What started as the Occupy Wall Street movement in New York in September has spread across major cities worldwide as a call to action against unequal distribution of wealth.
Economist Jeffrey Sachs explains why he believes the Occupy Wall Street movement is crucial to America's future.
A provocative bake sale designed to satirize affirmative action resulted in no fisticuffs Tuesday, but it did prompt a sellout of 300 cupcakes and some heated debate at the University of California at Berkeley, the bake sale organizer said.
It's meant to be racist, and it's meant to be discriminatory.
Campus Republicans at the University of California Berkeley have cooked up a storm of controversy with their plans for a bake sale.
More than 150 students at the University of California at Berkeley took over a campus building Thursday to protest a proposed 81% increase in tuition fees, university officials said.
1. Sociology of Fame and Lady Gaga
Certain kinds of 3D displays cause extra eye fatigue, according to a study published by the Journal of Vision that was funded in part by Samsung's R&D arm.
The prototypical computer security expert is some ponytailed guy with a three-day beard and an uncomfortable habit of telling hacker war stories that make you scared to go online for weeks. Then there's Dawn Song, a 36-year-old associate professor at the University of California at Berkeley and a MacArthur Foundation fellow (also known as a MacArthur genius). With her broad smile and laugh, Song puts a visitor at ease, then begins mapping the Internet out on a whiteboard. The whole genius thing quickly becomes apparent.
As more technology goes mobile, "where" has become one of the key pieces of context in daily life. And the answers to "where" increasingly are provided through geographic information systems (GIS), a technology that is being explored, debated and celebrated today in public.
Air travelers already know the frustration of endlessly waiting for a plane to arrive or depart, but now a new study has put a dollar amount on the economic toll of the problem and it's big.
On a balmy summer day 10 years ago, President Bill Clinton announced an accomplishment that was likened to landing men on the moon: The sequencing of a nearly complete human genome. Flanked in the White House by the two scientists mostly responsible for it, Francis Collins and Craig Venter, the president and other speakers brashly opined that new drugs and treatments would soon flow from this historic achievement.
Scientific research has finally caught up with the lifework of my family. For three generations, we have been exploring, questioning, experimenting, passing along our findings from parent to child. We are not neuroscientists or psychologists, like those who have come after us. We are simply...nappers. A nap, where I come from, is sacred.
Ethnic Tibetans' ability to thrive in high altitudes with low oxygen is the fastest genetic change ever observed in humans, according to a study published Friday in the journal Science.
Dissatisfaction, anger and an uncertain future have led professors and students in California and across the country to call for a day of action Thursday to defend education at state colleges and universities.
Atrazine, a weed killer widely used in the Midwestern United States and other agricultural areas of the world, can chemically "castrate" male frogs and turn some into females, according to a new study.
Tuition at many public colleges and universities is skyrocketing, thanks to state budget deficits that have choked off funding for higher education.
Police early Thursday cleared protesters occupying a business administration building at San Francisco State University, and school authorities were getting the facility ready for classes, a school spokeswoman told CNN.
Angry students at San Francisco State University protest fee hikes and budget cuts.
Protesters of a tuition hike at University of California campuses stood their ground into Friday night, with 41 demonstrators at UC Berkeley cited for trespassing after their takeover of a campus building.
Thelma Gutierrez reports that despite student protests the University of California will hike tuition by 32 percent.
Joe Marshall was cruising across the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge when a piece of steel and a giant cable crashed down.
Last autumn I took time off to go back to school. The timing turned out to be just right: My American economic history course at the University of California at Berkeley got to the Great Depression in early October, around the time everyone became convinced we were about to have another one.
Question: I'm 49 and my wife is 50. We agree on most things, except how much of our investment portfolio we should keep in cash. She is completely risk-averse and focuses only on the "spanking" we took in the market last year. I feel that by letting so much money sit in CDs earning 1% to 2% we're missing out on better opportunities. Currently, we've got about $500,000 in cash as part of an otherwise well diversified portfolio. Can you help me convince her to take half that money and buy into some dividend-paying blue chips? --Garry, Atlanta, Georgia
More than half of the Internet's top websites use a little known capability of Adobe's Flash plugin to track users and store information about them, but only four of them mention the so-called Flash Cookies in their privacy policies, UC Berkeley researchers found.
Massive investment in renewable energy could ultimately create 4 million manufacturing jobs. But for the workers in the bottom rung of this movement, the shift to green jobs could very well mean a pay cut of nearly 60%, a trend spreading across the entire manufacturing sector.
From where he came, no one could have predicted what Ronald Takaki would become. Raised in a low-income area of Oahu, Hawaii, a descendant of Japanese immigrants who toiled in sugar cane plantation fields, he cared more about surfing than schoolwork.
After spending 10 years in the U.S. Navy, Kenric Scarbrough got a sobering start to his civilian career. He was laid off in January, just months after he found a job as a boiler technician -- one of the victims of the worsening economy.
