October 27, 2016

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SERVING THE UC DAVIS CAMPUS AND COMMUNITY SINCE 1915

VOLUME 135, ISSUE 6 | THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2016

UC DAVIS MOURNS LOSS OF PLANT BIOLOGIST SHARON GRAY

GRAY STRUCK, KILLED BY ROCK WHILE IN EAST AFRICA FOR PLANT BIOLOGY RESEARCH PROJECT COURTESY

BY DEMI CACERES campus@theaggie.org UC Davis plant scientist Sharon Gray was struck and killed on Oct. 4 by a rock that crashed through the window of the vehicle in which she was riding near the outskirts of Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa. She was 30. Gray was in the East African nation to attend a meeting regarding the commencement of a plant biology research project. According to the Netherlands Institute of Ecology, which was also involved in the research project, Gray’s death was not a direct consequence of the large-scale protests currently occurring in Ethiopia, but rather the result of a random act by a few individuals who were throwing stones at passing vehicles. Gray was a postdoctoral student at UC Davis who studied the im-

pact of climate change on plant life. Her graduate work focused on the response of soybean plants to high carbon dioxide levels in the presence of drought and showed that plants did not respond as the scientific community had anticipated. At the time of her passing, Gray had just completed her National Science Foundation-funded postdoc project, which characterized the responses of a drought-tolerant wild species of tomato and a droughtsensitive domesticated species of tomato. Siobhan Brady, associate professor in the Department of Plant Biology and the Genome Center at UC Davis, travelled with Gray on the trip to Ethiopia, and the two worked closely together at UC Davis. Brady said that Gray was a charismatic and wonderful person to work with and was very knowledgeable about her topic of research. “She worked so hard, was patient, funny [and] incredibly smart,” Siobhan said.

MARGRIT MONDAVI: PIONEER AND FRIEND

“She had an extensive background in physiology and statistics, which was so useful not only to my lab, but to several departments. Her smile lit up a room. In a room where there were ‘big voices,’ that is, people who speak loudly and can sometimes dominate, she would persevere and ask critical, thoughtful questions. I really admired this about her.” Gray was born in Carbondale, Ill. and grew up in Lindenhurst, Ill. with her parents, three brothers and two sisters. She earned her undergraduate and doctoral degrees from the University of Illinois UrbanaChampaign before joining the Department of Plant Biology at UC Davis in 2013. In 2014, she married R.J. Cody Markelz, a postdoctoral researcher in plant biology at UC Davis who was also from Illinois. They met as freshmen at Urbana-Champaign in an introductory biology class. GRAY on 9

ART AFTER DARK

CHELBERT DAI / AGGIE

CAT TAYLOR / AGGIE

PASSING OF UC DAVIS PHILANTHROPIST INVOKES FRIENDS TO REFLECT BY AMANDA CRUZ features@theaggie.org The gateway to UC Davis, just off the Interstate 80 exit, holds one of the most prominent surnames at UC Davis: the Robert and Margrit Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts and the Robert Mondavi Institute (RMI) for Wine and Food Sciences. Margrit Mondavi (née Kellenberger), lover of the arts and generous philanthropist passed away on Sept. 2, and the UC Davis community lost a great friend. Her presence on campus is visible in the many contributions she made and in the relationships she established within the community. Mondavi emigrated to the U.S. from Switzer-

land, travelling around the world as an army wife before settling in Napa in 1960. In Napa, she began working at the Robert Mondavi Winery and was active in bringing together wine and the arts. She married Robert — a Northern California native, Stanford graduate and advocate for the upand-coming Napa wine region — in 1980. “She was an immensely well-read and very sophisticated person,” said Jessie Ann Owens, professor of music and close friend to Mondavi. “There was a kind of simplicity and directness about her. She connected with anyone around her and was just a real nice and genuine person.” Part of what made Mondavi’s impact on the campus unique was the connection she forged with MONDAVI on 9

PENCE GALLERY HOSTS INTERACTIVE ART PROGRAM BY JENNIFER DUONG arts@theaggie.org Art museums can often be seen as stuffy or intimidating. Rarely are they associated with bustling atmospheres, live performances, or even food and drinks. The Pence Gallery is different. The gallery, located on D St. in Downtown Davis, aims to defy these norms with its Art After Dark events, a series of interactive art programs hosted on the first Friday of each month. The series, which is the brainchild of Natalie Nelson, the Pence Gallery director and curator, mixes live music, performance and hands-on art. Each program has a theme based on the current exhibits and also tries to connect the public with working artists.

“It started as an idea in my head, based on some fun times that I had in museums,” Nelson said. “The gallery was the location for collaboration with others, and learning without a capital ‘L.’ We try to keep it inexpensive for students — [admission] is $8 for live music, all the activities and free food.” Themes are chosen in relation to downstairs exhibits that visitors would find interesting. Currently, the gallery is working with Third Space Art Collective and other organizations to host exhibits with free food and live music. “Our coordinator Stephanie does most of the planning in terms of activities — I guide her to people in the community who I think are great artists and good with the public,” Nelson said. “I’ve done art for over

NOW OPEN DAVIS COMMONS HOTITALIAN.PIZZA

ARTAFTERDARK on 9


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