48.9 F
Davis

Davis, California

Monday, January 12, 2026
Home Blog Page 1038

Column: Queer Prom

0

Queer Prom was amazing. I kissed several girls (Katy Perry style but with more tongue), lost my shoe (like Cinderella but more inebriated) and skinny dipped in my unfortunate neighbor’s pool (a situation unique to me). Most of all, I laughed with friends and cried when I learned they were leaving soon after graduation.

I have made friends and memories in Davis’s LGBT community that I will have for a lifetime.

This year at UC Davis, queer pride is at an all-time high. We have a wonderful new LGBT Resource Center, located in the Student Community Center, and many events planned.

But life isn’t perfect.

When UC Davis was founded in 1905, homosexuality was defined as a psychological disease. At the time, psychiatrists performed electroshock therapy in order to “cure” homosexuality, and the police raided locations of “homosexual activity.”

Queer pride is hard to feel when someone has outlawed it.

In the 1950s, Eisenhower and U.S. Immigration barred and banned the immigration and employment of anyone who was homosexual. Today, regulations from the Clinton Administration’s DOMA, the Defense of Marriage Act, continue to negatively affect the immigration status of trans* peoples and same-sex couples.

Under Eisenhower, federal employees were forced to undergo a “loyalty pledge,” promising that they were neither gay nor communists. This executive order, protecting the American people from a fictitious threat, was not repealed until 1975.

In order to combat feelings of negativity, San Francisco’s Pride Parade was first held in 1970. This annual celebration has now been attended by Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi and the infamous Lady Gaga — who arguably holds more political sway.  If you want to show your pride here on campus, our own Pride Week begins mid-April.

It wasn’t until 1999 that California’s same-sex couples were granted legal rights. This came in the form of the Domestic Partnership Act where two people could vow to pay taxes together, share an income and own joint property. California still bans same-sex marriage, although — according to California’s Field Research poll — it has a 25 percent margin of support amongst citizens.

“Sodomy,” in this case defined as oral or anal sex between any two consenting people, was criminalized in every state until 1962. This was changed when individual states were granted the right to choose their own method of punishment for “homosexual behavior.” Some states chose to abolish the unfair laws, but others, like Idaho, placed those engaging in “sodomy” in prison for life.

It wasn’t until 2003 that the Supreme Court declared “sodomy laws” unconstitutional. So rejoice! Your sexual activities will remain private unless you choose to use a vibrator in Alabama, have sex with a live fish in Minnesota or have oral sex in Indiana. Then you may be fined.
Queer pride can change the course of history, but it hasn’t yet guaranteed total equality.

In February 2010 the 9th Circuit Panel of the Supreme Court ruled the ban on gay marriage, Prop 8, unconstitutional.

Twenty days after the Supreme Court decision, when I was a gallivanting young freshman — like many of you readers, fresh and full of life — the old LGBT Center was vandalized. The 2010 hate crime was committed by persons who were both extremely rude and terrible with spray paint. The center did not immediately remove the vandalism and instead fought to bring attention to the fact that, even here in our small town of Davis, hate crimes do happen.

According to the National Youth Association, more than one third of LGBT youths have attempted suicide, and nine out of every 10 LGBT youths have faced harassment at school.

Queer pride is a powerful emotion because it suggests a refusal to bow in the face of hatred and discrimination.

I hope feelings of pride will determine the future rather than emotions of shame, fear or hatred. I’m hoping that the only police who will bust a queer party will be carrying enormous boomboxes — if those still exist in the future — and wearing next to nothing underneath their revealing costumes. The laws will guarantee equality, and spray paint won’t be used out of fear, but rather, will come in rainbow colors that carry messages of pride.

But until that time, continue to feel and express your queer/ally pride! Attend Crafternoons at the LGBT Resource Center from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m., slap an equality symbol on your car/bike, understand the acronym LGBTQIA and vote!

KATELYN RINGROSE is interested in attending Queer parties (of the aforementioned breed), so please e-mail directions to knringrose@ucdavis.edu

Campus Chic

0

Elizabeth Godkin, first-year pre-landscape architecture major

The Aggie: What are you wearing?
Godkin: “Lace-up ballet flats from Urban Outfitters, a skirt and lace biker shorts from American Apparel, a crop top from The Orphan’s Arms, a scarf from World Market, a red knit cardigan from Urban Outfitters and a bag from Wasteland in San Francisco.”

