February 8, 2024

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VOLUME 147, ISSUE 15 | THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2024

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Chinese student nonprofit seeks to spread cultural awareness through Lunar New Year celebration in Central Park UC Davis’ Chinese Union hosts the “Dragon’s Market” for all BY LYNN CHEN features@theaggie.org Lunar New Year celebrations are just around the corner for many students at UC Davis. One particular student-run organization is committed to celebrating in a unique and memorable way. The Chinese Union (CU) is a 501-(c)(3) non-profit organization split across many college campuses around the country, including UC Davis. It was founded at UC San Diego with the purpose of providing assistance and support to Chinese international students in the U.S. On campus, CU regularly hosts social events and extracurricular opportunities that integrate students’ academic, lifestyle and entertainment interests. “It’s a great place to meet friends who have a similar background to [you],” said Yi Zhu, an executive member for the Project Management Department of CU and secondyear psychology and theatre and dance double major, via WeChat text messaging. To observe the arrival of the

Flyer for the “Dragon’s Market” put on by UC Davis’ Chinese Union. (Courtesy / Chinese Union)

Senate hears anti-Indigeneity presentation, Mental Health Initiative quarterly report at Feb. 1 meeting

The Senate held their first meeting since being on hiatus due to vacancies in the Judicial Council via Zoom BY AALIYAH ESPAÑOL-RIVAS campus@theaggie.org Vice President Aarushi Raghunathan called the Feb.1 Senate meeting to order at 6:12 p.m. After roll call, she read the UC Davis Land Acknowledgement. The first item on the agenda was an anti-Indigeneity presentation given by Zach Schnelbach, a thirdyear political science, public service and Native American studies double major. The presentation highlighted Indigenous justice, the history of Indigenous erasure in the United States and how the community can be allies to Indigenous and Native American students. “We cannot erase the connection between environmental justice, racial justice, immigration, voting rights and reproductive justice to that of Indigenous people,” Schnelbach said. The next item on the agenda was the Mental Health Initiative (MHI) quarterly report. The initiative has been working toward their annual Mental Health Conference, according to Adithi Sumitran, the secretary for

MHI and a second-year statistics and political science double major. Slated to be held from Feb. 17 to 18, Sumitran shared updates on the conference including the workshops, resources and the speakers confirmed. Sumitran then called upon the Senate’s support to help with getting the word out about the conference, in both advertisements and attendee outreach. This includes tabling and posting on social media. Other updates from the initiative included upcoming events, team training and socials. The meeting then went into public comments. Senator Chasa Monica urged senators to begin thinking about possible locations for the upcoming town hall meeting, due to the Mee Room in the Memorial Union building being under construction. After discussing town hall, the Senate moved into an open forum. Senator Trinity Chow announced that the Senate meeting should most likely be in person next week as interviews for the vacancies in the Judicial Council would be finalized. The meeting was then adjourned at 7:25 p.m.

Lunar New Year, the nonprofit will be hosting the “CU Dragon’s Market” in Central Park on Feb. 18 from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. A variety of booths showcasing traditional food, games and artwork, as well as music and dance performances of various Asian cultures for guests’ perusal and participation. “We will showcase activities such as traditional Chinese paper cutting and embroidery during the event,” said Xiniy Tong, an executive board member of CU, second-year communications major and deputy chief planner and financial director for the event. “Through our fair, we hope that [non-Chinese] people can learn more about our culture,” Tong said. According to Tong, attendees can also expect Lion Dance performances, long rope skipping games, writing calligraphy blessings on red parchment paper and the opportunity to dress in traditional Han-style clothing. Additionally, many of the goods and materials provided or sold at the Dragon’s Market will be imported directly from China, in the hopes that it will create a more welcoming and homely environment for those who grew up there. While these are all traditional Chinese activities and recreational pursuits, CU also hopes to be inclusive of other cultures that celebrate the Lunar New Year with its event. “In the past few years, we’ve only hosted events for international students

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from China,” Justin Han, president of CU and third-year managerial economics student, said. “This year we wanted to change this fact through the market fair, because everybody should be able to enjoy our cultural event.” Han stated that the fair will also be showcasing traditional Vietnamese performances. First of all, hosting a fair to celebrate Lunar New Year was a relatively new idea for CU to bring to life. Other similar Chinese student associations to CU and the nonprofit itself had no experience organizing something at such a large scale under such a short amount of time. As such, the Union placed a substantial amount of effort into planning the event. “The Dragon’s Market has been a very creative and challenging project for us,” Tong said. “It’s something that has never been done before in Davis.”

