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Wednesday, December 24, 2025
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UC health workers to vote on potential strike

The more than 20,000 patient care technicians and service workers throughout the 10 campuses of the University of California system are prepared to take a strike vote after a 10-month impasse. The vote began Saturday and runs through Thursday concluding with a press conference the next day to announce the results.

Talks began in August 2007, but the UC hasn’t budged at all, said Leticia Garcia-Prado, a medical assistant at Cowell Student Health Center.

“We hope that they see that we are vital to campus health centers and realize how much we do and the effect that we have,” she said.

Garcia-Prado is one of the more than 3,000 patient care technicians and service workers on the UC Davis campus. Many of these service workers live in poverty with wages as low as $10 per hour, while community colleges and non-UC hospitals offer an average of 25 percent more for the same work.

Patient care techs and service workers are responsible for everything from assisting in surgery to cleaning campus dorms.

Nicole Savickas, HR communications coordinator for the University of California Office of the President explained the difference between the two jobs.

“Patient care techs work in medical centers, while service workers may work on campuses or in medical centers,” she said. “In our proposals to the union, we have differentiated them because they are different and are funded from different sources.”

AFSCME, the American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees, is negotiating on both workers’ behalf.

The UC and AFSCME consulted a neutral fact-finder on both situations. One of the most hotly contested issues is hours of work.

According to information from the office of the president, AFSCME asserts that patient care techs need over $50 million in wage increases with a 9 percent increase to individuals and substantial range increases in Year 1 and that the minimum pay rate should rise to 14.50 and $15 an hour for classifications that require a license. Years 2 and 3 should bring a 6 percent increase to individuals and ranges, and the minimum pay should raise 25 cents per hour each year.

The university’s position on patient care tech wages calls for an $18 million increase in wages, with anywhere from a 4 to 15 percent increase to individuals. Each employee would then be placed onto a step pay structure based on a minimum of his/her years of experience in his/her job. For Years 2 and 3, the UC suggests a 2 percent increase.

The neutral fact-finder ruled that there should be a 5 percent increase to individuals and ranges in Year 1, approved the UC’s step pay structure and found that Year 2 should bring a 3.5 percent increase to individuals, and Year 3 a 3 percent increase.

AFSCME proposed the same changes in wages for service workers as for patient care techs, but the university proposal varied greatly, suggesting a minimum rate of $10.74 per hour in Southern California and $11.50 per hour in Northern California, which would cost them about $500,000 more than they paid workers this year.

Savickas clarified that the disparity in proposed salaries is because service workers are paid for by the state instead of the UC system.

“But AFSCME is only publicizing the UC recommendations for service workers to make it seem that we’re that far away from their proposal,” she said.

The fact finder found that service workers deserved wages similar to those of the patient care techs, prompting the UC systems to issue a dissent with a reminder that the amount of money they can give to service workers is out of their hands.

Another critical issue is hours of work. For overtime work, AFSCME proposes that workers should receive 1.5 times normal pay when working after shift and twice pay if they reach 12 hours. Sick leave, vacation and holiday hours should also be credited as hours worked for purposes of achieving overtime after 40 or 80 hours.

Garcia-Prado said that mandatory overtime takes a toll on many of her co-workers.

“Whether you have to stay overtime on one shift or work 14 or 15 hours and then come back the next day, it’s a big safety issue,” she said. “Some of these are techs that are taking patients’ lives into their hands, others are parents who have to go home and care for their families – it’s so important for these people to be rested.”

AFSCME claims that if workers are called in on-call, they shall receive 40 percent on-call pay with a minimum of three hours pay at the 1.5 times rate and 75 percent should they have to come in on holidays. They also suggest that employees be paid an additional 15 minutes per missed rest break.

The UC agrees with AFSCME’s escalating pay proposal, but insists on maintaining the ability to mandate overtime. They also state that the current on-call system is fine.

The conclusion reached by the fact finder is agreed with the UC system, allowing them to retain the power to mandate overtime. The fact finder did however compromise with AFSCME regarding on-call pay and ruled that workers shall get 25 percent on-call pay with a minimum of two hours pay if they are called in.

Throughout the week, people will be coming to UC Medical Center and campus student health centers explaining the situation to workers and giving them the chance to vote for a strike.

“We’re not happy about the fact that they’ve decided to hold a strike vote rather than bargain, but we’re prepared to deal with it,” said Savickas. “We have contingency plans in place for all campuses and medical centers and are prepared to hire temporary workers if necessary.”

 

MIKE DORSEY can be reached at campus@californiaaggie.com.

ASUCD Senate Briefs

ASUCD Senate meetings are scheduled to begin Thursdays at 6:10 p.m. Times listed are according to the clock at the May 15 meeting location, the Memorial Union’s Mee Room.

 

Meeting started at 6:12 p.m.

 

Ivan Carillo, ASUCD president, arrived 6:26 p.m., left at 9:15 p.m.

Molly Fluet, ASUCD vice-president, present

Rebecca Schwartz, ASUCD senator pro tempore, present

Andrew Bianchi, ASUCD senator, present

Sergio Blanco, ASUCD senator, present

Chris Dietrich, ASUCD senator, present

Erica Oropeza, ASUCD senator, present

Ramneek Saini, ASUCD senator, present

Lula Ahmed-Falol, ASUCD senator, present, left at 10:06 p.m.

