海角社区

Gnome, silver oak leaf jewelry and more gifts that say '海角社区'!

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Photo: Silver oak leaf pendant (cropped)
Photo: Silver oak leaf pendant (cropped)

A GIFT A DAY

Look for Aggie gift ideas and holiday specials, a different one every day, on the page, starting tomorrow. The specials include a Holiday Sale at all 海角社区 Stores on Wednesday (Dec. 5). about the sale and the stores' new Aggie Kickbacks Customer Rewards Program.

OTHER WAYS TO GIVE

Holiday drives are under way for food, toys, coats, money for pet baskets (for homeless people to care for their animals).

This holiday season you can give your loved ones some of what 海角社区 is made of, in gifts reflective of our academics and art, agriculture and the arboretum, and more.

Consider adding these to your shopping list:

Beautiful bowls, handcrafted of wood from our very own trees.

Silver pins and pendants in the shape of a valley oak leaf from the 海角社区 Arboretum.

Fine art by the staff at the Craft Center, and elegant scarves that exemplify our university鈥檚 artistic talent past and present.

Insect art and jewelry, T-shirts and more from the Bohart Museum of Entomology, including The Story of the Dogface Butterfly, the California state insect 鈥 a children's book written and illustrated by 海角社区 students.

Books by our faculty members, books about our campus, and reprints of historic books rooted in our agricultural expertise.

Olive oil-infused personal care products 鈥 body lotion, body butter, soap and lip balm 鈥 from our very own Olive Center.

Olive oil and olives, from the Olive Center, of course, and dried tomatoes from the Russell Ranch Sustainable Agriculture Facility. See about two tasting opportunities next week.

More good eats, grown or produced by 海角社区 graduates, in California Harvest Gift Boxes, being sold as a fundraiser for the women鈥檚 rowing sport club.

All kinds of 海角社区 apparel, of course, T-shirts and sweat shirts and the like, including a new line of infant wear. Plus unique gifts like the Aggie gnome and a 海角社区 blue Santa hat!

Good Life and Campus Grown

海角社区 highlights many of its signature products in the , including the Scarf Collection, books, and olive and tomato products.

The collection also includes , where you can find one-of-a-kind products made from salvaged wood 鈥 bowls, vases and salad tongs. The wood is from campus trees that required heavy pruning or needed to be felled for safety reasons.

Campus Grown also includes the new 鈥 oak leaf jewelry. Designer and metal smith Nancy Shapiro made the mold in the lost-wax technique, using an actual leaf from the arboretum as the basis for her work.

Shapiro, co-president of Friends of the 海角社区 Arboretum, arranged for the casting of a limited supply of leaves out of fair-trade silver, then she did the finish work to turn them into pins and pendants.

The Scarf Collection highlights art and poetry by UC Davis faculty and students, and works in the Fine Arts and Design collections. The (2011) included a Wayne Thiebaud scarf, while the includes an original design by Professor Annabeth Rosen, who holds the Robert Arneson Chair in Ceramic Sculpture.

Most products in the Good Life Collection are available from , online and in selected stores. Look for the arboretum jewelry, the scarves and salvaged wood items at the downtown store (Second and F streets).

Oh, baby, that looks good on you!

Our littlest Aggies have a new way of showing their allegiance, thanks to alumna Lisa (Wade) Wells 鈥03, a design major who works as a graphic designer in University Communications.

In recent years, when her Aggie friends started having babies, she started making 海角社区 one-piece bodysuits for them. Eight months ago, Wells and her husband, Andrew, had a baby of their own, Lauren, and she, too, has a one-piece with the official 海角社区 logo over the word 鈥淏ABY.鈥

Then Wells started working with 海角社区 Stores to make infant bodysuits and T-shirts available to everyone. The clothes should start showing up in the stores any day now.

Beyond clothes, the stores offer all kinds of other items with 海角社区 logos and the university seal, from pens to paperweights 鈥 and, brand new, the ceramic , 12 inches tall, wearing a 海角社区 sweater and waving a 鈥淕o Ags鈥 pennant.

Kelly Holt, supervisor of the 海角社区 Store Downtown, says 海角社区 woven throws are popular 鈥 so popular, in fact, that they are out of stock right now, with more due to arrive next week.

Books and more books

If you see a book by a scientist in the bookstore鈥檚 campus authors section, there鈥檚 a good chance he or she is writing nonfiction. Not so with physics professor emeritus Tom Cahill鈥檚 new book, a science fiction novel.

