- Author: Pamela Kan-Rice
Several of Calloway's former students are working on a book chronicling her role in establishing the research base for addressing nutrition and health problems across the lifespan.
If you knew Calloway, and would be willing to write a few sentences on your interactions with her, please contact Mary Blackburn at mlblackburn@ucanr.edu.
A renowned human nutrition scientist, Calloway was recruited as chair of the Department of Nutritional Sciences at UC Berkeley in 1961. She is known worldwide for her pioneering metabolic research in food irradiation, food composition, nutritional needs during space travel, protein and energy requirements, nutrient needs during pregnancy and lactation, and functional consequences of malnutrition on health and well-being of populations – particularly vulnerable populations. Of note is her work on the National Academy of Sciences' National Research Council and Food and Nutrition Board to establish the 1969-1974 and 1989 Recommended Dietary Allowances, and her advocacy on the U.S. National Committee for the International Union of Nutritional Sciences for the reduction of hunger and malnutrition.
As the first woman appointed to the position of provost at UC Berkeley, she advocated forcefully, and persistently, for hiring and promoting women, and for racial/ethnic diversity among faculty. In 1999, the Regents of the University of California created an endowed chair in human nutrition at Berkeley in her name.
- Author: Pamela Kan-Rice
The University of California Office of the President seeks employee comments on the two policy changes proposed below.
PPSM-2.210 Absence from Work – Pay for Family Care & Bonding Employee Consultation Period
The University of California is proposing revisions to PPSM-2.210 (Absence from Work), which applies to staff employees in the Professional & Support Staff, Managers & Senior Professionals, and Senior Management personnel groups.
PPSM-2.210 has been updated to include language that describes the new Pay for Family Care and Bonding option, which will be implemented on July 1, 2021. Please note that only the sections of the Absence from Work policy that were updated as part of this review are included.
The proposed policy is posted at https://ucanr.edu/sites/anrstaff/Administration/Business_Operations/Controller/Administrative_Policies_-_Business_Contracts/Policy_and_administrative_handbooks/ANR_Administrative_Handbook/Recent_Updates/.
If you have any questions or if you wish to comment, please contact Robin Sanchez at rgsanchez@ucanr.edu no later than April 24, 2021. Please indicate “Absence from Work Policy” in the subject line.
UC Health Participation in Activities under the End of Life Options Act
The University of California Office of the President invites comments on a proposed Presidential Policy UC Health Participation in Activities under the End of Life Option Act. The policy is proposed to be revised and includes the following key issues:
- The issuance of the Interim Presidential Policy: UC Health Participation in Activities under the End of Life Option Act in 2016, coincided with the issuance of the End of Life Option Act (California Health and Safety Code §443, et seq., referred to in this policy as the “Option Act”) which allows terminally ill adult patients with the mental capacity to make medical decisions to request to be prescribed and self-administer an aid-in-dying drug to end their life if specific conditions are met.
- The Option Act establishes specific procedures and requirements to be followed by patients and health care providers who choose to assist them. It also provides that, upon proper notice, a health care provider may “opt out.”
- UC Health has chosen not to opt out but acknowledges the rights of individual employees to refrain from participating in activities authorized under the Option Act.
- It is the policy of the University of California to extend to its patients the choices made available through the Option Act and to comply with its terms. The University, however, neither requires nor encourages any individual provider to participate. Participation in activities authorized under the Act is strictly voluntary.
The proposed policy is posted at https://ucanr.edu/sites/anrstaff/Administration/Business_Operations/Controller/Administrative_Policies_-_Business_Contracts/Policy_and_administrative_handbooks/ANR_Administrative_Handbook/Recent_Updates/.
If you have any questions or if you wish to comment, please contact Robin Sanchez at rgsanchez@ucanr.edu no later than June 24, 2021. Please indicate “UC Health Option Act” in the subject line.
- Author: Pamela Kan-Rice
In March 2020, when California issued a shelter-in-place order to reduce the spread of the COVID-19 virus, we didn't know how long the pandemic would cause upheaval or how it would affect us. We all adapted in different ways. How has this past year changed you?
