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Waves of Delirium

Nicolas Cage gets another chance to go completely nuts in The Surfer, an endeavor good enough to make lovers of eccentric Cage performances happy. Cage plays the title character, a successful businessman looking to move his family back to his childhood home in Australia. When he arrives with his son at the beach where he […]

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Waves of Delirium

Nicolas Cage gets another chance to go completely nuts in The Surfer, an endeavor good enough to make lovers of eccentric Cage performances happy.

Cage plays the title character, a successful businessman looking to move his family back to his childhood home in Australia. When he arrives with his son at the beach where he surfed in his youth, to surprise him with a potential beach-house purchase, a pack of evil surfer dudes restrict his access.

The Surfer refuses to leave, and things go all over the place from there.

The Surfer is waiting for the financing on his beach house—located on the gang-inhabited beach—to close. He winds up getting isolated, and his obsession drives him into a state of homelessness and living out of a car.

Director Lorcan Finnegan presents a puzzle movie where you can watch it with different mindsets. You can take it in as if the actions onscreen are all really happening—or you can see it like the Surfer is hallucinating as he becomes food-deprived and dehydrated. I like to see it more in the hallucinatory realm.

Either way, the movie is fun to watch. Cage is in fine delirious form.

And I still have no desire to ever go surfing in this lifetime.

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Eight Pack Athletes Earn All-Mountain West Honors

Story Links Reno, Nev – Eight Nevada track and field athletes earned All-Mountain West honors across seven events announced the conference Wednesday. The All-Mountain West selections are compiled of the top-three individual finishers in each event and the top-three relay teams at the Mountain West Championships. Magdalene George earned her second honors of […]

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Reno, Nev – Eight Nevada track and field athletes earned All-Mountain West honors across seven events announced the conference Wednesday.

The All-Mountain West selections are compiled of the top-three individual finishers in each event and the top-three relay teams at the Mountain West Championships.

Magdalene George earned her second honors of the year following second place finishes in both the 100m (11.34) and 200m finals (23.12).

Annalies Kalma earned her all-Mountain West honor by placing third in the 400m, following a hard fought race and finish (53.90). 

Lilly Urban won the Javelin competition at last weeks outdoor championships, throwing a school record 56.89m. Urban will look to the NCAA West First Round next week for more success. 

Johanna Haas notched her first all-Mountain West honor with her second-place finish in the Heptathlon where she finished with a personal best and #4 all-time point total of 5473 points. 

Meekness Dogonyaro earned her first all-Mountain West Honor by placing second in the Triple Jump, jumping 13.23m.

Magdalene George, Annalies Kalma, Kylee Parsons, Vivian Groppe and Halyn Senegal all earned their honors through their performances in the 4x100m (45.21) and 4x400m (3:41.73) finals, where the Pack placed third in both. 

The Pack will be back in action next week for the NCAA West First Round in College Station, Texas. 

Nevada 2025 Outdoor Track and Field All-Mountain West Honors

 

Magdalene George

100m

200m 

4x100m 

Annalies Kalma

400m

4x100m 

4x400m

Kylee Parsons

4x100m 

4x400m

Vivian Groppe

4x100m 

4x400m

Halyn Senegal

4x400m

Lilly Urban 

Javelin

Meekness Dogonyaro

Triple Jump

Johanna Haas

Heptathlon

 



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Florida State University Athletics

TALLAHASSEE – Head volleyball coach Chris Poole announced the signing of Lexie Mason for the 2025 season on Wednesday afternoon.    Mason will enter Tallahassee as a true freshman and was one of the top high school volleyball players in the state of Washington. The 6-2 right side hitter was a 2A First Team All-State […]

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TALLAHASSEE – Head volleyball coach Chris Poole announced the signing of Lexie Mason for the 2025 season on Wednesday afternoon. 

 

Mason will enter Tallahassee as a true freshman and was one of the top high school volleyball players in the state of Washington. The 6-2 right side hitter was a 2A First Team All-State selection in 2024 and was named the 2023 Skagit Valley Herald Volleyball Player of the Year. Mason was a first team all-conference performer all four years of high school. Mason ended her career as the school record for kills with over 1,500. She also recorded over 1,000 digs, 200 blocks and 150 aces. 

