The UCSB women’s tennis team hosted three teams this weekend, pulling out wins in two of the matches. To kick off the weekend, #60 Furman University defeated the Gauchos, 4-2 in a game shortened by rain and darkness Friday.
I can’t help but get a sick stomach when I walk into a Wal-Mart or a Kmart since I realized that most of the things I see will end up in a dump within a few months, or a few years at most.
Late-night Mexican-food junkies may have noticed that Freebirds has been serving up more than just burritos Friday and Saturday nights, now that the restaurant has added a bouncer to its payroll.
Saturday was both a disappointment and a redemption of sorts for the #10 UCSB women’s water polo team as it dropped a 6-5 decision to #6 Cal at home.
Imagine that one Friday night you return to your humble abode after a pleasant night of meeting strangers – who are now your new friends of course – topped off by you and a pal drunkenly devouring an oh-so-delicious crispy chicken sandwich from Silvergreens.
Complementing a University of California systemwide petition, union members in two UCSB campus departments are collecting signatures in an effort to increase their wages.
The UCSB men’s and women’s track teams blew past the competition at Saturday’s All-Cal Challenge Cup, racing to both team victories and 12 individual titles at the Irvine classic.
This past weekend I was afforded a wonderful opportunity. Through UCSB Hillel I traveled to our nation’s capital along with 15 other UCSB and SBCC students to attend the Charlotte B. and Jack J. Spitzer B’nai B’rith Forum on Public Policy.
Four UCSB construction projects are currently in the works in an attempt to give the campus a new look and provide more housing for its growing population. The projects include the Sierra Madre Apartments, North Campus Faculty Housing, the Ocean Road faculty and family housing projects and a remodeled campus entrance off State Route 217.
As an antithesis to Isla Vista’s Halloween mayhem, a sociology class is planning Chilla Vista: An almost waste-free street fair slated for June 4. Throughout the quarter, students in Sociology 194 have been organizing the street fair – estimated to attract roughly 1,500 students – to promote sustainable purchasing and living practices, as well as local music, art and culture.