Chad Roberts, ASUCD senator, absent

Rebecca Lovell, ASUCD senator, present

Jesse Rosales, ASUCD senator, present

Joe Chatham, ASUCD senator, present

Tracey Zeng, ASUCD senator, present

 

Appointments and confirmations

Business and Finance Commission

Don Ho, commissioner

Cory Mah, commissioner

 

Presentations

Tren Kauzer, representative from Classical Notes, presented information on the Classical Notes program.

 

The Science and Engineering committee representative read a letter to ASUCD about the committee’s concern that it was not informed of a resource fair on the Quad that occurred earlier in the quarter.

 

Consideration of old legislation

 

Senate Bill 51 authored by Alex Li, co-authored by Paul Harms and Mark Champagne, presented by Saini, to allocate $20,752 to Refrigerator Services from Refrigerator Reserves to purchase new refrigerators passed unanimously.

 

Senate Bill 60 authored by Schwartz, co-authored by Ahmed-Falol and Dietrich, introduced by Schwartz, to standardize public office hours for Senators, passed unanimously.

 

Senate Bill 54, authored by the Internal Affairs Commission, to update a section of Chapter Five so that it is consistent with the Long-Range Plans passed unanimously.

 

Urgent legislation

 

Urgent Bill 59, authored by Albert Parnell and Dominic Waters, introduced by Ahmed-Falol, to allocate $1,000 from Senate Reserves to the National Panhellenic Council’s Stomp Fest occurring May 18 was amended to $700 and was motioned to table for next week with 6:5:1.

 

Urgent Bill authored by Ruth Gebreyses and Ariam Tsighe introduced by Bianchi to allocate $500 to the Pan African Student Organization to the Keep a Child Alive: Celebrating the African Diaspora event for May 16 was amended to $431 and passed 8:1:3.

 

Public discussion

 

Ashley Eslick, a first-year undeclared representative from CalPIRG spoke about the High Speed Rail campaign and asked senators to take pictures with a banner that read “I’d rather be Riding the High Speed Rail.”

 

Max Mikalonis read a list of names of fallen soldiers of Iraq from the past week and held a moment of silence.

 

Meeting adjourned at 10:29 p.m.

 

ANGELA RUGGIERO compiles the senate briefs and can be reached at campus@californiaaggie.com

UC Davis benefactor Robert Mondavi dies

California wine patriarch Robert Mondavi, one of the great modern-day benefactors of UC Davis, died Friday at his Napa Valley home. He was 94.

Mondavi donated $25 million to help establish UC Davis’ Robert Mondavi Institute for Wine and Food Science, scheduled to open in October. He also contributed $10 million to the Robert and Margrit Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts, which opened in 2002 and has attracted highly acclaimed performers from throughout the world.

“Mondavi and his family have given much to UC Davis, and not just through his time and financial support, but also through the association of the Mondavi name,” wrote UC Davis Chancellor Larry Vanderhoef in a tribute that appeared in The San Francisco Chronicle on Friday. “His generosity touched so much of the transformational research, stellar teaching and superb programs that this campus offers today.”

“Mondavi truly opened a new era of opportunity for UC Davis. We are deeply grateful for his inspiration,” Vanderhoef wrote.

Many on the Davis campus expressed gratitude for Mondavi’s generosity.

“Mr. Mondavi was a lifelong friend of UC Davis; it was an honor to be associated with him,” said Andrew Waterhouse, chair of the UC Davis Department of Viticulture and Enology. “He was a very strong supporter of public education and public research institutions like ours.

“We are very thankful for his support, and, of course, we are very thankful for his vision of the Robert Mondavi Institute for Wine and Food Science,” he said, adding that the Institute will include research and teaching labs and a sensory theatre for wine- and food-tasting classes.

“Mondavi was an incredible visionary, and we are going to miss him tremendously. It’s the end of an era,” said Clare Hasler, executive director of the university’s Robert Mondavi Institute for Wine and Food Science. “He was a wonderful benefactor to UC Davis.”

Because of Mondavi’s support, UC Davis’ programs in wine and food science will remain “preeminent in the world,” she said.

Mondavi and his wife Margrit were also dedicated to the performing arts.

“Not only did their generosity help make the Mondavi Center possible, but they were also passionate about what went on inside the center,” said Don Roth, executive director of UC Davis’ Robert and Margrit Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts.

Roth said the Mondavis recently attended performances by Israeli-American violinist and conductor Itzhak Perlman and world-renowned soprano and New Zealand native Kiri Te Kanawa

“The Mondavis’ attendance at events showed people … they were passionate about [the center]; their presence was very exciting,” Roth said.

Mondavi is credited with helping the California wine industry reach international fame.

The son of Italian immigrants, Mondavi was born in Virginia, Minn., and moved to California in his youth. He attended Stanford University in the 1930s, earning a degree in economics.

Mondavi then worked in the family wine business in Napa Valley. In 1966 he established the Robert Mondavi Winery, the first major winery built in the Napa Valley since the 1933 repeal of the Prohibition Act. Mondavi combined European craft and tradition with the latest in American technology and used educational efforts to sell his wines, according to a biography on the Winery’s website.

The website cites Mondavi’s pioneering work in fine winemaking techniques such as cold fermentation, stainless steel tanks and the use of French oak barrels; by the 1970s his wines were recognized for their quality internationally.

Mondavi is survived by his wife Margrit Biever Mondavi; his three children Michael, Marcia and Timothy; nine grandchildren; and his brother, Peter.

In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations to COPIA, UC Davis, The Oxbow School and Stanford University.

