Dorms across campus are being overloaded with digital technologies. The average college student needs an essential amount of technological "bling" to feel connected to the world, and of course, look good at the same time. There is a dangerous side to looking good and feeling connected that seems to be unknown to students.
Sacred Heart is home to students from a number of different countries including Jamaica, England, Ireland, Sweden and Canada. The school's website boasts a representation of about 37 countries. The majority of students come to Sacred Heart from Long Island, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Massachusetts.
Park it in a spot, be courteous. Regardless if you are a student, faculty member or employee of the university, not finding a parking spot is always aggravating. Yet this seems like an ever present problem that we all wish would be remedied. With the university gaining notoriety, it seems that inevitably it will outgrow itself.
Seniors gathered at the Outpost Pub to celebrate the fact that they were made in the 80's. The first pub night of the year had about 300 attendees, some of whom dressed in 80's garb. The Outpost Pub, held in Flik, was practically packed last Wednesday, September 21.
As of October 1, 2005 if you are caught talking on a cell phone, while driving in Connecticut, you are going to pay, literally. The law that was passed this summer requiring hands free devices for the use of cell phones while driving goes in to effect this weekend, and if you are caught without your hands free you'll be slapped with a $100 fine.
"Where does the money come from? Where does the money go? College students are notorious for walking around penniless. Most college students do not have jobs during the school year; the money that was saved is completely consumed over the first three months of the semester.
Braised lamb shanks with mint sauce. Rotisserie chicken with roasted red potatoes and a vegetable medley. Sounds like menu items at a chic restaurant? Sure. However, it is what's being served in FLIK. Each day hundreds of students, faculty, and staff pass through FLIK either to grab a quick snack or just to enjoy their daily dinner.
Julia Davis had reacurring pains in her right side, along with fatigue and low fevers. After undergoing a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), doctors found that Davis had a tumor on one side. Surgery was set to remove the tumor doctor's thought was benign.