Social clubs begin recruiting new members

Liz Bosarge

Reporter

On Thursday, Sept. 10, Mississippi University for Women's four-year social clubs begin their process of recruiting new members. 

Applications for the clubs are still available and can be picked up in Room 204 of Cochran Hall. The D'Belle, Highlander, Rogue, Lockheart, Silhouette, Mam'Selle, Reveler and Troubadour social clubs are a long-standing tradition. Blacklist, a two-year social club, started 101 years ago. Lockhearts and Rogues started in 1938, and the youngest club on campus, D'Belles, was founded in 1962.

Spectator Sound-Off

Ryan Savage
Reporter

The selfie stick trend has extended itself to the top of the photography world. From friends wanting to take a group photo to adventurers at the tops of the tallest skyscrapers, this invention allows people to get everything they want inside their photo. Students and faculty were asked to comment on this new craze.

Q: What do you think about the selfie and the selfie stick?

Record-breaking year

Mallory Johnston

Reporter

The graduating class of Spring 2015 was a milestone class for the Mississippi University for Women. The class had more degrees awarded than at any other point in the school's history.

Dr. Jim Borsig thinks the increase in diplomas issued represents students who are finishing on time and who share a common focus on the future and what they can do with their degrees once they graduate. The last three years have been record-setting for the university, and he attributes it to hard work, both from students and faculty.

Frugal fall fashion

Jessica Barnett

Online Editor

In a world where most of our money is spent on books or bills and our energy is spent on getting that homework assignment turned in on time, fashion can take a backseat. Thankfully, this season, the old is new again, and a great outfit can be thrown together with very little effort or expense. 

"You can just wear jeans and Chucks, and it won't be a terrible fashion faux pas. You can start to wear plaid again. You can even raid your dad's wardrobe and start to wear his sweaters or roll up the sleeves on his plaid shirts. Very 90s Seattle of all of us," explains Mia, a Philadelphia, Penn., drummer who is excited to see the grunge look of her youth re-appearing on the runway. 

New movies coming to theaters in September

Patrick Wiggins

Feature Editor

September has arrived, and with it comes a new batch of movies. With the summer months behind us, don't expect any major blockbusters, but there are a few hidden gems on the way. 

Sept. 4 brings with it "The Transporter Refueled," the fourth movie in the series and the first to be released since "Transporter 3" was released in 2008. While the main character is the same, the actor portraying him is different. There is no more Jason Statham ("Furious 7"). Instead, we get relative newcomer, Ed Skrein ("Game of Thrones").

Campus ministries provide united front for students

Joanna Frye

Managing Editor

There are a variety of campus ministries at The W. These ministries seek to help students get connected with a body of believers, "so we, though many, are one body in Christ, and individually members one of another." (Romans 12:5)

These ministries are trying to be a united front. They want to serve the students on campus with opportunities to serve the community and share the love of Christ with students.

Thinking outside the exercise box with yoga on the bridge event

Monica Kizer

Reporter

Passport to Wellness and Bliss Yoga start off the fall semester at The W with their first event, "Barefoot on the Bridge" on Sept. 10 at 6 p.m. at the Riverwalk Bridge.

The event is free and is open to the public.

Passport to Wellness is an organization of student leaders who want to make a positive health change on the campus of The W and in the community. This year, the organization is thinking outside the box by getting The W and the community involved with a different style of physical activity: yoga. 

MUW’s Nepali Community Stands Strong and provides relief after Earthquake

Pedro Acevedo

Managing Editor

Last Saturday tragedy struck Nepal. A devastating 7.8 magnitude earthquake shook the country near its capital, Katmandu, killing more than 5,000 people so far, displacing tens of thousands of others and destroying much of the city’s cultural heritage.

While the country’s government and the international community rally to deal with the aftermath back home, the Nepali community here at the W has come together to help with the relief effort.

William Simmons, the university’s international coordinator, said that the reaction was almost immediate.

“Fortunately a lot of the students here had a call to action, you know,  and said to themselves ‘we can help even though we are abroad, and we are gonna be doing these efforts, we are gonna be promoting the cause, spreading awareness,” said Simmons. “All the credit goes to the Nepalese Student Association and many of its members.”

And lot of work is being done.