 

ANNA OPALKA can be reached at campus@californiaaggie.com.

 

 

Bicycle culture to be celebrated Tuesday by antique exhibition

If you’ve ever dreamed of riding a bike by bouncing up and down on a seat, you’re in for a treat Tuesday.

A group of UC Davis art students will present an exhibition titled “From Spoke to Sprocket: A Look at Bike Culture” all day Tuesday on the south Memorial patio. The event will feature local bicycle aficionado Peter Wagner’s “WhymCycles” and a display of antique bikes from the Pierce-Miller collection.

Erin McDonald, one of the curators of the student-run exhibit, said the aim of the project is to heighten awareness of Davis’ long bike legacy.

“We’ve designed an art exhibition to revitalize and take notice of the bike culture here at Davis,” said McDonald, a senior art history major.

Joyce Tang, also an exhibit curator, said she hopes to connect “students visually with the bike tradition” in Davis.

The exhibition will also incorporate a timeline to detail the history of cycling in Davis and the world, Tang said.

“We’re hoping to highlight the innovation in bicycles because bicycle riding is on the decline,” said Tang, a senior art history major. “We hope we can encourage people to get back on their bikes and start riding again.”

To do just that, the students of Art History 401 convinced Transportation and Parking Services to lend them an array of bikes from the Pierce-Miller Collection, which will soon reside in the California Bicycle Museum. The museum has yet to be permanently located.

The bikes in the Pierce-Miller collection date as far back as the 1820s, demonstrating that bicycles aren’t “just this modern thing,” Tang said.

In addition to the antique bikes, the exhibition will showcase “WhymCycles,” which are “fanciful, imaginative and eccentric” variations of bikes, said inventor Peter Wagner.

One of Wagner’s inventions, the “bouncer,” will be available for students to test ride at the exhibition. Bouncers are bikes with an off-centered rear axel that allows the wheel to spin easily and smoothly, Wagner said.

“The whole machine acts like a pedal, basically,” Wagner said. “When you turn the pedal on the bicycle, the axel is pivoted and goes around and drives the wheel around as well. You push down with both feet at the same time, and then you push away with both hands.”

The technique isn’t hard to learn with practice, Wagner said. In fact, riders have to watch their speeds going downhill, he said.

“On the big [bouncers], they almost propel you up the hill, they go so fast,” Wagner said.

Still, WhymCycles are safe, as they have been ridden by thousands of students, said Wagner, who is a K-8 substitute teacher in Davis and Sacramento schools. Prior to being a substitute, he worked for an investment company and sheet fabrication company.

Though Wagner has found a market for his WhymCycles by word of mouth, he said his principle motivation is to “get his creative juices flowing.”

“I’m a person who likes to have some sort of a project going,” he said.

“From Spoke to Sprocket: A Look at Bike Culture” will be open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on the south patio of the Memorial Union on Tuesday only. For more information about the future California Bicycle Museum, go to groups.dcn.org/cbm.

 

PATRICK McCARTNEY can be reached at campus@californiaaggie.com.

Daily Calendar

TODAY

 

Kim Epifano Dance workshop

10:30 a.m. to noon

University Club

Learn how to dance while feeling the air at this free Chinese movement workshop. Contact Lynette Hunter to reserve space at lhunter@ucdavis.edu.

 

Soul food talk

1:30 to 3:30 p.m.

3201 Hart

This talk will discuss soul food and African American conversations about it. This event is part of Black Family Week.

 

Voice studio recital

3:30 to 5 p.m.

115 Music

This free concert will feature voice students Justin Montigne, Zoila Muñoz and Bharati Soman.

 

Make Your Own Mantra

4 p.m.

The House

Relax with students at The House at this event. The House is an on-campus peer mental wellness center.

 

Petronius lecture

4 p.m.

53A Olson

Massimo Fusillo, professor from the University of LAquila, will give a talk titledPetronius and the Contemporary New Picaresque Novel: Problems of Genealogy and Genre.

 

Zhang Ailing’s works

5 to 7 p.m.

University Club

Experts will discuss writer Zhang Ailing’s early years in Shanghai and Hong Kong, and her collaboration with Shanghai composer Zhu Jian’er. Contact Lynette Hunter to reserve space at lhunter@ucdavis.edu.

 

ASUCD budget hearings

5 to 7:50 p.m.

Memorial Union Garrison Room

See what next year holds in store for your favorite ASUCD unit.

 

UCD Dance team clinic

6:30 to 9:30 p.m.

Upper Hickey Gym

Want to become a UCD dance team member? Find out what it takes at this open clinic. This is the last clinic before tryouts.

 

D-Q University 101

7 p.m.

234 Wellman

Learn more about this Native American college from a student panel.

 

Documentary screening

7 p.m.

1322 Storer

This documentary features footage and pictures from children in the Brazilian Amazon.

 

Birdstrike Theater show

7 to 9 p.m.

Griffin Lounge, Memorial Union

Laugh midterms away with this on-campus student improv troupe.

 

OpenStreetMap founder talk

7 to 9 p.m.

1006 Geidt

Steve Coast, founder of the OpenStreetMap project, will talk about his free online global map project. Free pizza will be served.

 

Local Tones concert

8 p.m.

1100 Social Sciences and Humanities

This UCD a cappella concert will feature The Spokes and The Afterglow.

 

Keep a Child Alive

8 p.m.

