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The Crow's Nest

USF St. Petersburg student newspaper

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Sunday, May 10, 2026

Archives for March 2015

Time to end time change

Time jumped forward an hour this Sunday in response to daylight saving time, and if you’re here at USF St. Petersburg today, you likely noticed. Or you showed up at your 8 a.m. class at 9. Daylight saving time has been around for nearly 100 years, as Woodrow Wilson signed it into law in 1918,

My Asheville Adventure

Instead of going to parties and watching Netflix during Spring Break, I decided to attend the Un-BULL-ievable Spring Break Asheville. The trip was an alternative spring break that focuses on an act of service. We worked for the YMCA of Western North Carolina to help increase access to sports and recreation. There were eight students

Playlist: Spring forward

It’s time to spring forward. We may lose an hour, but what we lose in minutes we gain in sunshine and flowers. Let the changing seasons be a wakeup call. It’s been said that the third quarter mark of any academic year is where students slack the most — don’t let that happen. Work hard

Margin

Welcome back from spring break! I know, many of you are kicking and screaming to be back at school. It’s just getting warm, and … can’t we have one more day at the beach? I understand, friends. So I’ve made this little countdown sheet for you. Anytime you feel discouraged, just keep the countdown going.

Bulls fall to top-ranked Huskies in regular-season finale

In what was their closest conference game of the season, the Connecticut Huskies women’s basketball team defeated South Florida by 23 points, capping off the regular season.  The Huskies (29-1, 18-0) have pummeled through opponents all season long with an average 50.2 margin of victory in conference play prior to Monday’s 88-63 victory against the USF Bulls. They are

Gherman elected student body president

On Feb. 25, Jozef Gherman and Juan Salazar were elected student body president and vice president in the runoff election. Gherman’s ticket received 386 votes, accounting for 58.48 percent of the total votes, while Ziya Kardas and Kyle Uber received 274 votes at 41.52 percent. 660 students voted. In order to win, one ticket had

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