Saturday, April 18

Forum to review elections’ effects

The votes have been cast and the ballots counted, but the work has just begun for policy analysts trying to make sense of Tuesday’s election. With the high number of ballot initiatives in California, there was much to vote on and a lot of information to take in. Read more...


Few apartments contain recycling

Though recycling has become increasingly convenient for on-campus residents over the past decade, many students living in Westwood Village apartments remain without access to recycling services. Read more...



After hours: A look at lab nightlife

It is past midnight. A large opossum crosses Ackerman turnaround in the dim yellow flood of street lamps, unbothered and unobserved. Bruin Walk is still, and the tables of Kerckhoff Coffeehouse have long since emptied. Read more...


Weblogs weave social networks

For third-year biology student Tran To, law student Phillip Carter and law Professor Eugene Volokh, blogging is an answer to the question of how to get their voices heard, whether on a campus of 40,000 or halfway across the world. Read more...


Health care needs remedy

The longest grocery strike in U.S. history has ended, but workers still don’t have the quality health care they fought so hard for. Last week, the grocers and workers voted on a contract that ended the four-and-a-half- month strike, which cost the supermarkets over $1 billion dollars. Read more...


A closer look: With primaries over, Democratic student groups to unite behind one person

With the California primary election behind them, student political groups supporting Democratic presidential candidates are taking on different roles on campus. Other than Bruins for Dean, whose members will not be endorsing anyone come election time, the student political groups will work together to campaign for the Democratic presidential candidate, regardless of who he is. Read more...