Yearly Archives - 2011
2011 Archives
Aggies lose count on the mound
SportsMarch 1, 2011
Baseball: With a first-game win this weekend, the Aggies expected to pick up the whole series.
Aggies earn highest road score of season
SportsMarch 1, 2011
Gymnastics: The sports stereotype is that a team doesn’t play as well on the road.
Aggie Daily Calendar
FeaturesMarch 1, 2011
TODAY: Summer Abroad Info Session: Australia; Campus Rotaract Club of Davis General Meeting; Career as a Clinical Psychologist
UC responds to UniversityProbe author’s budget discrepancy claims
Campus NewsFebruary 28, 2011
A UC Berkeley professor claimed to have found a $4 billion budget discrepancy in the UC budget, but has recently been refuted by the UC system.
Students protest elimination of adult health services
City NewsFebruary 28, 2011
Amanda Summat, a junior English major, collected 664 signatures in three days this month in an effort to save California Adult Day Health Centers.
Simpson not leaving Hamilton Court just yet
SportsFebruary 28, 2011
Women’s basketball: The games could not have been more different.
On-campus organizations team up to present affordable education panel
Campus NewsFebruary 28, 2011
In light of Gov. Jerry Brown’s proposed $500 million cut to the UC system for the 2011-12 academic year, various UC Davis groups have collaborated with administrative officials to organize a ‘Making Education Affordable’ panel open to all students and faculty.
News-in-Brief: Davis community members question university’s accordance with Public Records Act
Campus NewsFebruary 28, 2011
UC Davis recently received a failing grade from Californians Aware for not responding promptly to public document requests.
News-in-Brief: ASUCD unit director dismissed in closed session
Campus NewsFebruary 28, 2011
In a closed session on Feb. 17, the ASUCD senate removed Dylan Schaefer from his former position of director of City and County Affairs. The job paid $63 per week.
Environmental advocates seek elimination of methyl iodide
City NewsFebruary 28, 2011
Farm and farmworker leaders are urging the state, and Gov. Jerry Brown, to support healthy and green farming without the use of methyl iodide. The pesticide, which is used in growing strawberries, is said to cause cancer, late-term miscarriages and contamination of groundwater.

