Friday, December 12, 2008

Outdoor Art at Robbins Hall

There is some relatively outdoor art at Robbins Hall at UC Davis. The art features plants, evolution and DNA -- things I dig. Here are some pics.

Robbins Hall Outdoor Art


The only issue I have is that they did not highlight the bacteria that should be present on the bean roots (legumes fix nitrogen via nitrogen fixing bacteria that hang out in nodules in the roots). But if we take an artistic interpretation of the bean roots, some of the little black triangles there can be considered root nodules.

Anyway, just thought I would share the pics. The art is worth checking out if you are in the area.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Woodland Native Dustin Pedroia Wins AL MVP Award

As a Boston native, one of the worries I had moving out to Davis a few years ago related to being too far from the RedSox, Sure they come to Oakland and sure my brother has season tickets to the A's mostly to get RedSox tickets, but California is really far from Fenway Park. Well, at least there are lots of RedSox fans around here, especially if I go up to Woodland. Woodland, if you do not know, is the home town of the newest RedSox superstar, Dustin Pedroia, who nearly carried the Sox into the World Series and today was awarded the American League MVP Award. Way to go Dustin and thanks Woodland for helping out my team.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Visit to the Raptor Center and Putah Creek

Just thought I would share some pics from a nice outing we had yesterday. We went to the UC Davis Raptor Center for their open house and then went for a walk along Putah Creek.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Outdoor art at the Farmer's Market







Love the outdoor art in the renovated Gardens in Central Park in Davis ...




Monday, October 20, 2008

Roan Press Web Site Live

Well, I wrote about Roan Press ("Sacramento's Small Literary Publisher") a while ago (see here) since a friend of mine from grad. school Brad Buchanan had published a new poetry book through them and was on the air on KDVS.  And now the Roan Press web site is live.  You can order Brad's book Swimming the Mirror there (and see a review here).  Brad will be doing a reading at the Avid Reader in Sacramento (1600 Broadway) at 1 PM on October 26. 

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Strange Helicopter Sighting over Davis




Strange military style helicopter came very close to houses in Wildhorse this PM.  Not sure what they were doing but they seemed to be searching for something and it came just after hearing some very loud car-like motors revving by.

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Davis wetlands pictures





Saturday, September 27, 2008

Davis Outdoor Art














I am planning to keep posting pics of Davis outdoor art whenever I can. Here are some pictures from the UC Davis Vet Hospital in an art display in honor of companion animals

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Funny Davis Signs #1

Going to start a new section here ... posting pictures of funny Davis
signs. This is one of my favorites.

MapMyRun for Davis is a nice way to find new places to explore in town

I meant to post this a while ago but was in over my head with other things.  I found this cool site while googling for Davis MAPS and thought I would share --MapMyRun.com | Find Runs and Running Routes in Davis, CA

It has a diversity of routes for biking, walking and running in and around town.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Lance Armstrong Coming to Davis for the Tour of California

Get ready Davis.  Not only will Davis host a stage of the Tour of California this year, but new reports are today confirming the rumors - Lance Armstrong will apparently race in the Tour of California for the Astana team.  See for example

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Is your city walkable?

Just got an announcement from a friend of mine who has started a new campaign for trying to "raise America's Walk Score." They have launched a web site www.walkscore.com with walkability rankings of 2,508 neighborhoods in the largest 40 U.S. cities. If you go to the site and type in your address you can see how you score (Downtown Davis does really well). And if you support walkable communities they have a petition online to encourage Congress to support walking towns ...

Davis Hosting Stage 2 of the Tour of California 2009

Big big news for Davis. Stage 2 of the Tour of California in 2009 will start in Davis (after Stage 1 which starts and ends in Sacramento).

