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By Dateline staff
GOLDEN MEMORY BOOK
It has a page for each of our Gold Star Aggies — “Gold Star” is a term that surviving family members might use, as in Gold Star Mother or Gold Star Father, to indicate the loss of a child in war — and will be on display during the reception after the Memorial Day Ceremony. Navy ROTC midshipmen Chris Ormes and Landon Nagao — ٺƵ students who participate in ROTC at UC Berkeley — will stand as honor guards at the book display.
for a list of all the Gold Star Aggies, each accompanied by class year at ٺƵ, branch of service, highest rank and the war in which the Aggie lost his life. Digital scans of every page of the Golden Memory Book can be seen in this .
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For the first time, a display of 135 U.S. flags — representing the Aggie soldiers, sailors and Marines who gave their lives in military service — will accompany the Davis campus’s annual Memorial Day Ceremony, this Thursday (May 21).
The 5 p.m. ceremony, open to the public, will be held as always at the , which opened 60 years ago in tribute to our fallen Aggies. Their names, kept in ٺƵ’ Golden Memory Book, will be read aloud during the ceremony, which will take place on the MU’s South Patio in view of the flags on the Quad.
Students who are now enrolled at ٺƵ will read the names. The and the are organizing the flag display.
The latter group came together last year to advocate for all veterans on campus, whether they be staff, faculty or students. Chancellor Linda P.B. Katehi subsequently recognized the group as an official constituency, and it is participating in the Memorial Day Ceremony for the first time.
Campus Recreation and Unions is organizing the ceremony. It will begin with the campus’s Army ROTC color guard, marching in with the flags. Then come the national anthem (sung by student Emily Robinson) and the Pledge of Allegiance (led by Army ROTC cadet Thomas Van Kirk).
Veteran Constituency Group members Donald Bruun (staff research associate, supervisor, Department of Molecular Biosciences, School of Veterinary Medicine) and Natasha Coulter (undergraduate program adviser, Department of Computer Science) will make a wreath presentation.
ASUCD President Mariah Watson, as emcee, will introduce Lora Jo Bossio, associate vice chancellor, Student Affairs, who will talk about the Memorial Union’s past, present and future.
The past, of course, has to do with the building’s history and naming; the present has to do with construction (the north side and east wing are being ); and the future has to do with the good things to come with the project’s completion in the fall of 2016.
Those good things include space for the Veterans Services Office, which will finally have a home in the MU. The renovated building also will include a new display honoring the Aggies who made the ultimate sacrifice.
Army ROTC Cadet Paul Ou-Yang will give the main address (he was chosen by his fellow cadets). Ou-Yang, from Stockton, is an economics major who said he plans to make the Army his career, “because it gives me an opportunity to lead and make real influence in people’s lives.”
Student veterans Jasdeep Brar, Ana Capps, Elias Ervin, Joseph Wetherbee, Elias Sanchez and John Paul Wallis will read the names from the Golden Memory Book, and alumnus Tyler Hager will play taps to conclude the ceremony. A reception will follow in the Coffee House (west side).
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Dave Jones, Dateline, 530-752-6556, dljones@ucdavis.edu