Thursday, May 28

Time off after graduation offers chance to explore career options

After leaving UCLA, many seniors will be entering graduate schools across the nation or starting to work in full-time jobs. Many will not. Some seniors who are not in transition from UCLA to graduate school or to a full-time job are doing what is commonly referred to as “taking a year off.” Director of the UCLA Career Center Kathy L. Read more...




USAC to continue ongoing projects

More than 10 years ago, Mark Pulido, the 1992-1993 president of the Undergraduate Students Association Council, had campaign goals to fulfill. Today, those goals are still worked on by his successors long after his graduation. Read more...



Graduation speakers blend originality, meaning

The small audience of judges was silent as Alisha Beltramo, a fourth-year communication studies student, spoke her piece. She spoke with great emotion of what she felt her experience at UCLA had given her, which she would be able to employ in her life beyond the proverbial campus walls. Read more...


Old friends, new Internet

Postcards, letters, phone calls ““ even e-mail ““ are becoming things of the past for this year’s graduating class. As students complete their college careers, leaving UCLA and memories of freshman year, fraternity parties and football games behind, their friendships will be kept alive via today’s most rapidly growing communications arena ““ the Internet. Read more...