Rice University’s Student Newspaper — Since 1916

Saturday, May 25, 2024 — Houston, TX

3 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.



An open letter to candidate Mitt Romney

(04/20/12 12:00am)

Congratulations, former Governor Romney. After flirting with a man whose name shall remain un-Googled, your party has decided to settle down with a candidate whose own press secretary compared to an Etch A Sketch, ready to "shake up and restart all over again" to appeal to voters outside the Fox News universe. You may not have secured the majority of delegates, but your remaining primary opponents are a gadfly with ideas plucked straight from science fiction - and Newt Gingrich. The nomination is yours. Send your unaffiliated Super PAC an anonymous thank-you note. After six years in beta testing and a quick deletion of your health care file, you only need one more reboot for the general election. Before you trigger the political reset button, we respectfully offer our advice on how to re-program yourself to swoop up persuadable Rice Owl voters.


KTRU sale leaves campus clubs unsafe

(08/27/10 12:00am)

These are the times that try Rice's soul. The recent incident involving the sale of the KTRU transmitter necessitates a surge of vigilance and skepticism among the student body. Unless the Rice administration is forcefully made aware of student opposition to the secretive process through which the KTRU tower and frequency were pawned off to the University of Houston, we must operate under the assumption that any university asset or program the administration deems unprofitable or underutilized is available for sale to the highest bidder. All members of the Rice community should be alarmed by the dangerous precedent established by the subversive liquidation of a fixture of our university's culture. We must demand more accountability and transparency from our administration. While neither the administration nor the Board of Trustees is obligated to obtain student input before making decisions, effecting drastic changes to a student-run organization should involve students. President David Leebron claims that the negotiations for the sale were, "by necessity, confidential" in order to "bring them to a timely conclusion." However, the administration began appraising the station's value and scouting the market years ago - all without notifying any student stakeholders. The administration's failure to inform students that a major student organization could undergo irreversible changes is unacceptable. If crafting a deal to sell the transmitter necessitated secrecy, then Rice never should have made the offer in the first place. It is disappointing and perplexing that the administration was more candid about the potential merger of Rice University and Baylor College of Medicine than it was about the sale of a radio tower. Given the immense backlash that resulted from its previous attempt to shut down the KTRU signal, it is hard to imagine that the administration's opacity was not a deliberate attempt to preclude dissent and to obviate organized opposition. The administration may never admit it, but its actions suggest it had something to hide. More disturbingly, its choices permanently undermine confidence in its receptiveness to student input. Unless students actively express our disapproval, Rice administrators have little incentive to operate more openly in the future.


KTRU Corner: Isis' Wavering Radiant

(09/04/09 12:00am)

In the words of Isis frontman Aaron Turner, heavy metal has "long been unjustly maligned as solely the province of knuckle-dragging meatheads." Although Isis keeps intact the dark lyrical themes, heavy guitar riffs, aggressive percussion lines and high levels of feedback that have made metal a somewhat disreputable genre, the band has managed to craft a distinctive sound that demonstrates metal's extraordinary versatility and artistic strength.Though the band is rooted in the sludge and hardcore styles of bands such as Neurosis, Godflesh and the Melvins, Isis' 2002 release Oceanic has been called a progenitor of the art metal, post-metal and metalgaze subgenres. Turner himself has been resistant to categorizing Isis in interviews, and once dubbed their sound "thinking man's metal."