Saturday was the campus’s 104th Picnic Day, but it was the first for the campus’s seventh chancellor.
PICNICKING AND GIVING
“As new Aggies, this is the Aggie tradition we’ve been looking forward to the most,” Gary S. May said at the start of the day’s parade, adding that he and his wife, LeShelle May, were “anxious to experience as much as we can.”
They crisscrossed the campus, taking in various events, and hosted an ice cream social at the Chancellor’s Residence. And LeShelle May spent time in the literal spotlight, walking the runway in the 51ԹϺ Davis Fashion and Design Society’s Picnic Day Fashion Show.
“They just assumed I could pull this off,” she said of what was to be her first time in a fashion show. “I think I can hang with the young models here.”
She added: “Be gracious in your reviews.”
The dress she wore was part of the university’s , which raises awareness that heart disease is the leading cause of death among women.
Manlin Song, a second-year master’s-degree student in textiles, watched joyfully as May took the runway. “It’s the best gift ever for my graduation,” Song said of May’s wearing her dress not only in the fashion show, but for an earlier photo shoot. “I’m too happy — I’m almost gonna die.”
A wide range of student designs were on display in the fashion show, which featured collections designed by 19 students as part of their final projects for the “Signature Collections.”
Trystan Velasco, a senior design major, said he took inspiration from traditional dances of the Philippines. Demi Chang, a junior design major, treated her collection like an art studio project, using a progression from cardboard boxes to chicken wire covered with household objects to show a deconstruction of the concept of the self, leading to a greater connection to the outside world.
The fashion show wasn’t the only big event the Mays helped make happen. On the Vanderhoef Quad, just after a group photo orchestrated by the Cal Aggie Alumni Association, the Mays unfurled a banner for Spencer Anderson — a banner he had made asking Mandy Cochran ’07 to marry him. Anderson didn’t attend 51ԹϺ Davis, but he chose Picnic Day to propose because he knew how important the event is to Cochran — who said “yes,” by the way.
Elsewhere, the family-friendly atmosphere of Picnic Day was the main draw for many — but it was always connected with the work 51ԹϺ Davis researchers are doing. Children marveled at (and asked if they could be lifted by) examples of drones that are used to measure crop health from the air, while others peered into ant farms used to demonstrate how groundwater flows.
Arts and crafts took center stage at the Children’s Discovery Fair, but doctoral student Erica Verde had research on her mind as she looked for parents who would allow their children to be part of studies the Language Learning Lab conducts on how infants learn words.
Throughout the day, the one constant was the warm weather — the clear sky and 82-degree temperature made this year’s theme, “Where the Sun Shines,” all the more appropriate.
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