Quick Summary
- Plan now for Information Security Symposium, and consider being a presenter
- Veterinary students鈥 pets adorn calendar
- The Capitol dresses up for heart health
- Blood drive brings in 516 lifesaving pints (and there鈥檚 still a need for Type O
Aggie Square, 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis鈥 planned innovation hub, will be the subject of town halls in February on the Davis and Sacramento campuses. Bob Segar, Aggie Square planning director, will lead the town halls, each of which will include a brief presentation and ample time for questions and answers.
鈥淛oin us to discuss the opportunities Aggie Square presents for our community,鈥 the planning team announced on a flier. The town halls will be recorded and made available online.
新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis is working with the city of Sacramento to develop Aggie Square on the campus of 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Health in Sacramento along the Stockton-Broadway corridor. The project is not be limited to the health enterprise 鈥 Aggie Square will be for all kinds of technology and innovation, a generator of ideas and companies as well as economic growth in the community.
鈥淭his is where the region鈥檚 most talented minds will be able to grow and work together to build a better, smarter Sacramento region 鈥 where you will go to find breakthrough talent, breakthrough ideas and breakthrough companies,鈥 May said when he joined Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg and others in announcing the Aggie Square location.
Here are the details on the town halls:
- Sacramento campus 鈥 noon-1 p.m. Friday, Feb. 8, 1222 (seating is limited; people are welcome to bring their lunches)
- Davis campus 鈥 9-10 a.m. Tuesday, Feb. 19, ballroom,
Questions? Contact the Aggie Square communications team by email or phone, 530-752-9838.
Information Security Symposium 2019
Information and Educational Technology is getting the word out about this year鈥檚 to be held Tuesday-Wednesday, June 18-19, and calling for proposals from people wishing to present.
The biannual event, held since 2003, is aimed at technical professionals and administrative managers from all 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 campuses and medical centers/health systems, as well as guests from other institutions of higher learning and from California state agencies.
- Managing and Leading Security
- IS-3 and other Policy and Regulations
- Protecting Assets
- Data Privacy and Integrity
- Incident Management
- Secure Code and Applications
Organizers said the symposium will have room for about 450 people, the same as 2017 鈥 and advise that the symposium usually sells out in advance. Registration will open in April, but interested people may want to start getting approvals now.
The registration fee is $125, which will be waived for presenters.
The symposium is seeking proposals for lectures, panel discussions, and hands-on labs on technical and nontechnical topics that concern information security and compliance. Lecture and panel discussions usually last one or two hours, and hands-on labs run two hours. Submissions are due by Feb. 28.
Vet students鈥 pets adorn calendar
OK, folks, we鈥檙e a month into the New Year 鈥 it鈥檚 time you got a new calendar (or another one)! Like this one from the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis chapter of the Student American Veterinary Medical Association 鈥 a calendar featuring the students鈥 own pets: dogs, cats, horses and a few reptiles.
The cost is $20 and all proceeds go to the chapter鈥檚 Professional Development Fund, which provides $17,000 per year to help students participate in conferences, externships and other educational programs.
Olga Maderych took all the photos. She鈥檚 a third-year vet student who runs Gadabout Photography when she鈥檚 not studying and working in the hospital.
You can purchase the calendars at the reception desk in the Small Animal Clinic, second floor of the . Can鈥檛 get there to buy a calendar? Send an email to Laurel Saldinger, president of the student chapter, and she will help you out.
The Capitol dresses up for heart health
Banners showcasing the 鈥 in support of women鈥檚 heart health awareness 鈥 went on display Jan. 28 in the state Capitol and will remain up through Friday (Feb. 1), National Wear Red Day and the first day of American Heart Month.
The and the are partners in the Red Dress Collection 鈥 students design the dresses as a way to encourage women of all ages to live heart-healthy lives.
Begun 10 years ago, the collection now includes more than 60 dresses. Adele Zhang, a lecturer in the design department, mentors the designers who add to the collection each year.
Designs represent a wide range of esthetic and personal perspectives related to women鈥檚 heart health. Mai Vang鈥檚 dress, for example 鈥 鈥淕olden Traditions鈥 鈥 blends traditional Hmong and modern styles to represent the need to link the past with the present in fighting heart disease.
鈥淭oday, through advances in medicine and technology, the Hmong community has been given a golden opportunity to merge modern science with their faith in herbal and spiritual healing,鈥 Vang wrote in her design statement. 鈥淭his Red Dress is a symbol of that alliance.鈥
Cardiologist Amparo Villablanca, director and founder of the Women鈥檚 Cardiovascular Medicine Program, said: 鈥淭he Red Dress has been tremendously effective on a national scale in educating women that heart disease is their leading health threat, and our collection reinforces that message among younger women and within our own community.鈥
Learn more about women鈥檚 heart health. You can see the banners near the governor鈥檚 office, in the annex on the east side of the Capitol.
516 pints of lifesaving blood
, formerly BloodSource, collected 516 pints in last week鈥檚 two-day blood drive on the Quad. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 thank you enough for the support and hospitality your campus provides for these lifesaving events,鈥 said Felicia LaMothe, donor recruitment representative.
She said 675 people 鈥 including 231 people new to the blood drive 鈥 turned out last week; not everyone could complete the donation process.
To people who could not make it to the blood drive but still wish to donate, LeMothe urged them to visit a Vitalant center. In a Jan. 25 email, she cited a critical need for type-O blood, used in emergency situations when a patient鈥檚 blood type is not known. 鈥淰italant strives to maintain a four-day supply of type-O blood,鈥 she said. 鈥淐urrently we鈥檙e at less than half that amount.鈥
The next campus blood drive will run for three days: Tuesday-Thursday, April 16-18.
Media Resources
Dateline Staff, 530-752-6556, dateline@ucdavis.edu