 

Mason plans on majoring in dietetics at Florida State. She is the daughter of Katie and Ronald Mason and has one sister, Annika, who plays volleyball at Everett Community College. 

 

For updates and exclusive content, follow the Seminoles on X (FSU_Volleyball) Instagram (fsuvolleyball) and Facebook (Florida State Seminoles Volleyball).

 



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Spokane Colleges men, women claim NWAC track and field titles

The Spokane College’s men’s track and field team claimed its first title since 2012 and 33rd overall, while the women won their second straight and 24th overall crown on Tuesday at the 2025 NWAC Track & Field Championships at Mt. Hood Community College in Oregon. The Sasquatch men were dominant, scoring 229.5 points. They outscored […]

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The Spokane College’s men’s track and field team claimed its first title since 2012 and 33rd overall, while the women won their second straight and 24th overall crown on Tuesday at the 2025 NWAC Track & Field Championships at Mt. Hood Community College in Oregon.

The Sasquatch men were dominant, scoring 229.5 points. They outscored second place Lane by 61 points to end the Titans’ 10-year championship streak. The 33 titles for the Sasquatch are the most all-time in NWAC history.

Spokane won six men’s events including the 4×100 relay. Individual winners include Jediah Darrel (discus), David Stingle (javelin), Travis Horn (1,500 meters), Michael Mendoza (110m hurdles), Jack Forbes (400m), Colin Wright (800m).

After winning their first championship last year since 2018, the Sasquatch women won this year by 62.5 points. Spokane finished with 236.5 points, led by eight individual champions.

Spokane swept all of the individual awards on the women’s side, led by Afton Wood who was the High Scorer of the Meet with 46 total points. Wood finished first in both the javelin throw and the 400-meter hurdles while also taking second in the heptathlon and 400 meters and third in the pole vault. She was also part of the women’s 4×100 and 4×400-meter relay teams that each finished second.

Mary Nakamura was named the 2025 NWAC Women’s Track Athlete of the Meet as she scored 38 total points for the Sasquatch. Nakamura won both the 3,000 meter steeplechase and the 1,500 meters, while taking second in the 5,000 meters and 800 meters. She was also a part of the women’s 4×400 meter relay team that placed second.

Spokane’s Maliyah Gordon was named the 2025 NWAC Women’s Field Athlete of the Meet with 24 total points. Gordon won the women’s hammer throw on Tuesday and placed second in the shot put and third in the discus.

Other women’s individual winners include: Joy Assonken (shot put), Daisy Lemly (discus) and Emmalyne Jimenez (800 meters).

College baseball

Outfielder Logan Johnstone was named to the All-Mountain West Conference first team and catcher Will Cresswell earned second-team honors, the conference announced Tuesday.

Johnstone is the first Cougar outfielder to earn first-team honors since WSU all-time home run leader Derek Jones earned All-Pac-12 first-team accolades since 2012. The redshirt-junior from Los Gatos, Calif. hit .337 with team-highs of 17 doubles, nine home runs and 17 multiple-hit games while his 40 RBI were second on the team. In conference play, Johnstone led the Cougars with a .387 average with 12 doubles, eight home runs and 27 RBI.

WSU’s season came to an end Saturday. The Cougars finished with an overall record of 18-36.

College football

With the 2025 season on the horizon, Eastern Washington football has solidified its team captains for the fall. Coach Aaron Best announced four Eagle captains for the upcoming season, with Jared Taylor, Nolan Ulm, Isaiah Perez and DaJean Wells earning leadership roles.

Ulm will begin his second season as a team captain, while Taylor, Perez and Wells earn the honor for the first time.

Athletics

Whitworth University has retained the Northwest Conference McIlroy-Lewis All-Sports trophy following the 2024-25 athletic year, according to the standings released by the conference on May 13.

