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Tuesday, December 23, 2025
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Editorial: Budget crisis

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Students just starting at UC Davis are about to be shocked by the instability of the UC system.

What some compare to being hit by a bus, or having cement shoes drag lifeful feet to the bottom of the Pacific Ocean, others have grown to accept as the current trend in higher education.

There is no money. There are a lot of expenses. And we as students are paying the price.

Fall 2011 tuition for full time, California residents is $3,740. There will be a 9.6 percent increase for Winter 2012, bringing the quarterly expense up to around $4,100. Along with student services and campus fees, UC Davis students will be paying over $16,000 for the UC Davis 2011-12 school year.

Last week, the Regents discussed potentially raising fees up to $22,068 by the 2015-16 school year. That’s a 37 percent increase in just four years.

To add insult to injury, all budget-related documents come with this disclaimer: As a result of gubernatorial, legislative, Regental, and/or campus action, these fees may change without notice.

In other words, your life may change without notice.  

This price system may work for supermarkets, but students do not work the same as customers observing a shelf of toilet bowl cleaners. Our education choice is not flexible, nor are our life goals arbitrary. When starting an education at UC Davis, we are committing to finish that education. There are no stipulations about our success being dependent on the political weather.

Students may notice money being spent in unexpected places, considering the current economic state of the UC system. A quick walk around the UC Davis campus reveals several buildings under construction; in August UC President Mark Yudof announced $140 million in merit-based faculty pay raises to dissuade academic talent from switching to private schools.

While these expenditures are frustrating, they speak to the dynamic complexity of campus priorities. Construction projects are commissioned and funded years in advance, often through money that has been allocated specifically for infrastructure. Non-represented faculty members have not seen a pay raise in four years.

So who should we blame for the rising cost of our education?

UC Davis Chancellor Linda Katehi says she sides with students and bemoans the dire condition of the state of California. Yudof, too, empathizes and publicly begs the state for more money. Gov. Jerry Brown — the man who signed a budget which shorted the UC system $650 million — also blames the state. But who is this “state” and how can we hold them accountable?

As it turns out, it’s us. There is no omnipotent Daddy Warbucks to undo the California state deficit. Student protesters often come across as angry children screaming for ponies in an abandoned stable. Student editorials are shoved in a memory box labeled “Adolescent Idealism.”

Well, here is your idealism: The California Aggie is starting this school year discouraged, eager to graduate before our major gets cut. It is a sad time at the University of California and the only thing we can do is continue learning, voting and reminding our representatives about the importance of higher education. Further more, with the hope that someday, when we run the state, things will get better.

 

Editorial: The Aggie

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If you want a one-stop place to learn about the doings of our student government (ASUCD), UC Davis administration, Aggie athletics, the Davis arts scene, the latest technology tips or an excuse to not pay attention in your first lecture of the quarter, The Aggie is here for you.

The California Aggie is the largest newspaper by circulation in Yolo County. We print 8,000 issues Monday through Wednesday and 11,000 on Thursday. Our website, theaggie.org is viewed by over 12,000 people a month.

Aside from ASUCD letting us use our facilities in Lower Freeborn rent free, we are completely independent. We don’t receive any direct funding from the student government or administration. All our revenue is generated from advertisements.

Because of this, we have the ability to act as a watchdog of ASUCD and Mrak Hall. We feel it is our responsibility to report on everything UC Davis for the benefit of the students with journalistic integrity and unbiased reporting.

Sometimes the news we report and editorials we publish might not be pleasant. That’s okay. If something we publish lights a fire, send us your opinion on the matter. We always encourage letters to the editor.

But we’re also here to entertain. Not everything in our paper has to be Woodward and Bernstein journalism. We like to have fun, and you see that in our features, arts, sports and science stories.

Along with our excellent journalism, our game page is one of the most viewed in the paper. Here’s a game everyone can play while bored in a large lecture hall: count the number of people doing The Aggie’s sudoku.

We’re also here to be a voice for the community. We want to hear what you have to say. Have an idea for a story? Let us know. Want to work for The Aggie? Stop by our offices at 25 Lower Freeborn from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Thursday or send an e-mail to managing@theaggie.org.

The California Aggie is not just the 100 employees that obsess over apostrophes and in a dusty basement – we’re a thriving community of 30,000 strong.

News-in-Brief: Davis man attacks a convenience store clerk

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The Davis Police Department (DPD) arrested 25-year-old Peter Lloyd Zuniga after he beat a Quick Shop Market clerk last Saturday around 7:40 a.m., according to a press release. The suspect, and Davis resident, entered the 1964 East Eighth St. store asking for matches. When a female clerk told him the store didn’t carry matches, he stole two lighters and left. The suspect returned 10 minutes later and beat the clerk and kicked her in the head while she was on the ground.

The clerk, a 45-year-old resident, was brought to Sutter Davis Hospital and suffered a broken nose, in addition to other minor injuries. The suspect was then apprehended at Full Circle in the Rancho Yolo neighborhood. 