ARC Ballroom

Come to a benefit dinner celebrating the African diaspora sponsored by the Pan-African Student Organization. Enjoy a night of poetry, music, food and dance. Tickets are $10 at the Freeborn ticket office and $15 at the door. All profits go to Keep a Child Alive.

 

American Pastime and student film screening

8 p.m.

194 Chemistry

The Asian American Film Festival wraps up with this movie and a student film contest.

 

Dance party fundraiser

9 p.m.

Delta of Venus

Support the Bike Church at this dance party with local DJs, a bike raffle and other goodies for sale.

 

SATURDAY

 

Rummage sale fundraiser

All day

Fifth and C Streets

Support the Davis Farm to School Connection, which provides gardens at schools, school recycling programs and cooking classes.

 

UCD Dance team tryouts

9 a.m.

Upper Hickey Gym

Want to become a UCD dance team member? Prove yourself to join this nationally ranked team.

 

ASUCD budget hearings

9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.

DeCarli Room, Memorial Union

See what next year holds in store for your favorite ASUCD unit.

 

Linux Installfest

10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

260 South Silo

Bring your computer to this event, and volunteers will help you install and configure the Linux operating system. RSVP required at least 24 hours in advance. For details and to register, visit www.lugod.org/if.

 

Graduate student piano recital

2 p.m.

115 Music

Katerina Frank and Peter Hill will give this free piano concert. Works include two-piano and four-hand works by John Adams and Schubert.

 

UC Davis Gospel Choir concert

7 p.m.

Freeborn Hall

This concert includes African and African American choral music, including contemporary and traditional gospel, spirituals, hymns and anthems. Tickets are $14 adults, $7 students and children.

 

SUNDAY

 

Cheer team tryouts

9 a.m.

Upper Hickey Gym

See if you can make the cut and join the UCD Cheer team! Open to everyone.

 

Band-uh-thon fundraiser

11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Central Park

Support the Aggie Band-Uh! This fundraiser includes a raffle, silent auction, live performances, snacks and kidsactivities. Tickets are $1.

 

ASUCD budget hearings

11 a.m. to 4:10 p.m.

Mee Room, Memorial Union

See what next year holds in store for your favorite ASUCD unit.

 

Stompfest

1 to 5 p.m.

Freeborn Hall

Celebrate Black Family Week with this fun and exciting performance.

 

Gospel Extravaganza Banquet

5:30 to 9 p.m.

Alumni Center

Conclude Black Family Week with this banquet dinner.

 

UC Davis Symphony Orchestra8 p.m.Mondavi Center Jackson HallListen to this talented student orchestra. Works will include composers Mussorgsky, Wagner and Berlioz. Tickets are $16/13/10 adults and $8/6.50/5 students and children.

 

To receive placement in the AGGIE DAILY CALENDAR, e-mail dailycal@californiaaggie.com or stop by 25 Lower Freeborn by noon the day prior to your event. Due to space constraints, all event descriptions are subject to editing, and priority will be given to events that are free of charge and geared toward the campus community. XXX

Correction

In Wednesday’s article “Parks and facilities outreach meeting to be held tonight,the date of the meeting was incorrect. The meeting will take place May 20 at 7 p.m. The Aggie regrets the error.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Walker named DeYoung’s successor as women’s golf head coach

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Kathy DeYoung built the program with her own hands. Now, she is passing it on.

Anne Walker, the current associate head coach at California, will assume the helm of the UC Davis women’s golf program on July 1. She will succeed DeYoung, who brought the sport to UC Davis in 2005 and is retiring after coaching at the university for 30 years.

“The program’s in perfect shape, and we’re bringing in somebody really good to take over,DeYoung said.Now I’ll know what it’s like to be a spectator again. I’ll miss the daily interaction with the [student athletes], but this is the right time for me and for the program.

“Im thrilled to be given the opportunity, Walker said in a press release. “Kathy has built a strong foundation for the program to be successful, and I look forward to continuing those efforts.

A former golf standout at Cal, Walker has been coaching at her alma mater since 2002. During her tenure, the Golden Bears have had three top-five national finishes, all of which came from 2004 to 2006.

As a player, the Lanarkshire, Scotland native became Cal’s first All-Pacific-10 honoree as a freshman, and she was a first-team Pac-10 All-Academic choice for three years. As a senior, Walker was also an Academic All-District VIII pick.

“We are delighted that Anne is going to be joining UC Davis, said Associate Athletics Director Bob Bullis. “She has great coaching experience and I believe she will take the team from where Kathy has gotten it in its three years and keep moving forward with it.

 

MICHAEL GEHLKEN can be reached at sports@californiaaggie.com. 

Track preview

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Event: Big West Conference Championships

Host: Cal State Northridge

Where: Matador Track – Northridge

When: Today and Saturday, all day

Who to watch: Aggies junior Polly Gnepa was named the Big West Conference Mens Track Athlete of the Week on Wednesday for his record-breaking performance in the 110 meter hurdles at the Aggie Twilight last weekend.

Gnepa crossed the finish line in 14.01 seconds, breaking the school record by one hundredth of a second. The Turlock, Calif. native is the first to receive conference Male Athlete of the Week honors for the Aggies this season and has already qualified for NCAA Division I West Region Championships.

Did you know? Gnepa wasn’t the only Aggie to make history in the hurdles. Sirena Williams broke her previous school record in the 100 hurdles with her run of 13.93 seconds.

Preview: The mercury will be rising this weekend to triple digits as the eight Big West Conference teams square off for an automatic bid to the NCAA Division I Championships in June.

