UCLA

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A Political Factoid for Today

Question: Can a UC campus foundation give money to ballot campaigns? If so, has it happened? Answer: The UCLA Foundation has twice given money to campaigns for ballot propositions in the past decade. Both propositions involved money for higher ed, including UC. In 2004, the Foundation gave $57,087 to support Prop 55 – a bond measure for education which narrowly passed. In 2006, it gave $87,550 in support of Prop 1D – also an education bond measure but which passed by a respectable 56.9%. Other UC and CSU foundations have made similar contributions. You can find the contribution information by…

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Back in the Stream

You may recall a brief episode in which classes which used streaming video at UCLA suddenly had the service cut off – and then restored after a brief interval. The practice of making such video course assignments available over a password-protected network to students was challenged in court as a copyright violation. The university restored the service when it concluded there was not a copyright violation. (You can find earlier posts about this matter on this blog.) A court victory was announced by the university yesterday. However, questions remain about how general the victory is. See below: Court dismisses lawsuit…

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Our Daily Bread

Readers of this blog who look at the blog’s heading will know that this blog is sponsored by the UCLA Faculty Association. If you are a current faculty or a retired faculty, you can help the Faculty Association earn its daily bread by joining. An application form is at http://www.uclafaculty.org/FASite/Join_files/FAApplication.pdf And as we have been doing quarterly, the blog is available as a pdf-book at: Open publication – Free publishing – More ucla Note that the videos embedded in the blog are not available in the pdf version. For video, you have to use the blogsite itself.

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UCLA History: Rose

After World War II, a UCLA graduate was arrested as being “Tokyo Rose.” She was convicted but later pardoned by President Gerald Ford. The story below: The Painful Ordeal of Tokyo Rose “L.A. Then And Now” section of the Los Angeles Times 5/24/98by Cecilia Rasmussen She was a soldier’s seductress whose sexy taunts earned her imprisonment, loss of her U.S. citizenship, and, ultimately, the derisive nickname “Rose With Thorns.” American GIs serving in the Pacific Theater during World War II knew her as “Tokyo Rose”, Imperial Japan’s radio propagandist whose infamous nickname became her curse. Wronged by her country and…

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Could There Be More I-405 Problems? Indeed, there could be, and will be

More I-405 problems for commuters to and from UCLA: Gridlock-causing closures to ramps connecting the 405 freeway to Sunset and Wilshire boulevards — crucial pipelines for UCLA commuters and visitors — will take place in waves that start as early as this Friday. A multi-week Sunset area closure scheduled from Oct. 15-29 and months-long Wilshire ramp closures beginning in November will likely cause the most traffic problems for Bruins. The Sunset work will particularly throttle traffic for UCLA commuters from the San Fernando Valley. The construction will allow utility work and bridge-widening at Sunset and ramp realignments at Wilshire as…

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FYI: UCLA Business Science Center Presentation

The more technological among our readers may have an interest in the program announcement below: Building an Entrepreneurial University Monday, October 3, 2011 3:00-6:00 pm CNSI Auditorium Please join us for a presentation by Professor William Ouchi to discuss new opportunities now being created at UCLA to support university inventors, followed by a conversation with the audience about the value of synergy between the academic and industrial communities, and highlighting ways they can work together to create a robust entrepreneurial ecosystem. California Nanosystems Institute (CNSI) at UCLA 570 Westwood Plaza Los Angeles, CA 90095 Registration at http://events.r20.constantcontact.com/register/event?llr=9ulm8oeab&oeidk=a07e4vl8hxzee3adec5&oseq=a004gjhnqkl5