For the one-year anniversary, Ricardo Vela and the News and Information Outreach in Spanish team asked ANR colleagues to reflect on their feelings about the past year.
NOS produced the video “One year later.” In the video, 18 ANR colleagues and 4-H members describe how the pandemic has changed their lives. In a year of trials and tribulations, we all have a story to tell. Some lost loved ones, while one found love. Some are sad, some grateful, and others share messages of hope.
View “One year later” on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ScwiHj_a9-Q.
UC colleagues from across the system also shared their stories of hardship, courage, gratitude and resilience at https://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/news/covid-19-year-reflections.
- Author: Pamela Kan-Rice
He was born in San Francisco to Frank and Maria Peri Ponzio and raised in Hopland.
“Growing up on a farm and ranch gave him a knowledge of and appreciation for hard work, and the importance that farming plays in supporting our society,” said Carol Ponzio. “Education was also important to the Ponzio family and Richard spent the rest of his life in pursuit of education for himself and contributing to the education of others.”
Ponzio earned a BA and MA from San Francisco State University. He started his career teaching elementary school in Ukiah and later Mill Valley. After receiving his Ph.D. in education from UC Berkeley, he worked at UC Berkeley and Mills College training teachers.
As a UCCE specialist in the Department of Human and Community Development at UC Davis, Ponzio's research focused on collaboration and advancing student learning in science education and teaching.
Ponzio approached teacher education as a fellow inquirer, always finding ways to ignite interest in his students, freeing them to be innovative and encouraging them to be observant and to listen to their students.
“Richard Ponzio was a good friend and colleague,” said Michael Marzolla, emeritus UCCE 4-H youth development advisor for Santa Barbara and Ventura counties. “His contribution of developing a science-based approach to the 4-H program that engaged 4-H youth as hands-on, minds-on citizen scientists continues to this day. It spread from California throughout the nation. He did this with good humor with a twinkle in his eye.”
In 1997, Charles Fisher of the University of Michigan and Ponzio co-authored the book “The Joy of Sciencing,” focused on cross-age teaching and community action. Fisher and his wife and research partner Freddy Hiebert collaborated with Ponzio on several projects over the years.
“The title of the book, The Joy of Sciencing, fully describes Richard C. Ponzio's long-standing professional commitment,” wrote Fisher and Hiebert. “Richard believed in the power that engagement in hands-on science experiences could have in the learning and the agency of individuals, especially children and adolescents. For almost half a century, Richard Ponzio created learning contexts that make engagement in science a reality for thousands of students and teachers. By the time Richard joined Cooperative Extension at UC Davis in 1987, he had created numerous opportunities for students as a classroom teacher (Ukiah, Mill Valley) and for pre-service and in-service teachers at UC Berkeley and Mills College.”
At UC Davis, Ponzio designed and developed 4-H youth programs including Science Experiences and Resources for Informal Education Settings (4-H SERIES); Science and Youth (4-H SAY), Youth Experiences in Science (4-H YES) and others.
“These programs, and their implementation in many states across America, express Richard's vision of collaboration (including cross-age tutoring) and learner empowerment as key ingredients in learning,” Fisher and Hiebert said.
Ponzio's curriculum “Earthquakes: Beyond duck, cover, and hold,” published in 2001, is still used by teachers.
“The development and implementation of these projects required collaboration among numerous agencies and individuals at several levels,” wrote Fisher and Hiebert. “Richard was highly successful in creating teams of colleagues and in securing funding to create innovative programs for young participants and their teachers.”
Ponzio retired from UC in 2008.
“Richard's numerous collaborators will remember him as a very warm, generous and humorous promoter of learning and joy,” Fisher and Hiebert said. “For many of his friends and colleagues, there will be memories of sailing on San Francisco Bay on his beloved sailboat Ragnarök or stomping grapes to make his home-made (and prize-winning) wines. Richard's legacy will continue through those who share his vision of joyful learning.”
