The following story came from the January 16, 1973 edition of the Daily Nexus. In the article, writer Matt Koerber describes what would happen to UCSB should a nuclear war break out.
As a UCSB alumna, a journalist and a former Nexite, I was disgusted upon hearing that members of the Associated Students Legislative Council were calling for a boycott of the Daily Nexus (“A.S. Mulls Sanctioning Nexus for Housing Ad,” Daily Nexus, Jan. 11.)
Anyone who attended UCSB last quarter probably remembers the A.S. Students’ Initiative. At the time, we were told that the fee increases outlined were entirely necessary. Even at the time, however, it was relatively obvious that the motion was flawed at best.
I would like to submit this as a response to Ray Collins’s drinking column (“Mexican Partying Is Worth the Trip, Hombre,” Daily Nexus, Jan. 10). He blatantly ripped of the material of one of my favorite comedians and the host of VH1’s “Insominiac,” Dave Attell.
In the wake of a tragic car accident that killed UCSB third-year students Angela Nguyen and Jonathan Kendall, the couple’s family and friends are coming together in both Santa Barbara and San Jose to grieve.
I hate being cock blocked.
The rout was on at the Thunderdome last night as the UCSB women’s basketball team dominated Utah Valley State 86-58.
Usually the victors write the history books, but in the case of Saddam Hussein’s execution, his is recorded by video footage. The moving picture camera is the whirring scribe of our time – a mechanical mediator that makes digital media, which can be disseminated through television and the Internet. In the 21st century, history – and, indeed, all media – is controlled by those who yell, “Cut!”
While students went home to relax for the break, the Santa Barbara News-Press pushed through the holiday season with more claims against others, less claims against themselves and the same claim surrounding staff unionization.
The results from last weekend’s Elephant Bar Invitational hosted by the #6 Santa Barbara men’s volleyball team are a bit deceiving. Including eight of the country’s top 15 squads, each team finished the tournament exactly how they were ranked at the outset of the competition – with the exception of #14 Pacific upsetting #13 USC.