For more information see Velonews here.
Also see the SacBee story here.
  • Stage 1, Saturday, Feb. 14 – Sacramento
  • Stage 2, Sunday, Feb. 15 – Davis to Santa Rosa
  • Stage 3, Monday, Feb. 16 – Sausalito to Santa Cruz
  • Stage 4, Tuesday, Feb. 17 – San Jose to Modesto
  • Stage 5, Wednesday, Feb. 18 – Merced to Clovis
  • Stage 6, Thursday, Feb. 19 – Visalia to Paso Robles
  • Stage 7, Friday, Feb. 20 – Solvang (individual time trial)
  • Stage 8, Saturday, Feb. 21 – Santa Clarita to Pasadena
  • Stage 9, Sunday, Feb. 22 – Rancho Bernardo to Escondido


Saturday, July 12, 2008

Good sources for Air Quality Information for Davis

Just in case anyone needs it here are a couple of good sources for air quality information for Davis and the area

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Jelly Bellies in the New York Times

Well, Jelly Bellies, a semi-local institution (they are based in Fairfield for those who have not seem them from I-80) has gotten some good press in the Times today. I hear they have a nice tour that kids and adults like but we have not done it yet.  I must say, I like their Sport Beans when I go for bike rides.  Anyway, just good to see local businesses getting some props in the Times.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Swimming the Mirror: Poems for My Daughter on KDVS Today at 5 PM

Brad Buchanan will be discussing and reading from his new book of poems, "Swimming the Mirror: Poems for My Daughter" (Roan Press) on KDVS 90.3 FM today (Wednesday) at 5pm. Please consider tuning in. Also available onlne at http://www.kdvs.org/listen/.

Why I am writing about this?  Well Brad and I used to play street hockey together in grad. school at Stanford.  No - neither of us started Google as did other street hockey players from Stanford.  But you should check out Brad's new book of poems from Roan Press and also can see some of his past stuff at an old blog here.

Roan Press is a new Sacramento area publisher. In the email I got they say 
"Please mark your calendars for Roan Press's first Book Launch Party at the Book Collector (1008 24th Street) on July 23 at 7:30 pm. Roan Press is a new Sacramento publisher with an interest in poetry, fiction, books of essays and other genres. We particularly welcome submissions from Northern California writers, but are open to work from anyone, anywhere. Please also watch for our website, www.roanpress.com, which is coming soon"

Friday, June 20, 2008

Street View for Davis on Google Maps

If you have not already heard, Google Maps has added the "Street View" function for Davis, CA where they drove around in a truck and took pictures of the front of every address.


See here  for a view of Central Park.
or click on the pic below.



View Larger Map

Oh - and here I am .... loading my car up for a trip.


View Larger Map

Monday, June 2, 2008

Chancellor of UC Davis stepping down

Thought this might be of interest

Begin forwarded message:

From: Chancellor Vanderhoef <lnvanderhoef@ucdavis.edu>
Date: June 2, 2008 3:28:58 PM CDT
To: UC Davis Family:;
Subject: Leadership Transition

Dear Members of Our UC Davis Family,

I can't imagine greater good fortune than to have spent the past 24 years at UC Davis, first as provost, then, since 1994, as chancellor. Along the way, there have been challenges to be sure, but, together, we have helped this remarkable university to reach higher, to be bolder and to achieve great distinction. For those years and those opportunities, I will always be grateful.

So it is with conflicting emotions that I announce today that next year, our centennial year, will be my last as chancellor. I will step down on June 30, 2009. Following a sabbatical leave, I will return to the life of a faculty member, and will do whatever I can to support UC Davis as its chancellor emeritus.

To make our centennial year my last has been my plan for some time now -- a decision made finally realizing that there'd never be a stopping point if I waited for every initiative to be completed. Our 100th birthday seemed to me a particularly fitting time for a transition in leadership, as we look back with pride at our first century, and as we look forward to a second century that's sure to be as transformational as our first.

As well, announcing now provides our new UC president, Mark Yudof, with ample time to recruit a chancellor who will continue to elevate UC Davis among the nation's most distinguished universities. Ours will be his first opportunity to recommend a new UC chancellor to the regents.

So as we wrap up one academic year and anticipate the start of my last as chancellor, know that I approach this coming year as I did my first -- inspired by the opportunity, and keen to turn plans into action.