Zuniga is currently at the Yolo County Jail, being held for charges of robbery and felony assault. According to the police, while in custody, he made threats to kill specific officers of the DPD. He has been charged with threatening public officials as well. His bail is set at $180,000.

Employees of the business declined to comment on the case.

— Angela Swartz

“Monster wasp” found on Indonesian island

A new species of wasp has been discovered by Lynn Kimsey, a professor of entomology at UC Davis, on a recent expedition to Sulawesi, an island in Indonesia.

The jet-black wasp that has been dubbed “monster wasp” is much larger in size than other members of its subfamily Larrinae. The male members of the species can span up to two-and-a-half inches long with their jaws measuring longer than their front legs. Although the females are slightly smaller, they are much larger than other members of the Larrinae subfamily. The wasp, which belongs to the genus Dalara and the family Crabronidae, has been tentatively named Dalara garuda.

“The wasp is ferocious and the largest member of its tribe. It seemed appropriate to name it in honor of the Indonesian national symbol – the Garuda,” said Kimsey.

Kimsey’s expedition to Sulawesi was part of a multimillion dollar project funded by the International Cooperative Biodiversity Group and was administered by the United States National Institutes of Health.

The island is rich in biodiversity, according to Kimsey, who has visited the island on several other such trips before.

“We’ve been going to Sulawesi since 2009 to survey the biodiversity of Mekongga Mountain in the southeastern part of the island,” Kimsey said, adding that this region remains unexplored as of yet.

Kimsey, who also manages the Bohart Museum of Entomology’s collection of seven million insect specimens, has discovered several other new species on the island on previous trips.

“To date we’ve collected nearly one million insect specimens, many of which are new to science – several new species of frogs, lizards, a new bat, two new fish and a new land crab,” she said.

However, she later added that the Garuda wasp find was “rather an exception.”

She said that while it can often be difficult to identify species of insects, especially wasps, due to their small size and abundance, identification of the Garuda wasp was much more simple.

“I’m pretty familiar with the group and it was clearly so different from everything else I knew it was new,” Kimsey said.

The region, which has never been surveyed prior to these expeditions, is currently being considered for Biosphere Reserve status by the Indonesian government in order to prevent any harm to the biodiversity of the region.

“Unfortunately, an international mining company has the concession for turning the mountain into an open pit nickel mine,” Kimsey said.

The mine, however, is not the only threat to the native flora and fauna of the region.

Daniel Potter, a plant systematist at the Agricultural Experiment Station and the director of UC Davis Center for Plant Diversity, said that chocolate and oil palm plantations also threaten the native biodiversity of the region.

Both the nickel mine and the chocolate plantations are economic resources for the local population.

“Twenty to 30 years ago there were several species of wild plants in New Guinea,” Potter said. “On a recent trip I looked for these plants and found out that the area that was native forest once is now just oil palm plantation.”

“It’s necessary to develop ways of accommodating multiple uses in these forests, so that retaining forest can be done at the same time that small farmers grow chocolate or coffee,” Kimsey said.

Both Potter and Kimsey stressed the importance of educating people about environmental issues.

“It is important to improve public education about the importance of the forests for providing ecosystem services and … public understanding about the damage done by mining. Translation – educate, educate, educate,” Kimsey said.

“The public gets distracted by other issues,” Potter said, “So it’s important to build a value system and educate at all levels.”

SASHA SHARMA can be reached at science@theaggie.org.

Student housing not offering Fall quarter leases for Domes

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The Domes, a UC Davis cooperative housing community, will not be housing students during Fall quarter.

The Domes were officially closed by Student Housing on Aug. 1, due to a failure to meet UC Davis safety regulations. The Domes, which are located in an area known as Baggins End, consist of 14 domes-shaped homes, which previously housed 28 students.

While Student Housing is not offering student leases for this Fall, student housing and Solar Community Housing Association (SCHA), a non-profit housing organization, are currently in negotiations for a ground lease, which would allow SCHA to rent the Domes for five years.

“There would be requirements under the ground lease that it (SCHA) would have to comply with laws and university regulations. However, SCHA would be the main interface with the students. If you’re a student, your landlord would be SCHA,” said Mary Hayakawa, executive director of UC Davis real estate services.

Negotiations between SCHA and student housing are going well, according to Hayakawa.

“We’re in the middle of the negotiations. They [the SCHA] would take over the Domes and do some repairs, and the hope is that they would be ready to be leased out to students for Winter quarter. That’s the hope right now, but we’ll have to see how everything plays out,” Hayakawa said.

Veronica Pardo, a graduate student at UC Davis and former resident of the Domes, said that from her point of view, the negotiations were going well.

Pardo said that she hoped SCHA would help move the Domes toward future ideas.

“This third party nonprofit, SCHA, would serve as the landlord to the Domes and work in this transition toward Domes 2.0,” Pardo said.

While students are not allowed to live in the Domes, there is currently a Memorandum of Understanding between the university and the registered student group Friends of Baggins End. This Memorandum of Understanding is an agreement that allows students to continue to make use of the land while the Domes are uninhabited.