The eight Big West teams include three-time-host and defending champion Cal State Northridge. UC Davis, Cal Poly, Cal State Fullerton, UC Irvine, Cal State Long Beach, UC Riverside, UC Santa Barbara and Pacific.

As a first-year member of the conference, UC Davis will be looking to dethrone Cal State Northridge, the three-time defending league champion.

Besides conference leaders Gnepa and Williams, junior Micah Grant and senior Natalie Russell are jumping a few more hurdles in the 400, making their way to the UC Davis all-time list.

Grant won his most recent event at the Aggie Twilight with a run of 48.30. Russell, meanwhile, set a new personal best with a 1:01.93, jumping her to No. 6 on the all-time list.

A three-event starter for the Aggies, junior thrower Matt Swarbrick recently set a personal record in the shot put that moved him to 8th all-time.

“I’ve been battling for two years,Swarbrick said.Going through a lot of training trying to PR [personal record] in the shot put, and it finally happened. Right now I’m throwing in three events and I know you can’t be the best in all three but I’m going to try to.

Swarbrick also had encouraging words for freshman Ed Orgon, who recently PR’d in the hammer throw.

“Eddie is going to be a great thrower. He has a lot of raw talent right now but with a little more technique he’ll be awesome, Swarbrick said.

In women’s long distance, senior Kim Conley has paced the conference in the 5,000 meter run after setting the school record on May 4. Conley is another three-event participant, running in the 800, 1,500 and her forte, the 5,000.

For the past three years, the Aggies had been forced to participate in the Division I Independent Championships, waiting for a chance to compete for the Big West title.

UC Davis women’s rugby advances to Elite Eight

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It’s a hard-knock life, but somebody’s got to do it.

That somebody is the UC Davis women’s rugby team. In fact, the Aggies have had some recent national success, and have been taking names in the process.

In only 10 years of existence, the UC Davis women’s rugby club, the youngest program in the Northern California Rugby Football Union, has made it to the Sweet 16 three different times, including a trip to the Final Four in 2007 and an Elite Eight bid in 2008.

“It is a pretty big deal because there is no NCAA women’s rugby right now, so the level that we are playing at is the highest level for college women to play at, sophomore Maggie Mello said.

But this is not a team of purely rugby players.

“I played three sports in high school. Last year I came in as a freshman and I was on the UC Rowing team, which was ICAA,sophomore Delaney Chapman said.I decided not to continue rowing but I had heard about how competitive the rugby team was and that they were a team that had made it to the Final Four the previous year.

And competitive they were omit this season. The Aggies were 5-2 overall with a 4-1 post in league while playing against premier teams such as Stanford, Reno, Chico State, California and Humboldt State.

“We play in the toughest division in the country,head coach Corey Pope said.

They succeed in it, too. Stanford, this year’s national champion, only lost one game this entire seasoncourtesy of UC Davis.

But to obtain the success that the Aggies have had recently, a lot of work has been put in.

“My biggest thing with rugby is that we put in so much together,senior Rebecca Bruggman said. “We are out on the field every night. We have meetings all the time. We have games every weekend. We traveled five hours roundtrip to make it to Reno, and the next morning we woke up and did a fundraiser at 5 a.m. in the morning. We are a committed team and we are a family. We put so much of ourselves into it.

This tight-knit, committed team is constantly looking for new members.

“We accept women of all sizes, all different backgrounds,said sophomore Thania Balcorta.We need tiny little girls. We need big tall girls. We need sturdier girls. We accept girls of all shapes. Other sports are very exclusive but rugby we accept everybody and anyone.

The team holds non-contact touch rugby on the Russell Intramural Field on Tuesdays at 6 p.m. New players are urged to bring cleats and comfortable running shoesbut no experience is necessary, as demonstrated by sophomore Julia Buchfuhrer.

“I came on as a rookie knowing absolutely nothing about rugby and they just basically took me in,said Buchfuhrer. “[They] taught me everything from the basics to what a scrum is and all these different things. I was actually able to become starting A-side player, which I think is just amazing that someone can come into this sport knowing nothing and just get to a level where you are playing nationally at such a high competitive level. That’s one thing I really like about this sport.

“I feel women can play rugby from all different backgrounds,Balcorta said.I think it’s just the desire to just go out there, get a group of girls who are really cool to hang out with and just exercise. Tackling is an additional thing that is just so much fun.

While the high-camaraderie team is having a great season, there will be plenty of turnover from this year to next. Fourteen seniors – nearly half the squad – will be departing this year. Yet, the close bunch is still optimistic about the future of the team.

“I am just hoping that next year we build a new family,Bruggman said.

 

MAX ROSENBLUM can be reached at sports@californiaaggie.com.

 

Baseball preview

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Teams: UC Davis vs. No. 11 UC Irvine

Records: Aggies, 31-19 (10-8); Anteaters, 34-14 (10-8)

Where: Dobbins Stadium

When: Today at 2:30 p.m.; Saturday at 1 p.m.; Sunday at 1 p.m.

Who to watch: After a few lackluster weeks at the plate, junior catcher Jake Jefferies has jumped right back into the hunt for .400. The Merced, Calif. native went 2-for-4 in the Aggieswin over No. 13 California on Tuesday, and is once again the Big West Conference’s leading hitter with a .399 clip coming into this weekend’s series.

On Wednesday, it was also announced that the Aggie backstop is one of 12 semifinalists for the prestigious 2008 Coleman Company-Johnny Bench Award, presented to the nation’s top collegiate catcher.

