack of confidence or communication can potentially damage a student’s promise of landing a job when it comes to an interview.

“For some people it will have detrimental effects, because you see that now when people don’t know it’s inappropriate to put their phone on the table at a meal with friends. You’re supposed to be present, and I think if somebody did that at a job interview they wouldn’t be called back,” Grasso said.

Boon to the shy, detriment to the easily-distracted
“For some people [CMC is] actually very good and allows them to develop relationships they might not have been able to develop any other kind of way,” Puckering said.

Texting, emailing and online chatting can aid shy or anxious personalities into becoming more social — despite it being mediated. But this positive effect of CMC is paired with the negative effect of giving individuals more distractions.

Depending highly on technology to communicate can mean spending less time in the present for in-person interactions.

As smartphone users commonly browse social media or check emails, they are more likely to be distracted while in the middle of a face-to-face conversation. Multi-tasking face-to-face communication and computer-mediated communication require paying only half of one’s attention to each in order to do both simultaneously.

Scott believes that this bad habit of distraction due to CMC does not necessarily mean that those phone-obsessed individuals will lose the ability to converse normally face-to-face — it’s a matter of choice.

“I think they’re definitely able to communicate face-to-face, there’s just a lack of will. I think they’re able to if they put their phone away,” Scott said.

Meanwhile, Facebook-less Dao Ho continues to be teased
It’s true: Ho will not “like” the latest Justin Bieber status. He will not post pictures of his breakfast at IHOP and check the comments in the late hours of the morning. He will miss out on many facets of the computer age.

But unlike so many others, he will rest assured knowing that when in the presence of another human being, he can communicate free of distractions and not find himself oddly enough — just 3 feet apart — inexplicably disconnected.

ALYSSA KUHLMAN can be reached at features@theaggie.org.

Arts Week

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POETRY/OPEN MIC

Sunday Afternoon Howl! Open Mic
Sunday, April 21, 4 p.m. to 6 p.m., free
Little Prague Bohemian Restaurant, 330 G St.
As a celebration of a traditional pub, Little Prague is hosting a multimedia Open Mic Sunday afternoon. The call is for poetry, prose, impromptu bar songs and acoustic jam sessions. Art materials will also be provided to paint or craft while listening to performances. This event is for all ages and is open to the public.

BOOK/AUTHOR EVENTS

UC Davis Book Club: Travels with Charley
Tuesday, April 23, 7:10 p.m., free
206 Olson Hall
UC Davis Book Club’s first meeting of Spring Quarter will occur this Tuesday in Olson hall. Present members will discuss John Steinbeck’s Travels With Charley, the chosen reading for April, and then discuss book selections for May.

Sexy Feminism
Friday, April 19, 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m., free
Avid Reader, 617 2nd St.
Heather Wood Rudolph and Jennifer Armstrong, the bloggers and authors behind sexyfeminist.com, are coming to the Avid Reader to discuss their new book, Sexy Feminism. The book is intended to lead young women to and through feminism and dispel any stereotypes associated with the word. Copies of the book will be available for purchase and signings will take place after the event.

Vegetable Literacy
Tuesday, April 23, 7:30 p.m., free
Avid Reader, 617 2nd St.
Deborah Madison, cook and former Davis resident, will be speaking on her new cookbook at the Avid Reader. The book focuses on the ins-and-outs of 12 plant families and features over 300 recipes for their use.

Author Talk: D.R. Wagner
Monday, April 22, Noon to 1:30 p.m., free
MU Store Lounge
D.R. Wagner, a lecturer for the Davis Design program, will be speaking on his new book, 97 Poems by D.R. Wagner, followed by a Q&A and book signing. Wagner is also a musician and visual artist, and has published over 20 books of letters and poetry.

University of California, Davis
Tuesday, April 23, Noon to 1:30 p.m., free
King Lounge, Memorial Union
Dennis Dingemans and Ann Foley Scheuring will be presenting their book, University of California, Davis, consisting of 200 black-and-white images describing the history of UC Davis. Dingemans is a geography professor at UC Davis who co-authored the book Woodland, and Scheuring is the author of Abundant Harvest: The History of the University of California, Davis.

Kitty Kindergarten
Wednesday, April 24, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., free
Blanchard Room, Davis Public Library, 315 E. St.
Dr. Sophia Yin, animal behaviorist and veterinarian, is coming to speak at the Mary L. Stephens Davis Library. Her talk will be about the early socialization of cats in order to create kind and outgoing kittens. Refreshments will be provided.

MUSIC

Picnic Day Entertainment Showcase
Friday, April 19, Noon to 1 p.m., free
Quad
Picnic Day 2013 presents this Friday’s Entertainment Showcase as the culmination to its Pre-week events. The showcase will feature Clouds Like Mountains, a “post-powerpop” band from Fresno, and San Francisco indie-pop band Finish Ticket. Free food will be provided.

ART/GALLERY

Picnic Day Fashion Show
Saturday, April 20, 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., free
Freeborn Hall
This Picnic Day, the runway will be run by student models and designers. UC Davis’ Fashion and Design Society, made up of UC Davis design majors, will present their works in an annual fashion show. The event is very popular and fills up quickly, so show up early for seats.

