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The Crow's Nest

USF St. Petersburg student newspaper

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Sunday, May 10, 2026

Archives for October 2012

Making music and living on the streets

Downtown St. Petersburg is artistically comparable to other major cities around the country, holding its own in entertainment, nightlife and museums. But unlike the other cities in its league, there is not a very large presence of street performers. Why this gap in culture? The art of street performing is commonly referred to as busking.

Inspired by the 2000 election

It was the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November 2000: Election Day. I was in seventh grade at the time and the topic dominated conversation at Lawton Chiles Middle School for the past week; we even had a debate in my language arts class (all reflecting the views of our parents). The precinct

To fix USC conflict, work with system

The University Student Center and Student Life Center are concrete testaments to what a unified university culture is capable of achieving. At the same time they are also testaments to the challenges students and administrators face in sharing the leadership and stewardship of our universities. Two years ago I imagined this being a time of

Yard signs aren’t just for the neighbors

Five Man Electrical Band summed up election time best in their 1971 hit, “Signs.” “Sign, sign, everywhere a sign! Blockin’ out the scenery, breakin’ my mind.” Election time strings mini-billboards along our roadways and in our neighborhoods. Sign wars have been ongoing for centuries, but what is the motive behind displaying signs that advertise our

Street performing culture of St. Petersburg

Downtown St. Petersburg is artistically comparable to other major cities around the country, holding its own in entertainment, nightlife and museums. But unlike the other cities in its league, there is not a very large presence of street performers. Why this gap in culture? The art of street performing is commonly referred to as busking.

Finding Florida with the help of a fourth grader

This year, the ‘Cities and the Environment’ resource institute shared a study revolving around urban students’ almost nonexistent schooling about local plants and insects. But before students can get educated about their own backyards, their teachers have to. The study sent 13 New York City public-school teachers and five undergrad teaching assistants 50 miles north

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