Video games important for society
ByVideo gaming has a bad reputation. In the aisles of Wal-Mart or Target, you see potato chips or other junk foods under newly released games.
Video gaming has a bad reputation. In the aisles of Wal-Mart or Target, you see potato chips or other junk foods under newly released games.
Deep red leaves float across a gentle blue sky, gradually falling until they meet their reflection in the rippling water below.
Tucked away in a corner of the Ceddia Union Building’s third floor is a rarely spoken of resource center for the Shippensburg University community: The Project Center. One of the numerous student-employed departments of the CUB, the Project Center opened in the fall of 2011.
Students were encouraged to bring multiple copies of their resumes to the job fair at Shippensburg University on Oct.
The litter created from college parties surrounding Shippensburg University is not a new phenomenon — but the initiative to clean it up is.
Sitting on the waxy seats of a middle school bus, Alexis Goodreau’s eighth-grade friend handed her an “American Idiot” album by Green Day — the album that brought her to where she is now.
For those who want to raise their voices about women’s sexuality and strength, there is a forum for just that — the Women’s Center is holding auditions in Horton Hall for the Vagina Monologues. Auditions start Nov.
It took 37 years and thousands of beers, but graduate student Kevin Faust found his calling — counseling, the profession that saved his life. Prior to beginning his bachelor’s degree in psychology, Faust was drunk every night for about 17 years.
Wednesday afternoon became a bit more relaxing with a pumpkin decorating and chocolate tasting event sponsored by the Shippensburg University Counseling Center. Students stood in line at the Library Plaza, waiting to let their creative juices flow.
October marks Breast Cancer Awareness month and on Tuesday, Oct. 20, Colleges Against Cancer partnered with the Shippensburg University Women’s Center for its annual Breastival in the Ceddia Union Building Amphitheater.
There is something going on behind bathroom stall doors. That’s right, something unspeakable, rarely mentioned, embarrassing even, it is taking place every day — people are pooping.
The planetarium was lit with an orange glow as people shuffled in and sat down. Their eyes were pointed toward the domed ceiling Thursday night at Franklin Science Center in the Dibert-Roddick Planetarium. Allen Armstrong, a physics professor of Shippensburg University, hosted the planetarium show for the third time.
Eight French students and their professor, Géraldine Réniez, spent a week in New York City and this past week in Shippensburg.
Jeremy Flick, senior, 2015 homecoming king Q: What is your favorite thing about SU?
Jaélin Smith, senior, 2015 homecoming queen Q: How does it feel to wear the crown? A: Mind blowing.
The Shippensburg University Homecoming Committee tested the power of SU students — the power of their trivia knowledge, that is.
An upcoming attraction will allow anyone to view the lives of those who served in the Vietnam War.
I knew going vegan would be much harder than going vegetarian, but it was even tougher than I imagined.
Students threw whipped cream pies all around the CUB Amphitheater Thursday, Oct. 8 all in support of a good cause. Shippensburg University’s 2015 Homecoming Court has spent the past three weeks fundraising as a part of their campaigns for king and queen.
On the verge of fall break, a small, intimate group gathered in CUB 106 at 3:30 p.m. on Oct. 8 to feed their brains one last time before going into hibernation.