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The Crow's Nest

USF St. Petersburg student newspaper

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Tuesday, May 12, 2026

News

NNB drive delivers Thanksgiving baskets

Neighborhood News Bureau students Kelly Jones, left, and Sophie Erber fill bags with food donated by campus community members. Students from NNB, part of the Department of Journalism & Media Studies, delivered seven Thanksgiving baskets to families in need in Midtown on Nov. 15. The campus-wide canned food drive began in late October. The department

News Briefs

“I’m not a scientist, man. I can tell you what recorded history says, I can tell you what the Bible says, but I think that’s a dispute amongst theologians and I think it has nothing to do with the gross domestic product or economic growth of the United States. I think the age of the

First time voters give their reasons

Voters between the ages of 18 and 29 were expected to stay home on Nov. 6. Instead, they showed up to the polls in larger numbers than 2008. With 60 percent of the vote, Barack Obama was their clear choice. The Crow’s Nest interviewed students who watched the numbers come in at the University Student

Veteran students start a second act, see city, school and life in new ways

With his athletic build and boyish face—aside from mild stubble for “no shave” November—David Sutton, a finance major, blends in with his fellow USF St. Petersburg students. So when people realize that he is a 25-year-old undergrad, they usually have questions. Sutton welcomes these inquiries, explaining that he “took a detour” and served in the

News Briefs

USF St. Petersburg students hit campus polls last Tuesday and Wednesday. According to Vincent DeCosmo, election rules chair, 270 students voted in 19 new Student Government senators: Steven Bird (113 votes) Matthew Bull (86 votes) Michael Cardozo (48 votes) Bryce Fitzgerald (79 votes) Jozef Gherman (64 votes) Jacob Grimes (116 votes) Thomas Hamby (159 votes)

Art in the cover of night

Draped in anonymity and the cover of night, the artist known as STOIC finds his peace of mind in the solitude of dark streets and the application of wet paint to concrete. He works with his face half covered to protect his identity from unfriendly eyes. Some fail to see anything more than property damage

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