The Davis Enterprise Sunday, November 6, 2022

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enterprise THE DAVIS

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2022

Former UCD coach reunited with long-lost wedding ring

Options expand as voter centers open in Yolo County

By Lauren Keene

By Anne Ternus-Bellamy

‘All my love’

Enterprise staff writer

Enterprise staff writer

Jerry Hinsdale isn’t quite sure when his wedding ring slipped off his finger. “I looked down one day and it was gone,” said Hinsdale, who figured he lost the gold band while working on the sprinkler system or building a backyard arbor at his then-Oak Avenue home. “I looked all over the place, but I couldn’t find it anywhere.” When the Hinsdales — Jerry, his wife Jane and their children Jill and John — sold the home in 1986 to move to Elmwood Drive, they figured the ring was gone for good. Fate, however, had other plans. Fast-forward to Oct. 26, 2022, some 36 years later. Leslie Carroll, whose family bought the Oak Avenue house from the Hinsdales, had hired Americo Meza of Americo Handyman to work on some household projects. Meza had pushed aside a bush to rinse off his tools with the front-yard hose when he saw a circular object come loose in the dirt, where it had been wedged against the base of the house. “He called me out and said, ‘Look what I found.’ It was this ring,” said Carroll, who

See RING, Page A4

Lauren Keene/Enterprise photo

Jerry Hinsdale holds both his long-lost wedding ring, right, and the one that later replaced it.

UCD chancellor stresses affordability By Monica Stark Enterprise staff writer SACRAMENTO — With all the pomp and circumstance of an energetic rally, UC Davis Chancellor Gary May and Yvette Gullatt, University of California chief diversity officer, addressed the CK McClatchy High School class of 2025, who got a flurry of advice on how to prepare now for admission to the University of California system. UCD’s mascot, Gunrock the Mustang, ran up and down the aisles as balloons of the UC’s colors of blue and gold framed the entryway of the campus. A college fair engaged students at lunchtime with college

VOL. 124 NO. 134

With Election Day just a few days away, Yolo County voters now have more options for getting their ballots in on time. On Saturday, 10 voter assistance centers were scheduled to open throughout the county, including three in Davis, adding to the three centers that have been open since Oct. 29. With traditional neighborhood polling locations now a thing of the past, voter assistance centers have become the place to cast a vote in person, drop off a completed ballot, receive bilingual assistance, register to vote and cast a conditional registration ballot, and more. In Davis, voter assistance centers will be open Saturday through Tuesday at the Veterans Memorial Center multipurpose room, 203 E 14th St.; UC Davis ARC ballrooms A and B, 760 Orchard Road; Montgomery Elementary School multipurpose room, 1441 Danbury St.; and Emerson Junior High School

INDEX

Business �����������A5 Forum �����������������B2 Op-Ed �����������������B3 Classifieds ���������A4 Living �����������������B4 Sports ���������������B1 Comics ���������������B5 Kid Scoop ���������B7 The Wary I ���������A2

admission information. And, the CKM sophomores also heard from MAY alums who UC Davis now chancellor attend UCD. While the event was billed to include UC President Michael V. Drake, M.D., a 1967 CKM alum, due to unforeseen circumstances, he could not attend. Gullatt encouraged students to look into admissions requirements and financial aid options. The message was that college is for everyone and

WEATHER Today: Cloudy, late showers. High 62. Low 45.

that the UCs shouldn’t be written off because of a high price tag. On the stage, inside the 788-seat Visual and Performing Arts theater, May promoted the more than 100 different majors at UCD whereby the 41,000 students are studying the major issues of our time. “We're also empowering students for great success after they graduate and helping them to find their dream career. We want each of our students to have a job offer in hand before they graduate or have plans for graduate school in place. And one thing that excites me here today is such a diverse student

See CHANCELLOR, Page A4

Teachers keep up push for compensation at meeting By Aaron Geerts Enterprise staff writer Davis public-school teachers showed no signs of wavering in their resolve for higher compensation at the Davis School Board meeting on Thursday, Nov. 3. While the board trustees stuck to the agenda of the meeting, the teachers once again took center stage, highlighting not only their lack of compensation, but the district’s dire staffing issues as well. Angry, upset and enraged would be putting mildly the emotions poured out by the district’s teachers and

HOW TO REACH US

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See CENTERS, Page A4

parents at the meeting. DTA President Victor Lagunes called out more than the lack of compensation, however. To Lagunes, compounding that issue are the numerous teaching vacancies which only add more weight and stress to the workload of existing teachers, which trickles down as adverse effects on the students they serve.

“There are over a dozen vacant positions that are still open, and all the others are filled by longterm subs and interns.

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See TEACHERS, Page A3

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