Two candidates debated Wednesday for the position of external vice president for local affairs, a position that maintains and strengthens the relationship between UCSB students and the local community.
Returning after three years of silence with a third album, the band stands by its old habit of changing membership every album as well as its snide regard for ’70s hard rock, and then goes full bore.
Senior history major and Gauchoholic Lee Gientke gets dunked as a part of A.S. President Brian Hampton’s kick-off for a website that would allow students to evaluate and look at other student’s evaluations of professors online. To have a chance to dunk someone, students needed only to fill out an evaluation.
I feel cleansed, fresh, wonderful. But let me start at the beginning. Last year, a curiously simple little brown-fronted CD-EP landed in the review pile, from a band called Bats & Mice.
Before you get any Catholic jokes in your dirty minds, I have an admission to make: Reverend Horton Heat took my psychobilly cherry in the back of the House of Blues on Sunset in 1996.
I bet she plays a mean guitar. Theatre UCSB presents “Passage/Spring Dances 2002” tonight at Hatlen Theatre. Director Stephanie Nugent says the show “offers a diverse array of aesthetics, perspectives and journeys.”
“Nearly 70 percent of inner-city and rural fourth graders cannot read even at a basic level. Imagine that: in the greatest, wealthiest nation the world has ever known, nearly seven out of every 10 fourth graders in big cities and rural areas cannot read.”
Junior forward Mark Hull drained six three-point buckets against Arizona in the first half of the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
The weatherpet is suffering a midlife crisis. At three he is past his youth and has been reminded of his advancing age by a hernia and kidney stones.
As a sex columnist, I’m sort of expected to cover a broad range of topics within the subject of “sex.” Yet there is one area thus far I haven’t touched on at all – homosexual, bisexual and transgender issues.