With Newsom pulling out of the 2010 Gubernatorial race, name recognition has gone out the window. So can we keep caring about the politics now? ; The end of Newsom’s Governor run brings with it the potential return of the Brown family’s political dynasty. So what can we do?
Student Jacob Cribbs’s The Animals of Omaha opens this weekend in UCSC’s Experimental Theater. Winner of the 2009 Dharma Grace Award, the show deals with issues such as domestic violence and intolerance while exploring the ways people render one another inhuman through their daily interactions.
The economic crisis has hit many families across the country hard, but amongst the hardest hit have been families with special needs children who are now finding the agencies they turned to for aid are no longer able to help them to the same capacity due to budget cuts.
With skulls painted on their faces, approximately 60 faculty, staff and student demonstrators led a “funeral procession” to UC Santa Cruz Executive Vice Chancellor David Kliger’s modest Santa Cruz home on Monday, Nov. 2 to protest student fee hikes, employee salary reductions and furlough days.
UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal provided student media with an afternoon to discuss issues facing the University on Nov. 2. City on a Hill Press, along with KZSC, touched on the topics of privatization and UC President Mark Yudof’s handling of the budget crisis. Jim Burns, the director of public information, and student media advisors, were present in the background of the hour-long interview.
WTH?!: Yo, I think you’re great, and I’m gonna let you finish… but I’ve just gotta ask this question. This week’s question: What would Beyoncé do?
{Last Week’s Results} Men’s Soccer 10/30 at Chapman (away) 1-0 (win) 11/1 at Cal Lutheran (away) 2-1 (loss) 11/4 at Holy Names (away) (1-0) (loss) Women’s Soccer 10/30 at Claremont Mudd Scripps (away) 3-2 (loss) 11/1 at Chapman (away) 5-0 (win) Women’s Volleyball 11/3 at Dominican (away) (3-1) (win) {Upcoming Athletics} Men’s Basketball 11/6 at [...]
Yudof’s “new” plan to increase student funding is merely a short-term solution to a long-term problem.
What will the UC system look like ten years from now? What will its size be? How can the University of California ensure that it is within reach of Californians of all backgrounds? And how will it continue to attract world-renowned faculty? Amid UC’s economic turmoil Board of Regents Chairman Russell Gould created the Commission on the Future to answer these questions.
