University of California-Santa Cruz Top Questions

What are the most popular student activities/groups?

Maria

Some of the popular groups on campus are the sororities Gamma Phi Beta and Alpha Kappa Delta Phi, and the fraternity Lambda Epsilon Phi Kappa. I am involved in University Economics Association and Student Union Assembly. I am planning to rush for Gamma Phi Beta next quarter. When I lived at Oakes, students left their dorms open, but here at College Eight, the doors are mostly closed. The athletic events are not popular at all, I never hear news about them unless my friends are involved in a sport. I met my closest friends through friends that I either met at orientation or my roommate. If I am awake at 2am on Tuesday, I would be online (facebook or aim) or watching a movie. On weekends most people look for parties on campus or off campus. I can tell greek life is very small here, but I know people trying to get more involved. I wish Santa Cruz would not ban the frat houses. Last weekend I partied everyday except for Sunday. On a Saturday, people can watch movies downtown, go out to eat, play video games or watch tv and attend campus activities. I rarely go off campus because there is nothing special to do.

Emmerson

Students in my hall did not leave their doors open, but it was a transfer/re-entry hall, which means they're used to going to a home that is off campus. Athletic events are not popular. The parties here suck: everyone just stands around. BBQs and beach bonfires are better than any party. I met my closest friends in class and at STARS functions. People party often. Frats/Sororities struggle here. Since UCSC prevents such organizations from advertising their affiliation with the campus publicly, you hardly know where they exist. Saturday nights can be spent downtown on Pacific Avenue but most just go to drink. If you're not doing that, you're at a friends house... drinking. I camp, hike, and travel when I'm off campus.

Harper

There are several dance clubs on campus that give free lessons and dances, which is awesome. There are lots of hiking/outdoors-y clubs. Lots of martial arts clubs. I don't know what the most popular clubs or teams are, but we have pretty much whatever you could want, from basketball to Balboa. A group I'm involved with is SPS--Society of Physics students, which hosts meetings once a week for an hour, includes food and drink and usually a really interesting speaker. Great for physics students, all though ironically a lot of my classmates don't show. Some are shy, some just aren't interested, some are busy. Students do NOT leave their dorm rooms open. Stuff get's stolen a lot, though it also gets recovered a lot. Athletic events don't seem to be the most popular, though they certainly happen. Lots of guest speakers, on everything from masculinity in hip-hop to gender roles in Peru to the newest information on supernova. We have a great selection in that regard. The dating scene...I don't really know. I met my current boyfriend here, through an activity, and people do seem to pair off, so I'd say it's reasonable. If I'm awake at 2am on a Tuesday, I'm probably studying. There are a couple of cool traditions every year. One is 4/20, called "four twenty" which is on April 20th when a whole bunch of people get together on the Porter meadow to smoke pot. I didn't even hear about it until I came here, probably because the administration is really embarrassed by it. It's the only event I know of where it's really obvious that people smoke pot on campus. Otherwise people keep that sort of thing mostly to themselves. There is drinking and such, but I've never heard of a lot of hard drugs being done on campus. It's a very "let's drink healthy organic drinks and eat vegetarian and smoke pot and save the world." By the way, you can find pretty much any vegan or vegetarian food, either around the campus or on it, since Santa Cruz is so hippie. Another tradition would be the Vagina Monologues, put on by students at Porter college every year for Women's Day. They do a very excellent job. People who party on campus are mostly freshman and sophomores. The major partying goes on off-campus for juniors and seniors. The partying is not evenly distributed. At Crown there's hardly ever any, at Porter and Kresge there's a lot. It depends on where you live. I don't think fraternities/sororities are super important, but they're around. Rush week just happened, so all the Greeks came out to try and recruit people. I'm not really interested, and people didn't seem to be breaking down the doors to sign up, but they definitely exist. Last weekend I went out downtown for pizza with friends, saw a movie, and studied, and slept. On a Saturday night you can go downtown, see a movie, eat good food (my one complaint is there really isn't any great Indian food around...at least not like in San Francisco), go shopping, visit the Boardwalk, or hop on a bus and go to Capitola and hit the mall, or just stay in with some friends and play some board games. If you like dance, there are some local social dance venues, too. Off campus I do all of the above, go to the beach, hike in the trails, go dancing at local venues, etc.