“Part of that understanding is that they can use the common space, use the gardens and use it for community meetings,” said Ramona Hernandez, student housing associate director.

Student volunteers will be on site to feed the chickens, garden and care for the site.

In general, the outlook for the future of the Domes and the SCHA is optimistic.

“Negotiations are going very well and we hope to bring those to conclusion within the next few weeks. They’re going well, nothing’s ever 100 percent until it’s signed, but it’s going well,” Hayakawa said.

HANNAH STRUMWASSER can be reached at campus@theaggie.org.

UC Davis West Village opens to mixed reviews

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UC Davis is moving ahead with its plans for a new student, faculty and staff neighborhood on campus.

The plan was proposed in 2003 and opened this fall to accommodate the increase in student enrollment and allow for more affordable housing for students, faculty and staff.

Upon its completion, the project, situated west on CA-113, south of Russell Boulevard and north of Hutchison, will boast 474 units of faculty and staff housing, 1,015 units of student housing and a community center, among other things.

Of the 1,489 total units to be completed, the first 315 are already ready to be occupied this month and many are looking forward to moving into the other units once they are completed.

Carmel Partners, who are working on this project with Urban Villages of Denver, stated that since July, 98 percent of the 654 bedrooms in the Ramble portion of the project have already been leased and 75 percent of the 192 bedrooms in the Viridian portion have been leased.

Including utilities and high speed internet, prices in the Ramble portion start at $748 a month per person and prices at the Viridian complex begin at $1,896 per month for a two-bedroom unit, $1,495 for a one-bedroom.

While many look forward to West Village’s debut, some wished it had opened sooner.

“I wish this was around while I was [a student] here,” said Eric Flounders, an assistant in the entomology and nematology department. “It looks amazing and is close to campus.”

Student housing will consist of three and four-story apartments in styles ranging from one to four-bedroom apartments.

Larger homes will be located along the “main street” and townhouses and apartments will accommodate a wide variety of family sizes and income levels.

The project, which is to be completed in three phases, will be home to the 60,000 square foot Sacramento City College Davis Center, making it the first community college ever located on a UC campus. There will be 42,500 square feet of retail space and a 15,000 square foot recreation center. Other amenities include bicycle paths to recreation fields, pools, a fitness center and a games and theater room.

Perhaps the most significant part of the project, however, is the fact that it is the largest planned zero-net energy development in the United States. Using a 4-megawatt solar powered system, the development will put as much power back into the electrical grid as it takes out.

In The Davis Enterprise, Lt. Governor Gavin Newsom touted the project as “the most significant project of its type anywhere in the [U.S].”

Cutting-edge energy saving technologies such as on site water-retention, solar reflective roofs, highly insulated 2×6 inch exterior walls and wall outlets programmable by smart phones have allowed the project to exceed California Title 24 building code energy use standards by 50 percent.

“UC Davis West Village demonstrated the university’s unwavering commitment to sustainability and clean energy solutions,” said UC Davis Chancellor Linda Katehi in a press release.

While those working on the project have flaunted West Village’s amenities and its future, those currently living there have given mixed reviews.

A veterinary graduate student, who asked to remain anonymous, moved up from southern California in May and was drawn to the Viridian portion of West Village because of its proximity to campus and highly publicized amenities.

While at first taken aback by the nearly $1,000 a month per bedroom price tag of a two-bedroom apartment, she still signed a lease because she was offered two months of free rent and a $500 Visa Gift card, which she said made the yearly price reasonable.

The student was dismayed when she found out that the Viridian, which was to open early for graduate students, was not ready and she and her roommate would have to stay in the Ramble for three weeks. This was just the beginning of her problems, as the apartments were dirty, appliances did not work and some amenities promised, such as lights and outlets that could be programmed with a smart phone, were not even present in the apartment. She was unable to sleep, as her apartment shares a wall with a noisy elevator and construction starts at six in the morning and ends after midnight.

“I have class at eight in the morning,” said the student. “I generally wouldn’t complain about construction, but it is affecting my studies.”

The noise at Viridian was so bad that Carmel Partners sent out representative Stacey Lecocke, who placed many residents in the Hyatt on campus.

While she remains positive that West Village will one day be a wonderful place to live, the graduate student said she feels that she was intentionally deceived and has since asked to be compensated or let out of her lease without being penalized.

Editor’s note: Numbers in this story were updated for current totals.

ELLIS CLARK can be reached at city@theaggie.org.

Senate bill for more UC, CSU transparency passes

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After three years, Sen. Leland Yee’s Senate Bill 8 has passed in the California state senate. SB 8 aims to bring more transparency and accountability to the California higher education system, which includes the University of California (UC) and California State University (CSU).

The bill is designed to make all financial records, contracts and correspondences subject to public disclosure upon request, allowing for students to see where their money is being used in the school system.

“The clear benefit for students is that this is their money that goes to these auxiliaries and now students will be able to watch where their money is going,” said Adam Keigwin, Yee’s chief of staff.

