Opinion

Column: Too good to be true

When's the last time you actually won an iPod for being the one millionth visitor to a website or a free vacation to a tropical island?

Column: Memoirs of a go-go

"They want sexy," said my friend. "You've been put on the list. You're doing it."

Column: The scarlet letter

There are times when socially conservative Americans and I part ways. But one issue that we both see as a terrible problem in our country is infidelity.

Editorial: Bylaws should be followed

Sabrina Dias, Outreach Assembly speaker, has filed an ASUCD lawsuit against current ASUCD President Adam Thongsavat for improper hiring practices. She interviewed for City and County Affairs director but was not hired.

Editorial: Students should be allowed legal counsel

The administration at California State University, Sacramento recently charged the "Sac State Four" with code of conduct violations for their April sit-in at the campus' Sacramento Hall.

Letters to the Editor: Lawsuit filed against ASUCD president

While President Thongsavat has made it clear that Speaker Dias will not be appointed to head the City and County Affairs office, this does not mean her case challenging the hiring process is meaningless. Instead, Dias represents future UC Davis students who may face a far worse violation of their right to a fair hiring process in the ASUCD.

Letters to the Editor: Response to sleep/napping column

We at Health Education and Promotion (HEP) were excited to see Corrie Jacobs' informative article on the importance of sleep and napping. We know that most college students' schedules are a balancing act of commitments to work, school, internships and extracurricular activities, making sleep the first thing to go. But when students cut out sleep, performance in school can suffer. In fact, according to 2009 National College Health Assessment data collected on our campus, about one in five UC Davis students report suffering negative academic impacts - such as a failing grade or dropping a course - as a result of sleep difficulties.

Column: Addicted to URL

My last week consisted of restoring files after my computer decided it hated me, gave me that blue error screen of death and proceeded to have a major glitch in its operating system. After rushing it to the computer hospital and praying that it wasn't going to die forever, I realized just how much of my life is contained on my hard drive.

Column: Lucid dreams

It's always interested me to deduce things about people based on their inadvertent tendencies: Freudian slips, unconscious facial expressions, words whose meaning contradicts the tone that speaks them.

Column: Life after love

For some reason, it seems like people are feeling a little anxious about graduating. Apparently the economy is bad? Hm. I don't know about you, but I've got a six-figure gig lined up for me once I receive my pretty gold-sealed diploma. That's right, I bet you wish you were an English major now, eh.

Column: Leave everything behind

"The two best days in a man's life are the day he buys a bus and the day he sells his bus." I learned this line from an old friend, a crafty conman who somehow, even after telling me this, convinced me to take care of his 1968 junker while he chased a yoga teacher to New York. Despite my better judgment, I agreed to help him, and the bus became a 40,000 pound relic of the destructive, unsustainable lifestyle I lived at the time.

Editorial: ASUCD senate seat

ASUCD Senator Eli Yani, who was elected by the student body about 10 weeks ago, will graduate in June. This means that he will abandon his term 18 weeks early, a plan he chose not to disclose during his campaign.

Guest Opinion: Statistics don’t lie, people do

It was a great pleasure to discover the response of Rob Olson to my previous opinion, "Now or never," because it means that at least one person took the time to read what I wrote and cared enough to write an answer.

Column: Fries, anyone?

Your few years of study will come to an end here. You're all set to get that freshly-minted degree of yours.

Column: Making a memory

This Monday the lives of New Yorkers were changed forever with a mind-infiltrating advertising scheme that is sure to revolutionize the industry.