Starting April 5, students will be able to reserve study spaces at Moffitt Library for up to three hours.
Students who are interested can make appointments but will have to adhere to Moffitt Library’s community health protocols, including low-density seating and mask-wearing at all times. Food and drink are also prohibited in the building. The campus will provide more details regarding the reopening after spring break.
Students with disabilities will have priority for appointments, according to Amanda Hill, campus sophomore and Academic Senate Library Committee member.
“(Moffitt) has the capacity for about 50 people, and after spring break all students will be welcome,” Hill said in a tweet Thursday. “Please note all of this is tentative and subject to change.”
Netflix s To All the Boys: Always and Forever does not do UC Berkeley justice
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Noah Centineo as Peter Kavinsky and Lana Condor as Lara Jean Covey in To All The Boys: Always and Forever. Sarah Shatz / Netflix
In the final installment of the Netflix teen rom-com saga “To All The Boys: Always and Forever,” Lara Jean Covey is utterly torn between two colleges: UC Berkeley and New York University.
Our lovelorn protagonist (played by the endlessly endearing Lana Condor) just came back from a life-affirming senior class trip to New York, which included a glam rooftop party, a trip to Levain Bakery for its cookies, and, for reasons only loosely explained, a theft of a pink couch.
I’m fortunate enough to have a mathematical concept named after me. And not just Wadge degrees. There’s also the Wadge hierarchy, Wadge reducibility, and the Wadge game. In fact I’ve seen people say they’re interested in “Wadge theory”. A whole theory!
I’ve posted about this before but that was mainly technical and for most readers not all that accessible. It left out the human element, the passion, the drama, the thrill of victory etc. So here’s the real story.
I arrived in Berkeley (California) fresh from getting a math degree at UBC in Vancouver. I arrived a long time ago, in the Fall of 1966 (!). There was a lot going on on campus – roll on from the previous year’s “Free Speech” movement. And the Vietnam war was raging. Soon after I arrived the Marines set up a recruiting table in the student union building. Hundreds of protesters chased them and the police out of the building and across Sproul Plaza into Sproul Hall, the administration building. That wa