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Davis and Merced Get Drones, But We Have Snodgrass
The website California’s Capitol reports that UC-Davis and UC-Merced have applied to the FAA to have drones. http://www.californiascapitol.com/2013/10/californias-drone-applicants/ and https://www.eff.org/files/filenode/faa_coa_list-2012.pdf. Obviously, the rest of us will be falling behind in this technology. But at least we have Prof. Snodgrass who drones on and on, as former UC president Yudof once reminded us in his soliloquy on online higher ed:
Mystery Email Seems Legit
We have cautioned on this blog about responding to emails that purport to come from university sources but may actually be email spam or worse. Yours truly – and probably many other UCLA faculty – received the email in italics below. I was cautious because it did not come from a UCLA or UC source. It came frommember@surveymonkey.com and had a reply address of survey@acrd.us. After a little snooping and Googling, however, it appears to be legit. ============================ Dear University of California Colleague,The UC Office of the President funded researchers at UC Merced to conduct a system-wide survey of community…
Wishlist budget adopted by Regents
As expected, the Regents adopted the budget – which the governor on Wednesday termed a wishlist – yesterday. The value of adopting a wishlist budget which will not be funded as requested was debated on Wednesday but adopted by the Committee on Finance of the Regents. We posted the audio of that meeting, including the governor’s comments. Yours truly was in transit yesterday and so could not record the Regents’ live stream audio. We will, as usual, request the recording as a public document and post it when received. (And [sigh] again we ask why the Regents audios are not…
Riverside and Merced say take our meds
From the LA Times, Larry Gordon 7/16/12 (excerpt):…UC Riverside‘s long-held dream to have a full medical school was badly battered last year when the state refused to pay for it and then national accreditors wouldn’t allow it to open. Those denials were a blow to the UC system’s proud tradition of adding campuses and programs to serve a growing state. Now, UC Riverside is making what national experts say is a rare second attempt to gain approval for a medical school. Campus officials say they have obtained alternative financial backing, worth about $10 million a year for a decade, from private…
More and More Getting Off Scale
The Daily Bruin today has a piece on proposals for dealing with faculty salary scales which have grown increasingly outmoded. As the table, based on a graphic in the Bruin, illustrates, most faculty at UCLA are paid off-scale. The University, for recruitment and retention purposes, tries to meet the external academic labor market. In effect, since there are only so many dollars to go around, paying more than the official scale has to mean a higher student/teacher ratio than would otherwise prevail. Percent of faculty off scale as of 10/2010:Merced 88%UCLA 80%Santa Cruz 73%Berkeley 72%Irvine 66%Santa Barbara 66%San Diego 64%Riverside…
Too Many in the UC Lifeboat?
Mike Lofchie pointed me to this article which questions the one-system view of UC and, in particular, UC-Merced, in a period of budget stringency. February 12, 2012, Chronicle of Higher Education Fault Lines Form Among Campuses as Finances Strain U. of California (excerpt): By Eric Kelderman President Mark G. Yudof of the University of California often says that the system he oversees is one university with 10 campuses. But some higher-education experts say the economic strains and budget cuts of the past three years are fraying the ties that hold the system together. Several campus leaders have proposed measures to…