By Hope Weil If you live in the St. Petersburg area, you’ve probably heard of the bubbly probiotic drink kombucha. The drink that was originally sold primarily in health stores
Month: February 2019
By Dinorah Prevost In recent years, the U.S. Census Bureau has poked the beehive of race in the United States with statistics. It poked first in 2008 and more recently
By Bryce Lawson With the 2019 NBA Trade Deadline at a close and the NBA All-Star Game Feb. 17, a big topic of discussion around the league is whether players
By Dinorah Prevost Radio host Joshua Johnson, away from the microphone and pop filter, is not the droning radio newscaster you think of when you hear the letters N-P-R. When
By Dylan Hart Douglas Herbert is not a smoker, but says he inhales the equivalent of 183 cigarettes a year. “The reason I smoke 183 cigarettes a year is because
By Amy Diaz On the rainy, early morning of Feb. 13, around 40 presumably sleepy USF St. Petersburg students piled onto a bus headed for Tallahassee. Political science majors, medical
By Jonah Hinebaugh The phrase “American exceptionalism” was used for the first time in 1930 – by Joseph Stalin. In the decades that followed, those words became a point of
By Amy Diaz The Open Partnership Education Network is hosting Common Ground, a weeklong series of events around the theme of civility. From Feb.18-22, students and community members can participate
By James Bennett III We may never know if androids dream of electric sheep. But if they pooped, it would probably be done in a similar manner to the ORCA,
By Anna Bryson What used to be a holiday to celebrate love is now the anniversary of one of the deadliest school shootings in the United States. To mark the