CUSU on 9

UC Davis Student Housing and Dining Services holds student focus groups for ‘Dining Reimagined’ project

Students shared feedback on the current state of dining and possible improvements BY AALIYAH ESPAÑOL-RIVAS campus@theaggie.org On Jan. 26, the UC Davis Student Housing and Dining Services hosted three student focus groups for the first phase of their “Dining Reimagined” project. Held in the Segundo Dining Commons, students across different years and housing locations — onand off-campus living — were invited to give feedback on what the dining commons could be doing to improve the student dining experience. “Dining Reimagined” has been in the works for the past two years, created after student input was given to create the Latitude restaurant, according to Richard Ronquillo, head of marketing for Housing and Dining Services at UC Davis. “Latitude was our first real facility that was really designed to meet a specific need from our students,” Ronquillo said. “Students really expressed that they wanted to have more international cuisine [...] For some students, they wanted the experience, [...] and for some, they wanted a taste of home.” Kraig Brady, the executive director of Dining at UC Davis, said that “Dining Reimagined” looks to the future of dining on campus, with the help of student input to implement both short and long-term changes to improve the dining hall experience.

The facade of Tercero Services Center and Dining Commons. (Summer Sueki / Aggie) “[‘Dining Reimagined’] is a collaboration with the campus and student community,” Brady said. “We want to [bring forth] a service provider program that is totally cohesive and collaborative with the community.” For Maya Leonard, a first-year communications and fashion design double major, attending the focus group was important to her because she wanted to get more involved in the community. “I came to this group because I had ideas [to improve dining on campus],” Leonard said. “I’m trying to make people get involved and put their ideas out there, because if it’s not out in the world, it’s not going to happen.” DCFOCUSGROUP on 9

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Chef Martin Yan visits campus on Jan. 26 to give cooking demonstrations in celebration of the Lunar New Year

At the event, a world-renowned chef and UC Davis alumnus engaged students in cooking demonstrations and prepared limited-edition recipes for dining commons menus SEE PAGE 3

UC Davis Students for Justice in Palestine hold protest in response to arrests at UC Board of Regents meeting The protest was organized in response to the 13 students and faculty members arrested during a sit-in for Palestine at the UC Regents meeting on Jan. 24

BY RIVERS STOUT campus@theaggie.org Content warning: This contains discussions of violence.

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On Feb. 1, UC Davis Students for Justice in Palestine held a protest following the arrests and misdemeanor charges on 13 UC and CSU students and staff who participated in a sit-in gathering in support of Palestine at the UC Board of Regents meeting. Students and community members at the graduate and undergraduate levels gathered on the Memorial Union’s south patio to demand that UC Regents drop the charges on those arrested. Throughout the protest, speakers acknowledged the fact that they were being filmed by individuals outside of the protest. “We are very clearly being

harassed, [and] we are very clearly being surveilled,” an anonymous protestor said toward an individual who had been making fun of their chants, as well as for dancing along to their rhythm throughout the protest. Another speaker then recalled the arrests at the UC Regents meeting on Jan. 24. “The UC regents and chancellors were too cowardly to listen to our demands,” the anonymous speaker said. “They remain too uncomfortable with the bloody truths we called them out on, ones that they try to justify so hard and escape from. Instead of listening to us [...] they [...] chose the dirty pig-cops to handle us, to ‘handle the situation.’” Next, a different anonymous speaker protested the UC’s involvement with companies that support Israel. “[While] the UC refuses to affirm that the killing of Palestinian students

is wrong, we protest,” they said. “Our very own chancellor Gary May sits on the board of one of these companies, Leidos. We will never sit idly by as our tuition money, and more broadly our tax dollars, are sent in the billions to fund Israeli life, on what is stolen land.” Speakers continued to express their frustration toward the UC system for supporting war industry companies that develop weapons used against Palestinians. “I hope the UC Regents and Gary May feel good about themselves knowing that they pump billions of dollars into the complete destruction of Gaza and Palestine as a whole,” the anonymous speaker said. “That the weapons manufacturing companies that they send billions of dollars to that create weaponry that slices human beings apart into beats until they are pieces of flesh on the ground [...] We can not let them continue

living their lives with such ignorance and compliance with this genocide.” Stanford McConnehey, a law student at the UC Davis School of Law and organizer for the UC Davis Graduate, Medical, Veterinary and Law Students for Palestine, was one of the 13 protestors escorted out of the UC Regents meeting and arrested. “Last week when students, faculty, staff and alumni from around the state mobilized to participate and demonstrate at the UC Regents meeting, [the UC Regents] showed the people of California how they really feel,” McConnehey said at the protest. “They spat in the faces of undocumented students by suspending Opportunity for All, a policy which allowed the UC system to hire undocumented students, after stringing [them] along and telling them how much they care.” McConnehey then talked about the arrests at the meeting.

“They arrested a group of students, alumni and staff, including myself, from multiple UC campuses for holding a sit-in and demanding the regents direct the UC chief investment officers to divest the UC’s investment portfolios from military-industrial companies involved in the zionist colonization of Palestine and genocide of Palestinian people,” McConnehey said. The UC Police Department’s decision to arrest the 13 individuals at the sit-in was completely optional, according to McConnehey. “The regents and the UCSF [UC San Francisco] administration did not have to have us arrested,” McConnehey said. “Their treatment of peaceful protestors is a perfect example of the anti-Palestinian racism that animates this institution.” SJPPROTEST on 9


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February 8, 2024 by The California Aggie - Issuu