And, as was true then and even more so now, I am grateful for all that my wife, Rosalie, has done to support me and UC Davis -- particularly her tireless work to raise funds for the Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts and to introduce schoolchildren to the arts. To those many, many people with whom we've worked closely over the years, there's not enough room in this letter to express our appreciation. We'll try to catch you, one by one.

Sincerely,

Larry N. Vanderhoef
Chancellor, UC Davis


June 2, 2008

UC Davis Chancellor Larry N. Vanderhoef to Step Down in June 2009

Chancellor Larry N. Vanderhoef, who led UC Davis' climb up the ranks of the nation's finest universities while he helped open the campus's doors to the disadvantaged and advocated academic diplomacy to help resolve global conflict, announced today that he will step down in June 2009, at the end of the campus's centennial year.

Vanderhoef, appointed in 1994 as UC Davis' fifth chancellor, is one of the nation's longest-serving university leaders and is widely credited for nurturing future university presidents and provosts. He came to the campus in 1984, first serving as executive vice chancellor and then provost/executive vice chancellor. After what will be a full quarter century of service to UC Davis, he will take a yearlong sabbatical, and then return to the faculty as a professor of plant biology. He will also continue to support the campus as chancellor emeritus.

"I can't imagine greater good fortune than to have spent the past 24 years at UC Davis," Vanderhoef said in a letter today to the campus community. "Along the way, there have been challenges to be sure, but together we have helped this remarkable university to reach higher, to be bolder and to achieve great distinction. For those years and those opportunities, I will always be grateful."

The University of California System's top leaders -- UC's current president, Robert Dynes, and incoming President Mark Yudof -- led the chorus of many who praised Vanderhoef for his distinguished tenure.

Dynes pointed out that Vanderhoef "has been the senior chancellor of the UC system for several years, and all the other chancellors and I look to him for wisdom and experience." Yudof, outgoing president of the University of Texas, said that, from afar, he has "watched the campus go from relative obscurity to the front ranks among the nation's research universities."

Expanded access and opportunity

The first in his family to complete high school, and one of the very few in his Wisconsin foundry town to find his way to college, Vanderhoef has dedicated his time as chancellor to removing barriers to higher education. He elevated the campus's Division of Education to a new School of Education when other universities were downsizing theirs, expanded partnerships with community colleges, encouraged disadvantaged elementary school students to stay on track through the innovative "Reservation for College" program, and partnered with leaders of regional communities of color to raise awareness of UC Davis.

Enormous strides

On his watch, UC Davis has grown and prospered. The campus was invited in 1996 to join the prestigious Association of American Universities, representing the top 62 research universities in North America. Research funds, won competitively by UC Davis' faculty, increased from $169 million to more than $500 million annually. The campus has risen in national rankings, too. UC Davis is now ranked 8th among all U.S. universities in contributions to society (Washington Monthly) and 11th among U.S. public universities (U.S. News & World Report). Private gifts have jumped from $40 million to nearly $200 million a year, with more than $1 billion cumulatively raised in support of programs -- including $100 million from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation to launch a new School of Nursing, $35 million from Robert and Margrit Mondavi to name the Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts and the Robert Mondavi Institute for Wine and Food Science, and a $10 million gift from alumnus Maurice Gallagher to help fund a new building -- Maurice J. Gallagher Jr. Hall -- and endowment for the Graduate School of Management.

Under Vanderhoef's leadership and direction, UC Davis has also made great strides in recruiting a diverse and accomplished faculty and student body. Student enrollment has grown from 22,000 to 30,000, and the faculty has increased by 44 percent. More than 4 million square feet of classroom, lab, clinical, performance and office space have been added. And an ailing county hospital in Sacramento has been transformed into an academically distinguished and financially sound regional medical center.

Among Vanderhoef's most ambitious undertakings is a new south entry to the campus, anchored by the state-of-the-art Mondavi Center, the soon-to-open Robert Mondavi Institute and the under-construction Graduate School of Management, conference center and hotel buildings. On another campus flank will soon rise West Village, an innovative and environmentally sensitive neighborhood that will provide affordable housing for students, faculty and staff, as well as a Village Square and community college center -- a first within UC.

