Is that considered theft?
burritos;735457 said:
Is that considered theft?
FiatSlug;735508 said:
A more serious answer: I'd guess it's considered trespassing.
burritos;735518 said:
Even if they are Cal students?
grandmastapoop;735536 said:
Being a Cal student does not entitle someone to go anywhere they want on campus. Are Cal students free to enter their teacher's offices? The sports locker rooms? Haas Pavilion? The administration offices? No.
GB54;735510 said:
Football teams have imposed a mandate that all watchers must pay. These people refuse to observe that mandate and the Supreme Court will soon decide on their legitimacy
Boot;735599 said:
Are you serious? That is one of the great college football traditions sitting on tightwad. My family has been going to Cal games since the 30s even some of my late fathers friends sat up there. We have always had tickets single game or season for generations but tightwad was always rocking.
muddlehead1;735650 said:
how much of the actual playing field can you see from there?
burritos;735606 said:
I personally don't think it's theft.
Quote:
Now it so happened in the days of old Edo, as Tokyo was once called, that the storytellers told marvelous tales of the wit and wisdom of His Honorable Honor, Ooka Tadasuke.
This famous judge never refused to hear a complaint, even if it seemed strange or unreasonable. People sometimes came to his court with the most unusual cases, but Ooka always agreed to listen. And the strangest case of all was the famous Case of the Stolen Smell.
It all began when a poor student rented a room over a tempura shop - a shop where fried food could be bought. The student was a most likeable young man, but the shopkeeper was a miser who suspected everyone of trying to get the better of him. One day he heard the student talking with one of his friends.
"It is sad to be so poor that one can only afford to eat plain rice," the friend complained.
"Oh," said the student, "I have found a very satisfactory answer to the problem. I eat my rice each day while the shopkeeper downstairs fries his fish. The smell comes up, and my humble rice seems to have much more flavor. It is really the smell, you know, that makes things taste so good."
The shopkeeper was furious. To think that someone was enjoying the smell of his fish for nothing! "Thief!" he shouted, "I demand that you pay me for the smells you have stolen."
"A smell is a smell," the young man replied. "Anyone can smell what he wants to. I will pay you nothing!"
Scarlet with rage, the shopkeeper rushed to Ooka's court and charged the student with theft. Of course, everyone laughed at him, for how could anyone steal a smell? Ooka would surely send the man about his business. But to everyone's astonishment, the judge agreed to hear the case.
"Every man is entitled to his hour in court," he explained. "If this man feels strongly enough about his smell to make a complaint, it is only right that I, as city magistrate, should hear the case." He frowned at the amused spectators.
Gravely, Ooka sat on the dais and heard the evidence. Then he delivered his verdict.
"The student is obviously guilty," he said severely. "Taking another person's property is theft, and I cannot see that a smell is different from any other property."
The shopkeeper was delighted, but the student was horrified. He was very poor, and he owed the shopkeeper for three month's smelling. He would surely be thrown into prison.
"How much money have you?," Ooka asked him.
"Only five mon, Honorable Honor," the boy replied. "I need that to pay my rent, or I will be thrown out into the street."
"Let me see the money," said the judge.
The young man held out his hand. Ooka nodded and told him to drop the coins from one hand to the other.
The judge listened to the pleasant clink of the money and said to the shopkeeper, "You have now been paid. If you have any other complaints in the future, please bring them to the court. It is our wish that all injustices be punished and all virtue rewarded.
"But most Honorable Honor," the shopkeeper protested, "I did not get the money! The thief dropped it from one hand to the other. See! I have nothing." He held up his empty hands to show the judge.
Ooka stared at him gravely. "It is the court's judgement that the punishment should fit the crime. I have decided that the price of the smell of food shall be the sound of money. Justice has prevailed as usual in my court."
calumnus;735734 said:
I Love Tightwad
Bears2thDoc;735932 said:
http://www.cp.berkeley.edu/LRDP/UCB-Segmented_pdfs/Hill_area-Other_properties.pdf
Stated Appropriate Uses:
Field ( as in CMS field) Station (as in KGO 810) for Behavioral Research (what does Tedford do now).
Recreation (as in climbing a damn steep hill carrying beer, sandwiches and a lounge chair)
Nope, not stealing or trespassing.....in fact, encouraged.
CHEERS!!
GO BEARS!!!!
sp4149;736016 said:
If it were considered a crime, like stealing intellectual property, it would be enforced against the PHA folks who after all have built permanent structures to that end...
burritos;736046 said:
Other than the enforcement issue, how is it any different from stealing intellectual property.
FiatSlug;735569 said:
Could be. Has it been posted NO TRESPASSING?
I'm sure that campus admin has the legal power to post NO TRESPASSING on its property, should there be a determination that this is in the University's best interests.
Hey, there are brass plaques at certain spots on campus that have language to the effect that the right to pass is subject to the approval of the Regents.
CalBearJim;736864 said:
I watched part of a game from the top row of Husky Stadium. The view from Tightwad Hill is better.
FiatSlug;735853 said:
Judge Ooka was wise, indeed.
burritos;736046 said:
Other than the enforcement issue, how is it any different from stealing intellectual property.