Club Re-requests Katrina Travel Funds

After a few weeks of bureaucratic ping pong, the UCSB chapter of Habitat for Humanity will reapply for funding from Associated Students Finance Board to pay for its Hurricane Katrina relief efforts.

Spy Games

At one point in “Breach,” Chris Cooper’s character, Robert Hanssen, complains that his fellow FBI agents are more interested in violence and glory than in contemplation and moral conviction.

RHA Is Not To Blame for ResLife’s Responsibilities

Christian McCusker — or number 3985 as we prefer to call you around the office — we appreciate your letter telling us how much we (or “The Man,” as we like to call ourselves) are keeping you down (“RHA Unjustly Hassles Residents,” Daily Nexus, Feb. 28).

UCSB Remains Poised for Tournament

After a tough loss last Saturday to UC Riverside that shattered any hope of winning another Big West conference championship, the UCSB women’s basketball team will be getting ready for the Big West tournament in their last two games of the regular season this week.

Leg Council Tables Bill on New Hub Position

Associated Students Legislative Council heard reports from several A.S. committees, discussed future plans and tabled one bill at its meeting yesterday.

Love By The Numbers

Say the words “science fiction,” and the imagination conjures visions of breathtaking advances in physics and biotechnology that transform our world into a dystopia, a utopia or a little of both.

Aggies Roll Into Santa Barbara With Momentum

After a rough week at the Irvine Invitational, the #12 UCSB women’s water polo team is ready to leave last week behind and secure a victory against UC Davis (10-4 overall).

Scrap It

Not many sculptures are adorned with strands of human hair and old stickers. Then again, most sculptures are not made out of lint.

Broiled Kazaam

After losing Dwayne Wade, Shaq finally felt the heat last night, only it wasn’t in Miami. Actually, his season-high 23 points seems more like Wade lit a fire under his ass.

“Into Great Silence” Speaks Volumes

With the Oscars culminating last Sunday and Hollywood’s summer blockbusters yet to come, Philip Gršning’s documentary about reclusive French monks, “Into Great Silence,” offers a more poetic and abstract look at filmmaking than the average award-winner.