DANCE

Davis Dance Revolution
Saturday, April 20, 7:30 p.m., $15 tickets
Freeborn Hall
This Picnic Day will see the eighth annual Davis Dance Revolution, a dance battle wherein 14 UC Davis dance teams compete in modern- and traditional-style dances for a $1,000 prize. Student tickets are $13 presale at the UC Davis Ticket Office or $15 at the door.

THEATER/MONDAVI

The Foreigner
Thursday to Saturday, April 18-20, 8 p.m., $8 student tickets
Wyatt Deck, UC Davis Arboretum
In collaboration with the UC Davis Arboretum, Common House Productions will be performing Larry Shue’s The Foreigner, a comedic play about a foreign man who believes that everyone around him is “lost in translation.” Tickets can be reserved at commonhouseproductions@gmail.com.

Oklahoma!
Friday to Saturday, April 19-20, 8:10 p.m., Sunday, April 21, 2:15 p.m., $16 student
DMTC Performing Arts Center, 607 Pena Dr.
Acclaimed musical Oklahoma! is coming to Davis, as presented by the Davis Musical Theatre Company. This year marks the 70th anniversary of the play, which is a multi-emotion-evoking musical centering around the forbidden love held between a cowboy and a farmgirl.

San Francisco Symphony
Thursday, April 18, 8 p.m., $52 student tickets
Jackson Hall, Mondavi Center
The San Francisco Symphony will be performing two pieces, Beethoven’s Violin Concerto in D Major, Op. 61 and Nielsen’s Symphony No. 5. The talented and renowned Herbert Blomstedt will be conducting, and the performance will feature Augustin Hadelich as the soloist for Beethoven’s only violin concerto.

Arlo Guthrie
Friday, April 19, 8 p.m., $29 student tickets
Jackson Hall, Mondavi Center
Still celebrating his father after his 100th birthday in 2012, Arlo Guthrie will be performing solo at the Mondavi Center on Friday. A great contribution to the American folk genre, Guthrie will be performing as part of his Woodie Guthrie “Here Comes the Kid” tribute tour.

Firebird Ensemble
Monday, April 22, 7 p.m., $8 student tickets
Vanderhoef Studio Theatre, Mondavi Center
A collective of young musicians, Firebird Ensemble will be presenting six separate and collaborative pieces this Monday. Their music is intended for varied audiences, and is well-known all across the United States. Monday’s performance is the first part of their program; Program II will be presented on April 26th.

– Tanya Azari

Picnic Day Entertainment Lineup

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East Quad (Main Stage)

Hansori
11:30 a.m. – 12 p.m.
Percussion

funk.defied
12 – 12:30 p.m.
Funk Rock

The Spokes
12:30 – 12:45 p.m.
Acapella

Clouds Like Mountains
1 – 1:30 p.m.
Power-Pop/Punk

Finish Ticket
1:30 – 2 p.m.
Indie/Rock

The Ten Thousand
2 – 2:30 p.m.
Rock

MOB Dance Legacy
2:30 – 2:50 p.m.
Latin Dance

Lounge Lizards
2:50 – 3:10 p.m.
Acapella

SoNE1
3:10 – 3:30 p.m.
Korean Cover Dance

ARC Stage

Gospel Choir at UC Davis
11:30 a.m. – 12 p.m.
Gospel

DNL
12:10 – 12:40 p.m.
Hip-Hop/Rap

Unbound Progression Company
12:50 – 1 p.m.
Dance

G-Mile
1:10 – 1:30 p.m.
Dance

Spirit in Motion Dance Company
1:40 – 2 p.m.
Ballroom/Latin Dancing

Manasa
2:10 – 2:40 p.m.
Belly Dancing

Crow Canyon
2:50 – 3:20 p.m.
Rock

Yosaki
3:30 – 4 p.m.
Modern Japanese Dance

Silo

Bakuhatsu Taiko Dan
11:30 a.m. – 12 p.m.
Drumming

Blue Rhythm
12:10 – 12:40 p.m.
Jazz

The Plastic Revolution
1:30 – 2 p.m.
Rock

Tha Dirt Feeling
2:10 – 2:40 p.m.
Hip-Hop/Rock/Soul

Via Coma
2:50 – 3:20 p.m.
Alternative Rock

Golden Turtle Lion Association
3:30 – 4 p.m.
Classic Lion Dance

Davis Police set up homicide tip line

The Davis Police Department Investigations Unit has created a tip line for the April 14 double homicide. Those with information are encouraged to call 747-5439. Any urgent information should be reported to the dispatch center at 758-3600.

For more progress on the homicide investigation, visit davispd.org or their Facebook page at facebook.com/cityofdavispolicedepartment.

— Claire Tan

Davis resident missing

The Davis Police are searching for 26-year-old Davis resident Daniel Brian Thompson. He was last seen on April 12 and last heard from on April 13.

Thompson is a white male, about 5’9″ tall and weighs about 155 pounds. The police are still trying to locate Thompson. Anyone with information is urged to contact the Davis Police at 747-5400.

