Inventory of the University Archives Photographs AR-013
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Noise Abatement Procedures
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, DAVIS BERKELEY • DAVIS • IRVINE • LOS ANGELES • MERCED • RIVERSIDE • SAN DIEGO • SAN FRANCISCO SANTA BARBARA • SANTA CRUZ TRANSPORTATION AND PARKING SERVICES ONE SHIELDS AVENUE TELEPHONE: (530) 752-8277 DAVIS, CALIFORNIA 95616 FAX: (530) 752-8875 July 8, 2009 CC09-023 TO: Pilots utilizing University Airport (KEDU) RE: University Airport Noise Abatement Program This letter serves to update and clarify the Noise Abatement Program for University Airport and supersedes all previous letters pertaining to recommend noise abatement procedures. The University of California, Davis intends that University Airport be regarded as a “Good Neighbor” by the surrounding community. For pilots, this means minimizing the noise impact of flight operations on adjacent residential areas for all arrivals and departures, as well as for training/proficiency flights. Compliance with noise abatement procedures, while strongly encouraged, is always voluntary and operational safety always takes precedence. Generally The residential area north of the airport (bounded by Russell Boulevard on the south) is the most noise sensitive area in the vicinity of the airport. For arrivals, a well executed left hand rectangular traffic pattern, as described in the FAA Aeronautical Information Manual, is generally sufficient for noise abatement procedures. Straight in approaches to Runway 35 are also acceptable. Runway 17 departures require no special procedures. Runway 35 departures should comply with bullet point 7 below. University Airport does NOT have a designated calm wind runway. Pilots are expected to take off and land into the prevailing wind. In the event of a calm wind condition, pilots are encouraged to include noise abatement considerations in the selection of a departure or arrival runway. -
Ceqa Findings Page 2
Attachment 9 CALIFORNIA ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY ACT FINDINGS IN CONNECTION WITH THE APPROVAL OF THE CHEMISTRY ADDITION AND FIRST FLOOR RENOVATION PROJECT, DAVIS CAMPUS I. ADDENDUM TO THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA DAVIS 2018 LONG RANGE DEVELOPMENT PLAN FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT REPORT FOR THE BAINER HALL AND CHEMISTRY COMPLEX ADDITION AND RENOVATIONS PROJECT DATED FEBRUARY 2019 The Board of Regents of the University of California (“University”), as the lead agency pursuant to the California Environmental Quality Act (“CEQA”), prepared an Addendum (“Addendum February 2019”) to the Final Environmental Impact Report (“EIR”) for the University of California, Davis (“UC Davis”) 2018 Long Range Development Plan (“2018 LRDP”) (State Clearinghouse No. 2017012008) for the Bainer Hall and Chemistry Complex Addition and Renovations Project (“Project”) to document that no subsequent or supplemental EIR to the 2018 LRDP EIR is necessary to evaluate the environmental impacts of the Project pursuant to CEQA. The 2018 LRDP EIR was certified by the University in July 2018. The Addendum was completed in February 2019 (“Addendum February 2019”) in compliance with the California Environmental Quality Act, Public Resources Code Sections 21000, et seq. (“CEQA”) and the State CEQA Guidelines, Title 14, California Code of Regulations, Sections 15000 et seq. ("CEQA Guidelines"). Addendum February 2019 evaluated whether any of CEQA’s conditions requiring the preparation of a subsequent or supplemental EIR in connection with the Project are present. The University has examined the Project, in light of the environmental analysis contained in the 2018 LRDP EIR, and has determined that all of the potential environmental effects of the Project are fully evaluated in the 2018 LRDP EIR. -
Ryken Grattet August 2020
