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Bringing the secrets of the Pentagon to the University of Puget Sound

By Keely Coxwell “Chelsea Manning and Snowden are my personal heros,” Daniel Ellsberg said. On Thursday, Oct. 5, students, faculty members and members from the community filled every pew and stood in the back of Kilworth Memorial Chapel to listen to Daniel Ellsberg’s lecture, “SECRETS: From the Pentagon Papers to Snowden and Beyond.” “I was surprised that so many people were there,” Thomas Aquilina ‘19 said. “I went in blind; I didn’t know anything about Daniel Ellsberg or the Pentagon Papers before the lecture.” According to Ellsberg’s website, he “worked...
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Tacoma makes bid for new Amazon headquarters

By Marcelle Rutherfurd Tacoma is making a bid to be the home of Amazon’s second headquarters. The Seattle-based web delivery company is currently searching for a place that fits the necessary requirements to be the home of the building dubbed “HQ2.” “Amazon is outgrowing its hometown of Seattle, and Tacoma hopes that by offering more room to expand and a short commute to the original headquarters, it can beat out Amazon’s other suitors,” Geekwire reported. If Tacoma were to beat out its competitors for HQ2, it would mean big economic...
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Attorney General of Washington State Sues Northwest Detention Center

By Ayden Bolin “A multi-billion dollar corporation is trying to get away with paying its workers $1 per day. That shouldn’t happen in America, and I will not tolerate it happening in Washington,” Bob Ferguson, the Washington State Attorney General, said. Ferguson is suing the privately-owned Northwest Detention Center (NWDC) for this reason. The lawsuit cites the detention center paying detainees in snacks or $1 per day for labor. Because the prison is privately run and for-profit, Ferguson has announced that the prison should be providing its workers with minimum...
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University Extends Financial Aid For All Students Who Study Abroad

By Emily Schuelein “When I first came here in no way did I think I would be able to go abroad. With this new policy, it is a possibility for me,” Joy Risley, a sophomore, said. The revised financial aid policy for study abroad allows students “who study abroad beginning in the 2018-19 academic year to apply institutional merit aid as well as need-based aid to their study abroad experience,” according to a campus-wide email from Kris Bartanen, Academic Vice President, Dean of the University, Interim Vice President for Student...
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Annual Security Report

By Andrew Izzo This year’s Annual Security Report was released on Oct. 1, 2017. This report contains information and statistics about crime and fire reports on and around campus for the last three calendar years, starting in January of 2014 and ending in December of 2016. This report is required by law through the Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act of 1990. This essentially requires colleges to outline information on crimes and other incidents that happen on campus. “It was an effort to make...
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Students gather for vigil for the Rohingya

By Keely Coxwell “The Rohingya are a really small Muslim ethnic minority from Myanmar’s Rakhine state,” Jae Bates ‘18 said. Bates organized an interfaith vigil for the Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar. The vigil was held Sept. 26 in the Piano Lounge. The conflict between the Rohingya and the majority-Buddhist Myanmar government has endured for decades but things escalated this past August. “After the military took over the Burmese government (now Myanmar) in 1962 were deliberately excluded from the census,” Chanel Chawalit ‘18 said. “In 1978, the military implemented Operation Nagamin...
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University grapples with repeated instances of anti-Semitic graffiti

By Emily Schuelein Over the months of July, August and September, three cases of anti-Semitic vandalism found on campus were reported, according to Director of Security Todd Badham. The first piece of vandalism was found on a “handrail on the music building. The second one was on the bike rack on the northeast corner of the science center by the main concert hall entrance. The last one was written... on a light concrete wall as part of Thomas Hall,” said Badham. “I keep in touch with the Tacoma Police Department...
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Merritt or Woodards: Who will be Tacoma’s new Mayor?

By Andrew Izzo The future of Tacoma was debated in the Tahoma room on Sept. 26. Mayoral candidates Jim Merritt and Victoria Woodards took to the stage before a crowd predominantly comprised of local citizens, with a few students from both University of Puget Sound and Pacific Lutheran University. The debate was jointly hosted by the University of Puget Sound Forensics Program and the Pacific Lutheran University Department of Politics and Government. Also on the stage that night were candidates for several other local government positions. For the Port of...
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Equifax security breach worse than expected

By Ayden Bolin On July 29, 2017, one of the largest mass Consumer Credit Reporting Agencies, Equifax, experienced a major data breach wherein sensitive personal information regarding millions of American citizens was released. Approximately 209,000 credit card numbers for individual consumers, as well as personal identifying information for 182,000 of those individuals were also affected. This information was kept by the agency until Sept. 7, when it was officially announced via equifaxsecurity2017.com. According to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the breach could affect anyone with a credit report. This rounds...
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University Responds to Title IX Announcement

By Marcelle Rutherfurd On Friday, Sept. 22, the Department of Education announced that revisions had been made to the procedures for investigating sexual assault on college campuses. President Crawford sent out an email that day announcing the changes to the campus community. “Earlier today the U.S. Department of Education released revised guidelines relating to the procedures by which educational institutions investigate, adjudicate, and resolve allegations of sexual misconduct. We will continue to follow our existing policies and procedures … while we study the new guidelines and seek advice from the...
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Freshman Class 2017

  By Andrew Izzo The freshman class of 2017 is unique in the institution’s history. “Demographically, this is the most diverse class we’ve ever had,” said Associate Vice President of Admission Shannon Carr. Carr goes on to say that this class is also very diverse in terms of ideology and geography. This includes a substantially higher number of local Tacoma residents. This increase in local students is due to the new University program that works with the Tacoma Public Schools, Carr says. This program provides scholarships to high-achieving Tacoma Public High...
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