Monthly Archives: February, 2009

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Locking Down on Captive Labor: California Prison Reform

Things are now so bad here in California that it seems we can't even do what we're best at anymore: locking people up. Boy, do we know how to pack them in. Not only has California been sending prisoners to other states due to a lack of facilities, but it is also housing prisoners in our state's jails that are somewhere near 200 percent capacity, according to CNN.

Letters to the Editor

Retired DEA: Writer Misunderstands View of Police; Gunless Students are Legally Defenseless on Campus; Myths Persist About Concealed Weapons on Campuses.

Modern Day Heroes: Feet of Clay

All the heroes are dead. Their bodies lay strewn about cyberspace after being pulled apart by Internet jackals and our own curiosity. Our thirst to know more has driven us to slay the very people we admire, and the Internet lies in our hands like a bloody murder weapon. Modern media has made the idea of a hero impossible, thanks to overexposure.

Extraordinary Rendition: Bush to Obama

Picture this: You wake up each morning in a dirty cell and are hung by your wrists and interrogated while a government operative holds a gun to your head. This same operative takes a scalpel to your body, makes incisions and then pours stinging liquid into your open wounds.

UCs Drop SAT IIs, Not Standards

The regents' Committee on Educational Policy voted unanimously for a controversial change in freshman admission standards that would take effect for fall 2012. On Wednesday, Feb. 4, the University of California regents gave preliminary approval to drop the requirement for two SAT subject exams, which would allow more students to be eligible for a review of their applications. Students would still need to take the main SAT or ACT entrance tests.

NorCal: Not So Good to Us

BASKETBALLl: Men's team drops two games on its trip up north. Bland records sixth double-double.

Lady ‘Eaters Continue to Struggle

BASKETBALLl: Women's basketball has a tough time against UC Davis and comes up short against Pacific.

Gauchos Scare, ‘Eaters Prevail

volleyball: No.1 men's team survives a scare with a five-set win over No.12 UC Santa Barbara at home.

Oh Yes ‘Eater Fans; Baseball is Back

BASEBALL: The Anteater baseball team is ranked ninth in the nation and is on a road to redemption.

Gimme Shelter

Taking refuge from the downpour on Thursday night, bands blast away in an intimate setting in the Phoenix Food Court as part of the Acrobatics Everyday concert series.

Red Jumpsuit Falls; Lily Allen Flies

Everyone knows that Red Jumpsuit Apparatus is like that kid in the corner everyone picks on. Its sophomore album "Lonely Road" justifies every reason as to why the band is handed so much ridicule... Lily Allen caught many people's attention with her first album "Alright, Still," which discussed many personal situations as well as her true feelings and opinions about them. Her second album, "It's Not Me, It's You," also includes personal dilemmas with a fresh twist to her music.

Thriller?

Members of the Chinese Assocation Dance Crew show off more of their killer moves at the UC Irvine Career Fest, coming straight off of the crew's victory at Vibe XIV.

Celebrations of a Man’s ‘Visions’

The Irvine Barclay Theatre came alive with a celebration of performances new and old, covering standout pieces in a variety of genres in "Dance Visions 2009." A showcase from the UC Irvine Department of Dance, "Dance Visions" was a tribute to Donald McKayle, a Claire Trevor School of the Arts professor of dance.

“The Class” Obeys Audience Desires

The last few decades in Hollywood were awash with inspirational schoolhouse dramas that pitted an exuberant, maverick teacher against a sea of uninspired but capable students. There was always a happy ending — either through fate or fortune, the teacher managed to change the lives of every dangerous mind under his or her influence. Sadly, anyone who has ever endured public schooling, be it in a bustling city or a sleepy suburb, understands that such tidy outcomes are more the stuff of legend than reality. This decade has been a little different. "Half Nelson" (2006), an underrated drama starring Ryan Gosling as a drug-dependent middle school teacher, brought much-needed realism to the dynamics of change in the classroom.

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