International academic diplomacy

But Vanderhoef's interests and influence have stretched far beyond northern California. In 2004, for example, in the face of considerable concern and disapproval, the chancellor led what he was told was the first high-level university delegation to visit Iran since that country's 1979 revolution. Vanderhoef wrote in a journal at the time, "We're not going to Iran to make a political statement, nor are we seeking publicity. We're simply one university wanting to talk to another university about ways in which we can work together. And, perhaps in the process, one small step can be taken toward a return to normalcy in the Middle East."

Vanderhoef has been asked to return to Iran this November, this time as a member of a small delegation of university presidents sponsored by the Association of American Universities.

Principled decisions in the face of criticism

Certainly, Vanderhoef's 2004 trip to Iran was not the first of the tough decisions he has made as a UC Davis leader. Indeed, it was a fiscal crisis in the early 1990s, when Vanderhoef was then provost and executive vice chancellor, that proved his mettle and ultimately positioned him to be chancellor. He oversaw painfully deep cuts and staff layoffs, yet in a collaborative way that restored a sense of stability and fairness to a campus in tumult. It was then that he initiated his series of brownbag chats that continue today, offering faculty, staff and students a regular opportunity to meet and talk with him.

When the UC regents in 1995 ended the use of race, ethnicity and gender in admissions, Vanderhoef vocally opposed the action, believing that without an immediate alternative to provide access for the disadvantaged a generation of students would be lost. Soon after, when it was UC Davis' turn to be featured at a regents meeting, he brought the diverse Gospel Choir to perform, and brought the regents to their feet.

In 2003, Vanderhoef made another controversial decision -- announcing that UC Davis would move from Division II to Division I athletics, knowing that the faculty as a whole would not be supportive. The chancellor said then that the campus really had no alternative. "We are seeking, in an evolving landscape, firm ground upon which to continue and to enhance a program that is centered around the student-athlete and the teacher-coach," he said at the time. The Big West Conference would offer Davis a better academic, philosophical and competitive "fit," he said, and align it with sister campuses UC Irvine, UC Riverside and UC Santa Barbara. In this, the first official Division I season at UC Davis, the Aggies sent 11 teams to NCAA postseason play.

In 1993, Vanderhoef disappointed students at the School of Law with his decision that broadcast media could not be barred from covering the commencement speech of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun, a condition of the justice's speaking. Blackmun withdrew, and the unhappy graduates signaled their discontent by passing around a jar of sourballs at commencement. New York Newsday, however, wrote that "Maybe [Vanderhoef] is the one who ought to be on the Supreme Court."

Nurturing university leaders

To be sure, Vanderhoef has never been one to seek out controversy to raise his own profile. On the contrary, this unassuming and down-to-earth Midwesterner has always been more interested in bringing recognition to UC Davis than to himself, and in growing new academic leaders along the way.

In the past 15 years, more than a dozen UC Davis administrators have gone on to president and provost positions at major universities around the country. They credit Vanderhoef's collegial and collaborative approach to problem solving, and his belief in delegating both authority and responsibility, with providing junior administrators the experience to move on and up.

"That type of experience, particularly with an excellent, diverse team, provides strong leadership development," said Virginia Hinshaw, former UC Davis provost and executive vice chancellor and current president of the University of Hawaii-Manoa.

"Larry Vanderhoef sets a positive tone at the top for good behavior among administrators, and I believe this brings out the best in people," said Mark McNamee, former dean of biological sciences at UC Davis and now provost of Virginia Tech.

Still, Vanderhoef has garnered many personal accolades. Recognized for his "passion to make things happen," he was honored by the Sacramento (California) Business Journal as one of the 20 people who have contributed most substantially to California's capital region over the past 20 years. The Sacramento Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce named him Sacramentan of the Year in 2004, and the Arts and Business Council of Sacramento presented him with its Prelude to the Season Outstanding Contribution Award in 2003. And in 2006, the Northern California World Trade Center and the California Business, Transportation and Housing Agency presented him with the International Leadership Award, in recognition of his efforts to increase the campus's international engagement.

