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Vol. 71, Issue 05

Page 1

THE HIGHLANDER

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, RIVERSIDE

FOR THE WEEK OF TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2022

VOL. 71, ISSUE 05

est. 1954

NEWS

The Judicial Council reopening Elections Director and General Advocates positions HARU CHANG Assistant News Editor

On Wednesday Oct. 19th, the ASUCR Senate called to order at 6:30 P.M. All were present except President Pro Tempore Aalani Richardson, CHASS Senator Jules Yang and BCOE Senator Chloe Au. A motion to remove CA-F22-001 and CA-F22-002 from the agenda was approved by CNAS Senator Brenden Cano and seconded by CHASS Senator Brandon Huang. The agenda with the following amendments were approved by Senator Nguyen and seconded by CHASS Senator Hemant Hari. The previous Oct. 12th Senate meeting minutes were approved by CHASS Senator Alaa Mido and seconded by Senator Huang. The motion passed 13-0-0.

The meeting proceeded right into the committee reports after confirming there was nothing to announce during the public forum and the Ex-Officio Reports. Senator Mido approved the motion to open up Finance Hearing Minutes #2, seconded by Senator Hari. The Vice President of Finance Christian Martinez led the hearing. Martinez referred to the recent finance hearing where it discussed the general allocation for new clubs which was approved around 41 to 45 student organizations. The Vice President of Internal Affairs Jeanine Nassar requested a removal of a paid position in order have it transferred to a new Commisional of Sexual Violence position. The request was approved. President Mufida Assaf and Chief of Staff Tran introduced the

GRACE SUN / THE HIGHLANDER

► SEE ASUCR PAGE 3

OPINIONS

The dangers in your child’s candy this Halloween is a myth AYLÍN MORENO Contributing Writer

While October is a spooky, and scary time of the year — finding razor blades, drugs or other criminal paraphernalia in a child’s candy bag is an outright myth. Understandably, reading this statement might elicit memories from childhood regarding razor blades in candy apples and treats laced with THC/marijuana. However, these tales were simply that — tales. People have become paranoid towards a seemingly wholesome tradition involving children and candy. The answer lies in Halloween sadism. Halloween sadism can be viewed as an urban legend, which emerged during the early 1970s, to give expression to growing fears about the safety of children, the danger of crime and other sources of social strain.

a staple in medicine cabinets across the United States, became an aberrant and frightening thing. This case, while unrelated to Halloween, was blasted by the media in an effort to warn families of any tampered medications lurking in their homes during the end of September 1982. It wasn’t unexpected that this news would bleed over into October and create hyper awareness of tainted consumer goods. While these cases should be taken seriously, it is safe to say the correlation between them and a child’s Halloween goodie bag from three doors down is indiscernible.

► SEE CANDY PAGE 6

COURTESY OF PEXELS

FIND OUR HALLOWEEN MEDIA RECOMMENDATIONS ON PAGES 13 & 14!

Many misconceptions parents hold regarding Halloween safety are rooted in truth. The real cases that fed the drugged candy paranoia, however, were either unrelated to Halloween or were not committed by strangers. The Tylenol murders are a chilling case that involves a similar theme of tainted consumer goods depicted by Joel Best in his exploration of Halloween sadism. A familiar over the counter medication, regarded as

@thehighlanderucr @HighlanderUCR UCRHighlander NEWS 3

OPINIONS 5

FEATURES 9

RADAR 12

SPORTS 15

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