The Pirates held off George Fox University by seven points (253-246) in the final tally, the closest margin since Puget Sound defeated Whitworth by only three points in 2005-06. The win is Whitworth’s 15th overall, tying Pacific Lutheran for the most in NWC history. 

The Pirates earned the maximum 18 points for NWC titles in four sports this year: volleyball, men’s swimming, women’s swimming and men’s basketball. The Bucs claimed runner-up points (16) in men’s cross country, football, men’s track and field, women’s track and field and baseball.

The Northwest Conference All-Sports Trophy recognizes athletic excellence among Northwest Conference institutions across all fields of competition.

Soccer

Velocity defender David Garcia earned a starting spot on USL League One’s Team of the Week for the eleventh week of the 2025 season for his performance in Spokane’s 1-0 win over Richmond on Saturday. Garcia registered a game-high seven clearances and logged two interceptions. He also had 75 touches, which was the second highest on the team. This was Garcia’s first Team of the Week honor of the 2025 season.



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IU INDY RELEASES 2025 VOLLEYBALL SCHEDULE

Story Links INDIANAPOLIS – The IU Indy Athletics Department released its 2025 volleyball schedule on Wednesday (May 21). The Jags are set to host 12 home matches, including their annual Hampton Inn Invitational.   Head coach Andrew Kroger enters his third season leading the Jags after posting the best IU Indy record […]

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INDIANAPOLIS – The IU Indy Athletics Department released its 2025 volleyball schedule on Wednesday (May 21). The Jags are set to host 12 home matches, including their annual Hampton Inn Invitational.
 
Head coach Andrew Kroger enters his third season leading the Jags after posting the best IU Indy record since 2017, winning 15 games during the 2024 season with a Horizon League Tournament appearance.
 
The Jaguars will open the regular season on the road this season at the Charleston Southern Invite when they face The Citadel on August 29. They will stay on the road as they travel to Xavier for an invite, September 4-6. IU Indy will then host Bellarmine, Gonzaga and Northern Illinois for their annual Hampton Inn Invitational from September 11-13. The Jags will then close out their non-conference slate with the Butler Invitational (September 17 and 20) and an away match at Purdue on September 21.
 
They open the Horizon League slate against Wright State on the road in back-to-back days (Sept. 26/27) before returning to the Jungle to host Purdue Fort Wayne (Sept. 30) and Milwaukee (Oct. 3/4). The Jags will also host Youngstown State (Oct. 17/18), Oakland (Oct. 24/25) and Northern Kentucky (Nov. 14/15). IU Indy will visit Robert Morris (Oct. 10/11), Purdue Fort Wayne (Oct. 28), Cleveland State (Oct. 31/Nov. 1) and Green Bay (Nov. 7/8).
 
The Horizon League Championship is set to begin on Nov. 21 with the championship match slated for Nov. 23.
 
IU Indy will see several starters return to the 2025 roster, including All-Conference performers Grace Purichia and Morgan Ostrowski. Other top returners include Jordyn Pax, Kate White, Ava Harris, Maia Long, Elle Patterson, Kennedy Seputis, Brynn Zastrow and Lili Britt. Joining the Jags for their first season will be transfer Ninah Miranda (Lipscomb) and incoming freshman Laura Roeder, Amanda Stephens, Kate Jacquay, Jillian Tippmann and Chloe Macias.
 



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Teacher accused of assaulting student with whiteboard in PBC classroom

PALM BEACH COUNTY, Fla. (CBS12) — A Santaluces Community High School teacher and girls beach volleyball coach has been accused of assaulting a student with a whiteboard during class, alarming several other students. The Palm Beach School District (PBSD) said that on April 14, at 1:15 p.m., a school resource officer was made aware of […]

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A Santaluces Community High School teacher and girls beach volleyball coach has been accused of assaulting a student with a whiteboard during class, alarming several other students.

The Palm Beach School District (PBSD) said that on April 14, at 1:15 p.m., a school resource officer was made aware of an assault between a teacher, identified as Christopher Winkles, 52, and a student.