Did you know? With its 6-5 win over UC Riverside last Saturday, UC Davis reached 30 wins in a season for the first time since 2004, when the Aggies finished 37-15. The win over the Highlanders last weekend was also UC Davis10th official Big West victory.

Preview: Basically, it all comes down to this for the Aggies.

After an impressive first 50 games in the program’s first official season in the Big West, UC Davis will be playing the most important series of the year against one of the best teams in the nation.

The Anteaters, who scored a season-high 18 runs against Loyola Marymount on Wednesday, and the Aggies are currently locked up in a three-way tie for fourth place in the conference standings. UC Davis needs to make a statement this weekend to keep its NCAA playoff hopes alive.

“It’s a big series for both clubs, and one team is going to have to come out of it ahead,Aggie head coach Rex Peters said.Both clubs are sitting at 10-8 in the conference, and we’re trying to finish in the top four or five so that we can be in consideration for postseason opportunities.

“We’ve got to win at least two of three this weekend and the following weekend for us to get the regional bid that we’ve been wanting to get, Jefferies said.

Today’s pitching matchup between junior Anteater right-hander Scott Gorgen and senior Aggie right-hander Eddie Gamboa will be one of the most anticipated Big West duels of the year. Gorgen (10-2, 1.79) and Gamboa (6-3, 2.79) rank third and fourth, respectively, in ERA among conference pitchers. Gorgen also leads the league with 101 strikeouts in 90 1/3 innings.

“Scott’s got really good stuff and his numbers back it up,Peters said.He’s probably the best pitcher in the conference. We’ll definitely have our hands full with him.

Sophomore Anteater outfielder Dillon Bell will be a challenge for the Aggie pitching staff this weekend after coming off a 9-for-18, five-RBI week that helped UC Irvine to a 3-1 record and earned him Easton Big West Player of the Week honors.

Like Jefferies, sophomore Aggie third baseman Ty Kelly is chasing down the .400 batting average plateau. The Tracy, Calif. native is hitting .391 on this season, second in the Big West.

Booty call

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I can usually get a laugh when I tell people I was first educated as part of a failed governmental experiment. Then, when I try to explain further that my unorthodox instruction led directly to me becoming a raging nerd and, indirectly, to a guy getting punched in the face four years later, I’m invariably treated to an incredulous stare. But it’s true, all of it.

At the tender age of about five my parents elected to deprive me of a decent, God-fearing public-school experience and tossed me instead into the Apple Project. Like most government projects the program was under-funded, so instead of buildings we got what essentially amounted to an educational trailer park. Better yet, Apple was designed to teach students from K-12 but was only allotted threebuildings, suggesting to any mathematician that something was awry. The kicker was the free-form nature of the curriculum, which resulted in me learning approximately zilch during my formative K-3 years.

I’d transferred by fourth grade, but the result of my unique education and a district swap was that I knew nothing and no one. My earliest memory from the new school involves me running with a fellow reject, our middle fingers extended, shoutingFuck the Earth for all its worth!” These days I’d call it edgy performance art, but at the time it merely served to make us even less popular.

Years passed, and I maintained my awkward status quo. I had 4.5 close friends, issues with 1.8 bullies and an even billion pubescent voice explosions. As time flowed I donned stylish neck gear and a pair of glasses any 73-year-old man would be proud to sport, leaving me a far cry from the achingly handsome portrait gracing this page. Fortunately I developed some acne to deflect stares from my greasy hair. It wasn’t until seventh grade that things really came together, because seventh grade brought me Kelci Miller.

Kelci was everything a thirteen-year-old girl should be and more, and I avoided her like the plague lest she learn of my affections. This proved difficult, however, when the two of us ended up paired together on a four-student field trip to the Mojave. Despite my social awkwardness we actually hit it off rather well, which made subsequent events all the more unfortunate.

Since the various students in our seventh grade science class had split up and gone on separate trips, our teacher took dozens of photos in order to assemble a slideshow collage of the whole experience. Through an interesting lapse in judgment, she opted against letting students from the trips annotate their own pictures. Instead, labelers were chosen at random, or in my case, via demonic interference.

You see, nestled inside the slideshow was a rather compromising photo. I will forever maintain that I was staring, very intently, at a small Saguaro cactus I’d found. I grudgingly admit, though, that to the untrained eye I mightmighthave been staring, very intently, at Kelci’s ass. That, of course, was the gist of the photo description that was read gleefully by one Nick Groble to an entire middle school assembly.

You’ve never heard such teasing. Months passed, filled with such gems as “Cade the ASStonishing man!” andTake a picture, it’ll lASSt longer!” So when I tracked down the caption’s perpetrator and delivered a mighty blow for Truth, Justice and a Nerd’s Right to Live in Peace, I really couldn’t be blamed.

I can never decide the best way to end this story. On one hand, my dad’s suggestion that perhaps Mr. Groble had earned his face-full of fist was a victory in itself. Dad didn’t think I needed punishment beyond the school’s mandatory one-day extension to my winter break, a fate considerably better than death. But I think the real triumph lies in the fact that Nick earned himself a suspension solely by getting punched in the teeth. If that’s not an achievement for nerd-kind, I don’t know what is.

 

CADE GRUNST wants you to send your middle school horror stories to cade@ucdavis.edu.

