
Voices
Archive
The promise of congestion pricing
May 6, 2008
Sharing the cost of insuring those with health risks
May 6, 2008
Sound Bites
May 6, 2008 Sound Bites question: Do you participate in Web 2.0 social networking, blogs or wikis?
Americans can't escape the tyranny of the penny
Apr 22, 2008
The other side of sex scandals
Apr 22, 2008
Sound Bites
Apr 22, 2008
Blindness and elected office -- the history behind the headlines
Apr 8, 2008
Immigration: the elephant in the room
Apr 8, 2008
Sound Bites
Apr 8, 2008
Who's to blame for the toxic toy crisis?
Mar 25, 2008
Sound Bites
Mar 18, 2008
Top-notch faculty recruitment is critical
Mar 17, 2008
Our consumption factor imperils us all
Feb 20, 2008 The average rate at which people consume resources is 32 times higher in North America, Western Europe, Japan and Australia.
Why dieting doesn't work
Feb 20, 2008 Doctoral student of social psychology, Janet Tomiyama provides insight into why diets don't work.
Sound bites
Feb 20, 2008
Preparing for global warming's health crisis
Feb 5, 2008
Be more aware of the world's 'bottom billion'
Feb 5, 2008
Sound Bites
Feb 5, 2008
How 'they' become 'us'
Jan 23, 2008
His life, legacy are a call to action
Jan 23, 2008
Sound Bites
Jan 18, 2008
California's wildfires are inevitable
Dec 11, 2007
Letter to the Editor: Don't test addiction on animals
Dec 11, 2007
Sound Bites
Dec 11, 2007
Answer our next Sound Bites question
Nov 30, 2007
Sound Bites
Nov 20, 2007 UCLA's FITWELL program is promoting healthy activity and lifestyle choices. What are you doing to stay fit and healthy?
State funding for universities benefits everyone
Nov 20, 2007
Student screenwriters have a stake in outcome of strike
Nov 20, 2007
Disaster planning for disabled is a 'SNAP' away
Nov 6, 2007 UCLA Center for Neighborhood Knowledge is developing a new project to aid those with disabilities in time of disaster.
Prof. targeted by animal rights extremists speaks out
Nov 6, 2007
Sound Bites
Nov 6, 2007
First steps for peace in the Middle East
Oct 23, 2007 Steven Spiegel is professor of political science and director of the Center for Middle East Development
Does the tobacco research policy go far enough?
Oct 23, 2007 Michael Ong is an assistant professor in residence at the David Geffen School of Medicine; Linda Sarna is a professor in the school of Nursing.
Sound Bites
Oct 23, 2007 Campus members tell us if they're taking advantage of campus Happenings.
Asian Americans are California's new 'sleeping giant'
Oct 10, 2007 California Asian Americans are growing in number and political influence
The health of our children must be secured
Oct 10, 2007 Support passage of the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP)
Sound Bites
Oct 10, 2007 Are college textbook prices too high, and what can be done about it?
Raising the minimum wage is not enough
Sep 25, 2007
Bringing the arts back to school
Sep 25, 2007
Weapons are more lethal than words
Sep 25, 2007
Sound Bites
Aug 14, 2007
Our sad retreat from desegregation
Aug 13, 2007
Fixing faculty salary scales is a high priority
Aug 13, 2007
Where passion for Bruin sports burns hottest
Jun 26, 2007
Men, too, are prone to depression
Jun 26, 2007
Giving books a second life in Iraq
Jun 26, 2007
Letter to the Editor
May 22, 2007
A bold idea for advancing public education
May 22, 2007
Some survivors live with 'gift' of breast cancer
May 22, 2007
Cities reap benefits by going green
May 22, 2007
The perils of expanding DNA searches to relatives
May 8, 2007
Students suffer when campuses are too PC about sex
May 8, 2007
What Mother's Day cards don't say
May 8, 2007
Be alert to warning signs of a student in crisis
Apr 24, 2007
sound bites
Apr 24, 2007
Paradoxically, piracy sometimes spurs innovation
Apr 24, 2007
Letters to the Editor
Apr 24, 2007
The roots and global dimension of modern terrorism
Apr 10, 2007
Parking in Westwood Village: an inconvenient truth
Apr 10, 2007
To the Editor
Apr 10, 2007
Apartheid accusations: impediment to peace
Mar 20, 2007
Tackling an invisible invader
Mar 20, 2007
Sound Bites: 4th Anniversary of Iraq War
Mar 20, 2007
Is this not apartheid?
Feb 21, 2007 Former President Jimmy Carter has come under sustained attack for having dared to use the term "apartheid" to describe Israel's policies in the West Bank. However, not one of Carter's critics has offered a convincing argument to justify the vehemence of the outcry, much less to refute his central claim that Israel bestows rights on Jewish residents settling illegally on Palestinian land while denying the same rights to indigenous Palestinians.
Like speech, romance in the ivory tower is a fundamental right
Feb 21, 2007 The fundamental issue, I believe, is not whether campus romance should be encouraged or prohibited but whether the choice to engage in a campus romance should be protected or precluded.
