Daily Nexus
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The Daily Nexus is the university newspaper for the campus of the University of California, Santa Barbara (USCB). It has a daily circulation of approximately 20,000 people and is the primary news service for people living in Isla Vista, California — a campus-adjacent community that houses most UCSB students as well as many families.
Student journalism has always been a part of college life in Santa Barbara, even before the existence of UCSB. Before joining the University of California system, for example, Santa Barbara State College had a newspaper called The Eagle. As the institution slowly transformed into the modern UCSB, it adopted various other named for various other news publications, including The Roadrunner, El Gaucho and The University Post. The paper reverted back to the name El Gaucho in 1970, shortly before protesters burned down the Bank of America building in Isla Vista. In the wake of that incident, the paper's editors decided to change the publication's name to the Daily Nexus, in order to "keep with the changing nature of the university." The name was drawn by the paper's 1970-71 editorial board from a quote attributed to Robert Maynard Hutchins: "A free press is the nexus of any democracy."
Since then, the Daily Nexus has provided the students of UCSB with both campus-related and county-wide news each Monday through Friday. Today, the paper boasts a staff of roughly 30 student editors and dozens of student reporters. To those familiar with the publication, these employees are commonly referred to as "Nexites." Very few non-students are permitted to work at the paper. All employees are hired, promoted and trained by other students. Unlike many college newspapers, the administration has very little say in the content, since the paper's editor-in-chief, always a student, has the final say regarding what gets printed in the Daily Nexus. Regardless, students are paid for their work at the Nexus through the school and therefore are technically employees of the University of California. Much of the paper's funding, however, is derived through advertisement sales, much of which are done by student ad reps.
Currently, the paper features a team of news reporters and editors, photographers, sports writers and editors and staff for Artsweek, a weekly arts supplement in which students review movies and music and discuss cultural goings-on. The paper also features a daily opinion section in which the Nexus editors give staff editorials. This section also features space for any student or member of the Isla Vista community to write an opinion column or letter to the editor. One of the paper's most popular features is a weekly sex column, The Wednesday Hump, which also runs on the opinion page. The paper features daily drawings by student artists as well. At various points in the paper's history, it has also featured a science news section and The Daily Friday, a humor supplement.
The Daily Nexus office is situated in the Storke Communications Plaza, beneath Storke Tower and next to the offices of KCSB, the campus radio station. Storke Tower is named for Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and former U.S. Senator Thomas Storke, who was also a founder of the Santa Barbara News-Press.
[edit] Daily Nexus highlights
In 1986, the Nexus broke the story regarding the investigation into misappropriation of UC funds by then-UCSB Chancellor Robert Huttenback. What had initially begun as a news article regarding the sudden departure of a UCSB vice chancellor eventually ended in an exposé of Huttenback's financial activities. Among other things, Huttenback had used UC funds to repair and improve his privately owned home. Huttenback resigned from his post on July 11, 1986. A review of the incident by the UC President was declared moot and never officially released. The story had been followed by newspapers throughout California, including the Los Angeles Times.
In 1995, the Daily Nexus filed suit against California Governor Pete Wilson and the UC Regents, alleging that the regents had illegally conspired during phone conferences to line up support for the cancellation of Affirmative Action. The suit claimed that the conference was a violation of the Bagely-Keane Open Meeting Act. Then-campus editor Tim Molloy and the Daily Nexus were both listed as plaintiffs. In June 1999, the California Supreme Court ruled that the paper could not continue with its suit, as any suits alleging violations of the Bagley-Keane act must be filed within thirty days of the supposed violation. The court never actually ruled whether Wilson or the regents had violated the law, however. The suit received coverage in newspapers across the country.
On April 5, 2001, staff writer Brendan Buhler interviewed The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy author Douglas Adams in what turned out to be Adams' final interview before he died. After being published in the Nexus, selections from Buhler's interview were published in Douglas' final book, The Salmon of Doubt. The excerpts were noted as having come from the Daily Nexus.
In 2002, Nexus staff writer Marisa Lagos provided daily coverage of the duration of the quadruple murder trial of David Attias, who had killed four people in Isla Vista by running them down with his car on February 22, 2001. At the time of the incident, Attias had been a freshman at UCSB. In July 2002, a Santa Barbara jury ruled that Attias was guilty but insane at the time of the incident. The Attias case was also covered by newspapers like the Los Angeles Times and the San Francisco Chronicle. It also has been featured in multiple installments of the Dateline NBC news show.
Two long-time non-student employees, Barb MacLean and J.E. Anderson, have been working at the Nexus for more than several decades.
[edit] Controversy
Student reaction to the Nexus varies over time. Though many praise the paper, the Nexus has been accused by its readers of being too liberal, too conservative, anti-Semitic, homophobic or racist. Student minority groups have marched in protest of the paper more than once. In 2000, for example, the Filipino students' union picketed the paper in reaction to a joke in an April Fool's article regarding a fictional bombing of the Philippines.
In early 2005, UCSB's Black Student Union also marched in protest after the paper featured two front-page photos of a black man being arrested. The incident was only one in a series of clashes between the paper and minority students at UCSB that date back to 1974, during which student Murvin Glass sued the Nexus and its editor-in-chief, Jim Minow. Glass claimed that the Nexus had printed an editorial cartoon that insinuated that he had stolen copies of the paper. Glass won the suit in 1979.