Marzolla also remembers Ponzio as a skilled fly fisherman, gardener and beekeeper.
Ponzios is survived by his life partner Carol, son Frank, and brother Jim and his wife Ann. A celebration of his life will be held in 2022. Donations can be given to Alzheimer's Disease Research.
- Author: Joel Van Eenennaam
- Author: Deanne Meyer
- Author: Abbas Ahmadi
- Author: Claire Moon
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Fred S. Conte, UC Cooperative Extension aquaculture specialist emeritus at UC Davis, passed away Feb. 19, 2021.
Conte was born March 10, 1940, in Houston, Texas, to Raphael and Etta Conte. He has one older brother, Frank. He met his wife, Elisabeth “Beth” (Bailey) Conte of Galveston while she was attending the Texas A&M Marine Lab. They married shortly after Beth graduated from college in June 1967 in Sacred Heart Church in Galveston.
Conte received his B.S. in 1963 in biology from Lamar State College of Technology. He earned his M.S. in zoology in 1966 and Ph.D. in invertebrate biology with a biological oceanography minor in 1972 from Texas A&M University (TAMU), respectively.
Conte's professional career in aquaculture began at TAMU in 1971, where he served as an extension mariculture specialist, covering saltwater aquaculture. He was involved in building the Corpus Christi TAMU Shrimp Mariculture Research Facility at the Barney Davis Power Plant, conducted research on shrimp culture, and managed the facility.
Conte joined the Department of Animal Science at UC Davis and UC Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources as California's first extension aquaculture specialist in 1977.
Conte's programs covered production technology and governmental issues that impacted both large and small aquaculture enterprises. He developed and extended information on warm- and cold-water finfish and shellfish production, including such topics as reproduction, hatchery management, water quality, markets, nutrition, harvest, transport, sanitation, aquatic animal welfare, pond and lake management, and farm assistance programs.
Recently he also began providing information about the rapidly growing industry of aquaponics (the culture of fish and plants together in a recycle system). His research and outreach efforts resulted in well-used production manuals and factsheets, podcasts, flash videos and newsletter articles.
During his early years, Conte emphasized writing, to extend aquaculture information to clientele. He edited the World Mariculture Society (1978-1980) and the California Aquaculture Newsletters (1980-1989). During the 1990s, Conte embraced web-based information dissemination to his diverse clientele by developing an aquaculture website as a one-stop location for aquaculture information requests. His continuous upgrading of the California Aquaculture Website served people around the globe with thousands of visits, and downloads from his library of pdf publications, every month. He also launched the California Aquaculture Facebook page in 2010, as a companion to the website. The Facebook page had an international audience and featured media stores addressing regional, national and international aquaculture and fisheries related media coverage.
In the early 1980s, California growers and UC Davis scientists established sturgeon as the newest aquaculture species in the West. Conte's significant contribution to this achievement was the production of a manual, which is still considered the gold standard for sturgeon hatcheries nationally and internationally: The Hatchery Manual for the White Sturgeon, Acipenser transmontanus Richardson, with application to other North American Acipenseridae (1988). He continued to provide the outreach for numerous white sturgeon research projects that spanned 40 years at UCD, and California is now the largest producer of sturgeon meat and caviar in the U.S.
Another major accomplishment for Conte was the initiation of the shellfish sanitation modelling research program at UCD in the 1990s. The development of improved methods of evaluating sanitation conditions in shellfish growing areas in coastal waters was instrumental in opening shellfish sales post rainy weather. Research funded through several Western Regional Aquaculture Center (WRAC) projects resulted in three shellfish sanitation models: “Aquarius” (2009), “Pearl” (2013), and “Mermaid” (2017); and numerous ancillary shellfish software programs used to evaluate and manage shellfish growing areas. These complex and comprehensive models provided more sensitive and accurate analyses of sanitation conditions in shellfish growing areas, especially when making adjustments in rules for opening and closing areas for harvest thereby improving food safety and reducing unneeded economic hardships on farmers.
