California State University board approves 6% annual tuition hike
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:09:25 GMT
LONG BEACH, Calif. - California State University students will see tuition increase starting next year. On Wednesday, the CSU Board of Trustees approved a proposal to hike tuition by 6% annually for the next five years.Undergraduate tuition at CSU schools will increase from $5,742 to $6,084 in the 2024-25 school year, to $6,450 the following year, $6,840 in 2026-27, $7,248 in 2027-28, and $7,682 in 2028-29.A woman holds a sign during a protest outside the California State University chancellor's office, Tuesday, Sept. 12, 2023, in Long Beach, Calif. The CSU Board of Trustees is considering a 6% tuition increase beginning in fall of 2024. (Paul Bersebach/The Orange County Register via AP)The board’s finance committee had unanimously approved the tuition hike earlier in the day.Administrators say the CSU system needs to address a $1.5 billion budget gap to cover existing programs and services. Like in all sectors, inflation has driven up costs. Tuition hasn’t been increased ...Trouble, one of oldest bison that lived in L.A. County park, dies at 35
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:09:25 GMT
A 35-year-old female bison named Here Comes Trouble, or Trouble for short, that lived in William S. Hart Park in Santa Clarita died over the weekend, park officials announced Wednesday.Trouble was one of the oldest and “most spirited” members of a herd living in the sprawling park, located at 24151 N. Newhall Ave.Los Angeles County Parks Director Norma García-González said in a statement that the department was “saddened” by the loss of Trouble. “She will be greatly missed."Trouble was born at the park on April 12, 1988 and gained a reputation of being feisty because she apparently picked fights with herd mates, officials said.“She also had a playful side and sometimes challenged the park staff by squaring up to the truck during the morning feeding time. She was a beloved and memorable character among the herd, enjoyed by park visitors and staff, who frequently said, ‘Here comes Trouble’ when they saw her approaching,” parks officials said in a news release.“Trouble brought a lot of...Festival tickets for In-N-Out’s 75th anniversary event sold out
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:09:25 GMT
With just over a month until In-N-Out’s 75th anniversary celebration, festival tickets have officially sold out.The company shared the news Wednesday on its Instagram account and event website.The festival is slated to occur at the newly renamed In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip, formally the Pomona Raceway, on Oct. 22, 2023.The raceway was officially renamed to celebrate the company’s milestone.Visitors can enjoy drag racing, carnival rides, a car show, food, drinks, live musical performances and In-N-Out burgers at the event. Meghan Markle, Duchess of Sussex, spotted at In-N-Out While festival tickets and ticket bundles are gone, In-N-Out fans can still purchase car show tickets for $100 per person. The ticket grants each person entry to the show and access to the festival area.In-N-Out fans looking to participate in the car show should purchase their tickets soon since they are limited, the company said.In-N-Out CEO Lynsi Snyder announced the event last year.In-N-Out Burger open...Magellan Rutaneahwa Killed in Hit-and-Run Crash on McDowell Road [Phoenix, AZ]
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:09:25 GMT
49-Year-Old Pedestrian Crossing the Street Dies after Being Struck by Vehicle near 7th StreetSCOTTSDALE, AZ (September 13, 2023) – On Sunday evening, police were called to a hit-and-run that claimed the life of Magellan Rutaneahwa.The incident happened around 7:30 p.m., September 9th, at the intersection of 7th Street and McDowell Road.Paramedics from the Phoenix Fire Department arrived at the scene and found 49-year-old Magellan Rutaneahwa unconscious on the roadway. They performed life-saving measures on him but he succumbed to his injuries at the scene.Furthermore, the driver that struck Rutaneahwa left the scene and did not call for an emergency. Investigation showed that Rutaneahwa crossed 7th Street at a red light when the vehicle headed north crashed into him.At this time, no identification of the driver or the vehicle was released by the authorities. Speed is suspected as the factor of the incident.Further investigation is still active and anyone with information can c...Oakland rapper arrested after four months on the lam, now faces federal and state felony charges
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:09:25 GMT
OAKLAND — Eight months after he was arrested and charged by the U.S. Department of Justice with illegal gun possession, an Oakland man is facing new charges related to an Aug. 30 arrest, after allegedly absconding from a halfway house, court records show.Masia Hollins, 22, an independent rapper who uses the stage name Dooder, was charged this month with possessing a concealed weapon and evading police, court records show. He also still faces pending federal charges of being a felon in possession of a firearm, and is being held in Santa Rita Jail in Dublin without bail.Oakland police have been searching for Hollins since late April, when he allegedly ran away from a halfway house in San Francisco. Last January, a federal judge released Hollins, siding against a prosecution motion to keep him detained.Officers finally spotted Hollins and another man in a vehicle driving through Hayward on Aug. 30. They attempted to pull him over, but Hollins allegedly sped away, but struck two p...Fights break out at protest of landlord party celebrating end of eviction moratorium