— Claire Tan

UPDATE: April 22, 12:04 a.m.

According to the Bring Daniel Brian Thompson Home Facebook page, Thompson called his parents Sunday evening and told them he had been in a car accident and was lost for seven days in the mountains.

The Davis Police said that Thompson used a Zipcar account to rent a car in Sacramento on April 13. The police were since searching in both Davis and Sacramento for Thompson.

— Claire Tan

Vigil to be held today for double homicide victims

Today there will be an hour vigil from 7 to 8 p.m. at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Davis’ sanctuary for Chip Northup and Claudia Maupin.

Northup and Maupin were found dead on April 14 in their condominium at 4006 Cowell Blvd. after a welfare check by the Davis Police. No motive has been established and the case is still under investigation.

Both were founding members of the Unitarian Universalist Church. Northup was an attorney and a member of the local band, Putah Creek Crawdads.

Memorial services for the two will be determined at a later time.

— Claire Tan

UC Davis softball dominates first game but cannot maintain hot bats throughout series

The Aggie hitters were feeling good on the first game of Saturday’s double header. They managed to score eight runs, all the while shutting out the Gauchos and winning the first game of the series, 8-0. Junior designated player Caitlin Voss drove in two RBI and scored two runs on a pair of hits for the day. She supplemented junior second baseman Chandler Wagner’s extraordinary hitting performance. Wagner drove in four RBI on two hits.

UC Davis’ hot hitting was not the only story on Saturday’s first game, as sophomore pitcher Justine Vela pitched five innings of shutout ball. She struck out five batters and only allowed three hits on her way to the victory.

The Aggies’ second game of the double header was another impressive pitching performance by UC Davis. However, they simply could not find the bats to give the pitchers any run support. Senior Jessica Thweatt threw six innings and only allowed a run on five hits. The brilliant performance was wasted however due to the lack of hitting on the part of the Aggies. They managed only two hits against equally dominating Highlander pitching, eventually losing the game 1-0.

In the final game of the series, UC Davis once again pitched well but did not drive in any runs. The Aggies were shutout in two of the three games this series, losing the final game by the score of 1-0 as well.

UC Davis leaves the series with an overall record of 17-21 and a conference record of 4-7. They are currently sixth in the conference, behind Cal Poly who is 6-8 in conference and 17-26 overall.

The Aggies will host Pacific on April 17 before traveling to UC Riverside for a weekend series.

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

Women’s golf finishes 10th in final tune-up before Big West Championship

The UC Davis women’s golf team traveled down to Arizona for the annual PING/ASU Invitational this year for its final tournament before the conference championships, and walked away with some encouraging results.

The Aggies placed 10th in the 17 team field with an overall score of 879. The Aggies’ best day came with the first round, when they shot a combined 287.

UC Davis was led by the dependable senior Demi Runas, the 22nd-ranked player in the country, who finished in a tie for second.

The Torrance, Calif. native shot a 209, two strokes behind the winner of the tournament. Last year, Runas shot a 212 to win the tournament, but despite her three-stroke improvement on last year’s score, she placed second behind Alabama’s Emma Talley.

Sophomore Beverly Vatananugulkit followed that up with a 216 to tie for 22nd at the tournament while freshman Andrea Wong put up a strong 223 to place her in 48th place. Senior Amy Simanton recorded a 231 while sophomore Blair Lewis shot a 253.

UC Davis will now set its sights on the Big West Conference Championships which will take place April 21-23 in San Luis Obispo, Calif.

 

Matthew Yuen

Aggies’ bats heat up as they rally in the sixth to clinch the win

The Aggies looked like they were heading for yet another defeat. They were down 7-3 heading into the top of the 6th. UC Davis has not fared well with its back against the wall this season. However, the batting order woke up and delivered some much needed runs to gain the lead. Once the sixth inning was over, the score stood at 9-7 in the Aggies’ favor.

The relief pitching also managed to pitch four shutout innings to finish off the game against a Nevada team that scored all seven of their runs in the first five innings.

The Aggies’ rally started when junior shortstop Adam Young singled to third base. This was followed by a single to left field by sophomore right fielder John Williams. The Wolfpack pitchers then proceeded to load the bases and walk a run home with two consecutive walks. Eventually, with the bases loaded, junior Steven Patterson hit a two-RBI single which opened the floodgates.

The awful Nevada relief pitching allowed an enormous sixth inning rally as six runs were scored allowing the Aggies to pull in front, 9-7. From there the UC Davis pitching staff had sufficient run support to close the game out. The duo of freshman relief pitchers Spencer Henderson and Max Cordy pitched four shutout innings to ice the game for the Aggies, giving up only four hits between the two of them. Cordy ended up with his fifth save of the season as he pitched a scoreless eighth and ninth innings.

UC Davis now improves its record to 12-22 on the season, while dropping the Wolfpack’s record to 16-18. The Aggies now enter a three game series with UC Riverside. UC Davis hopes to jumpstart its conference record of 0-9 against the Highlanders.

KENNETH LING can be reached at sports@theaggie.org