Vigil for solidarity unites students
ByShippensburg University students of diverse backgrounds united on Thursday night in support of the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement.
Shippensburg University students of diverse backgrounds united on Thursday night in support of the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement.
The president of the Safe Zone, Shippensburg University’s LGBT club, sat pensively at a desk, working pencil to paper.
Yellow T-shirts were worn this past Tuesday in honor of those who have been affected by suicide.
Throughout the U.S., England and Australia, people will be searching for individuals who are so remote they lived in another lifetime, and yet so present their voices ring crisply and their translucent forms wisp through this world as if they were still breathing.
The second Open Mic Night of the semester, hosted by the Activities Program Board (APB), took place this past Wednesday at McFeely’s Café at 8 p.m.
While many college students view Fridays as the evening to spend money on a good time, the Activities Program Board (APB) gave Shippensburg University students the opportunity to make money.
Many members of the African Student Association (ASA) can answer Shakira’s question, “Tsamina mina zangalewa,”— where do you come from — with 54 different answers because of the 54 different countries in Africa.
The Women’s Center graduate assistants invited students to decorate umbrellas with empowering messages on the Ceddia Union Building (CUB) patio in the spirit of Rape, Assault, and Incest National Network (RAINN) Day.
Flipping hamburgers and grilling hot dogs, Shippensburg University campus police ditched their uniforms Thursday night to socialize with students.
Shippensburg University students explored new depths of friendship and community at this year’s Under the Sea Crab Fest hosted by the African American Organization, (Afro-Am.).
This past Thursday, the Latino Student Organization (LSO) held an event known as the Big Splash Party, in order to bring the student community together.
“True friends are the ones that never leave your heart,” said Andrew Moran, a Shippensburg University alumnus.
With two years of college under his cap, one ROTC cadet took a giant leap and landed a summer internship with NASA.
This past Wednesday, the United Campus Ministry (UCM) hosted an event for students to come out and observe and experience what the church is all about.
Shippensburg University students fell out of their chairs last Thursday when international comedy hypnotist Eric Mina dared them to dream using his fine-tuned power of suggestion.
It is the same campus but with new people. It is reused pens and old, half-scribbled notebooks. It is a stack of textbooks that may or may not get read. It is the adventure that has not yet unfolded; the late nights that will surely pile up like fried food stacked onto Reisner plates. It is the final exam; it is the final year for many; it is the final first college semester for others.
Bags are unpacked, rooms are decorated and parents are long gone. The Shippensburg University Class of 2020 has arrived.
As first-year and transfer students trickled onto Shippensburg University’s campus for move-in on Wednesday, students of the Martin Luther King (MLK) Academic Retention Program were finishing up the last of their workshops of their three-day early orientation.
College is an exciting and unique environment in which individuals can be whoever they want to be and do whatever they please. As students finally reach the end of their high school years and receive their diplomas, the next step for some is pursuing a college career.
As first-year students looked through the list of events to attend, many decided the Career and Community Engagement Center’s (CCEC) Craft for a Cause was worth attending.