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:09:25 GMT
A protest against the Berkeley Property Owners Association’s celebration of the end of the city’s pandemic eviction moratorium on Tuesday night ended in fistfights and shoving matches, according to witnesses.Nearly 100 protesters from the Berkeley Tenants Union and the Tenants and Neighborhood Councils assembled outside of the ironically named Freehouse Pub around 5 p.m. where around 40 landlords were gathering to fête the end of a policy that banned them from evicting tenants who couldn’t pay rent. As landlords entered the mixer, picketers chanted “See our might, see our power, landlords get no happy hour” and displayed signs reading “No peace for evictors.”Nearly 100 protesters, including members of the Tenant and Neighborhood Councils and Berkeley Tenants Union, gathered outside of a party hosted by the Berkeley Property Owners Association to celebrate the end of the eviction moratorium. (Courtesy of Tenant and Neighborhood Councils) An ho...Newsom assails right-wing attacks on rights, and on California values
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:09:25 GMT
Gov. Gavin Newsom in San Francisco on Wednesday assailed conservative attacks on voting rights, LGBTQ rights and books, tying the success of California’s businesses to “blue-state” Democratic values.“I’m watching 50 years, a half century of progress being wiped out,” Newsom said in a talk with Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff at the software giant’s annual “Dreamforce” conference.“I’m very worried about what’s going on nationally. Folks want to bring us back to a pre-1960 world. This rights regression needs to be called out.”Newsom held up the far-right ideology of former President Donald Trump and other leaders espousing hardcore conservative views as barriers to social, environmental and economic progress.Newsom decried the banning of books, mentioning specifically the blocking of a book by a southern California school board over its mention of slain gay rights leader Harvey Milk, who served on the San Franci...NFL players union renews call to get rid of turf after Aaron Rodgers’ injury
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:09:25 GMT
By TERESA M. WALKER AP Pro Football WriterNASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Skin scraped down to bloody patches. Sore bodies stinging in post-game showers. Aching shoulders, backs, hips, knees and ankles.Add in season-ending injuries like four-time MVP Aaron Rodgers tearing his left Achilles tendon in his debut with the New York Jets on Monday night and Buffalo pass rusher Von Miller tearing his ACL, an incident that he blames on artificial turf.Yes, NFL players prefer playing on natural grass. It’s why the NFL Players Association called on the league Wednesday to switch all fields to grass in what executive director Lloyd Howell said was “the easiest decision the NFL can make.”It’s a matter of career preservation.“I mean, the NFL is already ‘Not For Long,’ right?” Carolina linebacker Shaq Thompson said. “It sucks it had to happen that way. … Hopefully they run with it. Hopefully they blow it up and shout it out loud and everybody puts it on social media, takes a stand and d...Single-family residence in Hayward sells for $1.9 million
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:09:25 GMT
28861 Bay Heights Road – Google Street ViewA 3,489-square-foot house built in 2000 has changed hands. The spacious property located in the 28800 block of Bay Heights Road in Hayward was sold on July 27, 2023. The $1,850,000 purchase price works out to $530 per square foot. This single-story house boasts a generous living space with five bedrooms and three bathrooms. In addition, the house features a two-car garage.Additional houses that have recently been sold close by include:In July 2022, a 2,944-square-foot home on Bailey Ranch Road in Hayward sold for $2,100,000, a price per square foot of $713. The home has 5 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms.On Bay Heights Road, Hayward, in October 2022, a 2,669-square-foot home was sold for $1,838,000, a price per square foot of $689. The home has 4 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms.A 3,705-square-foot home on the 28800 block of Bailey Ranch Road in Hayward sold in August 2022, for $1,950,000, a price per square foot of $526. The home has 7 bedrooms and 4 bath...Letters: Slavery’s legacy | Seniors’ needs | Preserve Pac-12 | Bosa contract
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:09:25 GMT
Submit your letter to the editor via this form. Read more Letters to the Editor.Reparations won’t solveslavery’s legacyRe: “Payment to offset slavery unpopular” (Page A1, Sept. 11).Elissa Miolene’s Sept. 11 article on reparation says, “Voters who oppose the idea said it would be unfair to ask today’s taxpayers to pay for past wrongs.” That is true.On the battlefield, our forefathers poured out their blood that the institutions of the Confederate States of America would pass away and that those who were enslaved and their descendants would forever be free. Today, some of the fruits of that shed blood are a former Black president, a Black vice president, Black Supreme Court justices, Black athletes with lucrative contracts, very successful Black entertainers and businessmen, and numerous elected Black state officials.We are not guaranteed equal outcomes but equal opportunity to make free choices. Yes, there are inequalities to be fixed. ...Latest news
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