Once you’ve wrapped up your review, the big question rolls in: Do I stay with this company, or start looking elsewhere?
The Stute
I found myself between a rock and a hard place last week, Wednesday to be specific. I was proposed with an article idea that may have an impact on several groups on this campus.
I have the bad habit of becoming engrossed in my schedule and never deviating from my assigned times, being a perfectionist, being picky, or as my dad likes to say, “finicky.”
Whenever I write this column, I attempt to source the ideas from my own life. Today, my mile-long to-do list, overbooked G-Cal, and daily switch from girlbossing to bedrotting served as my inspiration.
There’s officially less than a month until graduation, and the days have been slipping through my fingers. My bulletproof defense to any hangout pushback I receive from my friends is, “It’s senior year.”
A drug, known for heavy-metal poisoning, may also be used as a treatment against snakebites.
Snakebite envenoming causes 138,000 deaths annually, and around 400,000 victims face permanent disabilities.
In May 2020, astronomers observed a planetary engulfment for the first time that they believed was caused by a star expanding to become a red giant–swallowing an orbiting planet in the process.
Cancer is and always has been one of the biggest hurdles in the medical science field. The cost of clinical trials is often extraordinarily high, making repeated research difficult to conduct.
This past weekend, the men’s and women’s track teams ran at the Coach Pollard Invitational and Paul Donahue Invitational hosted by Moravian University and Widener University, respectively.
On Friday, April 18, and Saturday, April 19, the Men’s Golf team competed at the Gettysburg Spring Shootout, hosted by Gettysburg College.