A team of UCLA engineers have taken an old spray-cooling method and applied it to silicon-based transistors. The result is a new method to cool down powerful transistors like those found in electric cars, aircraft, radar stations and personal computers. Read more...
Science & Health
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August 18, 9:00 pm
UCLA engineers recycle old method in new application to cool powerful transistors
Science & Health
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August 18, 9:00 pm
Column: PDAs have come of age
Personal Digital Assistants: people have lived without them for millennia, so why buy one now? If you have been waiting for wireless internet, now may be the time to take the plunge. Read more...
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August 18, 9:00 pm
Bruins conceive new ways to use condom
By Sarah Balkin DAILY BRUIN SENIOR STAFF [email protected] Put a condom on before sexual contact with your partner. Make sure the condom is on right side out. Read more...
News
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August 18, 9:00 pm
Feature: Getting to know Walter, story of a homeless man
Despite society’s efforts to turn a blind eye to the homeless, the fact is they’re there. If you’re like me and you spend time in Westwood, then you know they are a part of the landscape. Read more...
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August 18, 9:00 pm
Speaks Out
If you could have your choice of anyone to be the next Pope, who would you choose and why? Peter Mikhial Fourth-year Psychobiology I would say Bill Clinton because of his high moral standards and his affinity for doing good in the world. Read more...
Science & Health
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August 18, 9:00 pm
Altruism is evolutionary instinct says UCLA professor in new book
Greedy corporate executives, greedy athletes, and greedy politicians have loomed large in popular culture and the national news over the past few months. But the apparently natural human instinct to be selfish has been over-emphasized for too long, according to UCLA professor Shelley Taylor in her new book. Read more...
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August 18, 9:00 pm
Study reveals salary discrepancies
By Kelly Rayburn DAILY BRUIN SENIOR STAFF [email protected] Working in a burgeoning industry, Los Angeles Spanish-language television and radio broadcasters earn less than one-half of what their English speaking counterparts do, a new UCLA study found. Read more...