Casual casuality

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You may recall me writing on apathy the other week; I really don’t care for that subject anymore. I have recently re-attuned my lifestyle to the words of one of my foremost role models in life, Kermit the Frog: “Time’s fun when you’re having flies.” In non-frogian terms, I take this to mean something like “take nothing seriously.” You see, puns provide a much-needed relief from the toils of life’s coils, and I am loyal to their use, regardless of the situation at hand.

Take for instance, a severe case of diarrhea. The average level-browed and dreary patron would wallow in his despair, and would insist upon making this unfortunate sickness yet drearier with his negative attitude. What he fails to see while he mopes around the perimeter of his toilet is that there is a positive resonation to his situation. For one, you are on the better end of the exchange between you and the toilet, so be grateful – that poor ceramic bowl truly earns his name by enduring the countless “toils” you put him through.

Likewise, I don’t despair because I am poor – at least I’m not “roop,” because if there’s one thing worse than being poor, it’s being poor and backwards.

Don’t worry, currency is not the cure – you can be coy without coins, paid without paper. Being affluent can be a flu; when you’re sick for pay, you pay the price. When you’re rich, you may hit the bottom, but when you’re at the bottom, you’re rich, for it is at the bottom, when exposed and independent, that you can spend time discovering the economy of your inner-being. And while the poor may ask for change, the rich ask only for continuity.

The crux of my crit here is that maybe the worst life has to offer is brightest in a different light. If you are a copy-bitch at an office, for example, you may find consolation in this tidbit: Santa’s helpers are subordinate clauses. At first glance, you may be upset, but please, do not belittle the importance of subordinate clauses. If not for their humble existence.

You see? You were suspended in suspense, because my clause was incomplete – much like your boss would be without your general bitching and bumbling.

Many would argue that getting old is among life’s worst progressions. On the contrary, I would say that growing old is life’s only progression, and thus great in its uniqueness. I may or may not change my mind when I reach the other end of life’s parabola and have to return to diapers. In any case, it seems that the old shrink rather than grow, but that’s an issue concerned with wording, and I clearly hold no stock in the importance of lingual subtleties.

How is it that getting older is a natural process? Foremost, anything processed is not natural. Secondly, nature does not grow in age; age grows in nature. Nature grows leaves, and leaves leave their trees as do we; nature nurtures its nubile infants, as do we. But as we age we engage in sage wages with meaning, and nature does not.

We question why we grow older, and we grow older in our answers. This will become immediately obvious to you if you are over 50 years old and try to slog your way through this column. But then again, if it becomes immediately obvious to you, you probably have not made it this far, so perhaps I am wasting valuable syllables.

But even post-life experiences can be lightly approached, like death, which as you may imagine, can only be described as indescribable. Are our arduous casualties casual? Well, I suppose we do pass away with minimal fuss sometimes, but those who quietly roll over and die are the loudest of all, for actions speak louder than words.

Likewise, there simply is no way to pass away without passively wasting a chance to live longer. From womb to tomb, we casually cover ground, then ground covers us.

You see – life is funny!

 

ZACK CROCKETT can be reached at ztcrockett@ucdavis.edu or ztcrockett@ucdavis can be reached at ZACK CROCKETT.

Dining in Davis: Raja’s Indian Cuisine

Just like the hot Indian men in my life (of which there are naan), Rajas Indian Cuisine takes the Indian cake in spiciness.

Having tried a couple of the other Indian and Nepalese places in downtown like Indyna Bistro and Kathmandu Kitchen, I was itching to try Raja’s. But to be honest, I was turned off by the subpar wraps they offer at Davis Farmers Market. Still, I was determined to give them a chance to make amends with my taste buds.

I didn’t swing by during their lunch buffet hours, which are Monday through Friday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. or Saturday from noon to 3 p.m., and missed out on their $7.95 plus tax deal. I stopped by around 6 p.m. and my friend and I were the only ones up there above the Education Abroad Center.

To ease our loneliness, the sweetest host/server was there to greet us, and let us wander over to the seat of our choice either inside or outside on the patio. Were he not over 50 years of age, I would have asked him if he came with an order of basmati rice or naan.

However accommodating he was, the interior of the restaurant is a bit off-putting and cold. The walls are painted slabs of white on green, or what look like an extremely poor interpretation of Rothko. So, I opted to sit outside on the covered wooden patio and watch bikers pass by on Third Street.

The nice man who doubled as host and server brought us menus and even checked to see that he handed them to us right side up. How many times have you been handed an upside down menu?

My friend settled on the baigan bartha, a clay oven roasted eggplant cooked with onions, costing $8.95. He also ordered vegetarian samosas, three vegetable-stuffed triangle dumplings, costing a mere $4.50. I decided on the chicken tikka masala, clay oven roasted and braised pieces of chicken in a masala sauce, costing $10.95. Enticed by the picture on the door, we also ordered amango lassidrink.

We started with our vegetable samosa appetizers, which were really delicious and came with a sweet red sauce and a spicy green sauce. Too bad there weren’t more than three of them, but I can’t complain since it only cost us $4.50.

When the rest of our food came, in a timely fashion, the host/server brought us both regular and garlic naan, without us requesting it. The food portions were reasonable but what really struck me was the spicy chicken tikka masala. The masala was actually like a curry, thick and spicy, unlike the kind offered at Indyna Bistro or Kathmandu Kitchen. The first bite was very savory and I was surprised by the bold flavor. Where is that type of flavor in the wraps they offer at farmers market?

