Lately, there seems to be a wave of commercial Hollywood actors experimenting with independent films that generally have short, limited releases in the theaters and enjoy most of their success after they are released on DVD.
With graduation rapidly approaching, departing seniors across campus and around Isla Vista are lamenting all the things they will lose come June.
UCSB intramural soccer’s best players will compete for a chance to display their skills in the limelight tonight at 6 p.m. at the Rec Cen field, as the first annual IM World Cup Soccer Tournament will showcase two of the best teams from this season’s A League in the championship match.
The UCSB Associated Students’ lawsuit against the University of California Regents looks like it could be lost almost a year after being filed. UCSB A.S. – and later the UC Berkeley Associated Students Graduate Assembly (ASUCBGA) – filed a lawsuit against the UC Regents last October in an attempt to change the University’s policy forbidding the use of student funds for campaigns supporting a political candidate or issue on a ballot.
“Masqued” Haunting, eery and more than a little creepy, “Masqued” was a beautiful but chilling combination of fairy tale and fright. The film is based on an adaptation of two classic tales – Edgar Allen Poe’s “Masque of the Red Death” and the childhood favorite “Cinderella.” With shaky camera work and the sense that the […]
The sun is shining, the weather is clear and the Bob Marley references are already flowing like a nice, cold beer on a hot summer day.
Not even the thin air in Provo, Utah could slow down sophomore distance runner Bethany Nickless on her way to finishing second in the 3,000-meter steeplechase at the NCAA Western Regional last Saturday.
Students may find themselves interacting in sometimes uncomfortable but always unique ways with members of the Art 7A class this week. The class’ final project asks students to explore the idea of personal space by taking up an area anywhere on campus for two hours while performing a particular interaction.
Seeing two enormous, masked men in the dark usually signals trouble. This was far from the case when attendees at last Saturday’s screening of “Santo vs. the Martian Invasion” at I.V. Theater found themselves in the presence of Mexican wrestlers Enigma de Oro and Kayam of the Los Chivos wrestling team.
I was extremely disappointed after reading Elana Wenocur’s column (“Iran’s Wristbands Are Reminiscent of Nazi Germany,” Daily Nexus, May 24, 2006).