Skip to content
  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Full Issues
  • Staffing
The Crow's Nest

The Crow's Nest

at USF St. Petersburg

  • Home
  • News
  • Arts & Life
  • Sports
  • Feature
  • Opinion
  • Editorials
  • RHO Updates
Sports USF Sports

USF ends regular season on top of the American Conference

March 14, 2026March 14, 2026 Dominic Feo
Feature

LSO spring break trip helps students step out of the classroom and into community volunteering 

March 11, 2026March 11, 2026 Julia Birdsall
Arts and Life

LASA and CCE celebrate Carnaval

March 11, 2026March 11, 2026 Arts & Life Staff
News

USF BOT to terminate four degree programs and add two 

March 11, 2026 Jasmin Parrado
Arts and Life

Public art exhibition ‘embracing our differences’ returns to Poynter Park

March 11, 2026March 11, 2026 Zariya Bankston
Feature

The truth of true crime: USFSP looks past the caution tape

March 9, 2026March 9, 2026 Zariya Bankston
News

Overheard: RNC Edition

September 4, 2012 Lenay Ruhl

“Today, women are more likely than men to start a business. They need a president who respects and understands what they do.” —Mitt Romney, accepting the Republican Party’s nomination for

Read More
Campus News News

Journalist discusses stimulus’ importance during RNC event

September 4, 2012 Lenay Ruhl

Those who arrived early to Michael Grunwald’s talk in Harbor Hall last Tuesday may have spotted the journalist in the entrance, doing what journalists do—filing a story. Dressed in a

Read More
Editorials Opinion

USFSP shouldn’t trick students

September 4, 2012 USFSP Faculty

Florida students have long been the soft underbelly of public university funding. The price of an education continues to increase at unprecedented rates as political and academic leadership, people who

Read More
Sports

Bulls defeat Tennessee Chattanooga 34-13 in opener

September 4, 2012 Mike Hopey

Head coach Skip Holtz loved the way his special teams and defense played on Saturday night. But despite some miscues and a couple turnovers the University of South Florida Bulls

Read More
Sports

My hometown sports fans are unstable

September 4, 2012 Mike Hopey

Whenever I talk sports with friends from back home in Boston they bring up Tampa’s reputation as a poor sports town. I quietly laugh with them and nod. But it

Read More
Opinion Opinion Columns

Lasting connections

September 4, 2012 Lenay Ruhl

  Many students hesitate to seek out clubs or events on campus, staying under the radar until they quietly graduate. This usually wards off the disconcerting feeling of being out

Read More
News

Local art initiatives seek funding

September 3, 2012 Lenay Ruhl

American Style Magazine bestowed St. Petersburg the title of No. 1 mid-sized art destination in America for the third year in a row in May. The high-budgets of the Salvador

Read More
News

‘Hail to the blue moon’ playlist

September 3, 2012 Lenay Ruhl

Most people have heard the phrase ”once in a blue moon” used at some point to denote a rare event, falling somewhere between pigs flying and hell freezing over on

Read More
Sports USF Sports

With win under belt, USF looks to future

September 2, 2012 Lenay Ruhl

Consistency. It was the word of the night for head coach Skip Holtz and something that the USF Bulls seem to struggle to maintain at times, both on the field

Read More
News

The Venture Compound offers performance space for local musical artists

August 28, 2012 Aimee Alexander

The Venture Compound, a non-traditional performance space in St. Petersburg’s Warehouse Arts District, is radiating sound waves in the underground scene. The living space, which doubles as a show space

Read More

Posts pagination

Previous 1 … 409 410 411 … 448 Next

Recent Posts

  • USF ends regular season on top of the American Conference
  • LSO spring break trip helps students step out of the classroom and into community volunteering 
  • LASA and CCE celebrate Carnaval
  • USF BOT to terminate four degree programs and add two 
  • Public art exhibition ‘embracing our differences’ returns to Poynter Park

usfcrowsnest

📲 Click the link in our bio to read the entire 📲 Click the link in our bio to read the entire story.

✍️ Story by Julia Ferrara

🎨 Graphic by Olivia Young

#usf #usfsp #stpete
📲 Click the link in our bio to read the entire 📲 Click the link in our bio to read the entire story.

✍️ Story by Julia Birdsall

🎨 Graphic by Olivia Young

#usf #usfsp #stpete
Heading into the 2026 Indy NXT Firestone Grand Pri Heading into the 2026 Indy NXT Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, 17-year-old Gulfport-native Nikita Johnson was optimistic. 