How did you decide what to wear today?
“I looked up the weather and picked something that I’d still be able to bike in.”

Where do you find inspiration?
“I guess when I see guys wearing lots of black. I don’t know why. And Free People.”

What pieces are you looking forward to wearing this autumn?
“Buying a nice, giant, oversized red coat and wearing it all the time.”

STEPHANIE B. NGUYEN can be reached at campus@theaggie.org.

News in Brief: Safety Day on West Quad

0

The UC Davis Fire Department, along with various other campus safety units, held a Safety Day event on the West Quad Tuesday at 11 a.m. In addition to informational presentations and demonstrations on tips to help stay safe, the Quad also hosted stationary fire trucks and a medical helicopter.

Students were invited to try on firefighter gear, participate in a fire hose spraying challenge and meet resident firefighters. Students who participated in a survey on the Fire Department’s services received free UC Davis Fire Department t-shirts.

– Muna Sadek

AT&T activates LTE network in Sacramento, Davis

On Sept. 17, AT&T turned on its fourth generation Long Term Evolution (4G LTE) network in Sacramento. Davis’ LTE network was turned on in early August, but its activation was announced the same day as Sacramento’s.

Over the wireless LTE network, smartphone users can download five to 12 megabytes per second (Mbps). It is also about 10 times faster than the third generation (3G) network. Currently, it is available in most major areas of California, such as the Bay Area, San Diego and Los Angeles.

According to an AT&T press release, the carrier has the nation’s largest 4G network, reaching 275 million people with 4G technology.

“[Smartphone users] like to multitask and love the speed,” said John Britton, spokesperson for AT&T. “The LTE network is all about speed.”

Britton said because of the faster download speeds, people can have a much more fun, more efficient experience on their smartphones and tablets.

“With LTE, these screens are materializing fast,” he said. “Everybody wants wireless connectivity these days because we’ve become a mobile lifestyle, a mobile population.”

Since college students are constantly on-the-go, they are a prime target audience.

“College students are a target audience for several reasons. First, they are in that age group and demographic where everybody is embracing that technology,” Britton said. “They’re a mobile population; a lot of college students may not live at home, they live in the dorms or off campus and don’t spend a lot of time on the computer at home.”

Consequently, college students demand connectivity even more so than a lot of other people, Britton said.

There are two types of 4G networks: the 4G HSPA+ network and the 4G LTE network. The HSPA+ network stands for Evolved High-Speed Packet Access and is four times faster than 3G.

“In the last couple years, we’ve had five speed upgrades on the HSPA+ network,” Britton said. “We’re constantly updating the network.”

The AT&T press release said the LTE network provides not just faster speeds, but also new devices, faster response times and a more efficient use of spectrum.

With more users, there needs to be more capacity on the network. Thus, AT&T said they add more carriers, which adds more spectrum. The added spectrum creates more bandwidth so that more people can use it. However, because spectrum is finite, it’s a challenge for carriers to accommodate their users’ need for speed.

Britton said AT&T is constantly expanding, optimizing and improving the network to meet the growing demand for mobile broadband.

“Mobile broadband is unbelievable,” he said. “In the last five years, mobile data on our network increased by 20,000 percent.”

AT&T is working with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) over spectrum. Britton likened spectrum to the blood of the wireless network.

“[Spectrum] is being used up quickly as people use bandwidth,” Britton said. “Streaming video is bandwidth intensive and that’s what college kids probably do a lot.”

Britton said back in 2007 when smartphones were just appearing, there wasn’t as problematic of a bandwidth situation since people used their phones for email.

“When we get faster networks, more people are tuning into YouTube, streaming videos and eating up resources,” Britton said.

Britton said what’s increasing is contact via social media and text messages. Voice calls are on the decline and more people are going to Twitter and Facebook to connect.

“We continue to see demand for mobile internet skyrocket, our 4G LTE network in Sacramento and Davis responds to what customers want from their mobile experience — more, faster, on the best devices,” said Terry Stenzel, AT&T’s Vice President and General Manager for Northern California and Northern Nevada, in a statement.

CLAIRE TAN can be contacted at city@theaggie.org.