The idea for the bill began a few years ago when a Sacramento State student was trying to get information from the school’s bookstore about how much the school paid for books as compared to what students then paid for them. When this information was not released, the student brought the issue up to Yee.

“This has been a long fight, but I am proud of our coalition of open government advocates, students, faculty and workers who have stayed so persistent in helping protect the public trust,” said Yee in a press release.

The long wait for this bill was due partially to resistance from the CSU administration and former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who vetoed the bill.

“Once they realized they no longer have a backstop in the governor’s office for a veto, they sat down with us and negotiated, where we got about 90 percent of what we were looking for with the bill,” Keigwin said.

According to Diane Klein, spokesperson for the UC Office of the President, the earlier versions of the bill didn’t provide enough privacy for volunteers and donors.

“This, in turn, would have compromised the foundation’s ability to raise funds from private sources – and at a time when our fundraising needs are greatest,” Klein said. “What we had objected to, specifically, was the precedent in the earlier versions that would have declared our foundation’s public entities subject to the Public Records Act.”

Yee negotiated with the CSU administration to allow for some degree of anonymity for donors.

“We provided donor anonymity unless donors are getting something clearly beneficial from the university,” Keigwin said. “Donors cannot stay anonymous if they have any sort of influence over the university.”

For students, this bill provides a secure feeling that the funds they provide are going to where they are promised, although according to Klein, misappropriation of funds was never an issue in the school system.

“The transparency, as to how and where funds are spent, has always been there,” Klein said. “We support, and encourage, transparency in university operations.”

However, according to Yee’s administration, the transparency in most school foundations was lacking access for students, thus the need for SB 8.

“The clear benefit for students is that this is their money that go to these auxiliaries and now students will be able to watch where their money is going,” Keigwin said.

CHARLOTTE YOUNG can be reached at campus@theaggie.org.

UC Davis cross country hopes to outrun competition

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It is time for the UC Davis men’s cross country team to begin the defense of its Big West Conference Title.

The Aggies will not have an easy task repeating, however.

The men’s squad will have to find a way to replace graduated runners Calvin Thigpen and Jonathan Sees.

Helping to mitigate those losses will be the return of senior Jonathan Peterson. The Clovis, Calif. native won the 8K race at last year’s Big West Championships and finished 14th at the NCAA Division I Championships last season. He was also named an All-American and Big West Athlete of the Year.

Peterson will hope to improve on his national finish this year, and he is beginning his early season training with a focus on the NCAA Championships.

“We’re doing harder and faster training,” said coach Drew Wartenburg. “[Peterson is] devouring training in a good way, but we’re taking a long-term approach. We want him to race well throughout the season, but we’re focusing on excelling in the postseason.”

Peterson finished first in 6000-meter race when UC Davis kicked off its season by hosting the Aggie Open.

On the women’s side the Aggies will be counting on senior Krista Drechsler. Dreschler was the highest placing Aggie in the 6K at the Big West Championships, finishing 14th.

Racing alongside Dreschler will be junior Sarah Sumpter. The Cloverdale, Calif. native was named Big West Women’s Athlete of the Year as a freshman before sitting out last season.

Sumpter has a great deal of potential, and if she’s able to shake off the rust of a missed season, she could be one of UC Davis’ top performers.

“Having sat out for a year, there are some variables in terms of getting her racing legs and racing head back in the game,” Wartenburg said. “Part of the beauty of Sumpter is that she doesn’t need an outside voice to motivate her – she’s her own harshest critic. We just have to make sure she keeps working hard without overworking.”

With Sumpter and Dreschler both in the lineup, the Aggies hope to present a formidable women’s team.

“[Sumpter and Dreschler] have been training in tandem,” Wartenburg said. “We’d like them to become a really strong one-two punch. We have two really good leaders on the women’s front.”

The duo looked like just that at the Aggie Open when they finished together, tied for first in the 4000-meter race.

While cross country is a sport based on individual performance, the Aggies know that there is also a strong team element.

“We spoke about it as a team this year, and we decided that we need to be self-aware enough to make sure that each individual is accountable,” Wartenburg said. “Outside of the individual, though, we need to make sure we keep pushing each other to improve. We need to remember that we’re racing with, not against teammates.”

By working together as a team the Aggies are hoping to repeat on last season’s success – another Big West Title and postseason appearances.

“We let the team set their own goals and they want to finish strong in the Big West,” Wartenburg said. “Beyond that we want to have individuals and teams to be competing on the regional and national level.”

TREVOR CRAMER can be reached at sports@theaggie.org.

UC Davis water polo looks to swim to the top of conference

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No. 11 UC Davis is back and ready to make a run at a Western Water Polo Association Championship.

After going 15-16 in 2009, the Aggies improved to 18-10 last season and fell just one game short of a WWPA title.

The 2011 season did not get off to a great start, however, as the Aggies lost to No. 1 California and No. 5 Pacific to start the year. While UC Davis was hoping to lock down some impressive wins, coach Steve Doten believes facing tough opposition early on will benefit his team in the long-run.

“We wanted to start the season against the best teams we could play,” he said. “To start the season that way is a tough thing to ask of your players, but we improved in those two games.”