Early in his career, he was named an Eisenhower Fellow, a recognition given to emerging leaders from around the world to promote positive relationships and interactions between countries. He was awarded honorary doctoral degrees by Purdue University and Inje University in Korea, and an honorary professorship by China Agricultural University. He holds B.S. and M.S. degrees in biology from the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, and a Ph.D. in plant biochemistry from Purdue University.

Nationwide search

A nationwide search for a new Davis chancellor will be initiated, and a committee with regent, faculty, staff, student, alumni and foundation board representatives will be named to advise Yudof, the incoming UC president, in the selection of Vanderhoef's successor.

UC Davis, a land-grant institution, is a leader in interdisciplinary study, offering more than 100 academic majors and 86 graduate programs. It is the only campus in the UC system with schools of Education, Law, Management, Medicine, and Veterinary Medicine. The campus's breadth of academic and outside-the-classroom programs, commitment to providing an attentive and research-enriched education, determination to address society's needs and consideration of campus community members as family are truly distinctive.

What others are saying about Chancellor Larry Vanderhoef's distinguished tenure at UC Davis:

UC President Robert Dynes: "I heartily congratulate Larry for all he has accomplished. Larry has been the senior chancellor of the UC system for several years, and all the other chancellors and I look to him for wisdom and experience. During his tenure as chancellor, UC Davis has grown in size, stature and excellence, and everyone within UC is proud of it. Congratulations to a friend for a stellar accomplishment."

UC President-designate Mark Yudof: "Larry has done a remarkable job during his tenure at UC Davis. I have, from afar, watched the campus go from relative obscurity to the front ranks among the nation's research universities. I offer him my heartiest congratulations, and I am looking forward to working with him during his final year."

UC Provost Rory Hume: "Chancellor Vanderhoef has served both UC Davis and the UC system as a whole with great distinction. During his long period of leadership Davis has grown enormously in academic distinction, and in size. It has substantially broadened the scope of its academic programs, while retaining its highly valuable, distinctive nature. Much credit for those advances rests directly with Larry Vanderhoef. He has also been a superb citizen of the UC system, wise, measured, supportive and decisive. We could ask for no better colleague and friend."

Robert Berdahl, president of the Association of American Universities and former UC Berkeley chancellor: "Larry Vanderhoef has been an extraordinarily successful chancellor of UC Davis. Under his leadership, Davis emerged as one of the outstanding public universities in America. He has provided leadership within the University of California, where his voice and judgment are widely respected by the other chancellors, and he has been an effective leader on the national stage as well, including at AAU. His leadership has always been marked by intelligence, thoughtfulness, and generosity of spirit. I am proud to consider him a colleague and friend."

Vice Provost for Undergraduate Studies Patricia Turner: "It has been my privilege to serve on Larry Vanderhoef's leadership team. When he appointed me to my first senior position, I was relatively untested. He recognized managerial and leadership abilities I did not even see in myself. I believe his ability to identify and support strong leaders stands as one of his most significant gifts to the campus. As well, he has an uncanny ability to connect with undergraduate students and takes seriously their comments and suggestions. For the past 14 years, UC Davis students have been very fortunate to have a chancellor who prioritized their academic and extra-curricular well-being."

Robert and Margrit Mondavi, in nominating Chancellor Vanderhoef for a 2006 CEO Leadership Award: "Chancellor Vanderhoef's leadership has elevated the accomplishments and the reputation of UC Davis, and has inspired the support of people like us, who share his vision and see opportunities for creating a lasting legacy through investment in a remarkable university. We share with Larry Vanderhoef a commitment to innovation and excellence, and to the risk-taking that's inevitably required to be successful."

Then-Assemblyman Darrell Steinberg, in supporting Chancellor Vanderhoef's 2004 selection as "one of the 20 people who have contributed most substantially to California's capital region over the past 20 years": "When Larry arrived at UC Davis...he brought with him a commitment to not only guide UC Davis to the top tier of national universities but to ensure that the university was engaged with its broader community....UC Davis has clearly flourished under Larry's leadership and consequently has contributed substantially to the state's and the region's prosperity."

