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Opinion

It’s A Long Walk To Your Car

The ever-present problem of parking for UC Irvine students, especially for those who live in on-campus communities like Vista Del Campo, Vista Del Campo Norte and the newest residential community – Camino Del Sol, has once again reared its ugly head.

Mounting Repression Against UC Activists

Even the most cynical observer might have been surprised by the Orange County District Attorney’s decision to press charges against the 19 students and workers who, directly or indirectly, participated in the Feb. 24, 2010 sit-in on the fifth floor of Aldrich Hall. This might only be because the district attorney’s office decided to inform the students of the charges through an online press release, publishing each student’s full name and location (forever linking each of them, via Google, to a criminal case) on the Thursday of finals week, with an arraignment scheduled during Winter Break, and a full six months after UC Irvine itself completed disciplinary proceedings against the students involved.

Zuckerberg: Person of the Year?

Although Time magazine readers recently chose WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange as “Person of the Year,” Time editors preferred to feature a far less controversial figure on the cover of the magazine. They decided to select Mark Zuckerberg, founder and CEO of Facebook and the youngest choice for the honor since Charles Lindberg in 1927. While both Assange and Zuckerberg are founders of tech empires that have transformed today’s social landscape, the difference between the two is clear. In short, Assange’s innovation has targeted government secrecy while Facebook has changed our personal lives.

In-Class Essays Hurt So Good

All of us have been there. It’s 8:00 a.m. on a Friday, you have just completed a somewhat successful caffeine-fueled all-nighter, and you are now sitting in a lecture hall preparing to take your last final of the quarter. Two hours later, your right hand — or left hand, if you happen to be a genius by no choice of your own — feels like it has been participating in a never-ending arm-wrestling match with a malevolent celestial creature for whom sleep and rest are unnecessary. The only clear solution is to drink until you can no longer feel feelings.

Americans Not So Sure About Evolution

Old habits die hard. A recent poll revealed that 4 in 10 Americans believe in some variant of creationism, 38 percent in “theistic evolution” — that is, evolution guided by God — and 16 percent in evolution tout court. The expected, incredulous reaction of the average reader of this article is as follows: “Really? In 2010?” But the charts show that this is the lowest occurrence of belief in creationism in decades, and progress — if this is progress to you — comes at its own pace.

UCI Gets No Love

On Dec. 23, Scott M. Reid covered the UCLA-UC Irvine basketball game much like any mainstream media outlet — from UCLA’s perspective. The only problem: Reid was writing for the Orange County Register.

WikiLeaks Keeps It Real

If you’ve been keeping up with the news for the past month or so, the name WikiLeaks should sound more than familiar, as well as the constant battle between the site and many governments. WikiLeaks, an international non-profit organization that publishes private, secret and classified media, has recently been releasing classified documents of detailed correspondence between the U.S. State Department and its diplomatic missions from countries around the world.

Obamacare: Is It Legal?

Recently, U.S. District Judge Henry Hudson ruled that forcing people to buy health insurance (or pay a fine) is unconstitutional. Although further judicial review is pending, and several courts have ruled differently, this decision just may be the death knell for President Obama’s plan to provide insurance for the nation’s uninsured. The judge’s ruling was as literal an interpretation of the Constitution as one can imagine. Had the health care bill used different words and levied a tax (of equal amount instead of the fine) on all Americans and provided a tax credit (also equal to the fine) for those with health insurance, nothing significant and of substance would have changed from the bill, and as a result the judge would have had no objection.

Editor’s Post

The editorial staff of the New University would like to clarify information presented in Nesma Tawil’s article “Check Yourself Before You Wreck Yourself”...

For the Love of Four Loko

Society continues to either sneer and turn its nose up at Four Loko or indulge lavishly in its unreasonable and sticky, sweet existence....

Check Facebook While You Read This Article

With all the distractions we are presented with these days from connecting with our friends on Facebook and other social networks, it can...

Censorship Woes

The Combating Online Infringements and Counterfeits Act bill, or COICA, should be loathed by anyone who uses the Internet. Here at UC Irvine,...

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