That improvement became apparent quickly, as the Aggies proceeded to win their next five games, outscoring their opponents by the score of 75-29 over that stretch.

While Doten knew his team was capable of putting together a strong string of matches, he was especially encouraged by his team’s consistency during the winning streak.

“I think in the past we would have struggled and would have been more inconsistent during a stretch like that,” he said. “I think this year we’ve shown consistency, and we’ve played at a higher level [than in years past].”

The Aggies’ star performer through the early parts of the season has been senior Aaron Salit. The center from Mill Valley, Calif. has scored 34 goals so far and was named WWPA Co-Player of the Week on Sept. 15. With his strong work-ethic and impressive talent, Salit will look to lead the UC Davis offense this season.

“He’s been a great player for us over the past few years, but he’s still continuing to improve,” Doten said. “He’s playing at a highest level I’ve ever seen him play at. His mindset and his focus are really translating to his play in the water.”

Salit will need to be more than just an offensive force for UC Davis to find success this season, however. The senior will need to contribute defensively, an area that the Aggies will look to improve upon this year.

“Our defense needs to keep us in games, and for the most part they’ve played well this season,” Doten said. “If we can hold teams down it gives our offense a chance to win games. [Salit] obviously does a great deal to help us offensively, and if he can be as good defensively as he is offensively it will help our program greatly.”

The UC Davis defense will also rely on senior goalkeeper Kevin Peat both to keep opponents off the score-sheet and to provide leadership both in and out of the pool. The Walnut Creek, Calif. native has started nearly every game since his freshman year and is now in his third season as a team captain.

“[Peat] has been a solid player for his whole time at UC Davis,” Doten said. “He’s always had a high level of intensity and he pushes his teammates to get better. He does so much to help this team and he doesn’t let anything fall through the cracks.”

While Salit and Peat will both factor heavily into any success the Aggies have this season, Doten believes that the depth of this year’s squad sets it apart from past UC Davis teams.

“We have a very deep team this year,” he said. “In order to improve the program and grow we need to have a lot of guys contributing and I feel like we’ve had that so far this season.”

If the Aggies can continue to build on their depth they believe they could find themselves with a WWPA title and an NCAA Championship appearance.

“I have a lot of respect for the teams in our conference and I think top teams are very good. It’s going to be a tight battle until the end,” Doten said. “We’re going to be up there and I think we have what it takes to win the conference championship.”

The Aggies will return to action Friday at home against Cal Baptist. The contest will mark the first of six games this weekend, including four conference matches.

TREVOR CRAMER can be reached at sports@theaggie.org.

UC Davis field hockey continues to grow

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The Aggies are hoping the third year’s the charm.

In its first two years as a field hockey program, UC Davis showed a great deal of improvement. After going 3-15 in their inaugural 2009 season, the Aggies made it to 7-10 last year and tallied the first two NorPac Conference wins in school history.

As UC Davis enters year three, it is looking to continue building on its success.

“The first few years we really tried to keep things simple,” said coach Vianney Campos. “This year we’ve really been able to add to what we’re able to do.”

The Aggies got off to a perfect start, beating NorPac foe Pacific 3-1 in their season opener. Not only did UC Davis win, but it put on a dominating performance, outshooting Pacific 31-3. The contest gave the Aggies the confidence they needed as they started the year.

“It was big for us to create some momentum and to give us some confidence early on,” Campos said . “It was good to see that all of our hard work was paying off.”

Since that point, however, the Aggies have struggled to find the win column. UC Davis went 1-5 on a pair of road-trips, moving their season record to 2-5 overall. Despite the string of tough results, the Aggies are not discouraged by the way their season is going.

“We’ve had a few disappointing losses,” Campos said. “But we’re just continuing to build so we’re prepared for conference, which is our main focus.”

The Aggies have missed the goal-scoring touch of junior Nadia Namdari, who has started the year cold. Namdari led the Aggies with eight goals and five assists last season, but the Escondido, Calif. native has yet to get on the score-sheet in either statistic this season, despite taking 22 shots.

Despite Namdari’s slow start, Campos is confident that she will be able to get back on track.

“She’s a scorer and she knows how to put the ball in the cage,” Campos said. “Teams are constantly double-teaming her so it’s been difficult, but I have no doubt that she’ll come around and do as well as she did last year if not better.”

With the lack of production from Namdari, the UC Davis spread the scoring around. Nine different Aggies have found cage this season, with junior forward Emily Mecke leading the squad with three scores.

UC Davis has also focused on its defense, anchored by the backline group of juniors Lydia Brambila, Kelly Dudek, Kristen Lopez and Casey Wollbrink.

“We have a lot of players [on defense] who are team leaders, and they’re constantly playing 65 to 70 minutes per game,” Campos said. “They do a great job of keeping our formation tight, and they also help us create some offensive opportunities by passing the ball into good areas.”