News in Brief: Activities Fair today

0
The UC Davis Center for Student Involvement is hosting the Activities Fair today, an annual student organization showcase that will include information from various campus service projects and programs. Over 180 clubs will be present to recruit new members.
According to the Center for Student Involvement, this will be the largest Quad event of Fall Quarter.
“This is the best way early in the year for groups to recruit members, give demonstrations, perform and let the campus community know who they are and what they have to offer,” the official event page states. “Come out to the fair and get involved!”
The event is taking place on the West Quad today, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
— Muna Sadek

Commemorating Niels Bohr

Great intellects always exist. However, it is far more seldom that those intellects extend far enough to shape history — far enough to execute and articulate logic to the degree that the rules of the game have to be re-written. For a great deal of time, the Earth was flat, and then human reasoning concluded that it was spherical. For another period, the Earth represented the center of the universe with the cosmos orbiting around it, and then human reasoning concluded that it is not. These shifts in thought were brought to light by observations made by the great intellects of their day.

One such intellect was a Danish physicist by the name of Niels Bohr, who if alive today, would have enjoyed his 127th birthday on Oct. 7. Unfortunately, he died in November of 1962.

Bohr, a young physicist at the University of Copenhagen in 1921, closely explored the works of some of his contemporaries, like Max Planck and Albert Einstein. Based on Einstein’s earlier research regarding the quantum nature of light energy and electrons, Bohr proposed a game-changing model for atomic structure. Bohr’s model of the atom won him a Nobel Prize in Physics in 1922, and to this day, serves as the accepted model for the structure of the atom.

“[Bohr] established the principles that allowed for the making of a periodic table…a success of quantum mechanics,” said Manuel Calderon de la Barca Sanchez, an associate professor of physics at UC Davis.

His model described electrons orbiting the nucleus of the atom at distinct energy levels, or orbitals. This means that the behavior of atoms can be quantified and predicted. Bohr’s work served as a conceptual foundation for modern chemistry, providing a set of rules that could be used to predict the nature and outcome of chemical interactions on the atomic level.

“[Bohr] explains the fundamentals of the nucleus which set a foundation for all of nuclear physics,” said Daniel Cebra, a physics professor at UC Davis.

After receiving his Nobel Prize, Bohr went on to found the Institute of Theoretical Physics in Copenhagen, which housed great minds like Werner Heisenberg, best known for his work on the uncertain nature of subatomic particles, known as the Heisenberg uncertainty principle.

“The position and the momentum of a particle cannot both be known at the same time, though either can be measured with as much accuracy as you desire,” said John Conway, a physics professor at UC Davis and an off-site researcher for the Large Hadron Collider at the European Center for Nuclear Research (CERN), which Bohr co-founded in 1954. “Quantum reality [is] a strange place indeed.”

Heisenberg was a great researcher and a close friend of Bohr. He was conscripted by the Third Reich to aid in Nazi Germany’s development of nuclear weapons. In 1941, Heisenberg called for a meeting with Bohr to discuss the implications of the project and the risks Bohr faced, being of Jewish descent.

According to Cebra, Heisenberg cautioned Bohr that if Bohr refused to aid in Germany’s nuclear program, he could face relocation to a concentration camp. Obviously, the meeting placed a huge stress on the friendship.

During the war years, Bohr used his status and estate in Copenhagen to protect and house Jewish refugee scientists from Germany. In 1943, during the Nazi occupation of Denmark, Bohr learned of his approaching arrest, and with the help of resistance forces, fled the country. Bohr took residence in Sweden and then England before leaving Europe for the United States.

Upon arriving in America, Bohr met with President Roosevelt to discuss the wartime potential of weaponized uranium. This audience played a pivotal role in the establishment of the Manhattan Project in Los Alamos, N.M., where Bohr acted as an advisor.

After the war, he truly believed that the U.S. and Britain should share their technology with Russia. In an open letter to the United Nations, he addressed that in an age of such dangerous technology, barriers to information would only serve to propagate fear and divide the world. For the sake of peace, Bohr called for openness and an increased level of human cooperation.

Despite his role in the creation of nuclear weapons, Bohr was one of the world’s first advocates for nuclear disarmament. He managed to meet with both Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill in an effort to warn against the dangers of furthering nuclear research programs.