My one complaint is the texture of the chicken. I’m not sure if it was because it was oven roasted and braised, but it tasted more like hard fish than chicken. The baigan bartha was tasty and thick also, but not nearly as good as baigan barthas offered elsewhere. My basmati rice was mediocre and a little bit hard.

The mango lassi was also thick, which must be their secret mantra. It was very sweet and tasty and highly recommendable, but be sure to have a glass of water by your side.

There are a wide variety of options at Raja’s, including more than 16 vegetarian specialties, including my friend’s baigan bartha. By the time we left, there were more people trickling in to get a taste of Raja’s too.

Raja’s was an interesting choice, but I’m not sure I would jump to it again to appease my Indian food cravings. Though I would really like to take the sweet host/server man home with me.

 

ANN KIM can be reached at features@californiaaggie.com. XXX

 

Sidebar:

 

In review:

Raja’s Indian Cuisine

207 Third St.

Hours: Lunch: Monday through Friday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.; Saturday from noon to 3 p.m.; Dinner: Monday through Saturday from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Food:

Ambience: ½

Price: $-$$

 

Key

Food and ambience quality

 

I’m eating here everyday

Almost like eating at home

Better than my roommate’s cooking

Only if I’m starving

 

Budget

 

$$$$ chancellor $20

$$$ professor $15-$20

$$ graduate student/alum $10-$15

$ undergraduate $5-$10 XXX

 

 

 

 

 

Police Briefs

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MONDAY

It’s all those college loans

Individual was seen sleeping in an alleyway on C Street.

 

Getting catalytic crafty

A catalytic converter was sawed off on Vista Way.

 

I’ve fallen and I can’t get up

A customer fell off a chair and was breathing but not responding on West Covell Boulevard.

 

Looks like it, smells like it

Individual thought someone was smoking marijuana on I Street.

 

International man of mystery

Individual reported international passport was missing on Cowell Boulevard.

 

TUESDAY

Desperate times call for desperate measures

Unknown subject rang the reporting party’s doorbell, tried the door knob and tapped on the windows on Barony Place.

 

Champagne campaign

A customer claimed to be deaf and attempted to purchase $6,000 in champagne on G Street.

 

Top secret

Individual was in the bushes talking on her cell phone on Research Park Drive.

 

Myspace mayhem

Individual asked an officer to look at myspace.com page in relation to threats.

 

Road trip?

Unknown suspect took money out of an ATM in Oregon and Washington.

 

WEDNESDAY

I better not get charged

The red light camera was continually going off on Mace Boulevard and Chiles Road.

 

Weirdo

Unknown individual went up to neighbors fence, whistled and then went back into own backyard on Humboldt Avenue.

 

Can man

Subject walked up to reporting party’s home and asked kids if they saw his can.

 

The Davis tumbleweed

A tree limb was in the street on East Covell Boulevard and Alhambra Drive.

 

THURSDAY

Wednesday night is the new Friday night

A complaint was made about a loud party on Cascade Place.

 

POLICE BRIEFS are compiled by ANN KIM from the public logs at the Davis Police Department and represent the official version of what happened. This segment appears Tuesdays and Thursdays. The DPD crime blotter can be viewed at cityofdavis.org/police/log. XXX

Davis Bike Church to hold first fundraiser tonight

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The Davis Bike Church will be holding its first fundraiser in its four-year history tonight at Delta of Venus.

A line-up of local DJs, including Mr. Glass, Dogtones and the Bike Church’s own Deacon Morgan, will keep the turntables spinning for the evening.

Other members of the Bike Church will also be providing entertainment.

“We will probably have a bicycle dance competition with a prize and there may be another showing of the Bicycle Passover skit,said Jason Moore, a UC Davis graduate student and member of the Bike Ministry, in an e-mail interview.

A bicycle dance competition is exactly what it sounds like: dancing with and on bicycles. According to Moore, a panel of expert judges will be looking to reward the most innovative dance.

Put another way, the plan is tobasically rock out and have fun while celebrating the bike!” said Siobhan Braybrook, a graduate student and member of the Bike Ministry in an e-mail interview.

Bike Church members will also be holding a raffle, with tickets costing $3 each.

“The prizes will be custom bicycles built by our ministers, bicycle accessories (bells, lights, etc.), Pachamama Fair Trade Coffee and Bike Church merchandise,Moore said.

Braybrook said there would be two bikes being raffled off, which aresuper flash-looking, not trashy Magnas.

The Bike Church will also be selling an assortment of Bike Church gear to raise money, including patches, buttons, stickers and two varieties of T-shirts. One shirt design shows Jesus with a bicycle and asks the question,What would Jesus ride?” while the other depicts the Hindu elephant god Ganesh wielding an array of bike tools.

The Bike Church is hoping to raise $2,000 over the course of the evening. The Bike Ministry has arranged for matching funds from private donors, up to an additional $2,000.

The money will be put towards theGreat Pedal Forward,the Bike Church’s project to update and expand their current facilities. It will includeconstruction of two weather-proof, secure domes, construction of lean-tos for bicycle storage, solar electrification [for lights, music, computers and tools], a bicycle fence and an after-hours self-service station,Moore said.

The Bike Church is also writing a handbook and working to receive official recognition as a nonprofit organization.

While this will be the Bike Church’s first fundraiser, they are no strangers to throwing parties. The Bike Church will also be holding its annual Burning Bike Festival later this month.

Tonight’s festivities begin at 9 at Delta of Venus.

 

J. DANA STUSTER can be reached at city@californiaaggie.com.XXX