the California Aggie SERVING THE UC DAVIS CAMPUS AND COMMUNITY SINCE 1915
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WAYNE TILCOCK / DAVIS ENTERPRISE
VOLUME 135, ISSUE 20 | THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 2017
JILL STEIN VISITS UC DAVIS ON CALIFORNIA TOUR Former green party presidential candidate speaks to students, community members about environment, income inequality
AGGIES TRIUMPH IN BIG WEST CHAMPIONSHIP
UC Davis men’s basketball team beats UC Irvine 50-47 for program’s first Big West Championship title, NCAA Tournament bid
BY ROWAN O’CO N N E L L- G AT E S sports@theaggie.org
JAY GELVEZON / AGGIE
BY IVAN VALENZUELA campus@theaggie.org
The UC Davis men’s basketball team made school history at the Honda Center in Anaheim last Saturday, capturing its first Big West Championship in a defensive struggle against UC Irvine, 50-47. The Big West title gives UC Davis an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. In just their 13th year as a Division I school, the Aggies are headed to college basketball’s biggest stage for the first time — a historic outcome for both the basketball program and the UC Davis community. UC Davis is set to play North Carolina Central in one of the tournament’s four “First Four” matchups in a game to be played on Wednesday, March 15. The winner advances to the first round of the Midwest Regional as the region’s 16 seed to play the region’s top- seeded University of Kansas on Friday, March 17, in Tulsa, Okla. At press time, the “First Four” game had not yet been played. Two years ago, the Aggies won the regular season Big West crown but failed to make good on their number-one seed in the Big West tournament. Last weekend served as the Aggies’ shot at redemption. The team opened the Big West tournament on Thursday, March 9 against seventh-seeded Cal Poly. Junior forward Chima Moneke tied a UC Davis record with 18 rebounds in the game and senior guard Brynton Lemar recovered from a rough first half to lead the Aggies with 16 second-half points. The Aggies led the entire game, resulting in a 66-55 victory over the Mustangs. Next up, the Aggies faced Cal State Fullerton in the Big
Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein spoke at a UC Davis rally on March 9, 2016 as part of a speaking tour across California. The event, sponsored by the Yolo and Sacramento Green Parties and the Black Student Union of UC Davis, also featured a speech by campaign manager David Cobb. “This is a time of great peril and great possibility,” Stein said in her speech. “We’ve got to decide which one it is. We don’t have time to go through another four years of being led around by the nose. We are on borrowed time right now; it’s not going to be easy to get out of here alive.” Throughout her speech, Stein touched on several issues pertinent to her platform, including healthcare, military spending, the environment, student debt and immigration. Walter England, a fifth-year anthropology major and a student officer for the Yolo County Green Party, said that the rally provided an opportunity for community members to learn more about Green Party policies and ideas. “[Stein] was paid by Humboldt University to speak, and she took that money and she used it to basically pay to travel up and down California, to meet at various different universities and towns to kind of rally different Greens,” England said. “So this is an opportunity for people and the public to kind of become more aware of the rising Green movement that’s happening right now, and to become aware of Green Party policies and the options that are available and the sort of actions that we help support.”