“Bohr was very concerned about a future nuclear arms race,” Conway said. “He pushed for the retention of civilian control over them in the U.S., which is still the situation today.”

On top of civilian control, Bohr argued for international regulation of nuclear weapons. His arguments led to the formation of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) under the United Nations.

In addition to playing a role in the foundation of the IAEA, co-founding CERN and creating a fundamental model for modern chemistry through his work in quantum mechanics, he was also the first-ever recipient of the Atoms for Peace Award, an award granted to individuals who develop peaceful applications for nuclear technology.

Throughout his life, Bohr sought to find elegant solutions to some of mankind’s great questions and divisive issues.

ALAN LIN can be reached at science@theaggie.org.

News in Brief: Governor speaks at Prop. 30 rally

0

Gov. Jerry Brown spoke at a rally yesterday at UCLA’s Bruin Plaza on behalf of Proposition 30.

The proposition is estimated to have a direct impact on CSU and UC student tuition.

“Our public colleges and universities are a pathway to the California Dream and ensure that we have the creative talent to succeed in an increasingly complex world. Join me in saying ‘yes’ to Prop. 30, so we can stop the cuts, stop the tuition hikes and invest in a strong economy for the next generation,” Brown said during the rally.

The rally also featured words from students, the California Federation of Teachers president Joshua Pechthalt and others who work on the UCLA campus.

The event was part of a statewide UC Day of Action, supporting the proposition and the first stop for Brown in a tour of higher-education events.

The Aggie and various other UC campus newspapers participated in a conference call with Brown, during which he was asked about various issues of concern to students, including Prop 30. A full article detailing the conversation will follow.

— Muna Sadek

News in Brief: EC presents ‘Dark Knight Rises’ at Science Lecture Hall

0

ASUCD Entertainment Council is holding the first movie screening of the year with the 2012 blockbuster The Dark Knight Rises.  Doors open tonight at 7 p.m. at Science Lecture Hall 123, with the show beginning at 7:30 p.m. EC will also be raffling off a pair of Morrissey tickets at the event. Admission is $2.

— Andrew Russell

Editorial: Gunrock wants YOU

0

With less than a month to go until Election Day, students across the nation are gearing up to participate in an election that decides many important issues. Not only will the outcomes of this election strongly influence future generations, but they also might directly impact our bank accounts — something UC Davis students are taking very seriously.

What’s impressive to us is the amount of participation and passion for politics on our campus. UC Davis boasts multiple influential and powerful student groups — many of whom have created programs and spent hours organizing events in order to get the rest of campus to care enough to vote.

First of all, let us commend the Davis College Democrats. Not only do they provide opportunities for those who wish to get involved in the election through campaign work, community service and lobbying on behalf of student issues, but they pulled off one of the coolest events to happen on our campus in a while: hosting Bill Clinton at a rally on the Quad to endorse some Democratic congressional candidates.

With most of the Quad filled with thousands of students and community members, it’s safe to say that the event served as an inspiring and monumental event for those in attendance. Not many other schools can say that they’ve hosted President Clinton twice in the past four years.

ASUCD brought John Garamendi, and will be bringing Kim Vann, to speak with students, giving students direct access to the congressional election.

Two other huge groups on campus got together to create Aggies Vote, a nonpartisan coalition of ASUCD and California Public Interest Research Group (CALPIRG), whose main purpose was registering UC Davis students to vote. ASUCD also has the New Voters Project, a continuous effort to register undergraduate students to vote.

By hosting presidential debate screenings and tabling, these groups had a strong presence on campus and have fostered a sense of political awareness in students.

We’re impressed and proud of these groups for getting out there and encouraging our campus to exercise our right to vote. There are six days left to register; what are you waiting for?

Column: Circle of Life

0

If there’s one thing I learned from Mufasa as he was teaching Simba about the Pride Lands, it’s that life continues in a never-ending circle.

Within the college Circle of Life, we have delicately orchestrated trees of lineage that date back to the beginning of UC Davis itself. Most sororities, fraternities, religious groups, sports teams and ethnic-interest organizations have a family line that connects students from decades ago to the students who are here now.

Large organizations often have Big Sibling, Little Sibling programs in which returning members take newbies under their wing. “Bigs” teach “Littles” what’s what within the organization, bestowing as much knowledge as possible so that when the young ones have their own “Littles,” they can continue the tradition.