UC Davis will continue its season Sunday with the second of their three home games – a NorPac matchup against Stanford. The Aggies fell just short in a 2-1 overtime loss when they faced the Cardinal at Aggie Stadium last year. With one NorPac win already in hand, Campos knows a win over Stanford could be a huge boost for the UC Davis.

“It would be absolutely huge,” Campos said. “We have a lot of confidence that at home we can take on anyone. We’re excited for it, and we’re good enough to take them on and beat them.”

A win would also move the Aggies one step closer to their ultimate goal – a NorPac title.

“One of the unique things about our conference is that anyone can win at any time,” Campos said. “One of the advantages we have is that we know these teams very well, and I feel good about our chances to do well this season.”

TREVOR CRAMER can be reached at sports@theaggie.org.

Aggie women’s golf looks to three-peat

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At the end of the season the question stood – how would UC Davis women’s golf move forward without graduating seniors Alice Kim and Chelsea Stelzmiller?

That question has been answered.

The Aggies exploded out of the blocks in the 2011 season, opening their season with a first-place finish at the Ptarmigan Ram Fall Classic in Ft. Collins, Colo. It was a result that even surprised coach Anne Walker.

“It was really exciting and unexpected to be honest,” she said. “We never talked about winning going into the event; we just talked about our commitment to work really hard. This group is very focused and driven and [in the first tournament] we got a glimpse of how good this team can be.”

Junior Demi Runas finished first individually for the first time in her collegiate career, shooting five-under over three rounds. Fellow junior Amy Simanton finished tied for ninth at three-over as the Aggies beat second-place host Colorado by two-strokes.

The duo of juniors will look to have more success this season both as solid performers on the course and as team leaders off it.

“Last season everyone wanted to talk about [Kim] and [Stelzmiller], and they were great players, but as a coach I was never really worried because I knew we had two solid players returning,” Walker said. “This season they’ve really developed and they’ve really matured. They had a chance to learn about being great leaders from Stelzmiller and Kim and we’ve seen that already this season.”

Both Runas and Simanton played every tournament for UC Davis last season. Runas led the Aggies with four top-five and eight top-10 finishes, while Simanton ended the year tied for second on the team with an average score of 74.9 strokes per-round.

Sophomore Jessica Chulya will be expected to step up and feel a bigger role this season with the loss of Kim and Stelzmiller. The Bangkok native played 30 rounds last season finishing in the top-10 twice and in the top-20 four times.

UC Davis will also rely on freshmen Blair Lewis and Beverly Vatanangulkit to fill starting spots. The two freshmen made their debuts in Colo., and made an impression on Walker.

“They looked like veteran players,” she said. “It didn’t look like their first tournament, but on the flip side they both have a lot to improve on and that’s something I’m excited about. The goal for them is to continue getting better and growing their game.”

While the Aggies have been encouraged by what has transpired on the course, they have also seen good signs in practice.

“Practice has been very focused and there has been a high level of intensity,” Walker said. “Everyone is working well and being very competitive.”

One area that has received special attention in practice has been the team’s short-game. While some teams pride themselves on being able to launch the ball off the tee, UC Davis wants to be known as the team that can put the ball on the green.

“We decided that our goal this year is to get our short game percentage above 60 percent as a team,” Walker said. “That’s something we want to take pride in, and we want to identify ourselves as a team that makes up for it if we miss the green.”

If the Aggies are able to lock down their short-game they could be looking at a third-straight Big West Conference Title, and an NCAA Regional berth.

UC Davis will continue its season Oct. 3 at the Northwestern Invitational in Chicago, Ill.

TREVOR CRAMER can be reached at sports@theaggie.org.

Men’s golf looks to fill holes

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The Aggies will face a tough task as they take the course in 2011-12.

UC Davis enters the season without Austin Graham, who graduated last season after being named to the Big West Conference First Team three straight seasons.

“Graham was a great player and a great guy,” said coach Cy Williams. “He had such a great work ethic and he really focused. We’re going to need our veterans to step up, because you can’t really replace a player like Austin Graham.”

Not only did the Aggies lose their best golfer from last season, but they will be without their second-best as well. Senior Tyler Raber will be redshirting this season in order to improve his chances playing golf beyond the collegiate level.

“He really wants to play professional golf, and I think him getting another year of maturity and experience will give him a better chance to get onto the [professional] tour and might open some more doors,” Williams said.

With both Graham and Raber out of the picture, the Aggies will rely heavily on sophomore Matt Hansen this season.

Hansen made an appearance in the NCAA National Championship Tournament last season and finished second on the team with an average of 72-strokes per-round.

“Hansen is just a superstar,” Williams said. “He wants to be a great player and he wants to be a professional and he works really hard. He is very talented, but his work ethic is amazing. He has a plan for how to get better and he sticks to it.”

Junior Andrew Haggen will also be expected to step up this season. Haggen played in all of UC Davis’ tournaments last season and was fourth on the team with an average of 73.3-strokes per-round. With Hansen and Haggen seemingly penciled into the starting lineup, the Aggies still have three starting positions up for grabs as they enter the season.

