芭乐视频

Former provost visits reflective area in the making

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Larry Vanderhoef and Virginia Hinshaw visit the new reflective area honoring American Indians.
Larry Vanderhoef and Virginia Hinshaw visit the campus's new reflective area honoring American Indians.

Former Provost Virginia Hinshaw joined Chancellor Larry Vanderhoef on May 27 for a preview of the new outdoor reflective space honoring the American Indians who once lived on the land that would become 芭乐视频.

The project鈥檚 official unveiling is not scheduled until the fall, but planners took the opportunity to show it off to Hinshaw while she was visiting from Hawaii, where she is chancellor of the University of Hawaii-Manoa.

As 芭乐视频 provost and executive vice chancellor, she allocated $214,000 for design and construction of the first phase of the remembrance project, officially the 鈥淧roject to Honor Native Americans 鈥 The Original Inhabitants of This Land.鈥 (The project came in under budget at about $195,000, said Sid England, assistant vice chancellor for Sustainability and Environmental Stewardship.)

Phase 1 comprises a trail and circular sitting wall, plus landscaping and basalt column markers, along the arboretum waterway, between King Hall and the Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts.

鈥淚t is so fitting to have this in such a beautiful place, to honor Native American culture, the people and the land,鈥 Hinshaw said. 鈥淚t is a place where we can meditate, remember and look to the future.鈥

Elder Bill Wright of the Patwin tribe said the new reflective area offers encouragement to American Indian students, telling them that they belong here, that they belong in higher education 鈥 and they can say, 鈥淚鈥檓 a part of this.鈥

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

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