Casey

If you want to party you can, but you don't have to to fit in.

Blanca

the most popular groups that i know of are the 5 big organizations in the reedwood building. Most students do leave their dorms opened. I meet some good friends here at UCSC from all backgrounds. I do stay up pass 2am mostly on weekends. I party 2-3 times a month. What i do mostly do off campus is hang out with friends. This last saturday i partied.

Christian

No athletic events, really. Dating scene - who knows?! My closest friends are my roommates and select classmates. People can be found partying every day, but mostly weekends, not surprisingly. First Rain / Naked Run every year! Lots of fun. Greek life is relatively low-key, which suits me fine. Lots of things can be done rather than drink (hiking, art shows, concerts, guest speakers/plays, etc.), but most people don't try very hard not to drink.

Matthew

Groups, clubs, and teams aren't that large and prevalent on campus. Sports isn't given the prestige that it is at other universities. This is something a lot of students like about UCSC. I agree, however, it would be nice if campus clubs were more visible. The campus kind of shuts down on weekdays (with occasional exceptions, including Cafe Revolucion). But there is always something to do in town.

Taylor

Practical Activism Conference is a one day conference where speakers, musicians, and workshops are a common sight. Coordinators and volunteers work trying to get student organizations to table, speakers to come talk, and facilitators for workshops to come. I've been a part of this conference for three years and I've seen so much potential flow from this conference whether some learned something new or arrived the following spring that year to help plan for the next conference. Working with these different individuals who have so many different perspectives on what activism is and how to make it practical is at first difficult and frustrating. But like the muscle develops through conditioning, I find that it is where we disagree and put aside our hindrances and begin to start that dialogue; it is there that Practical Activism becomes not a word but a state of mind and a way to look at our world and the issues that need to be addressed.

Ryan

I feel campus is a safe place. I've heard Porter gets a lot of break-ins. So some parts of campus aren't safe. My friends wallet and Ipod was stolen at teh dining hall and bikes are often stolen. But, no one gets mugged or jumped really. I usually meet friends through other friends. I also meet people at parties. People party all week, but parties are mellow until the weekend. 4/20 at porter field is a huge smoke-out. the first rain is also popular. Students run naked at the first rain. It starts at night during the first rain of teh year.

Devin

UCSC isn't big on groups/organizationd/clubs/teams frats are pretty lame and widely ridiculed by people everywhere, teams are getting more and more traction on campus but are still not too popular and the only real clubs or organizations tend to be small radical ones. The only group i'm involved with is a small unofficial drinking club. Yeah for the most people in the dorms leave their doors open and are very open to meetng new people. Athletic events are almost never attended by anyone. Guest speaks are always coming through and group of people go to see them a lot but i never have, theater eh, it kinda sucks. The dating scence is hit or miss, i mean i guess it all depends, i've heard people badmouth it and people say how great they were, i've always thought it was pretty good here, plenty of easy girls really. all my closest friends i got to know by going to parties, they drinking with them before parties and eventually just hanging out with them all the time. I'm hanging out with some friends, either drinking or watch a movie, or i'm at my apartment alone with my girlfriend and apartment mate watching tv and talking, sometime writing a paper or studying, depending on what time during the quarter is. 420 is a huge smoking event every year, everyone celebrate is it and of course the first rain run is a huge tradition where hundred of people run naked through campus on the first night of rain every year, there are drum circles in forests during full moon, a very pagan atmosphere really. Some people never party some do it every night. frats and sororities are non-existant almost. i drank with my friends went to a couple parties and such. umm, i don't know to much about not drinking on weekend, i've rarily done it, i guess you could go to the movies or something. I mean i know there's a lot to do if you don't drink i just don't know. Off campus, pretty much anything you would at any other college town on the beach, there's concert, lot's of concerts, the beach and stuff.