“[Having the spots open] will give us a chance to have our young golfers really compete this year,” Williams said. “It means everyone has a chance to get into the lineup, and we believe it will accelerate the learning curve for our young players this season.”

One early favorite to step up and fill a starting spot is sophomore Matt Seramin. The San Geronimo, Calif. native played just 12 rounds last year, but had strong performances over the summer.

“Matt Seramin has really elevated his game this year,” Williams said. “He has worked hard over the summer and he looks like he can not only start but be a really good contributor for us.”

Williams also expects that several of his players will continue to improve as the season goes along. With just two upperclassmen and no seniors on the active roster, the Aggies will need to learn on the fly this year.

“We’ve really got to make sure the young guys know how to continue getting better,” Williams said. “They need to learn how to identify weaknesses and work on them. Our veteran players know how to work on their game, but the younger players still need to learn that skill, and we will need them to learn it quickly.”

Despite the lack of experience in the squad, UC Davis still has high aspirations for this season. After winning the Big West two of the last three seasons, the Aggies are setting their sights on another league title in 2011-12.

“Our main goal every year is to keep getting better,” Williams said. “As far as tangible goals, we’re going to win the Big West; that’s our plan, and once you’re in the postseason anything can happen.”

UC Davis will open its season Monday at the Husky Invitational in Bremerton, Wash.

TREVOR CRAMER can be reached at sports@theaggie.org.

Aggies going for the goal

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Last season left the UC Davis women’s soccer team unsatisfied and hungry for more. The Aggies spent their off-season haunted by the numerous one-goal losses that marred their record last year. This year’s squad is determined to turn it around and the plan is simple


win more games.

In order to do so, the Aggies spent their preseason working on their physical fitness and mental focus. UC Davis also welcomed back several veteran players who had been sidelined by injuries last season.

Coaches and players emphasized the importance of playing smart soccer for the full 90 minutes of each and every game. This year’s squad is intent on avoiding the mistakes that cost them precious games last year.

“It’s all about keeping the discipline and focus,” Coach MaryClaire Robinson said.

UC Davis has played well on both sides of the ball so far. The defense has producing three shutout performances, and held Creighton without a shot on goal.

Offensively, UC Davis has proven to be explosive, tallying multiple goals on four occasions. The Aggies have also used excellent teamwork in the attacking third. Eight Aggies have found the back of the net thus far, and six different players have tallied assists. Leading UC Davis on the score-sheet is senior Lisa Kemp who has netted three goals, while freshman Lexi Poppoff tops the squad with five assists.

The Aggies’ early season focus has paid off, as the team has gone 5-3 to start the year and has lost just once at home.

UC Davis’ early season success has been highlighted by their 1-0 win over rival Sacramento State. The victory gave UC Davis its first points in the Causeway Cup. The Aggies followed that win with victories over Creighton and UNLV.

While the Aggies have struggled statistically since then, posting road losses to Oregon and Oregon State in their two most recent contests, Robinson said she was pleased with her team’s effort in the Pacific Northwest.

It is her team’s motor that she believe will carry them through the season

“We’re going to do the hard work and bring the energy and play at a high tempo,” Robinson said. “We just need to play to our strengths.One of our goals is to maintain high energy in our training sessions and games.”

The Aggies believe that if they give full effort throughout the season, they will have a chance to lock down a top-four spot in the Big West Conference and secure a berth in the conference tournament.

If UC Davis plans to start its conference schedule with any king of momentum, however, it will need to get back on track quick. Coming off two straight losses, the Aggies will face just one more non-conference opponent before they open Big West play against UC Irvine Sept. 30. That contest will take place on Sunday when the Aggies play host to Nevada.

Despite the high stakes, UC Davis plans to stick to a simple mindset throughout the season.

“We just have to keep working hard and the results will flow from there,” Robinson said.

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

Aggies hope to keep hot start going

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The season could not have begun any better for the UC Davis women’s volleyball team.

After losing its final six matches of the 2010 season, UC Davis is on fire as they kicked off the 2011 campaign. The Aggies have dominated opponents, winning 14 of their first 15 games and posting the best start in school history. The early-season hot-streak was highlighted by a first-place finish in the Northern Colorado Classic, a road victory against rival Sacramento State and a perfect 3-0 record as hosts of the Aggie Invitational.

Head coach Jamie Holmes credits her team’s offseason preparation for its in-season success.

“Our players worked extremely hard in the summer,” Holmes said. “They were dedicated enough to stay here in Davis and train hard in those few weeks we were able to practice together during the summer. That preseason preparation was critical.”

The Aggies needed the preparation to help the team fill the holes left by Kayla Varney and Melanie Adams, both of whom graduated after being strong contributors to the UC Davis program for the last few years. While the Aggies certainly miss having those two players around, they have found two new senior leaders, in the form of Betsy Sedlak and Katie Denny.

“Both of them are fantastic leaders,” Holmes said. “They are two of the best leaders I have seen in my 17 years of coaching. They’ve done wonders with a group of young players. Sedlak holds everyone to a high standard and Denny leads the team by example.”

