the California Aggie SERVING THE UC DAVIS CAMPUS AND COMMUNITY SINCE 1915
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VOLUME 135, ISSUE 29 | THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 2017
Hexter announces support for fossil fuel divestment ALEXA FONTANILLA / AGGIE FILE
Four UC chancellors call for UC to divest from fossil fuel industry BY JAYASHRI PA D MA N A B H AN campus@theaggie.org
Interim Chancellor Ralph J. Hexter announced his support for fossil fuel divestment on May 15 following student protests in Mrak Hall. The movement calls for the UC Regents to divest from the UC system’s $2.5 billion investments in companies that support fossil fuels. Hexter joins UC Santa Cruz Chancellor George R. Blumenthal and UC Santa Barbara Chancellor Henry T. Yang, who was the first UC chancellor to call for UC divestment from fossil fuels. Fossil Free UC Davis members began their protests at the Memorial Union and later held a sit-in at Mrak Hall. Students chose to continue protesting despite threats of possible Student Judicial Affairs action and police confrontation. Sarah Risher, a third-year environmental policy and planning major, said that the organization contacted members of the UC Davis administration who said they would assist with efforts to speak with UC Regents members. Students were unable to gain support from UC Regent Richard Sherman. “Hexter finally supporting the fossil fuel divestment movement is important because it sends a message that this is not something just the students want but something that UC Davis as a whole wants,” Risher said via email. “This puts more pressure on the Regents to act in the interests of the UC campuses rather than their own.”
Fossil Free UC Davis is a chapter of Fossil Free UC (FFUC), a UC-wide campaign calling for UC system divestment from the top 200 fossil fuel companies. “The greater goal of FFUC is to divest fully from the fossil fuel industry,” said Evan Steel, a fourth-year environmental policy and planning major. “This sends a clear message that there are viable clean energy paths forward and that the UC system does not support the oppressive and destructive regime of the fossil fuel industry. Our goals align with efforts to hold the UC accountable to its students, workers, faculty and the public. Ultimately, we want to see the democratization of our education system in a way that centers the voices of those who have been historically and socially marginalized and oppressed.” Global studies Ph.D. student Theo LeQuesne, the campaign coordinator for Fossil Free UCSB, said that Fossil Free UC Davis has played a crucial role in solidifying the support of chancellors around the issue. LeQuesne stressed the importance of every UC carrying out action similar to the sit-in. “Interim Chancellor Hexter’s public endorsement of fossil fuel divestment is a testament to the momentum and support that students across the UC have built around severing ties with the fossil fuel industry,” LeQuesne said via email. “As the third of four chancellors to endorse fossil fuel divestment in the six days since UCSB’s 400 person sit, Chancellor Hexter is helping to solidify the kind of leadership that chancellors across the UCs must show in addressing the climate crisis and delegitimizing the fossil fuel industry. DIVEST on 9
HANNAH LEE / AGGIE
GENESIA TING / AGGIE
Petition created for continued employment of NPB lecturer Dr. Lauren Liets
The question of intellectual property:
Over 1,000 students sign petition
Universities prevent researchers from taking complete ownership of ideas
BY YVON N E L E ON G campus@theaggie.org
A petition was created on Change.org at the beginning of May to support the continued professorship of Lauren Liets, a lecturer in the Department of Neurobiology, Physiology and Behavior (NPB), beyond Spring Quarter 2018. In 2014, Liets was given a “pink slip,” meaning her job could be revoked at anytime during the year. It was decided that her time as a lecturer would end after Spring Quarter 2018. UC Davis students Noreen Mansuri, a third-year NPB major; Colin Wang, a third-year NPB major; and Hiba Hummadi, a fourth-year NPB major, created the petition so that Liets could retain her job. As of May 28, 1,172 people had signed the petition. “We, the students of UC Davis, would like to express our love and support for Dr. Lauren Liets,” the petition reads. “Her passion, extensive knowledge, and ability to engage with students have made her one of the most beloved and sought out professors in the NPB department.” The petition also states
that “her departure from the university would be a great disservice to all students and the NPB department.” Many comments were left by the petition’s supporters. Ekaterina Gurzh, a fourth-year NPB major, said Liets is one of the best professors she has ever had. “I’m currently in Dr. Liets’ NPB 168 class and I can safely say she is one of the best professors I have ever had,” Gurzh commented on the petition. “Her class has been extremely eye opening and informative and I firmly believe that she is an irreplaceable asset to the NPB department. I hope students can continue taking her class for years.” Mansuri supports Liets because she believes the lecturer is an irreplaceable part of the NPB department. “I support this petition because Dr. Liets is one of the best professors on campus and as a student, I want to have the opportunity to take more classes with her in the future and ensure that incoming NPB on 9
BY G ILLIAN ALLEN features@theaggie.org
From the modern-day elevator to social media worlds like Facebook, America prides itself on promoting innovation and invention. However, coming up with a new and useful idea can be extremely expensive, difficult and time-consuming. For this reason, many Ph.D. candidates and professors dream of working at prestigious research universities that will provide researchers with the resources they need, such as money and technology, to pursue their inventions and ideas. “A lot of professors who have had successful pasts will be able to get a job at a university like this, use its facility, develop their [studies] and get grants to their department or school and also to himself or herself,” said Ryan Ko, a fourth-year biochemistry and molecular biology major. “There are professors in the field that are motivated to keep getting ahead and find that big breakthrough.” Since his sophomore year, Ko has worked in a lab studying the structural biology of proteins — even
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conducting his own independent research project — and has seen many cases of the interaction between industry and research. “A professor who has had that big breakthrough and starts selling [a discovery] to industry needs to consider the fact that it is intellectual property of the university and you can’t make additional money off of their facilities,” Ko said. “The school’s opinion is that if you develop an idea, it becomes the school property if you use their laboratory or their process of hiring undergraduates or graduates [...] you’re using the school as a way to get to where you are.” In a recent lawsuit over the ownership of a strawberry breed invented at UC Davis, two former UC Davis scientists were found guilty of breeding what was considered to be the university’s intellectual property. This is where the catch of the university research system comes in. According to a Forbes technology article from 2012, all UC campuses require that graduate students who have been hired to perform research each
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