The student involved told the school resource officer that she was leaning on her hand with a hoodie on her sweatshirt when Winkles approached from behind. The report states that the student claimed that Winkles picked up an 18″ x 14″ whiteboard and struck her thighs, demanding that she remove her hoodie.

“At this moment, I was startled and could not believe he just struck me,” she told the responding officer.

See also: WPB father’s alleged attempts to kill 2-month-old son caught on camera

She added that the blow left a mark on her leg and was loud enough to catch the attention of her classmates, telling police, “The hit was hard enough to cause a mark to my leg and loud enough to startle those around me.”

The report noted that Winkles had previously “messed” with her but had always apologized afterward.

Three other students corroborated her story, saying they witnessed Winkles hit the victim, either to “wake her up” or because she was wearing a hoodie, per PBSD.

Winkles has been accused of child abuse without great bodily harm.

CBS12 News has reached out to the Palm Beach County School District for further information. Check back for updates.

Find more ways to stay up to date with your latest local news. Sign up for our newsletter to get the day’s top headlines delivered right to your inbox. Subscribe to our YouTube channel for the biggest stories and can’t miss video.



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Battle of the Editors: Which UCLA team had the most disappointing finish to its Big Ten debut?

With just softball and baseball remaining in the postseason hunt, UCLA’s first year in the Big Ten is nearly in the books. From championship glory to painful upsets, this year delivered a full spectrum of highs and heartbreaks for the Bruins. As the year winds down, Daily Bruin Sports editors weigh in on which UCLA […]

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With just softball and baseball remaining in the postseason hunt, UCLA’s first year in the Big Ten is nearly in the books. From championship glory to painful upsets, this year delivered a full spectrum of highs and heartbreaks for the Bruins. As the year winds down, Daily Bruin Sports editors weigh in on which UCLA team had the most disappointing finish.

Ira Gorawara
Sports editor
Team: Men’s basketball

Hope was in short supply for UCLA men’s basketball in the 2023-2024 season – and so were the highlights.

Adem Bona was the lone spark in an otherwise dim campaign – the Bruins treaded water in the Pac-12 and ranked a dismal 152nd in offensive efficiency, with most of the roster unable to crack a 100 offensive rating.

But as the transfer portal tends to do these days, it flipped coach Mick Cronin’s 2024-2025 plans on their head before the season tipped off.

Hype engulfed the Bruins, who had landed key prospects from the portal including veteran Kobe Johnson, four-stars Dominick Harris, Skyy Clark and Tyler Bilodeau – to name a few.

The pieces were there – on paper, at least – enough to fuel preseason optimism in Westwood and talk of a bounce-back year, deep rotation and a chance to make noise in the team’s Big Ten debut.

For a minute, it felt like Cronin pulled off the reset the program desperately craved in the 2024 offseason.

But basketball isn’t played on paper.

Chemistry felt off on Cronin’s unit all season long. Rotations shifted constantly, the offense stalled far too often and what should’ve been a cohesive unit appeared more like a collection of talented strangers.

The defense – usually a Cronin staple – lacked bite, and the late-game execution that once defined his best squads were nowhere to be found.

As the hype train derailed the Bruins’ season, UCLA’s lifeline ended in the Round of 32 of the NCAA Tournament, at the hands of Tennessee at Rupp Arena.

Disjointed offense, untimely turnovers and an abysmal effort from the charity stripe characterized too many postseason games.

For a program that prides itself on postseason pedigree, bowing out in the first weekend – even in a loaded Big Ten transition year – felt like a gut punch.

All the portal moves and preseason buzz fizzled when it mattered most. The disappointment lingers.

Kai Dizon
Assistant Sports editor
Team: Football

(Aidan Sun/Assistant Photo editor)
UCLA football’s offensive unit gathers at Penn State’s Beaver Stadium, where the team fell 27-11 to Penn State on Oct. 5. (Aidan Sun/Assistant Photo editor)

Coach DeShaun Foster’s rookie campaign was awry six games into the season, with the Bruins on a five-game losing streak and yet to eclipse 20 points on offense in a single contest.