“I’m super thrilled, it’s such a tough category, so to be in [Indy NXT] again and for my first full year is amazing. Hopefully we can pull off a few wins,” Johnson told The Crow’s Nest at the Grand Prix Kickoff Street Party on Feb. 25. 

Johnson got his first win as a full-time Indy NXT driver earlier than expected. Starting from P2 after exceeding expectations in qualifying, Johnson overtook grid leader Max Taylor on the race’s initial turn and led the rest of the way. 

“I saw there was an opportunity coming into turn one, so I went for it and stuck it,” Johnson said during the post-race press conference. “After that — I don’t want to say smooth sailing — but I had it pretty controlled. It was still a little bit tough. Max was right there all the time behind me.” 

📲 Click the link in our bio to read the entire story.

✍️ Story by Dominic Feo

📷 Photos by Makenna Wozniak

🎨 Graphic by Olivia Young

#usf #usfsp #stpete
In a repeat of the 2025 Firestone Grand Prix of St In a repeat of the 2025 Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, Álex Palou parked his No.10 DHL Chip Ganassi Racing Honda in victory lane on March 1. He grabbed the lead in Lap 42 out of 100 and didn’t let go until the checkered flag waved. 

He finished 12.4948 seconds ahead of Scott McLaughlin, who took pole in qualifying on Feb. 28, for the largest margin of victory in the history of the street circuit. 

“[Palou] uses guard base and gets track position,” McLaughlin said in a post-race press conference. “Obviously, I think the correct decision today was probably to start with red tires, but we didn’t know that going in.” 

📲 Click the link in our bio to read the entire story.

✍️ Story by Irena Mesa

📷 Photos by Makenna Wozniak and Irena Mesa

🎨 Graphic by Olivia Young

#usf #usfsp #grandprix
Have you checked out Dave Crow’s participation a Have you checked out Dave Crow’s participation at the Grand Prix? You can find it on our latest print issue! 

🎨 Comic by Kaila McEwan

#usfsp #usf #stpete
📲 Click the link in our bio to read the entire 📲 Click the link in our bio to read the entire story.

✍️ Story by Matthew McGovern and Julia Ferrara

📷 Photo by Matthew McGovern

🎨 Graphic by Kaila McEwan

#usf #usfsp #stpete
Social media and protests are some of the main way Social media and protests are some of the main ways that people get involved in activism today. 

However, not everyone does this with selfless intention. 

Performative activism is when one involves themself with a social movement in a way that benefits them but not the movement they claim to support. 

“When it’s performative, it can come off a lot more like self-serving, or it can come off a lot more like you’re just here for the flashiness, but there’s no real work happening after,” said Harrison Lundy, the public policy director for Voices of Florida and a volunteer for 5051 Florida.  

It’s like putting on a mask, Elise Prophete, junior political science and sustainability major and Governor of the University of South Florida St. Petersburg’s student government, told The Crow’s Nest. 

When engaging in performative activism “we’re not allowing ourselves to be vulnerable and be at risk for the things we care about,” Prophete said. “We’re not allowing ourselves to truly care about them.” 
Performative activism has the effect of boosting one’s own social credit while devaluing a social movement.

✍️Story by Julia Birdsall
The poet laureate usually holds their position for The poet laureate usually holds their position for the mayor’s term and Johnson-Greene will join a distinguished body of poets who previously held the role, including Peter Meinke, Helen Wallace, and more recently, Gloria Muñoz.  

His reaction was one of surprise and astonishment.  

“I think I began to babble something like Courage the Cowardly dog,” Johnson-Green told The Crow’s Nest.  

Johnson-Green’s experience with poetry began about eight years ago, but he still considers himself new to it. He stayed away from the art form for a long time because of the sad connotations it carried.  

This changed when he attended a poetry open mic at Studio@620, a local visual and performing arts venue in downtown St. Petersburg.  

“The walls were a passionate red, the seating was cool and raised up like a theatre, and the poets were everyday people; the oldest around sixty-three and the youngest was about seven,” said Johnson-Green.  

✍️Story by Julia Ferrara
February was a month full of fun festivities. Here February was a month full of fun festivities. Here’s a look back at all the great events that happened on and off campus.

📲 Click the link in our bio to view all the photos.

All Rights Reserved –– The Crow's Nest 2023.
Proudly powered by WordPress | Theme: Fairy by Candid Themes.