The Spectator spotlight of the month is on Zap Saucier, a freshman Culinary Arts major. They chose Mississippi University for Women because of its Culinary Arts program, which stood out from other schools.
Study abroad provides immersion into learning
The time a young adult spends in college is often called one of the most influential and important stretches of his/her life. New information and the excitement of beginning to stretch out their wings apart from their parents’ watchful presence creates within young adults a fast-and-furious independence that only grows with each passing year they spend at their institutions of choice.
Campus superstitions continue, but change over the years
Seniors prepare for graduation, look forward to jobs, grad school
Video game fans and voice actors interact online
COVID-19 has changed people’s lives in many different ways. One of the biggest changes that it brought to us was adapting to a completely digital world where everything had to be held virtually. A major example of this is gaming conventions. Last year, events such as Overwatch League, League of Legends Championship series and ROECon were all held virtually.
'Godzilla vs. Kong': Smash hit or monster failure?
Homecoming festivities postponed until August
Radio station suffers power outage due to winter storm
Graduation to be in-person
Students cope with challenges during Pandemic
The pandemic has taken a mental toll on people around the world. Many have seen increased anxiety, depression, and other mental health situations including the students attending Mississippi University for Women. Kat Lewis is a freshman Speech Language Pathology major, and Emma Beeler is a junior English Creative Writing and History double major, and both say the pandemic has impacted them, but in different ways.