You've no doubt heard the term "lost decade" to describe what's happened to stocks since 1999. And that may have you wondering whether equities are worth the risk and whether buy-and-hold investing, dollar-cost averaging and dutifully contributing to your 401(k)'s mutual funds are a sucker's bet.
Doom and gloom were everywhere in 2008. It's not surprising, then, that people are longing for a return to normal, or at least to something a little less painful.
Miles O'Brien explores the possibility of intelligent life beyond Earth.
From a remote valley in Northern California, Jill Tarter is listening to the universe.
On his reality show "The Apprentice," Donald Trump plays to the cameras when he tells contestants they're fired. But in the real world, there's no easy way to tell employees they're losing their jobs.
Unemployment could reach 8% in 2009, economists say
Some called it the "Monday meltdown". It was the day when the world learned Lehman Brothers had gone bust and Merrill Lynch was hurriedly sold. Within days, two other giants of Wall Street, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley were in big trouble as their shares plunged.
A lot of college students feel pressured to binge drink, says University of California, Berkeley, student Joseph Bui.
In spring 2007, University of California Berkeley Energy and Resources Group professor Ashok Gadgil challenged students in his Design for Sustainable Communities class to come up with an affordable and efficient solar water heater that could be used in low-income households.
If a shooter came into some of the biggest classrooms at the University of California-Berkeley, recent graduate Scott Alto wonders whether students would be able to protect themselves.
Kent State University student Allen Brown says universities are easy targets for attack.
The general dialogue on adapting to a world affected by climate change by definition excludes the world's poorest people. And yet it's the world's poorest who are often put forward as the ones who are likely to feel the affects of climate change the most and are likely to be able to deal with them the least.
Nanotubes, sheets of carbon one atom thick rolled up into a cylinder 10,000 times thinner than a human hair, may someday replace silicon chips. What can they do now? Pick up FM and AM signals, as Berkeley scientists demonstrated with a radio 100 billion times smaller than the old RCAs.
To hear environmentalists tell it, investing in renewable energy won't just provide a clean source of power, it will create an explosion of new jobs.
Dinosaurs shared the Earth for millions of years with the species that were their ancestors, a new study concludes
Pranks are as much a part of college as tailgating before a big game or pretending to listen to your professor while you're really IM'ing with your friends. But what are the best pranks of all-time? Here is SIOC's Top 10.
Charles Simonyi, the software programmer credited with developing Word and Excel, has a billion Microsoft dollars to his name, squires Martha Stewart on his arm, and last month became the fifth so-...
Scientists have just released images of the brightest stellar explosion recorded.
Had enough of the gloom and doom in the news these days? Then check out the business section.
Had enough of the gloom and doom in the news these days? Then check out the business section.
The space above you is fizzing with activity as bubbles of superhot gas constantly grow and pop around Earth, scientists announced Tuesday.
First, the good news: U.S. gasoline prices may come down by a dime or so in the next month.
For somebody who isn't sure what to think about the immigration battle being waged these days in Congress, Jagdish Bhagwati's column in Tuesday's Wall Street Journal was strangely reassuring.
It's just the news that hardworking taxpayers want to see in their inbox: an update on their refund from the Internal Revenue Service.
I'm 26 years old and contribute 6 percent of pay to my 401(k), which my company matches. Aside from a menu of 18 different mutual fund options, my plan also has a self-directed brokerage account option that allows me to invest in stocks and other investments. I have the desire to invest and I follow the market news intently, but the minimum fees to trade seem high. Would I be wasting my time investing my 401(k) money through this brokerage account, or is this something that's worth a try?
NAME: Warren Beatty, a.k.a. the sexiest man in Tinseltown over 65
THANKS TO THE LUNKHEADS OVER AT Major League Baseball and the shenanigans of USA Track and Field, performance-enhancing drugs have gotten a bad name. Let's look at this for a minute. Isn't better p...
IT'S A LITTLE BIT humbling to a professional advice giver like me, but some of the best workplace wisdom I know comes from my readers. Antsy video-generation employees, fast-track foreign languages...
University of California-Berkeley police are investigating the theft of a campus laptop computer containing information on 98,000 individuals.
The domestic debate this election season has centered on job creation, with both candidates using Labor Department statistics to support their own arguments. But now that the economy has been added nearly 2 million jobs since last summer, economists are looking critically at the quality of these new jobs, to determine whether they are paying less than the ones we've lost.
Germain-Robin Brandy
The last thing a company wants in its factories, trucks, or corporate offices is a layer of dust. But "smart" dust? That's a different story.
Editor's note: As part of our coverage of the 2004 election season, CNN.com is sending correspondents to the colleges where they studied to report on issues affecting today's young voters. In this edition, Meriah Doty returns to her alma mater, University of California at Berkeley.
--DUMB LUCK SchoolSucks.com, a website that provides free term papers, is offering a $200 scholarship to the high school student with a B or C average who submits the best 500-word essay on "Why Ch...