Ryken Grattet August 2020 Professor & Chair Department of Sociology University of California One Shields Avenue Davis, California 95616 e-mail: [email protected] EDUCATION Ph.D. Sociology, University of California, Santa Barbara, 1994. M.A. Sociology, University of California, Santa Barbara, 1989. B.S. Sociology, Western Washington University, 1986. EMPLOYMENT 2009-Present Professor of Sociology, University of California, Davis. 2017-Present Chair, Department of Sociology, University of California, Davis. 2020 Visiting Professor, King School of Law, University of California, Davis 2017-2020 Adjunct Fellow, Public Policy Institute of California, San Francisco and Sacramento. 2012-2017 Research Fellow, Public Policy Institute of California, San Francisco and Sacramento. 2009 (summer) Visiting Professor. Underwood International College, Yonsei University, Seoul, Korea. 2001-2009 Associate Professor of Sociology, University of California, Davis. 2005-2006 Assistant Secretary (A), Office of Research, California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. 2000 Faculty Fellow, University of California Washington Center. 1996-2001 Assistant Professor of Sociology, University of California, Davis. 1996 Appointed Faculty, Women’s and Gender Studies Center, Louisiana State University. 1994-1996 Assistant Professor of Sociology, Louisiana State University. AREAS OF SPECIALIZATION Law Organizations Criminology Deviance Methods Public Policy AWARDS • Distinguished Scholar Award. 2018. Division on Terrorism and Bias Crime. American Society of Criminology. Ryken Grattet--2 • Chair-elect, Chair, and Past-Chair. 2012-15. American Sociological Association, Sociology of Law Section. • Social Sciences Dean’s Innovation Award. 2012. College of Letters and Sciences, Division of Social Sciences. University of California, Davis. • Distinguished Scholarly Public Service Award. 2010. University of California, Davis. • Distinguished Article Award. 2007. American Sociological Association, Sociology of Law Section. -
Aggie 20101014
serving the uc davis campus and community since 1915 volume 129, number 97 www.theaggie.org thursday, october 14, 2010 Police departments increase patrol Fall enforcement expanded to monitor partying By SARAHNI PECSON The Safe Party Initiative is a program on Aggie News Writer many college campuses to address high- risk drinking. In addition to the police de- With about 4,400 freshmen on campus for partments, Student Health Services (SHS), their first college quarter, Davis police offi- Campus Violence Prevention Program, cers are working extra hours to keep alco- Student Housing and Student Judicial Affairs hol-related incidents down. (SJA) are among the campus and com- The UC Davis Police Department and the munity groups involved in this initiative. city of Davis Police Department are plac- “The beginning of the academic year ing extra patrols on campus and downtown. brings a rise in excessive drinking, un- Categorized as “fall enforcement”, extra of- derage drinking, large parties, vandalism ficers are assigned to these locations for the and the number of people who visit bars,” first six weeks of the quarter. said Mandy Li, alcohol, tobacco and oth- Davis PD issued two extra foot patrols and er drug risk reduction coordinator at SHS. one officer in a vehicle in downtown drinking In the first four weeks of the quarter, there areas. There are also one to three bike offi- have been 64 noise complaints, six arrests, cers that patrol downtown during bar hours. three minors in possession citations, two “Freshmen students don’t have ex- SJA referrals and one DUI arrest. -
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Before the Energy Facility Siting Council of the Stat
1 BEFORE THE ENERGY FACILITY SITING COUNCIL OF THE STATE OF OREGON 2 3 In the Matter of the Request for FRIENDS OF THE COLUMBIA GORGE, 4 Amendment 4 of the Site Certificate for ET AL.’S REQUEST FOR A the SUMMIT RIDGE WIND FARM CONTESTED CASE PROCEEDING 5 6 7 I. INTRODUCTION 8 Pursuant to OAR 345-027-0071, Friends of the Columbia Gorge, Oregon Wild, the 9 Oregon Natural Desert Association, Central Oregon LandWatch, and the East Cascades 10 11 Audubon Society (collectively, “Requesters”) request that the Energy Facility Siting Council 12 (“EFSC” or “Council”) conduct a contested case proceeding on the Request for Amendment 4 of 13 the Site Certificate for the Summit Ridge Wind Farm (“Project”), and allow Requesters to 14 participate as parties in the proceeding.1 15 16 It has been nearly ten years since the preliminary application for this Project was filed, 17 and