Then, quarterback Ethan Garbers, who already had nine interceptions at the time, turned in a career day against Rutgers in Piscataway, New Jersey – tossing for 383 yards and four touchdowns in a 35-32 victory for UCLA football.

Foster proclaimed UCLA’s athletic director Martin Jarmond “hired the right guy” after defeating Nebraska 27-20 the following weekend. And against Iowa on Nov. 8, the running game that had been stuck in the trenches all season, exploded for 211 yards in a 20-17 win.

All of a sudden, the Bruins were 4-5, and just needed to win two of their final three contests to make a bowl game.

But Garbers was sacked six times in Seattle and the Bruins’ running backs were held to 40 yards as UCLA fell 31-19 to Washington.

In a do-or-die Battle for the Bell at the Rose Bowl, UCLA floundered again. Garbers had just one touchdown, and despite 99 rushing yards, first-string running back T.J. Harden failed to find paydirt.

The Bruins led 13-9 heading into the final quarter, but the Trojans put up 10 unanswered.

Yes, UCLA closed out the season with a 20-13 win over Fresno State, but I sure didn’t care. And given that it was Thanksgiving break, not many students did either. With a 5-7 record, the Bruin faithful were left with a sour introduction to the Fos Era.

Evidently, many of the team’s players were too.

On top of the players leaving via the NFL Draft or graduation – like Garbers, Carson Schwesinger, Oluwafemi Oladejo and Moliki Matavao – the Bruins lost J.Michael Sturdivant, Logan Loya, Niki Prongos and Harden to the transfer portal as practically every notable name from the 2024 roster would be absent come 2025.

Aaron Doyle
Assistant Sports editor
Team: Cross country

(Courtesy of UCLA Athletics)
Members of UCLA cross country run the course during warmups. (Courtesy of UCLA Athletics)

The pressure of qualifying for the national championship can make or break a team.

And in 2024, it seemed to have broken UCLA cross country.

Graduate student Michael Mireles carried much of the burden of qualification, earning UCLA’s first-ever podium finish at a Big Ten championship after placing second in the men’s 8K race.

The conference victory seemed like momentum that could have carried Mireles to the national championships, but it quickly slipped away at the NCAA West Regional on Nov. 15.

The men’s team opted to forgo a five-man lineup, forcing Mireles to qualify as an individual. A top-five finish would have punched his ticket to the national championship race.

Mireles looked to be in national-qualifying contention as he sat in fifth with just 1.8 kilometers to go. But at the 9K split, Mireles dropped to 17th and ultimately finished 21st, blowing his chances of going to nationals.

While the competition was stiff, Mireles seemed more than capable of making the cut. Mireles breezed right past Washington’s Nathan Green, Evan Jenkins and Tyrone Gorze, as well as Oregon’s Aiden Smith and Simeon Birnbaum at the Big Ten championships – but fell short to them when it mattered most.

Assistant coach Andrew Ferris blamed inexperience for the graduate student’s shortcomings, but there is still more to come from Mireles – just not as a Bruin.

Mireles has already announced his transfer to Oregon following the end of the outdoor track season, joining one of the teams that dashed his hopes in 2024.

Connor Dullinger
Assistant Sports editor
Team: Men’s soccer

(Darlene Sanzon/Assistant Photo editor)
Members of UCLA men’s soccer huddle together on the field at Wallis Annenberg Stadium. (Darlene Sanzon/Assistant Photo editor)

When UCLA men’s soccer fell 1-0 in Westwood to Loyola Marymount in the 2023 NCAA tournament’s second round, many thought the Bruins were destined for revenge come 2024.

Few imagined the Bruins would let the embarrassment of a postseason upset grace Wallis Annenberg Stadium for a second consecutive year.

But that’s exactly what happened.

Despite missing three penalty kicks to fall in the Big Ten tournament semifinals to Michigan, UCLA still managed to earn an at-large bid to 2024’s NCAA tournament, where it faced a UC Santa Barbara team that tied Westmont 2-2 – a squad that UCLA defeated 5-1 just 10 days after Santa Barbara’s draw.