Iraq needs a surge in diplomacy, not troops
Feb 21, 2007 President Bush has announced a "surge" of additional U.S. troops into Iraq. Will this deliver a "win?" Probably not. But it will distract us from facing the deep-seated regional issues that must be resolved.
UC regents should ban tobacco funding for research ...
Feb 6, 2007 The University of California Board of Regents is currently considering a proposal to prohibit future acceptance of research funds from "manufacturers or distributors of tobacco products, their affiliates, or any entity controlling or controlled by such companies that are used to study tobacco-related diseases, the use of tobacco products or the individual or societal impacts of such use." The regents want feedback from the Academic Senate to gauge faculty opinion.
... Or shouldn't: A ban would only undermine UC's mission
Feb 6, 2007 Money to do research is the researcher's lifeblood for scientific inquiry — without it, much less research gets done. But money, especially from commercial sources, comes with strings.
Regents finally make room for staff at table
Feb 6, 2007 "It won't happen — there simply is no more room at the table," said then-UC Regent John Davies during his presentation at the Council of UC Staff Assemblies (CUCSA) quarterly meeting back in February 2003 at UC Santa Cruz. As the UCLA senior delegate to CUCSA that year, I sat listening to him in utter disbelief.
How hip-hop culture is changing the wor(l)d
Jan 23, 2007 Hip-hop culture — born out of the politically abandoned streets of Black and Latino U.S. inner-city hoods — has become, in many senses, a global language.
Sound Bites
Jan 23, 2007 As we begin 2007, Voices Editor Ajay Singh went around campus asking people which issues — local, national or international — they felt must be resolved this year.
Look to history to understand why global capitalism is hated
Jan 23, 2007
Understanding UC's retirement plan
Dec 12, 2006 A healthy and robust UC Retirement Plan (UCRP) is critically important to faculty, staff and UC itself. UC wisely provides a defined benefit plan.
What should America's strategy be in the Middle East?
Dec 12, 2006 Until the end of the cold war, American foreign policy in the Middle East was pulled between those who wanted to cast our lot with Arab nations and those who looked to Israel as our key partner in the region. That debate has been replaced since the early 1990s by one in which the question is not whether to support Israel, but how.
Sound Bites
Dec 12, 2006 As 2006 comes to a close, capping a year of political upheaval at home and wars abroad, Voices Editor Ajay Singh went around campus asking people to identify the one national or international event this year that personally affected them the most.
We are a forgetful nation
Nov 21, 2006 As we celebrate our hospitality and embrace our identity as an immigrant nation, we turn a blind eye to the fact that we have gradually become an intolerant nation, neither hospitable toward newcomers nor generous toward those who do not share our values.
Returning vets need educational support
Nov 21, 2006 What the classroom full of veterans wanted most from their teacher was help in explaining to their families what they had gone through in the war. They were taking a course in communication that was part of a federally funded education program for Vietnam veterans in the early 1970s, and their teacher was a colleague of mine.
Light pollution harms our ecosystems
Nov 21, 2006 A photograph of the Korean peninsula from space at night recently made national news, showing bright lights blanketing South Korea while North Korea was dark. It was meant to show that although North Korea has the bomb, it is still an impoverished, undeveloped nation. But the photo told another story as well.
Cartoon: By Carole Cable
Nov 21, 2006
Fraternizing at work benefits us all
Nov 7, 2006 After-work socializing can be a time to network, make new friends and possibly share ideas with a senior employee. Yet in this era of heightened concern about sexual harassment and the taboo of workplace romance, many men and women choose to forego any non-work-related activities with coworkers who are not same-sex.
Sound Bites
Nov 7, 2006
The racial politics behind anti-immigration jokes
Nov 6, 2006 When friends joke and laugh together, they share in an age-old practice that generates warm feelings, bringing them closer together. But what happens when 6 million people laugh at a political joke — more precisely, the jokes of late-night talk show host Jay Leno?
California needs faster trains, not more freeways
Oct 24, 2006
Holistic evaluation makes admissions fair
Oct 24, 2006 UCLA's Academic Senate voted last month to adopt a new admissions process that will be implemented in the fall 2007 freshman class: a 'holistic' model in which each application will be reviewed and evaluated in its entirety. This is a major change in the admissions process at UCLA, where the applicant pool is stunning.
Nurses need to step up and speak for themselves
Oct 24, 2006 The real question is, why do professional registered nurses need unions?
Cartoon: Iambic tetrameter?
Oct 10, 2006
L.A. becomes guiding light of U.S. labor
Oct 10, 2006 A century ago, Los Angeles proudly proclaimed itself an “open shop” city. Wages were low, unions were weak, and employers were determined to keep it that way. Today, the opposite is true: The L.A. labor movement is a national model.
How I read -- and live
Oct 10, 2006 I am a thanatologist, a person who specializes in the study of death and dying as well as suicide prevention. Although my patients — suicidal and dying persons — have been my teachers, without books I would be illiterate. For me, a library is a sacred place. My avocation is reading.
Sound Bites
Oct 10, 2006 The UC Board of Regents is currently considering whether or not UC should continue to accept tobacco industry support for research, as some UCLA researchers have. Voices Editor Ajay Singh recently asked people on campus what they thought about the controversy.