nearly eight years since the Project was first approved. As a point of reference, in 2009, 18 when the Project was first applied for, Ted Kulongoski was Governor of Oregon, and Barack 19 Obama was in his first year as President of the United States. Since then, much has changed. The 20 Project has been abandoned by the initial developer, sold and transferred to a new owner 21 22 (“Pattern Energy,” “Pattern,” or “Applicant”),2 and the Project’s deadlines for beginning and 23 1 24 Requesters incorporate into this Request for Contested Case their February 21, 2019 comment letter to the Council (attached hereto as Exhibit A), the February 21, 2019 comment letter of Shawn 25 Smallwood, PhD to the Council (attached hereto as Exhibit B), and the oral comments of Friends’ Senior Staff Attorney Nathan Baker at the February 22, 2019 public hearing. -
Unitrans Records AR-071
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8gt5tm1 No online items Inventory of the Unitrans Records AR-071 Finding aid created by Archives and Special Collections staff University of California, Davis Library, University Archives 2018 1st Floor, Shields Library, University of California 100 North West Quad Davis, CA [email protected] URL: https://www.library.ucdavis.edu/archives-and-special-collections Inventory of the Unitrans Records AR-071 1 AR-071 Language of Material: English Contributing Institution: University of California, Davis Library, University Archives Title: Unitrans Records Creator: Unitrans (University transport system) Identifier/Call Number: AR-071 Physical Description: 4.4 linear feet Date (inclusive): 1966-2008 Abstract: Annual reports, schedules, newspaper clippings, photographs, and memorabilia documenting the history of Unitrans, the University and City of Davis bus service. Researchers should contact Special Collections to request collections, as many are stored offsite. History In the late 1960's, the Associated Students of UC Davis (ASUCD) explored possibilities for providing bus transportation to students traveling between the City of Davis and the campus. The University Transport System, or Unitrans, was founded by ASUCD and service officially began on February 28, 1968 with two London double decker buses operating on two routes. In 2008, Unitrans provided transportation with buses on 15 routes, carrying over 3 million passengers a year. Scope and Content of Collection Annual reports, schedules, newspaper clippings, photographs, and memorabilia documenting the history of Unitrans, the University and City of Davis bus service. Access Collection is open for research. Processing Information Liz Phillips encoded this finding aid with help from student assistant Aditi Sinha. -
2019 FOOTBALL OFFICIAL GAME NOTES • GAME 1: UC DAVIS at CALIFORNIA • 31 August 2019
2019 FOOTBALL OFFICIAL GAME NOTES • GAME 1: UC DAVIS at CALIFORNIA • 31 August 2019 FB SID Contact: Mark Honbo • Office: 530.752.8050 • Cell: 530.979.1744 • Email: [email protected] ABOUT TODAY’S GAME 2019 SCHEDULE UC Davis opens its 101st football season by facing its sister Aug. 31 at California .............. 3:30 p.m. school for the 10th time in school history, the second time in Berkeley, Calif. the program’s Division I era, and the first time since September Memorial Stadium (62,467) 4, 2010... The two teams also met up eight times from 1932 to 1939, with 18 other meetings against Cal’s junior varsity team (known as “Cal Ramblers”) between 1915 and 1957. Sept. 7 at San Diego ................. 2 p.m. San Diego, Calif. Torero Stadium (6,000) Who: California When: Saturday, August 31 • 3:37 p.m. Where: Berkeley, Calif. Sept. 14 vs. Lehigh .................. 7 p.m. Venue: Memorial Stadium (62,467) Davis, Calif. Listen: TuneIn (https://listen.tunein.com/ucdavis18s- UC Davis Health Stadium (10,743) chedule) Watch: Pac-12 Networks (https://pac-12.com/football/ Sept. 21 at North Dakota State . 2:30 p.m. CDT event/2019/08/31/uc-davis-california) Fargo, N.D. Gate City Bank Field at the Fargodome (19,000) Today’s Aggies-Golden Bears matchup also marks the seventh time UC Davis has faced a Pac-12 Conference member during Sept. 28 vs. Montana ................. 1 p.m. the D-I or D-I reclassification era, along with Stanford (2005, Davis, Calif. 2014, 2018), Cal (2010), Arizona State (2011) and Oregon UC Davis Health Stadium (10,743) (2016).. -
