Tuesday, March 17


New graduate student housing is a poor use of funds

Libraries are closing, majors risk elimination and salaries are being cut. Yet, UCLA administrators are about to embark on an estimated $121 million construction project. UCLA plans to sell $110 million in bonds and tap into UCLA housing reserves accumulated from student housing fees to build new graduate housing. According to Ross Shideler, associate dean of the graduate division, the construction of 504 graduate housing studios is important in garnering new students. Read more...


Act prompts healthy choices by requiring calorie counts

With the U.S. government's recent interest in health-care reform, calorie counting has gone beyond the habits of the Real Housewives and is now an issue of national concern. The Labeling Education and Nutrition Act of 2009 aims to reduce the problems of obesity and associated medical conditions by mandating that restaurants provide nutritional information on their menus. Read more...




Letters to the Editor

Repudiation of violence laudable In her column “Animal rights activists need to temper radical action and reconsider their objectives” (Aug. 17), Avni Nijhawan makes the case that extremists, ostensibly in support of animal rights, have sullied the reputations of both the animal welfare and vegetarian movements by engaging in criminal “direct action” to achieve their ends. Read more...


Digital textbooks offer a long-term solution

Last month, the California state budget closed a $24-billion gap, which slashed funding for new textbooks. The Board of Education won't approve new books for kindergarten through eighth grade until at least January 2016, and budget restraints have forced school districts, such as the Los Angeles Unified School District, to halt orders for new high school textbooks. Read more...