Column: Hint to new Potter content underwhelms
Magic can be found in the places you least expect it, but I don’t think a tweet from J.K. Rowling is going to cast a spell to resurrect our beloved Harry Potter. The Tweet reads as follows:
335 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Magic can be found in the places you least expect it, but I don’t think a tweet from J.K. Rowling is going to cast a spell to resurrect our beloved Harry Potter. The Tweet reads as follows:
People are rarely whole. While all the fingers and toes are accounted for, there are cracks, nooks and crannies that count us all just shy of "normal."
As I slouched down in my chair during every class last week, considerably impeded by the “Goldfish Syndrome,” my mind traversed through various time periods in Middle Eastern history and managed to stumble upon the Yom Kippur War in ‘73.
Welcome to October, the month in which State Fair, Homecoming, Fall Break and Halloween all reside. The fun is only as limited as an individual’s mental capacity for fun, which, with all the stress of the second half of the semester, is actually pretty limited.
Ms. Savage,
Home is a relative idea. It is comprised of people and feelings and determined meaning. This can be a few places. For me personally, it’s my parent’s house, my best friend’s house and right here at Carolina.
When it rains it pours. Perhaps a dusty old cliché, but it will be employed here as the only familiar aspect in this dark and uncertain time in campus culture.
Dear Dailey,
With all the “transition” happening on campus right now, I wonder why the issue of public safety is not being addressed with more concern. I get it. Public safety is boring to talk about until something tragic happens. Then it’s all about the blame game, but let us prevent tragedy (and goofy political finger pointing) before it happens and deal with the problem now. The problem that I am referring to is the unsafe crossing of students on Assembly Street.
Focus on singular body parts exacerbates attempts to see women as whole
I walked home alone last night, from Russell House to the Women’s Quad. The walk takes about eight minutes, tops, but when I do reach my room I breathe a sigh of exhaustion. Fear is tiring. Unfortunately, as a female student on an urban campus, fear is my life.
If you’ve ever traveled abroad to a country where your language is rarely spoken, you’ll understand when I say that it’s like being dropped to the bottom of the ocean.
It is hard to remember how different the world was back in January.
After two years of attending this university, I consider myself fairly settled down and knowledgeable of the campus.
If you’ve spent time outside this summer, you know that on the average day it feels hotter than the inside of an oven, or perhaps the surface of the sun.
Recently, I received an invitation in the mail to a wedding reception from a friend. As I get older, that’s going to be less surprising, especially as my friends who were upperclassmen when I was a freshman or sophomore in high school are beginning to graduate and start families.
I’d like to comment on Caleb Dixon’s article, “Founding documents still relevant” of July 16 — 22. I generally agree with all the cogent points he makes. As a political science student at Whittier College in California the founding documents were only covered in Constitutional Law and briefly in an American History survey course and an upper-level course called American Political Philosophy and Jurisprudence.
In the last issue there was an article that called a required class on this nation’s founding documents, the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution and the Federalist Papers, a “waste of students’ time and resources.” I took offense to this.
On May 23, Elliot Rodger shot and killed six people and injured several more.
Denmark, SC example shows teaching all options most effective