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volume 131, number 17
News iN Brief
Sundt Construction, Inc. wins contract to build new Tercero housing
tuesday, february 7, 2012
Community members run Unofficial Scrabble Club Group plays on Wednesdays, year-round
UC Davis awarded Sundt Construction, Inc. with a $71 million design-build contract for a 1,200-bed student housing project to be completed in June 2014, the company announced Monday. Construction is set to begin in June of this year for the 330,000-square-foot Tercero Student Housing Phase III project. The project consists of seven buildings with 108 single units and 537 double units, as well as several lounges, study areas, computer centers and gathering spaces. The project will create over 350 jobs over the two-year construction period, the company estimates. The project is funded through student housing capital reserves and loan funds, not state or tuition money. Dave Downey, pre-construction project manager for Sundt, said the company is ecstatic about being awarded the project. The competition for the contract began last April. Downey said the choice was based on both price of their proposed project and qualifications. Sundt also worked on the Graduate School of Management’s Maurice J. Gallagher Jr. Hall and the UC Davis Conference Center. –– Angela Swartz
Student Regents holding public forum today
Scrabble club
courtesy
By CHLOE BREZSNY Aggie News Writer
The UC student Regents will be holding a public forum today to provide students with information on how to apply to be the next student Regent. The forum will be today from noon to 1 p.m. at the Student Community Center in Meeting Room B. Lunch will be provided. — Hannah Strumwasser
It is probably safe to say that the majority of UC Davis students have played, or at least have heard of, the smartphone application Words With Friends. A lesserknown fact, however, is that the City of Davis has its very own Scrabble club. The Unofficial Scrabble Club of Davis plays year-round, every Wednesday night from 6 p.m. to 11 p.m. In the warmer months, April to October, members gather at the Davis Farmers Market to play alongside the food and live music of the Picnic in the Park. Beginning in November, the group moves inside to the
tables of Crepeville where they weather the cold with some friendly scrabble competition. Jack Norman, a sophomore statistics major and Scrabble Club member, explained that playing scrabble on Wednesday nights gives him a healthy break from his busy schedule. “If I’m stressed or if I have had a tough beginning to the week, I can always look forward to Scrabble night,” he said in an e-mail. Norman said that he is one of the younger players. Most of the club members are not college-aged; nevertheless, the club welcomes all people and all skill levels to come and play. The layout is
UC Davis students arrested at Occupy Oakland
family-style, with four to a board. Lynne Conrad-Forrest, another Scrabble Club member, plays in her free time when she is not working in Sacramento. She joined the club not only to exercise her mind with the popular word game, but also to socialize with other members of the community. “I enjoy the camaraderie and mental stimulation and sometimes silly fun that goes on,” she said in an e-mail. The Unofficial Scrabble Club follows all of the rules outlined for the game. The only exception occurs during a formal word challenge; if the challenger is
Davis taps into its agricultural roots Students, residents share gardening as common hobby
Arrests spark protest march among students last week By ALICIA KINDRED
By DEVON BOHART
Aggie News Writer
Aggie Features Writer
An estimated 300 protesters were arrested Saturday, Jan. 28 by the Oakland police. Ten UC Davis students were among those arrested. The events included marching through streets and an attempt to occupy Oakland’s city hall and the vacant Henry Kaiser Convention Center. Protesters were met with tear gas, rubber bullets and mass arrests by the Oakland police, a press release stated. “There were a couple of times I was close enough to the front lines where I was near tear gas and concussion grenades,” said Deanna Johnson, a sophomore environmental horticulture and urban forestry major. “Once I was arrested, I was kept in an overcrowded holding cell in the Santa Rita Jail. I was one of the first arrested and one of the first released, after 12 hours.” At 3 a.m. guards began to mop the floors as a way to keep the protesters awake in their cell, Johnson said. “I was arrested at around 8 or 9 p.m. outside of the YMCA building during a kettle that lasted two hours,” said Geoffrey Wildanger, an art history major. A kettle is a police tactic for controlling large crowds. “I got on a bus eventually. It was pretty disgusting; vomit was inside the bus. I was eventually taken to Santa Rita Jail,
Carrots, tomatoes and peas, oh my! From learning to eating to just having fun, Davis students and residents participate in the world of gardening with the establishment of over nine non-domestic gardens throughout the UC Davis campus and community. “I chose to come to UC Davis because it is one of the few schools that teaches agriculture, and what I wanted to learn in my time here is the union of community and agriculture,” said Lauren Cockrell, a junior sustainable agriculture and food systems major. Cockrell works at a public garden on campus that is a part of the Experimental College (EC), hence its name, the EC Garden. This garden rents out plots for a small fee, supplying gardeners with water, mulch, manure, tools and advice, giving anyone the opportunity to develop their green thumb. “This is a swath of land that showcases different forms of agriculture. The student farm is more efficiency-based, the Domes are more house-based and [the EC garden] is the amalgam of the two,” Cockrell said. “If you don’t have enough room in your backyard, you can just come out here and have your own little plot and be part of a greater community of gardening.” Another gardening option, also offering a public gardening community, is the Davis Community Garden, run by the city. This gar-
Today’s weather Rain High 53 Low 43
Brian Nguyen / Aggie
UC Davis students were arrested and held in the Santa Rita Jail after the protest events held in Oakland last Saturday. and kept in a holding cell with 16 people,” he said. After being transferred a number of times to overcrowded holding cells and being held in a cell of 55 people without access to working water, Wildanger was released at 8:30 p.m. Monday night, he said. “I was never fingerprinted or booked. So, if people called looking for me, there was no record that I was there,” Wildanger said. Those standing in front of the YMCA building were chargedto-hold with misdemeanors. Those inside the building were charged-to-hold with felonies. Those felonies have been
erased, however, according to Wildanger. UC Davis students participated in a protest last Wednesday in response to arrests at Occupy Oakland and to demonstrate support. Protesters met at the Memorial Union (MU) at noon and marched through the ASUCD Coffee House (CoHo) while chanting “Show me what democracy looks like; this is what democracy looks like” and holding trash bins that resembled police riot gear. Drums were used throughout the march, but protesters were
See PROTEST, page 2
Forecast Rain, rain, go away~ Come again another day~ It’s just one day of rain! Stay strong and look forward to the sunshine early next week. Raymond Chan, atmospheric science major Aggie Forecasting Team
See SCRABBLE, page 2
Wednesday
Thursday
Partly sunny
Sunny
High 62 Low 40
High 65 Low 40
Nathan Chan / Aggie
Sophomore international relations major Grace Emery picks some veggies in the Salad Bowl Garden. den has a similar concept as the EC Garden with minor variations and an off-campus location, which can better suit certain gardeners. Jane Schafer-Kramer has been the Davis Community Garden coordinator for the past 11 years. Gardening is one of the reasons that she lives in Davis; she said that she has been interested in gardening since she was young. After having to give up her plot due to time constraints, she returned for a part-time position to help with upkeep and to continue her hobby. “I got involved because I am
See GARDENING, page 2 Scientists have recently uncovered fossils in Namibian national park that they believe are the first animals. If this is true, this would push back the emergence of animal life back 100 to 150 million years. Fascinating, right? Amanda Nguyen