I would like to take this chance to both educate the UCSB community and blast Larri Gregg and her cohorts for spreading simplistic and inaccurate views (“Unexpected Campus Missile Projects Shock Student,” Daily Nexus, Feb. 8).
Photos from the protest that occurred on Feb. 12, 2008 at Pardall Tunnel in I.V.
Larri Gregg’s editorial last week (“Unexpected Campus Missile Projects Shock Student,” Daily Nexus, Feb. 8) unfairly groups all defense projects together as “weapons” and as tools of George Bush’s policy, when nothing could be further from the truth.
Hello, you. Welcome to my blog on the Nexus site. Fancy, huh? I’ll be writing here every day to tell you about something neat that I’ve found.
Look I’m not going to get in the way of today’s planned protest, but I want to make this very, very clear: Stay the hell away from the 217 this year.
After covering the campus with signs reading “No more blood for oil” and “Last year… We took the 217. This year…” activists will attempt to top last year’s massive anti-war protest today.
This past weekend, the UCSB men’s volleyball team rode up to NorCal sitting in a three-way tie for seventh place in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation. With a weekend split against conference foes, the Gauchos continue to cling to their playoff hopes.
The Democrats sure have an interesting plan to bring about change in America. With the primaries more than halfway complete, now is the time when candidates should gear up to put their party’s strongest candidate forward. Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama repeatedly boast their commitment to unity and their ability to steer America in the right direction. These past few months have said otherwise.
After losing 7-0 to #38 Washington (4-2 overall) on Friday, the UCSB men’s tennis team won their first match of the season against Ball State (3-4 overall) on Saturday afternoon in a 4-3 thriller.
Art Hoppe, the late star columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle, wrote decades of satire renowned by readers of that venerable paper for its wit and spot-on insight.