Kai Pottenger heads to campus a few times a quarter to approach random students and talk about spirituality and Christianity, mostly encountering students with different religious beliefs.
Author Archives: Jennifer Mishory
Results speak volumes about voters
The votes have been counted, the races have been decided, and the undergraduate student government has a new council ““ one that may not be recognizable to someone involved with student government only three years ago.
Become invested in council
A student working on campus in one of the Associated Students UCLA stores makes a starting wage of about $8.25 per hour. That same student will pay a total of $39.91 per quarter, or $119.73 a year, to next year’s Undergraduate Students Association Council budget. So it takes each undergraduate about 14.5 hours of work, […]
Debate brews in Westwood
The upstairs of Westwood Brewing Company, a bar that is a popular destination for UCLA students on Thursday nights, was the site of a different sort of party on Thursday afternoon.
Improving loan systems for students should be priority
Enrolling in the correct coursework, taking the right tests, getting the grades, submitting the applications, and deciding which school to attend are all a part of the process. And then for millions of high school seniors, the college admissions process isn’t over ““ there are more forms to fill out and the burden of thousands […]
Law scholar delivers lecture
Faculty, students and members of the community packed the Freud Playhouse on Thursday to hear law Professor Stephen Yeazell present the second Faculty Research Lecture of the academic year. Yeazell focused his research lecture on the positive and negative aspects of today’s civil legal system. Each year, departments put forward faculty members they would like […]
Setting eyes on the future is no easy thing
As spring quarter begins and summer approaches, the inevitable question arises with rapidly increasing frequency and with a greater sense of urgency. If you are a senior, you understand. The clock is ticking, and the world is waiting. It goes like this: “So … what are you doing next year?” It’s sort of depressing, or […]