Throughout his career, Conte served on numerous department and campus committees, most notably on the Aquaculture and Fisheries Program Executive Committee during its reorganization into the Center for Aquatic Biology and Aquaculture (CABA), and then serving as acting and interim director (1999-2001). He also contributed to classroom instruction as an invited lecturer on various aquaculture topics, in the department's aquaculture production courses.
Conte was a prominent figure as the UC aquaculture industry extension representative (1986-2017) to the California Aquaculture Association's Aquaculture Development Committee. He provided science-based information for policy development and worked with CAA leadership and members on numerous projects. He was also a science advisor to the CAA Board (1999-2019), providing his expertise on aquaculture science and the relationships between the aquaculture industries, research at UC and various government agencies. He also served on numerous committees of the California Farm Bureau, California Department of Fish and Wildlife, and the California Department of Health Services.
At the regional level, Conte was instrumental in the Western Regional Aquaculture Center's outreach efforts since its inception in 1986. He led the Strategic Planning Committee in major revisions of the Manual of Operations, to emphasize the importance that WRAC must place on both sound, relevant science, and transfer of that information to the industry. He was a member of the Board of Directors, the Publication Committee, and the Technical Committee. He authored numerous WRAC outreach publications and conducted frequent workshops. His outreach products were also used for conveying the economic impacts of WRAC's investment to federal agencies and congressional appropriations committees.
At the national and international level, Conte was active on many committees of the National Aquaculture Association and the World Aquaculture Society, including service as WAS president (1984-1985). In recognition of his website development, Conte was appointed to the USDA National Library Electronic Database, Aquaculture Steering Committee (1997-2008) and some of his more recent work led him to be a member of the USDA-NIFA Organics Standard Committee, Animal Welfare and Humane Slaughter Subcommittee (2006-2015).
Conte authored or co-authored numerous peer-reviewed articles and outreach publications, and presented and/or chaired sessions at hundreds of conferences. He also frequently organized and conducted aquaculture workshops and short courses. A well-known figure at conferences, Conte was highly sought after for discussions, to the point that he would develop laryngitis from voice overuse.
Conte's accomplishments were recognized through several awards: the CAA Presidents Service Award (1983), the WAS Distinguished Service Award (1985), the CAA Distinguished Service Award (1987), the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Cooperative States Research Extension and Education Service Award (2004), for outstanding contributions to the growth and development of aquaculture in the US through extension programs with national impact. And in 2016, he received the highly prestigious NAA Joseph P. McCraren Award for Lifetime Contributions to the Aquaculture Industry.
On Oct. 30, 2020, Conte retired from UCD, after 43 years of service. His legacy includes originating and implementing innovative and sustained research and outreach programs resulting in growth and development of aquaculture in the U.S. and throughout the world. He exemplified the role of the extensionist bridge between growers, academia, science and government.
Conte was gentle and unassuming. He cherished family, valued friends and colleagues and often developed lifelong friendships with growers and leaders within aquaculture. He was known for his subject matter excellence, perseverance and was driven to provide scientifically sound information to clientele. He embraced use of technology and delivered captivating stories.
You can listen to Conte talking about oysters and aquaculture in a series of podcasts at https://dcbsp.ucdavis.edu/x/aqua/Podcast/download.htm. These are probably the only recordings left behind from Conte. He is gone but he can still talk with us. He will be dearly missed.
Conte had two passions in life: his work and his family. He was devoted to his wife, and always took an active interest in the lives of his children. He took care of his family, and he was ready to give aid any time there was a need. In his spare time, Conte enjoyed watching movies, reading books, and the art of fly tying.
Conte is survived by his wife of 53 years Beth, son Samuel E. (Alex) Conte of Seattle and daughter Claire S. (Bobby) Moon of Hermitage, Tenn.; granddaughters Bailey Moon and Maggie Conte, brother Frank Conte, nieces Barbara Conte and Nell Gutierrez, nephew Michael Conte and numerous colleagues and friends he considered family. He was preceded in death by his son Mark S. Conte.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the UC Davis Arboretum or a charity of your choosing. A private memorial will be held when the family can gather.