Australia and Paraguay battled for a spot in the World Cup knockout stage Thursday at San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, resulting in a 0-0 tie. Entering the match, the winner was guaranteed second place behind the United States in Group D
Roughly 20% of UC Berkeley law students are now registered with the campus’s Disabled Students’ Program — a figure that has recently drawn national headlines but that several media outlets have incorrectly overstated
SPECIAL ISSUE | “Queer coding has much of its roots in the Hays Code. You couldn’t show anything deemed immoral by the production code...But that didn’t stop queer creatives from telling their stories — they just did it in more subtle ways.”
SPECIAL ISSUE | “This Pride Month seems bleak. For years, these companies and their marketing teams pandered to Pride partygoers with rainbows and glitter. But now, their silence is louder than ever. It’s become evident that for them, Pride isn’t profitable”
UC Berkeley professor Gabriel Zucman champions specialized taxation of the ultrarich. In his new book, “We Need to Tax Billionaires,” Zucman proposed the “Zucman tax,” an “unavoidable” minimum tax for extremely wealthy individuals, equal to 2% of their wealth
The city of Berkeley adopted a severe budget Tuesday night, which will cut almost every area of its services to close a $30 million deficit. The city agreed to deep cuts to public safety, which includes layoffs for fire and police department employees, among other city positions
Pride has always been a protest. But modern acts of “solidarity” look different this year: Fewer storefronts are adorned with rainbow flags, and San Francisco’s baseball players are openly opposing LGBTQ+ representation. Are we nostalgic for the visibility of corporate pride?
In this year’s Pride issue, we welcome the opportunity to reflect on what matters most when we celebrate queerness. Not corporate recognition for profit or empty messages of support, but community with one another in the spaces we build
Every four years, the internet somehow convinces everyone that the “real” World Cup experience involves plane tickets, stadium selfies and get-ready-with-me videos. The real experience doesn’t require flights. You can enjoy it fully from wherever you are in the world.
NCAA Division I Cabinet unanimously approved a new eligibility model for Division I athletes Tuesday, moving to a system that grants athletes five seasons of competition across five years if they enroll in college no later than the academic year following their 19th birthday.