A UCSB doctoral student is winning an award this week for his research on carbon fiber – a material used in everything from cell phone covers to fighter jets.
It was wartime in enemy waters for the #5 UCSB men’s water polo team, but the Gauchos emerged victorious, defeating #14 Pacific 8-3 on Saturday and #4 Berkeley 7-6 on Sunday in overtime.
You students pay a fortune of your own and your parents’ money to attend UCSB to get an education, but what you are getting is a thorough brainwashing by the left-wing bunch of professors that infest the campus today, instead of a well-rounded, balanced liberal arts education which you all need in order to deal with the multifaceted world after you graduate.
By late summer 2005, construction should be completed on the new Arbor convenience store, which will be 10 times larger than its predecessor and include a Woodstock’s Pizza, as well as a Subway sandwich shop.
It was 45 degrees outside, not counting windchill, on Saturday as the UCSB men’s and #15 women’s cross country teams competed in the Pre-NCAA meet, held at Indiana State University.
At the beginning of this school year, the new sex columnist promised us that his penis would be doing the writing. But instead he writes with a surrogate vagina.
UCSB students and Isla Vista residents rocked out this weekend at the Associated Students sponsored “Get Out the Vote” concert, featuring local and national talent.
Streaking fans and controversial officiating weren’t distracting enough to prevent the UCSB women’s soccer team from turning in a defensive gem en route to a 0-0 tie at Cal Poly to finish up its three-game road trip.
I am responding to your Friday, Oct. 15 printing of the column titled “Americans Ought to Select a More Palatable President” (Daily Nexus, Oct. 15). Elia, you suggest that our current president has erased decades of good relations between the United States and Europe, as well as a sense of European admiration for the nation that America has been.
After receiving $19.4 million in grants and donations over the past 22 months, the campaign to save Ellwood Mesa is just $1 million short of its goal.