Impulsive drivers take action
A number of criminal mischief reports have come into the campus police where students feel that damage to their cars has come as retaliation from angry drivers who they may have taken a parking spot from or cut off.
A number of criminal mischief reports have come into the campus police where students feel that damage to their cars has come as retaliation from angry drivers who they may have taken a parking spot from or cut off.
Controversy, violence and the vagina make their way to UVSC for the fifth year in a row, presenting The Vagina Monologues.
The United States Air Force Academy’s Latter-day Saint Cadet Choir gave a great concert honoring both our country and the LDS church. They sang some beautiful songs, including the national anthem, “The U.S. Air Force,” “I Know That My Redeemer Lives,” “Praise to the Man,” and “Come Thou Fount.” The students also enjoyed a piano solo of the song “I Stand All Amazed.”
Kiddus Yohannes, the former student who was arrested June 2007 on charges of purchasing guns illegally and unlawfully possessing his roommates debit card, was convicted on Feb. 15 and may face life in the custody of immigration officials.
In 1908, famed sociologist Thomas F. O’Dea published a monumental work on the LDS church titled THE MORMONS, a commentary that is now a staple in the collections of many contemporary Mormon theologists, researchers and critics. In celebration of the publication’s 50th anniversary, UVSC’s Behavioral Science department will host an on-campus conference titled “Thomas F. O’Dea’s THE MORMONS: A Reconsideration Fifty Years Later.”
Each year a local beneficiary is chosen and spotlighted. The beneficiaries of The Vagina Monologues ticket sales have been Turning Point at UVSC, Promise for Women and Children, the Donner/Galbraith Scholarship, House of Hope, and this year’s Center for Women and Children in Crisis.
Do you ever pause to wonder what inhabitants of the future will think of our society when they look upon our remains? If someone from the future came to UVSC’s campus, there is one thing that our future-friend would surely find baffling.
Now that I’m not on strike anymore, I can finally preach my words of wisdom unto thee. Here are some events to look for in 2008.
We’ve all seen them, and know that nothing ruins a day quite like the unwelcome vision of unkempt, unseemly, unattractive people. That’s right, you ugly degenerates, you know who you are, and you know we don’t want you around.
Regardless of my political views on any other issue, I believe the single most important issue we face as a nation is ending the war… not the war in Iraq or the war against terrorism, but the devastating civil cold war that is destroying our nation from within.
If you’re like most people, you’d probably rather not think about Mexico or illegal immigration. The issue is like a door that hinges on racism: Open it, and you enter a room of overwhelming and seemingly unsolvable social, economic and political problems.
Imagine a desolate ribbon of pavement, in the middle of nowhere, but someplace dry and barren where the terrain rolls up and down, in fairly regular, half-mile wavelengths.
Imagine that from the crest of these fluid waves, in solid ground, a person can see everything, clear ahead to the next crest or clear back to the last one.
Ten years ago, Julián Cardona, a photojournalist from Juárez, Mexico, began to document the devastating effects of globalization on the U.S.-Mexico border.
Wrestling is in the rear-view mirror for sure for at least two seniors and more than likely a third – but at least all three went out with wins.
Bad blood, close proximity, fights and more make it must-see hockey when Utah Valley and BYU get together on the ice.
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