I have one such Little in Mga Kapatid (MK), an on-campus organization revolving around Filipino-American social and academic interests.

When I first started at Davis and joined MK, I looked up to my Big as an example of what a model student should be like. When he graduated, I had my own Little to show the ropes to. Even after I stopped being involved in MK and eventually lost touch with him, we reconnected over the weekend as if no time had passed.

Dale, my Little, has grown into a leader within the Filipino-American community at UC Davis. This past weekend I attended the Pilipino Empowerment Conference (PEC), a retreat out in Bodega Bay that my Little led and coordinated. It was nothing short of amazing. I even found out that I have some grand-Littles and great-grand-Littles!

Now after three years, my Little was the one who was teaching me. But he didn’t teach me about where the best places to eat in the Silo were or show me his favorite spot to nap in Shields Library. Instead, he gave me invaluable and irreplaceable knowledge about my ethnic heritage that he himself learned from his time at Davis.

He taught me and the rest of the participants the inspiring history of the Filipino people and, in a sense, opened my mind to a larger circle of life that I never took the time to look at.

I mean, who knew that the original people of the Philippines had a thriving matriarchal society with their own written language before the Spaniards colonized them? Who knew that Filipinos were the first Asians to come to America, and further, as slaves? And who knew that a Filipino-American named Larry Itliong was a main player along with Cesar Chavez in organizing the United Farm Workers to strike for higher wages — even though there’s no holiday named after him?

These are some of the things I would’ve never learned about myself or my people if I never had Dale as my Little Sibling. The whole college system of “Bigs and Littles” turns out not only to benefit young freshmen, but also the upperclassmen who decide to take them in as their little brother or sister.

I can trace my MK family tree all the way back to 20 years ago, and if any of them came back to campus and contacted me, even though I don’t know most of them personally, I’d probably welcome them with open arms. I haven’t even met my grand-Littles and great-grand-Littles, but I already know I’d like them.

Simply being a member of an organization on campus doesn’t compare to having a Little and a Big. This system gives one a deeper feeling of “being a part of something larger than yourself.”

It creates a bond between you, all the students in your lineage who came before you and all the ones who will come after. It enhances the experience of being in college and connects you to people even after you’ve graduated and started a career.

To all my Bigs and Littles out there, thank you for helping to shape my college experience and for teaching me a little something-something about my Filipino heritage.

JHUNEHL has a student family tree that dates back to the 1960s. Tell her about your organization’s lineage at jtfortaleza@ucdavis.edu.

Police Briefs

0

MONDAY
#raging
Someone had 10 people over for a party on F Street and discovered that after half of them had left, her computer was gone.

THURSDAY
It’s not Halloween yet
A transient female who appeared very dirty, wearing a gray blanket around her shoulders and carrying a broom, was reported on West Covell Boulevard.

Explicit solicit
Someone was waiting at the bus stop at First and C Street with a friend, when approached by a male on a bike who asked if they wanted to have sex.

Imm’a cut you
Two intoxicated females were outside yelling at each other and cutting each other’s hair on Olive Drive.

SUNDAY
Mosh pit
Someone reported that people were jumping the fence and smashing the pumpkin garden on Danbury Street.

Flew the coop
A 65-year-old man was refusing to leave the Davis Food Co-Op on G Street and was running around the store.

Police briefs are compiled from the City of Davis daily crime bulletins. Contact EINAT GILBOA at city@theaggie.org.

UC Davis band director helps bring music to Esparato school

0

People of all ages have a passion. From academia to the arts, passion resonates among all people, especially at UC Davis. Concert Band Director Pete Nowlen has a passion for music and shares it with others through education.

Three years ago, Nowlen gathered a group of his colleagues for one purpose: to revive classical music in the Sacramento area through an organization called the Vocal and Instrumental Teaching Artists (VITA) Academy of Northern California.

“We all believe that classical music has profound power to transform people and communities,” said Nowlen, the artistic director of the Academy. “But it has to be relevant first, and it is becoming irrelevant. That is our biggest battle.”

This nonprofit program, made up of faculty and recent alumni at CSU Sacramento and the local musical community, has three main facets: the training of teaching artists, the implementation of music programs in schools and a professional orchestra that puts on shows to fund the Academy.

