UCLA History: Computer Demo
Label on this 1966 photo reads: Dr. Robert A. Hayes of UCLA faculty explains mysteries of computer to his son, Robert D. Hayes II.
Label on this 1966 photo reads: Dr. Robert A. Hayes of UCLA faculty explains mysteries of computer to his son, Robert D. Hayes II.
Readers of this blog – or of newspapers – or of just about anything will know that the 405 freeway will be closed this coming weekend for construction, something billed as Carmageddon. However, for those who feel they must have some kind of presence on campus, even if vicarious, it might be noted that there are various webcams running 24/7 at UCLA, three of which were working as of today: Royce Hall: http://www.admissions.ucla.edu/bruincam/default.htm Construction in DeNeve area: http://www.housing.ucla.edu/videos/DeNeve-1-Live.htm Construction in Sproul area: http://www.housing.ucla.edu/videos/Sproul-West-1-Live.htm Despite the webcam options, not everyone is happy about the closure:
The LA Business Journal reports that the developer of the hotel proposed for the old Hollywood video store site on Wilshire & Gayley will do the building as condos-only if UCLA goes ahead with the plan to replace the Faculty Center with a large hotel/conference center. See below. Scroll down to boldface type. No Vacancy? Jacquelyn Ryan Los Angeles Business Journal July 4th, 2011 It seems the biggest battles these days in Westwood aren’t on the basketball court but over luxury suites – and not the ones in arenas. Just months after a controversial plan to build an upscale hotel…
Some California university degrees disappear amid budget cuts (excerpts): Laurel Rosenhall, July 9, 2011, Sacramento Bee …UC Davis students can no longer get bachelor’s degrees in applied science, avian science or nature and culture. UC Santa Cruz has eliminated minors in computer technology, journalism and communication and rhetoric. As California’s public universities look for efficiencies in the face of ongoing budget cuts, some long-standing fields of study are falling by the wayside… “Clearly some of it is cyclical, but the budget cuts are accelerating the process and forcing the campuses to make some tough decisions,” said Todd Greenspan, director of…
UCLA hospitals to pay $865,500 for breaches of celebrities’ privacy By Molly Hennessy-Fiske, Los Angeles Times July 8, 2011 UCLA Health System has agreed to pay $865,500 as part of a settlement with federal regulators announced Thursday after two celebrity patients alleged that hospital employees broke the law and reviewed their medical records without authorization. Federal and hospital officials declined to identify the celebrities involved. The complaints cover 2005 to 2009, a time during which hospital employees were repeatedly caught and fired for peeping at the medical records of dozens of celebrities, including Britney Spears, Farrah Fawcett and then-California First…
State bill seeks more warning on tuition hikes July 7, 2011, Heather Somerville, Fresno Bee Student advocacy groups have stepped up their lobbying this week for a bill to make California State University and University of California officials give students at least six months notice before raising tuition… The bill, proposed by the UC and CSU student associations, would compel university officials to find other ways to manage budget cuts than their “knee-jerk” reaction of increasing fees, said Olgalilia Ramirez, director of government relations for (California State Student Association). AB 970 would require officials to consult with students before raising…
Inside Higher Ed today points to a U of Iowa $37,000 scholarship for a student with the best Twitter tweet. Despite President Obama’s recent Twitter town hall, yours truly hopes UCLA can resist the impulse to follow the Iowa example. Excerpt: One question. One hundred and forty characters. $37,000. It’s no game show — the University of Iowa’s Tippie MBA full-time program is awarding one full financial award package to an applicant who most creatively answers the question, “What makes you an exceptional Tippie MBA candidate and full-time MBA hire? Creativity encouraged!”, in 140 characters or less on Twitter. The…
The LA Times today runs an editorial lamenting UC tuition increases and increased admission of out-of-state students. See below for an excerpt in italics. But the editorial goes on to tell UC to pre-commit to reversals of these actions if the budget approves, apparently according to a formula. What in fact needs to happen is not unilateral action by UC but rather a negotiation between the governor, legislative leaders, Dept. of Finance, Legislative Analyst, interest groups, and UC in which future understandings are worked out. One-way pre-commitments are not the way to go. Yours truly has not noticed that the…
One impact of the recently-enacted state budget is that – because it was done without Republican support – there will be no special election this calendar year and, therefore, no propositions dealing with public pensions. In 2012, however, there could be pension-related items on the ballot. California senate leader Darrell Steinberg had this to say about what the legislative Democrats might put on the ballot: Steinberg pointed to Gov. Jerry Brown’s proposals to eliminate purchase of air time, prohibit so-called pension holidays and retroactive pension increases and ban payment of pension benefits to employees who are convicted of a felony…
Undoubtedly, the bill – if enacted – would end up at the California Supreme Court. Bill allowing UC, CSU to consider race, gender, economic background in admissions passes key committee (excerpt) Beige Luciano-Adams, San Gabriel Valley Tribune, 07/05/2011 A bill authored by Sen. Ed Hernandez, D-West Covina, that would allow public universities to factor race, ethnicity, gender and economic status in student admissions passed the Assembly’s Higher Education Committee on Tuesday by a 5-3 vote. According to Hernandez, the purpose of Senate Bill 185 is to address a significant drop in minority enrollment at both UC and CSU campuses –…