In Annals of the Omega Project, according to the publisher, EditPros, Cahill 鈥渄escribes what happens when a group of scientists investigating the beneficial powers of telepathic energy comes under savage attack by ruthless Coven members who subject their hapless victims to ancient mind-control techniques.鈥

Eric Smoodin explores make-believe of a different kind in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, all about the Walt Disney film classic of the same name.

Smoodin, a professor of American studies, and cinema and technocultural studies, discusses Disney鈥檚 career and the trajectory that made Snow White a logical next step, the film鈥檚 reception in the United States and around the world, and the film鈥檚 impact on so many aspects of contemporary culture.

海角社区 Stores can order the book for you: Call (530) 752-5923 or send an email to generalbooks@ucdavis.edu.

Two distinguished professors have contributed to the Very Short Introductions series from Oxford University Press:

The Orchestra 鈥 By D. Kern Holoman, conductor emeritus of the 海角社区 Symphony Orchestra.

Colonial America 鈥 By Alan Taylor, winner of the Pulitzer Prize in history in 1996 for his book William Cooper鈥檚 Town: Power and Persuasion on the Frontier of the Early American Republic.

Agricultural history, our history

The offers a series of historical agriculture books, among them by Edward Wickson, namesake of our very own Wickson Hall.

He joined the UC Berkeley faculty in 1879, published California Vegetables in 1897 and later reviewed dozens of proposed sites for the University Farm. Then, as dean of agriculture from 1907 to 1913, he oversaw the farm鈥檚 development at Davis.

The other books in the series: , , and .

All of the RMI books are available from (search for 鈥淩obert Mondavi Institute鈥), or from the RMI鈥檚 Kim Banister, (530) 752-5171 or kbannister@ucdavis.edu.

For campus history, pick up a copy of Abundant Harvest. And, if you want to bring the CoHo鈥檚 flavor to your own kitchen, you can buy the Coffee House Cookbook. Find them at 海角社区 Stores or online (click on 鈥淐ampus Interest鈥).

California Harvest Gift Boxes

Women鈥檚 crew sells these gift boxes every year to help support the sport club鈥檚 operations.

This year鈥檚 harvest: almonds, chocolate, sun-dried tomatoes, black olives, fresh garlic, honey, dried fruit and raisins, and organic popcorn 鈥 all packed as usual in wooden boxes with the Aggie athletics logo etched on top.

Only 500 boxes are being sold. The price is $36 price for pick-up (on campus), or delivery in Davis or to the Sacramento campus. The boxes can be mailed at additional cost.

The order form is available . Or contact rowing coach Carissa Adams, (530) 867-1494 or cradams@ucdavis.edu. The rowing club can accommodate recharges, for departments wishing to buy the boxes for official UC business purposes.

Craft Center Staff Show and Silent Auction

Unique, handcrafted gifts are yours for the bidding in this for programs. Artwork includes jewelry, glasswork, textiles, ceramics, metalwork, woodwork, photography, painting, drawing, screen-printing and mixed media.

Written bids are acceptable any time the center is open, through 6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 7. The cutoff time will come during a closing reception, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. A live auction will commence at 6 for any items that have interested, active bidders.

The Craft Center is in the . Regular hours: 12:30-10 p.m. Monday-Thursday, 12:30-7 p.m. Friday and 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday-Sunday. For more information, call Jan Garrison, Craft Center coordinator, (530) 752-3096.

Bug bonanza

The holds more than 7 million specimens 鈥 and almost as many items in the : from scorpion suckers and insect collecting kits, to T-shirts, coffee mugs, posters and earrings, to the new children's book about the California dogface butterfly, by Fran Keller, a doctoral candidate in entomology, and illustrated by Laine Bauer, an art major who graduated in June.

And, for $2,500 you can obtain the naming rights for a newly discovered species: a 鈥渃ute little black-and-white weevil with red polka dots鈥 (genus Macrocopturus), discovered in Costa Rica by Henry Hespenheide, professor emeritus at UCLA and a member of the Bohart Museum Society.

鈥淵our donation directly supports species discovery and student education in entomology through scholarships,鈥 said Professor Lynn Kimsey, the museum director. 鈥淏y naming this species you are promoting science education, species discovery and conservation.鈥

on this naming opportunity.

The Bohart Museum of Entomology, 1124 , is open from 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday, and on selected weekend days during the year. The next weekend date is Saturday, Dec. 15, when the museum will be open from 1 to 4 p.m.

Cal Aggie Alumni Association

The offers a number of , including discounts on memberships ($12 for six months, a savings of $38), Mondavi Center tickets, the 海角社区 Aggie Pride coffee table book and Aggie cruiser bicycles.

 

 

Media Resources

Dave Jones, Dateline, 530-752-6556, dljones@ucdavis.edu

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