“We wanted to build a community to renew the validity and effect of classical music,” Nowlen said.

The VITA Academy is trying to accomplish this goal through music education for children, specifically in the Esparto K-8 School in the rural community of Esparto, Calif. Before the VITA Academy stepped in three years ago, the school had not had a music department or music teachers for 30 years.

“Kids that are from low-income families particularly often don’t get these kinds of experiences,” said Kari King, a third-grade teacher at the Esparto K-8 school. “Especially with public school funding, most schools aren’t able to offer a [music] program.”

Nowlen and his colleagues developed a seven-year plan for the implementation of music programs in Esparto and are currently starting their third year. The VITA Academy uses “Link Up,” a program courtesy of Carnegie Hall that trains nonprofit organizations on music curriculum for students.

“During a time in our economy when arts programs are shrinking, we are able to have a growing program,” King said.

The first step the VITA Academy took toward building stronger communities was the use of teaching artists from CSU Sacramento. These instructors teach children about music and are performers at the same time, allowing them to incorporate real-life experiences into lessons.

“Every year, every student in school has at least some general music instruction, and in some grades, they have an intensive music instruction,” Nowlen remarked. “Studying music creates cognitive abilities that actually test well and develops life skills that lead to success and student resiliency.”

Liz Barton, lead teaching artist and site director at Esparto K-8, completed her master’s degree under the guidance of Nowlen and currently teaches music to third- and fourth-grade classes every week and also runs an after-school choir.

“They are learning basic music skills. Basic rhythm, basic melody, and to read notation as well,” Barton said. “We try to be as fun as possible, as interactive and hands-on just to get the kids really fired up. But we believe in teaching life skills too, like learning the discipline it takes to learn music.”

Barton visits classrooms of all grade levels at least twice a year with a music activity that is either multicultural or integrated with the curricula.

“There, they are so hungry for this experience,” Barton said. “When you have those bright eyes and that engagement with kids, that is my favorite thing.”

At the end of the year, the VITA Academy professional orchestra and students from Esparto join to put on a concert for the community.

The Esparto K-8 school was of interest to the Academy mainly because of its location, but also because its students’ test scores were improving, making it easier and more possible for the program to work.

“We wanted to see what impact music and music teaching had in a rural community,” said Nowlen.

The link to Esparto was found by Nowlen through CSUS Educational Faculty and VITA Academy Education Committee Chair Crystal Olson and CSUS Professor Emeritus and VITA Academy Board President Deborah Pittman.

“What we are doing is really focused on community. Esparto is in Yolo County; it is part of this community,” Nowlen said. “Serving these kids is really important.”

In the future, the VITA Academy hopes to expand the instruments they offer to students. Nowlen and Pittman also plan to develop ensembles.

“My expectations are mostly for that community, our continued and growing role as a facilitator of arts experiences, and the development of a model for arts education in underserved communities,” Pittman said.

All those who put work into creating the VITA Academy programs at the Esparto K-8 school say they are happy with how the program turned out.

“I think so much of our curriculum is driven by state testing that this is one area they have that is driven by a creative force,” King said. “It’s something that’s personal they can have.”

Nowlen connects the VITA Academy’s work back to UC Davis students by proposing internships for students interested in music.

“[UC Davis] is a research institution, and this is really my research,” Nowlen said. “I use what I learn in VITA Academy work very profoundly in my work with the UC Davis Concert Band. Music has an amazing power to pull people together, and when you use that power to educate, that’s when music becomes relevant.”

RITIKA IYER can be reached at features@theaggie.org.

Late game letdowns cost Aggies in weekend matchups

The Aggies did not have the homecoming they were hoping for, but head coach MaryClaire Robinson was still proud of her squad.

“The result sucks but the process is there,” Robinson said. “The level of play was awesome, it just comes down to the finishing.”

After the weekend games, the Aggies stand at a respectable 7-6-2 overall and 2-2-1 in conference.

Friday — Long Beach State 2, UC Davis 0

UC Davis kicked off against Long Beach State on Friday afternoon and the offensive shootout that ensued had fans on the edge of their seats for the whole game.

The Aggie defense was thoroughly tested by the explosive 49er offense. Long Beach State managed 13 shot attempts through the course of the game, but they could not manage to find the back of the Aggie net until late in the first half.

