Features

Features

Student employment: an overview

The decision whether to work or not while being a student at college can be as challenging as deciding what courses to study. How much time it will take, what the responsibilities will be, and whether additional preparation is needed before starting all come into consideration before anyone commits. Once students are involved, however, the rewards immediately begin to compile. A lot of reasoning comes into play when determining why students work. Why seek out a job, why accept one of multiple options, why put the time and effort into...
Features

An introduction to the new, diverse class of 2016

By CASEY KROLCZYK   It is the beginning of another academic year, and the freshman class is bringing a look of its own to campus. This incoming class is sporting higher SAT scores, more first-generation college students, a narrower gender gap and a higher percentage of students of color. Here’s how the class of 2016 breaks down: (1) 631 enrolling first years, slightly smaller than the current classes. (2) 47:53 male to female ratio, compared to the 43:57 ratio across all classes. (3) 28.6 percent self-identify as students of color...
Features

Prop 1 to reform bus system

Walking from class to class may take five, maybe 10 minutes at most. Getting to and from the S.U.B. or Collins Library is not something that takes a lot of planning beforehand. University pavements are maintained and structured to provide ease of access for students and passersby to get from place to place. Step off campus into the worn concrete of Tacoma and suddenly traversing from locations takes a little more effort. Many students have extra forms of mobility like skateboards or bikes, but the general population of those in...
Features

Third annual Book Collecting Contest to award cash prizes

In college it seems like all books ever do are collect dust on our dorm room shelves or clutter our backpacks, but what if in that mess of text books and paperbacks there was $1000? For the last three years, the Collins Memorial Library has essentially been doing just that. The annual Book Collecting Contest, encourages students at the University to develop a deeper appreciation of print material and the value of owning such works, by encouraging them to find a collection out of what they may have at school...
Features

Crafty Connie’s helpful hints for do-it-yourself plumbing

Plumbing problems are all too common in the domestic world. Today, our distinguished guest plumber Randy P. Ipelayer will offer up convenient DIY solutions to your flow-related problems. Domestic Dilemma #1: Hey Randy, the drain in my shower keeps backing up. Now I just take really shallow baths. Help! That sounds disgusting! I can only assume everything below your ankles is now coated in a nice crust of shame. There might even be some crusty shame on your socks. Once you get yourself clean, either by using your weird roommate’s...
Features

Freeset combats poverty and sex trafficking in Sonagachi

When Kerry and Annie Hilton and their four children moved to Kolkata (Calcutta), India in 1999 with a mission to live with the poor, they didn’t realize that two years later they would be changing the lives of over 180 women. When they first moved into their three-bedroom apartment, they were astonished to realize how much the neighborhood changed at night. During the day, Kolkata may seem like a normal, albeit more impoverished, Indian neighborhood. At night, however, Kolkata became the largest red light district in the city of Sonagachi....
1 38 39 40 41 42 52
Page 40 of 52