And in keeping with UCLA’s season-long offensive struggles, the Gauchos shut out the Bruins. UCSB outshot UCLA by eight and advanced to the second round after defeating the Bruins 1-0 in Westwood.

Not only did the Bruins fall in dramatic fashion in the Big Ten and NCAA tournaments, but they were also defeated 3-1 at home by Cal State Fullerton and 4-1 by Wisconsin in the regular season.

They also dropped crucial points on untimely goals, conceding two unanswered goals in the final 16 minutes of a 2-2 draw to Penn State and conceding an equalizer in the last 10 minutes to Michigan in a 3-3 tie.

Despite the squad’s deep roster and seven clean sheets, the Bruins failed to capitalize when they were expected to and gave up crucial goals when it mattered most.

Una O’Farrell
Assistant Sports editor
Team: Women’s water polo

(Anna Dai-Liu/Daily Bruin senior staff)
Members of UCLA women’s water polo stand at the side of the pool before their semifinal in Indianapolis. (Anna Dai-Liu/Daily Bruin senior staff)

Pulling off an undefeated season – one that resulted in the first national championship in 15 years for UCLA women’s water polo – is a hefty feat, almost impossible to replicate.

A 1.000 winning percentage wasn’t necessarily coach Adam Wright’s top priority heading into the 2025 season – earning back-to-back national titles was.

And with the return of two of the 2024’s roster’s top three scorers and ACWPC National Player of the Year sophomore goalkeeper Lauren Steele, along with the addition of two-time All-American junior center Bia Mantellato, it seemed the 2025 Bruins were well-poised to make a return to glory.

But the team struggled with early losses, with a 14-4 defeat to Stanford, 2025’s eventual national champions, marking UCLA’s worst loss differential since 2010.

The Cardinal handed the Bruins’ half of its 2025 losses, but maybe the most gut-wrenching of the trio came in an overtime defeat for the MPSF crown.

And with Stanford and UCLA sitting on opposite sides of the NCAA tournament’s bracket, many predicted the two to meet again in Indianapolis.

But the reigning MPSF and NCAA champions were unable to even make the title match after suffering a 15-13 loss to the Trojans, sending the Bruins home without the opportunity to defend their national title.

In 2024, Wright said that the Bruins were “back on the map.” But just less than a year later, they’d fall just short of the very greatness they swore would become a habit.

Sabrina Messiha
Assistant Sports editor
Team: Women’s basketball

(Aidan Sun/Assistant Photo editor)
Members of UCLA women’s basketball meet during a timeout of its Final Four match against UConn. (Aidan Sun/Assistant Photo editor)

Twelve weeks atop the AP regular season poll was not enough.

The first No. 1 seed in program history was not enough.

The first Final Four appearance in NCAA history was not enough.

Despite a year stacked with accolades, awards and trophies, UCLA women’s basketball was unable to take home the biggest reward – a NCAA championship.

While the Final Four outing doesn’t undermine the ground-breaking successes of the program, the nature of the loss makes for the most disappointing season end. All eyes were on UCLA to bring home a national championship, but they were upset by a No. 2 seed UConn.

It was more than an upset – it felt like a complete obliteration. The Huskies’ 85-51 over the Bruins marked the largest winning margin in NCAA Final Four history.

After UCLA maintained a perfect record against all schools except USC, it fell to a new foe. The Huskies were able to shut down junior center Lauren Betts, forcing the ball to a thoroughly defended perimeter.

“We wanted to take away their 3s, but we also wanted to make things hard for Lauren Betts,” said former UConn star guard Paige Bueckers.

And that is exactly what the Huskies did.

Only four Bruins scored in the first half. Only three players put up points from the field until the final quarter. UCLA put up just 13 points in the final 10 minutes of its season, as UConn ran away with a 34-point win.

And in the meantime, UCLA students gathered in Pauley Pavilion watched their team crumble.

Next season presents another opportunity for the Bruins to bring home the trophy. And if they don’t, may their fall be more graceful.



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