USAC voices concern about ASUCLA
Professor Ya-Hong Xie led this quarter’s third Professor in the Union series event – a student-faculty lunch and discussion sponsored by the Associated Students of UCLA – Tuesday to discuss “The Exciting Field of Electronic Materials.”
ASUCLA formed the weekly series in response to a proposed Student Union Strategic Initiative allowing ASUCLA to sponsor programs – some of the same programs the Undergraduate Students Association Council has traditionally conducted.
USAC called the initiative into question over the summer, but a revised proposal has not yet been released. USAC officials have said they believe ASUCLA should stick to its traditional funding role and let USAC and student groups run programs.
USAC sponsors a similar program called the brown bag discussions, during which professor and students meet to discuss prevalent issues.
“I wouldn’t say (ASUCLA) oversteps its role, but I would say it raises some concern as to how we are utilizing our money in the union,” said USAC President Anica McKesey.
“Finances are allocated to certain groups, so the distinction, therefore, of making programming on the side of ASUCLA is very questionable,” she added.
Even on the ASUCLA Board of Directors, members disagree what the role of the union should be in student programming, said board member Yousef Tajsar.
Brown Bag discussions address prevalent issues and policies while Professor in the Union discussions are different because they encourage student-faculty interaction, he said.
Still, interaction between professors and students can be done in the classroom, McKesey said.
Programming is about utilizing the conversations produced from student-faculty interactions and talking about different social issues and the responsibilities students are feeling, she said.
“To say that you want one or the other is to say you want both,” she added.
Tajsar said the board is working with the council to resolve differences of opinion about programming.
“I would say (ASUCLA and USAC) are interacting well and communicating a lot,” he added.
ASUCLA held the first Professor in the Union luncheon at the end of winter quarter last year to expand student knowledge outside of the classroom, said Lisa Raigosa, the student support services manager.
The student union hoped to attract students with the Professor in the Union series because it lacks the pressure of the classroom setting and because grades are not involved, she said.
Meetings are held every Tuesday from second to ninth week in Ackerman Union and allow 45 students to participate on a first-come, first-serve basis, she said.
Brown bag discussions are not scheduled as regularly because they depend on other programming that USAC does, Raigosa said.
Raigosa also said she has not seen advertisements for USAC’s brown bag discussion series and does not believe that ASUCLA has overstepped the bounds of its responsibilities.
At Tuesday’s event, Xie discussed topics from his childhood in Beijing and his experiences at UCLA as both a graduate student and a professor.
Students in attendance say they enjoy the Professor in the Union series.
Third-year sociology student Kenny Chow said the luncheon interested him because he likes learning about ideas that are not related to his area of focus.