Joining the senior duo as a key contributor for UC Davis is sophomore Jenny Woolway. The San Diego, Calif. native was named Player of the Tournament at the Northern Colorado Classic, and has proven her value to the team even in this early part of the season.

“[Woolway] has excellent vision on the volleyball court,” Holmes said. “She is very athletic and she reacts well to the ball. She is able to run down bad passes, and dig out balls that are deflecting at weird angles. She in an invaluable player for us.”

Woolway and her teammates also have the luxury of playing under a strong head coach. The UC Davis volleyball program went just 14-96 in the four years prior to the hiring of Holmes in 2006. Since that point the Aggies have improved every season, culminating in a 16-15 record last year.

While her coaching has helped UC Davis move from a perennial bottom-feeder to a program on the rise, Holmes is quick to point to those around her as the reason for the Aggies’ success.

“The key to UC Davis volleyball is the players that are here and the support that surrounds us,” Holmes said. “As a coach I can dream the big dreams and talk the big talk, but if the players don’t buy-in that doesn’t work. What works is bring in student athletes who have a vision for themselves, and want to work hard to reach what they’re dreaming of.”

With solid coaching and a group of players working to reach for their goals, UC Davis will be looking to improve their record yet again this season. Still, the Aggies don’t measure themselves strictly by wins and losses.

“I think our goal every year is to reach our full potential,” Holmes said. “That’s something we talk about a lot. We might not be the most gifted athletes, but what we can do is compete every day and reach our full potential. We want to be the best that we can be, and if that means we win a championship then that’s awesome.”

TREVOR CRAMER can be reached at sports@theaggie.org.

UC Davis soccer is shooting for the top

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As students prepare for the inevitably grueling quarter to come at UC Davis, there is one group that has been hard at work for weeks.

The UC Davis men’s soccer team has beaten two Pac-10 opponents (Including then-sixth-ranked UCLA team) and completed a road trip to Illinois, all before most students even concluded their summer vacation.

Despite a 2-3-2 record, there is no doubt in anyone’s mind that this Aggie squad can compete with any team in the nation.

The men’s soccer program has been plagued by injuries in recent years, but sports a fresh set of legs in its young roster.

Head coach Dwayne Shaffer is optimistic about the team’s chances this year, given they remain healthy.

“I’m very proud of the guys so far,” Shaffer said. “They’re a great group of young kids that keep getting better just from the experience of playing at such a high level.”

Indeed there is much potential to be tapped, as about two thirds of the roster is comprised of underclassmen.

Eddie Manella, Matt Sheldon, Brian Ford and Ramon Martin Del Campo are all freshmen that have made regular appearances in the starting lineup.

Highlighting the upperclassmen are Lance Patterson and Rene Cuellar, the only two seniors on the team. The Aggies looks to Cuellar and his three years of varsity experience to lead a solid defensive back.

Patterson has a list of achievements that is as long as he is fast. Shaffer calls him “by far the fastest player [he] has ever coached.” The talented senior earned All-Big West Conference Second Team honors in the midfield and led the team in almost every offensive statistic last season.

This year, though, Patterson has returned to the backfield, heading a defense that has emerged as the strength of this UC Davis team. “Scoring goals in the game of soccer is the most difficult thing to do,” Shaffer said. “Our defense is our strength right now with Patterson, Shawlee and [Omar] Zeenn – they keep us in these difficult games.”

Already the Aggies have had a campaign to remember, and look forward to a season with hope and ambition.

The victory against UCLA was one that will be talked about within the realm of UC Davis soccer fandom for a long time. The overtime goal off the foot of Alex Henry captured national recognition for Aggie soccer, and also gained a name for the school’s athletics program. Taking down the sixth ranked team in the third game of the season is no easy feat for any program.

Shaffer knows his team still has a difficult schedule ahead and hopes this isn’t the highlight of their season.

“The win gave our players the confidence that they can play with any team in the nation,” Shaffer said. “Our goal as an NCAA team is to win the national championship, and we have a tough conference to get through.”

The Big West Conference is one of the best in the nation for men’s soccer. It includes powerhouses UC Irvine and UC Santa Barbara, ranked fifth and sixth nationally, respectively.

The Aggies face most of their conference opponents twice, and Shaffer hopes his team will continue to compete at the high level.

“We’ve played an extremely difficult schedule so far, but we’ve been improving,” he said. “We have a young team that is talented and I know they’ll just keep playing harder and smarter.”

As the school year begins and the season continues, the Aggies look to their final non-conference game of the regular season – a matchup with rival Sacramento State.

Shaffer credits the home field advantage as playing a part in their triumph over UCLA and says as the games get increasingly significant and difficult, they could use the support of Aggie fans. UC Davis will face tough opposing crowds in away games, such as UCSB, who holds the record for highest average attendance at their men’s soccer games.

“There never is an easy game in soccer, so when you play at home it’s a huge advantage to have the crowd behind you,” he said.

UC Davis looks to continue its strong season against Sacramento State on Friday at 4 p.m.

Matthew Yuen can be reached at sports@theaggie.org.