City of Davis Bicycle Plan 2009
CITY OF DAVIS BICYCLE PLAN 2009 City of Davis Bicycle Advisory Commission In February of 2005, the Davis City Council established the Bicycle Advisory Commission to address bicycle issues related to education, enforcement, engineering and encouragement. Membership of the Commission may include representatives from the general public, the Davis Bicycle Club, UCD Administration, and UCD students, among others. 2008-2009 Bicycle Advisory Commission Members John Berg Chair Jack Kenward Vice-Chair Earl Bossard Commissioner Kelli O’Neill Commissioner Alan Jackman Commissioner Virginia Matzek Commissioner Angel York Commissioner Joe Krovoza Alternate David Takemoto-Weerts Ex-Officio 2007-2008 Bicycle Advisory Commission Members John Berg Chair Jack Kenward Vice-Chair Earl Bossard Commissioner Dan Kehew Commissioner Anthony Palmere Commissioner Lise Smidth Commissioner Ken Gaines Commissioner Kelli O’Neill Alternate David Takemoto-Weerts Ex-Officio Council Liaison to the Commission Sue Greenwald Staff Liaison to the Commission Tara Goddard 2 Resolution of Adoption RESOLUTION NO._______________, SERIES 2009 RESOLUTION ADOPTING THE CITY OF DAVIS BICYCLE PLAN WHEREAS, the Metropolitan Transportation Plan supports and encourages local agencies to develop comprehensive bicycle plans consistent with the regional plan; and WHEREAS, the City of Davis Bicycle Advisory Commission (BAC) has reviewed the Bicycle Plan and recommends its adoption; and WHEREAS, the proposed Bicycle Plan is consistent with the City of Davis General Plan and General Plan environmental -
2019 FOOTBALL OFFICIAL GAME NOTES • GAME 4: UC DAVIS (2-1) Vs
2019 FOOTBALL OFFICIAL GAME NOTES • GAME 4: UC DAVIS (2-1) vs. NDSU (3-0) • 21 Sept 2019 FB SID Contact: Mark Honbo • Office: 530.752.8050 • Cell: 530.979.1744 • Email: [email protected] ABOUT TODAY’S GAME 2019 SCHEDULE In the FCS season’s first meeting between two Top-5 teams, No. Aug. 31 at California ................ L, 13-27 4/4 UC Davis visits No. 1/1-ranked and seven-time FCS-cham- Berkeley, Calif. pion North Dakota State on Saturday... The contest rekindles Memorial Stadium (62,467) what had been a brief but storied Division II playoff rivalry in the early 1980s, then what later was a four-year Great West Football Conference matchup in the mid-2000s. Sept. 7 at San Diego ............... W, 38-35 San Diego, Calif. Torero Stadium (6,000) Who: No. 1/1 North Dakota State When: Saturday, September 21 • 12:30 p.m. PDT Where: Fargo, N.D. Sept. 14 vs. Lehigh ................ W, 41-13 Venue: The FargoDome (19,000) Davis, Calif. Live Stats: StatBroadcast UC Davis Health Stadium (10,743) (http://stats.statbroadcast.com/broadcast/?id=268471) Listen: Sports 1140 on TuneIn app (https://listen.tunein.com/ucdavis18schedule) Sept. 21 at North Dakota State . 2:30 p.m. CDT Watch: NDSU All-Access (https://gobison.com/showcase?Live=2463) Fargo, N.D. Gate City Bank Field at the Fargodome (19,000) Saturday’s game is also aired on the NBC North Dakota network, with fans outside the area able to watch by subscribing to ESPN+... The free NDSU All-Access video consists of the FargoDome’s in-house feed. -
NTE Fall 2012 V5.Indd
FALL 2011 FALL 2012 THE OFFICIAL NEWSLETTER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA MARCHING BAND AND THE CAL BAND ALUMNI ASSOCIATION A Cal Bandsman overlooks Memorial Stadium and the brand new Members of the Straw Hat Band play in Ohio Stadium at the Cal vs. Ohio press box. State game on September 15, 2012. Home Sweet Home: Returning to Memorial Stadium Cal Band Visits Ohio State Trevor Ford, trumpet ’09 Sara Van Valkenburgh, clarinet ’10 Most of us can agree that it has been a crazy couple of years for This past September, fi fty members of the Cal Band had a chance Cal Football fans. At the end of the 2010 season, we said goodbye to return to the source of many beloved Cal Band traditions: Ohio to our lovely old Memorial Stadium, and then spent the 2011 season State University. We boarded a charter fl ight out of Oakland at AT&T Park, home of the San Francisco Giants. And though we Airport on a Thursday morning, along with donors and Cal alumni. were grateful to be able to spend a year in the domain of the 2010 Thursday afternoon and Friday morning allowed for some free time to (and now 2012) World Series Champions, the season seemed to lack experience Columbus, Ohio – our hotel was right downtown next to that indescribable feeling that Memorial Stadium always brought us. City Hall and other historical sights. We missed our pregame concerts in Sproul Plaza. We missed our On Friday afternoon the band was lucky enough to attend one of winding march-ups through campus. -