Ta-lin Hsu
Unless you've been living in (or hugging) a tree, you know the country has faced a double whammy this year: a tech disaster and an energy crisis. Here are four companies that have weathered the fir...
Liars, cheats, and thieves. No corporate vermin are more infuriating than the snakes and weasels who take credit for the ideas of others.
Meet the "Tele-Actor," wired up with a camera, microphones, and a wireless Internet connection. Send a Tele-Actor out to a location, and you see what it sees and hear what it hears. Multiple partic...
Manuel Castells is a professor of city and regional planning and sociology at the University of California at Berkeley. He is the author of the three-volume The Information Age: Economy, Society, a...
Determining a company's worth in today's schizophrenic market is, well, difficult, to say the least. Is the fundamental value of Amazon.com the $40 billion-plus the stock market gave it last Decemb...
Remember your last Truly Great Idea? What if, while you teetered on the cusp of it, the director of marketing slowly, silently, crept into your cubicle and unloaded his clip--of rubber bands, mind ...
Academic journals don't spend much on market research. So it can take years to figure out which articles people actually read (the ones that end up cited elsewhere). The magic of the Internet is ch...
Recently, a 28-year-old student in my personal-finance course at the University of California-Berkeley showed me a computerized retirement analysis proving that he could retire at the tender age of...
Mix fear of death with a distaste of salesmen, and you can see why many people procrastinate about buying life insurance. Well, your computer can't stave off the Grim Reaper. But it can free you fr...
Back when the World Wide Web was new and even radical, I and others hoped that it would one day loosen the middleman's grip on many financial transactions, including home sales. After all, for most...
Anyone old enough to read this column knows better, I hope, than to trust all the free financial advice floating around online. There are no bouncers at the door to cyberspace, and online investmen...
If you're a mutual fund novice, you might as well skip this column. The four programs I'll be reviewing here weren't designed for you. But if you're a serious investor who wants to screen mutual fu...
What would happen to your finances if you had twins, or your spouse stopped working, or you gave up a steady salary to start a business? One of the illusions that you get from personal-finance soft...
Funding cutbacks at state universities are forcing deans of public business schools to become just as enterprising as their private peers. They are raising endowments, boosting tuition, and hiking ...
The world is becoming accustomed to seeing Third World countries launch their economies into soaring growth by lowering trade barriers. But conventional economic theory does a poor job of explainin...
BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA -- Ever since the University of California at Berkeley expelled the ''Naked Guy'' last winter, life hasn't been the same in this | . . . college town. It's been even more revea...
Some years back, when our son was a student at Oberlin College in Ohio, he had a curious annual ritual. At a certain time of day, on a certain day in the year, he would march up to a desk in the st...
America's public colleges and universities still offer some of the best bargains in higher education, despite being caught in a painful squeeze. Demand has never been greater -- the nearly 600 stat...
It is no longer any secret that public universities can provide a solid education -- in some cases rivaling what students can get at elite private institutions -- at a bargain price. During the 198...
By thoroughly investigating colleges now, your child can avoid having to switch schools later on. Each year, an astonishing number of students decide that they made the wrong choice. Based on past ...
Take one part corporate funding, mix it with several parts university research, and add a chunk of luck. You get a company with leading-edge technology and a school with a royalty-earning product t...
April is the cruelest month for tens of thousands of anxious high school seniors. Each day they go to the mailbox looking for responses from the colleges of their choice, either in a thick envelope...
Remember portfolio insurance? Fingered by the Brady commission as a culprit in the 1987 stock market crash, this hedging strategy seemed set to go the way of the dodo. Revenues at Leland O'Brien Ru...
Graduating MBAs aren't the only ones after big bucks. Business schools want % money too, and some are ready to rename themselves after you -- provided you can meet the asking price. You're too late...
Hey, remember the Free Speech Movement? That was the great crusade at Berkeley in 1964 -- the New Left uprising that initiated the great student revolution of the Sixties. It seems hard to credit t...
It's hard to read the health news these days without a paramedic present. There is alar on the fruit, radon in the rathskeller and cholesterol in Mom's apple pie. Diseases whiz in and out of the he...
If reactor phobia faded, only one serious roadblock would bar a new round of nuclear expansion: the lack of a burial site for the 1,700 tons of highly radioactive spent fuel that accumulates annual...
The number of bonded wineries in the U.S. has more than doubled, to over 1,400, in the past dozen years, partly because burned-out executives have been trading in the big-city life for pastoral toi...
Still picking arguments with people who insist that deep down inside everybody is the same as everybody else, we come now to the slightly touchy subject of brainy Asian-Americans. Oddly enough, the...
-- Long before he became chairman of the Federal Reserve, Alan Greenspan opposed the parts of the Glass-Steagall Act that ban commercial banks from dealing in securities. So when he restated his po...
BERKELEY, Calif. -- A federal civil rights official has complained to the University of California at Berkeley that its course catalogue contains sexist language . . . The official, Paul D. Grossma...
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