Junior Eileen Maes scored the lone goal of the day in the 77th minute to give the 49er’s their 1-0 lead.

UC Davis’ offense took 10 attempts in the second half, most of them occurring during the last 13 minutes of play.

There were several moments where UC Davis had the 49er defense on the ropes, but the Aggies were unable to finish any of their attempts.

After the loss Robinson commended the offensive effort.

“We had the best chances of the day. Once we start putting those away consistently we will win more games,” she said.

The loss against Long Beach dropped the Aggies in the rankings, but it left them hungry for a win against UC Irvine.

Sunday — UC Irvine 1, UC Davis 1 (2 OT)

The Anteaters came to town on Sunday and Aggie Soccer Field played host to another slugfest.

UC Davis started the show when junior Ashley Edwards scored off an assist from sophomore Lexi Poppoff in the third minute of play.

The goal gave the Aggies a 1-0 lead that they managed to hold for most of the game, despite the continued efforts of a determined Anteater offense.

The UC Irvine offense was relentless, forcing freshman goalkeeper Taylor Jern to tally six saves against her one goal allowed.

The Aggies were met with another late game heartbreaker as junior Zoya Farzaneh scored the Anteater’s first goal of the day, bringing the score to a 1-1 tie in the 79th minute to steal victory out of the hands of UC Davis.

The game went into double overtime but both squads struggled to get shots off and neither offense managed to earn the game-winner for their team.

The Aggies played a strenuous match on Friday and followed it up with another physical game on Sunday. Robinson has lauded their level of fitness in the past, but they struggled to hold it on Sunday.

“We went at them early and I felt there were waves when we had our legs and waves when we didn’t,” Robinson said.

UC Davis is now ranked sixth in conference which means the team has some work to do if it hopes to make the conference championship. Still, Robinson remains positive about their chances.

“These are great games. It’s very hard to get a [Big West] win but we’re fit and we’re getting excellent chances.”

The Aggies are now 7-6-2 on the season and 2-2-1 in conference play. They head to Hawaii this weekend to kick off the first of four straight conference games.

Hawai’i is currently ranked eighth in conference but they are a strong team that is hungry to prove they belong in the Big West.

UC Davis will focus on finishing strong this week and they are hoping to leave Honolulu with a win.

KIM CARR can be reached at sports@theaggie.org. 

News in Brief: ASUCD Senate applications available today

0

Prospective candidates interested in running for ASUCD Senate or another elected position are invited to obtain ASUCD Nominating Petition Packets for the Fall 2012 ASUCD General Election. Petition packets are available today in the Student Government Administrative Office (SGAO) until the deadline for submitting packets, Oct. 23 at noon.

To pick up a packet, students should bring their UC Davis Student ID card in person to the SGAO, located on the third floor of the Memorial Union.
125 signatures of enrolled UC Davis undergraduates are required for nomination.
More information on the election and nomination process can be found in the ASUCD Election Codes — in Chapter Four of the ASUCD Bylaws which can be found at the ASUCD website.

Further elections information can be found at asucd.ucdavis.edu/elections.

—Muna Sadek

News in Brief: WarnMe to undergo test tomorrow

0

WarnMe, UC Davis’ emergency alert system, will send out test alerts tomorrow, just before noon. The WarnMe system would be used in the event of a dangerous or risky situation on or near the UC Davis campus. The alert will be sent to students and employees on the Davis and Sacramento campuses and various other university facilities, according to the UC Davis News Service.

Contact information is being retrieved from employee listings from the UC Davis people directory, student mail addresses and personal contact information that was provided for the WarnMe system. This includes over 86,000 work and personal email addresses, almost 26,000 short message service (SMS) devices and nearly 950 pagers. The alerts will state that it is only a test.

WarnMe officials encourage the campus community to register with WarnMe or update their information.

“UC Davis WarnMe is part of the university’s comprehensive emergency management program and among the ways the university can alert students to emergencies and provide important information. The warnings UC Davis sends out are predominantly done through email and text.  Both of these avenues will ensure students receive emergency messages in a timely manner,” said Nick Crossley, manager at Emergency Management & Mission Continuity at UC Davis.

Students and university faculty can add or update their WarnMe information at warnme.ucdavis.edu.

— Muna Sadek