Saturday, May 31, 2008

Davis Really Is Friendly

Two years ago, when we moved to Davis, my wife and I kept talking about how absurdly friendly everyone was here. We still can't stop talking about it (yes, not everyone is friendly, but the average person is and I have never lived in a friendlier place).

Well, our feelings were confirmed by the recent Today show discussion of the five friendliest cities in the US and Davis was picked as one of them. Here is the video ...

Friday, May 30, 2008

UC Davis Beats Stanford Game 1 of NCAA Baseball Playoffs

Not much else to say here ... Davis has beaten Stanford in the first game in the NCAA Baseball Playoffs. Good job Aggies.

Friday, May 9, 2008

Explorit Videos on Youtube

A variety of videos are available from the Explorit Science Center on YouTube. They are worth browsing.




Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Icky Stuff at Long's




All I can say is I am glad I check my medicines before I take them.  I went to Long's in East Davis the other day to pick up some insulin and was given a box of my insulin pens.  When I got home I found that there was only one insulin pen in the box and that pen was used.  Not exactly confidence boosting in my pharmacy.  Only later did I figure out what happened which was even scarier.  This was insulin I had returned months before because of a defect that Long's was supposed to send back to the manufacturer (I had called the company who had handled this very well, and they told me a free box would be at Long's and that Long's would return the unused portion to them).  So I guess Long's put it in the fridge and did not return it and then saw my name on it and gave it back to me.  Yuck.  Even worse, they did it again, I think the next time I went in.  Double yuck.  

Note that I wrote this when it happened but decided not to post it (but saved it in my blogger account), since it seemed a bit too personal. But now (2009) I am having problems with Long's again and I figured I would make live some of my old postings about Long's.

Sunday, May 4, 2008

Save Davis' Schools

There is a financial crisis of sorts going on in Davis. Please consider donating to the Davis Schools Foundation by May 15 in order to prevent cancellation of programs and/or termination of teachers.

See the video below which was made to showcase Davis' children and what we stand to lose if we don't all act fast!


Saturday, April 19, 2008

Picnic Day Pictures

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Sunday, April 6, 2008

More on Tree of Life art in Arboretum

As someone who studied "The tree of Life" in terms of evolution I am fascinated by the Tree of Life art in the Arboretum.  Here are some more pictures




Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Davis Life Magazine

Just got an email announcing a new issue of Davis Life Magazine which I meant to post about here previously. It is a nice little web magazine about, well, life in Davis.

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Hey - that's my cat sitter on the UC Davis front page

Way to go Amanda Plunkett - featured on the UC Davis front page and in the UC Davis Magazine.

Friday, February 15, 2008

Sunday, January 6, 2008

More fun at Long's

OK. Just had to post something because this is getting comical. I went in to Long's in E. Davis the other day to pick up some prescription refills. I had requested the refills online through the Long's web site and received an email saying they were reads. When I got in to the store, they told me that the refills were not ready. This is funny because this was about the 15th or so time in a row that my prescriptions were not ready when I was told they would be. One time it was problems with the online system. Another time it was that they needed a new prescription from my Doctor. Sure prescriptions expire and that is not really Long's fault. But apparently, when my prescriptions expire they decide to send faxes to a doctor I used to have in Maryland, even though I moved over two years ago. I came in like four times once over two weeks and every time they person at the counter would say "We faxed a request to Dr. So and So' and I would say "That person has not been my doctor for years. My new doctor is Dr. So and So in Davis." and they would sit there and click away at the keyboard supposedly fixing things and then they would say "OK, we will send it to the new doctor" And then I would come back and the person would say "We faxed your doctor in Maryland but he has not responded". This happened over and over and over. I began to view it as a game. How many times could I come to the pharmacy and could they get something wrong? The good things was, the people at the Long's pharmacy were very very nice. The bad thing was, something always seemed to go wrong. For a while I tried to use their automated prescription refill system, but that always went wrong too. So instead now, since I live near Long's and go to the Nugget all the time, I view my trips to the Long's Pharmacy as kind of an experiment in how many different ways my prescriptions can get screwed up.