Towards Participation in Museum Architecture
TOWARDS PARTICIPATION IN MUSEUM ARCHITECTURE Thesis submitted for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the University of Leicester by Aikaterini Vlachaki School of Museum Studies, University of Leicester 2020 2 Abstract Towards Participation in Museum Architecture Aikaterini Vlachaki This thesis sets out to explore how museums can use the planning processes of museum buildings as a vehicle for fulfilling their social role, even before their establishment as physical entities. Considering people as experiential co-designers who hold a valuable tacit knowledge of design and museum matters, museums can transform the planning processes into a participatory endeavour. The thesis examines two examples of innovation in practice, two museum buildings built from scratch or redeveloped through participatory processes: The Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art (USA) and The Derby Silk Mill Museum of Making (UK). The first key finding of the thesis is that participatory intentions are not solely results of a purely social agenda, but also of a wider institutional agenda that could potentially seek to legitimise certain inequalities through a participatory endeavour. The research also found that the role of leadership is key for both inspiring and sustaining participatory initiatives. Another key finding is that a project widely communicating its participatory character could in fact involve similar forms and degrees of participation with a project with a less systematic approach towards its participatory nature. Additionally, the research shed more light on the systematisation of participatory planning processes of museum buildings and their key challenges and found that the source of funding could impact the degree of experiential co-designers’ participation in the project and “alienate” the outcomes from the initial participatory intentions. -
Office of the Chancellor Records AR-023
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8223145 No online items Office of the Chancellor Records AR-023 Liz Phillips University of California, Davis Library, University Archives 2018 1st Floor, Shields Library, University of California 100 North West Quad Davis, CA [email protected] URL: https://www.library.ucdavis.edu/archives-and-special-collections Office of the Chancellor Records AR-023 1 AR-023 Language of Material: English Contributing Institution: University of California, Davis Library, University Archives Title: Office of the Chancellor Records Creator: University of California, Davis. Office of the Chancellor. Identifier/Call Number: AR-023 Physical Description: 489.4 linear feet Date (inclusive): 1937-2014 Abstract: Office files relating to the physical planning and administration of the University of California, Davis. Biography/Administrative History Chancellors who have served the UC Davis campus: Stanley B. Freeborn (1958-1959); Emil M. Mrak (1959-1969); James H. Meyer (1969-1987); Theodore L. Hullar (1987-1994); Larry N. Vanderhoef (1994-2009), Linda P. B. Katehi (2009-2016), and Gary S. May (2017-). Scope and Content of Collection Office files relating to the physical planning and administration of the University of California, Davis. Access Collection is open for research. Preferred Citation Office of the Chancellor Records. UC Davis. University Archives Publication Rights All applicable copyrights for the collection are protected under chapter 17 of the U.S. Copyright Code. Requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the Head of Special Collections. Permission for publication is given on behalf of the Regents of the University of California as the owner of the physical items.