Associated Students and several other campus organizations have apparently adopted the Thomas Tussler idiom, “A fool and his money are soon parted” – and apparently we are the fools.
A crowd of over 30 people attended a special meeting for the Isla Vista Recreation and Park District last night, where the board of directors updated the public on plans to renovate Pardall Road.
As UCSB students, we are undoubtedly some of the most well rounded young people in the country. We study hard, we party hard and – let’s face it – this has got to be one of the better-looking student bodies in America. However, we have yet to thoroughly embrace one of America’s favorite pastimes: college sports.
At the turn of the century, the labor movement took some harsh hits. Over one million jobs were lost in the United States to the North American Free Trade Agreement that granted free trade with Mexico and Canada.
Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz lectured to a nearly sold-out crowd in Campbell Hall yesterday evening about the inadequacies of globalization and his suggested reforms.
It was a balmy morning in Isla Vista – 2 a.m. to be exact – and after a few successful rounds of flip cup and beer pong, I had a man on my arm and was on a hormone-driven mission home.
The beginning of the quarter textbook rush is just about over, but California Student Public Interests Research Group and Congressman David Wu have not stopped their investigations into high textbook prices, and how to lower them.
Riding high after its biggest win of the year, the UCSB men’s soccer team looks to continue its winning ways against lowly UC Riverside this afternoon. The Gauchos (7-5 overall, 3-1 in the Big West) pulled into a first place tie with #21 UC Irvine after UCSB’s 2-0 win last weekend at Harder Stadium, but […]
Just like your first beer bong, losing your virginity or even getting a blumpkin, turning 21 only happens once in a lifetime.
The upcoming Center for Film, Television and New Media has received a new moniker, after legendary television producers Marcy Carsey and Dick Wolf recently donated about $6 million toward its construction.