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13 of Our Most Uplifting Stories in 2016

News
Students on a raft in the Colorado River
This year ϲϿ Davis launched and continued efforts to inspire students and the greater community. (Joe Proudman/ϲϿ Davis)

As 2016 winds to a close, the team at ϲϿ Davis News and Media Relations thought we would take a look back at some of the year’s most uplifting stories to end the year on a positive note. We had a little trouble narrowing this down to just your traditional “Top 10” list, so enjoy the bonus features — our gift to you. Happy New Year!

Peydro the K-9 police officer recovers at hospital

Peydro leaves the ϲϿ Davis Veterinary Hospital.
Police dog Peydro leaves the ϲϿ Davis Veterinary Hospital on June 6. (Jason Spyres/ϲϿ Davis)

When Peydro, a K-9 police officer with the Woodland Police Department, was critically injured in the line of duty in May, he was immediately transported to the ϲϿ Davis Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital, where he underwent emergency facial and spinal surgery. During the procedure, ϲϿ Davis veterinary neurologist Maggie Knipe and her team placed two pins in Peydro’s vertebrae to stabilize the injury. .

The road from East LA to Harvard goes through Davis

ϲϿ Davis student Lucydalila Cedillo grew up in East Los Angeles in a home without books, collected recyclable cans with her mother to help support the household and didn’t know anyone who had gone to college. But on morning rides to middle school, she took to heart what her father told her about the importance of learning.

Now June’s top graduating senior has made her way across the country to a doctoral program at Harvard University to pursue a career as a professor. The first-generation college student also took the time to help others from her Boyle Heights neighborhood realize their goals.

Classroom to canyon

Water, rocks and life. Perhaps nowhere on the planet is that combination so brilliantly on display as where the Grand Canyon meets the Colorado River. That’s why, each spring, ϲϿ Davis graduate students of geology, ecology and hydrology explore the Grand Canyon by floating down the Colorado River, splitting the 225-mile river journey into two halves. .

Caterpillars guess the presidential election correctly

a woolly bear caterpillar
The woolly bear caterpillars have successfully predicted the outcome of the U.S. presidential elections for three decades. (Kathy Keatley Garvey/ϲϿ Davis)

Since the 1980s, ϲϿ Davis professor Richard Karban has conducted an annual census of woolly bear caterpillars in Bodega Bay. Over the years the furry insects have correctly predicted whether a Republican or Democrat will win the presidential election, based on whether their population grows or shrinks. This year, they were a bit unsure — but as it turns out, .

 

Sunflowers move by the clock

sunflowers in bloom
Sunflowers near the ϲϿ Davis campus. New campus research shows how sunflowers use their circadian clock to anticipate the dawn and follow the sun across the sky during the day. (Chris Nicolini/ϲϿ Davis)

The fields of Yolo County around ϲϿ Davis are filled with bright, cheerful sunflowers, dutifully watching the rising sun. But did you know that they move? Plant biologists have discovered how sunflowers use their internal circadian clock, acting on growth hormones, to follow the sun during they day as they grow. Growing sunflowers begin their day with their heads facing east, swing west through the day, and turn back to the east at night, waiting to repeat the process when the sun comes up in the morning. While this behavior has been described by scientists for more than 100 years, it had never been associated with circadian rhythms until now.

How the moon got where it is

The moon.
Earth and the Moon formed following a massive collision billions of years ago. A new theory answers questions about their composition and the Moon's orbit. (NASA)

Earth’s moon is an unusual object in our solar system, and now there’s a new theory to explain how it got where it is. There are a couple of problems with the traditional "giant impact" theory, and now Sarah Stewart, professor of earth and planetary sciences at ϲϿ Davis, and her fellow researchers have come up with an alternative model. 

Take a bow

The Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art is opened to the public.
ϲϿ Davis Interim Chancellor Ralph Hexter, Jan Manetti and Maria Manetti Shrem participate in the ribbon cutting ceremony at the Manetti Shrem Museum Grand Opening Event on November 13. (Karin Higgins/ϲϿ Davis)

Art at ϲϿ Davis comes in a variety of forms, from musical performances to indoor and outdoor sculpture around campus. And this fall, we added two new world-class venues for teaching and experiencing art on campus — the Ann E. Pitzer Center and the Jan and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art. Unveiled in September 2016, the Pitzer Center is a classroom and recital hall where students and the community can enjoy chamber and solo performances ranging from the traditional music of Java to new works written by ϲϿ Davis faculty and student composers. The Manetti Shrem Museum opened its doors to more than 2,000 visitors on opening day in November. It features five galleries, and indoor/outdoor studio and classroom space.

Minion-like robots deployed at sea

These robots, looking somewhat like the characters from Universal Studio’s animated movie Minions, and launched in the cool Pacific waters near ϲϿ Davis’ research laboratory in Bodega Bay, mimic clouds of microscopic marine larvae, such as baby crabs, mussels, clams and rockfish. The data the bots bring back provide some of the first direct confirmation of a decades-old and surprisingly contentious scientific mystery: Where do marine larvae go, how do they get there and back, and what allows them to do this? The research carries implications for a range of issues, including managing marine protected areas, fisheries, invasive species and the impacts of climate change.

President gives shoutout to ϲϿ Davis

After their six-week stay at ϲϿ Davis, ——, where they joined other young African leaders who had had similar fellowships this summer at other universities. In greeting the fellows at a town hall on Aug. 4, President Obama acknowledged the Hawkeyes and the Buckeyes, and the Sun Devils and the Fighting Irish in the audience, referring to the mascots of some of the universities that had hosted the fellows. But what about the Aggies? — “young people at ϲϿ Davis studying new ways to promote clean energy and fight climate change.” Thank you, Mr. President! Read about the Mandela Washington Fellowship’s Energy Institute at ϲϿ Davis.

Coach Hawk returns to Davis

Dan Hawkins dons his old letterman jacket.
Dan Hawkins dons the letterman jacket he wore during his time as an Aggie football player. (Gregory Urquiaga/ϲϿ Davis)

Between tearful remembrances of his time as an Aggie and bear hugs with his former coaches, Dan Hawkins ’84 was introduced to the community and members of the media as the new head football coach just after Thanksgiving at Aggie Stadium. In returning to his alma mater, Coach Hawkins stressed his desire to meld athletics and academics, saying success in one area can lift the other.

Professor is a National Book Award finalist

Cover of The Other Slavery.

 

A double shot of STEM

The Design of Coffee class.
Associate professor William Ristenpart talks with Sabrina Perell, community regional development major, and Kyle Phan, an undeclared major, about the taste of their brew during a ϲϿ Davis “Design of Coffee” class in 2015. (Gregory Urquiaga/ϲϿ Davis)

A story about the “Design of Coffee” engineering class and new Coffee Center drew national attention, including a tweet by Chelsea Clinton. Peet’s Coffee is supporting the first-of-its-kind center with a $250,000 grant. The pioneering center and pilot roaster will be devoted to post-harvest coffee research and engineering, an underrepresented field, and aims to be the leader in coffee science.

First state-funded firearm violence research center coming to School of Medicine

A ϲϿ Davis Medical Center emergency room doctor who works to prevent people from becoming patients in the first place will head the first state-funded firearm research center in the country. The new center, funded with an appropriation of $5 million over the next five years from the state of California, will build on unique resources already in place at ϲϿ Davis for conducting transformative violence-prevention research and draw on the power of other ϲϿ campuses and beyond to provide the scientific evidence that informs the development of effective prevention policies and programs.

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