The rally was held in Wellman 2 and began shortly after 8 p.m. with a short musical performance and announcements by the Sacramento and Yolo County Green parties. Adam Siegel, the local council secretary for the Yolo County Green Party, said that Stein will tour across California to take better hold of a rise in Green Party support since the election. “There’s been an upsurge in Green Party activity since the election, since before the election obviously, and there’s been a renewed interest in revitalizing the county party councils across the state,” Siegel said. “Jill Stein is currently barnstorming the state. She was in Arcata earlier today, she’s in Berkeley tomorrow and then the state Green Party is meeting in Bakersfield this weekend, so it’s all sort of a let’s take stock of where we are in 2017 and look to what comes next.” One of the prominent topics discussed was the lack of choice in the two-party system and a need for alternative candidates in the political field. “There’s a lot of possibility out there,” Siegel said. “I think, you know, the last year showed most Americans that there’s a real worry that we may be at a real point of departure in the political landscape, so you know there’s a lot of progressive energy out there that’s in the Democratic Party, that’s in the Green Party, that’s in other third parties and that is outside the party structure. [...] I think it’s important to build political alternatives or alternative political choices for voters.” Stein, who at various times compared herself to U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders, said that the Democratic Party has prevented members from the left from having a role in the party structure. “These are things that, as Bernie Sanders showed, is a majoritarSTEIN on 12
BIG WEST RECAP on 12
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1. STANLEY B. FREEBORN, 1958-59
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2. EMIL M. MRAK, 1959-70
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3. JAMES H. MEYER, 1970-87
4. THEODORE L. HULLAR, 1987-94
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5. LARRY N. VANDERHOEF, 1994-2009
6. LINDA P.B. KATEHI, 2009-16
7. GARY S.MAY, APPOINTED FEB. 23, 2017
THE HISTORY OF UC DAVIS CHANCELLORS Distinguished professors look back on six individuals who shaped the university BY HANNAH HOL Z E R features@theaggie.org
The University of California (UC) Board of Regents unanimously voted on Feb. 21 to select Gary May, a dean at the Georgia Institute of Technology, as UC Davis’ seventh chancellor. Prior to the creation of the chancellor position, university affairs were managed by the deans of the College of Agriculture and the Agricultural Extension at the University Farm. In 1958, Stanley Freeborn, who had served as the chair of the division of entomology for ten years, was appointed as UC Davis’ first chancellor. According to “Abundant Harvest: The History of the University of California, Davis,” Freeborn was known for his friendly nature and also as the occasional timer for soccer games, due to his love of university sports. After Freeborn’s retirement from the position in 1959, Emil Mrak, a food scientist and microbiologist, was appointed as the university’s second chancellor. During Mrak’s decade as chancellor, he oversaw the extensive expansion of the university, as the student population grew from 2,600 to 12,000. In addition to his determined attitude, “Abundant Harvest” writes that Mrak was also known for his hospitality and good relationship with the student body. In 1969, James Meyer took over the chancellor position, one he
remained until his retirement in 1987. Meyer, a former dean of the College of Agriculture, is responsible for the renaming to the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences. “His biggest strength was his very calm approach [and] his very steady leadership,” said Alan Hastings, a distinguished professor of environmental science and policy who has been a faculty member at UC Davis since 1979. “His biggest fault was that, at a time when there were lots of resources, he did not aggressively pursue those for the Davis campus, as opposed to other campuses in the UC system.” Meyer’s replacement, Ted Hullar, proved to be an extremely different leader than Meyer was. Unlike his predecessors who had previously worked within the university, Hullar served as the chancellor of UC Riverside before he was appointed chancellor of UC Davis. “One [difficult factor] was having somebody from outside UC Davis who did not understand UC Davis,” said chemical engineering professor Robert Powell, a faculty member since 1984. “There was also a feeling of, [...does] this devalue Riverside? People here were just calling all of their friends at Riverside and finding out that they were really happy for him to leave. That was a bad decision.” Hullar was one of the most, if not the most, widely criticized chancellors among UC Davis faculty member, according to Hastings. “His was a fairly short and tumultuous reign,” Hastings said. “I
think he certainly was somewhat polarizing in a way. There was a sense that he did not do enough planning in order to carry out the programs he was working on.” According to Powell, under Hullar, research became more monetized. However, Linda Bisson, a professor in the Department of Viticulture and Enology and faculty member since 1985, said that Hullar had an additional long-lasting impact. “I’m a real fan of change agents,” Bisson said. “You have somebody coming, opening doors and windows and [saying], ‘This is what we’re going to do.’ You might not like what they say [...but] now there can be a dialogue.” After almost six years as chancellor, Hullar was transferred by thenUC President Jack Peltason to a temporary job in Oakland. Meanwhile, Larry Vanderhoef was appointed as interim chancellor in May of 1993 and officially named the fifth UC Davis chancellor in 1994. “Larry was a real nuts-and-bolts budget [and] money guy,” Bisson said. “It was a change. He brought a practicality with him that was, I think at the time, welcomed. Not so visionary, but day-to-day, the place is going to run.” According to Hastings, Vanderhoef enjoyed interacting with students and would meet informally with student body presidents and faculty members by taking walks with them. Powell, who served as CHANCELLOR on 12
PHOTO CREDITS 1 - 4. SPECIAL COLLECTIONS / UC DAVIS LIBRARY 5. SANJANA CHAND / AGGIE FILE 6. CIERA PASTUREL / AGGIE FILE 7. GEORGIA TECH / COURTESY
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