Public Safety officers responded to inoxicated students in the chapel, an overflowing bathtub, public urination and a St. John’s student who struck a St. Thomas student.
News in :90 — Sept. 25, 2013
This is News in :90 for Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2013.
Teddy Geiger draws full house at Scooter’s
Geiger sang songs from his new record and some old favorites, such as “For You I Will (Confidence).”
Freshman class elects USG officers
After a three-day long voting period last week, 400 freshmen selected Paige Aanestad as their class president.
News in :90 — Sept. 24, 2013
This is News in :90 for Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2013.
Electronic cigarettes prohibited under proposed tobacco ban
If a policy banning tobacco passes, smoking products, including e-cigarettes, won’t be allowed on campus.
News in :90 — Sept. 23, 2013
This is News in :90 for Monday, Sept. 23, 2013.
Business school ahead of gender equity trend
A New York Times study exposed gender inequality in Harvard’s Business School, but St. Thomas doesn’t fit the findings.
University lowers parking permit fee to increase demand
Commuter permit fees dropped from $250 to $200 per year in a university effort to fill its parking lots.
Public Safety treats 11 intoxicated fans
St. Thomas Public Safety dealt with 11 intoxicated people in a record-setting crowd of 10,800 fans during Saturday’s Tommie-Johnnie football game,
Study Abroad hopes Mandarin course will increase students studying in China
A new Mandarin Chinese course at St. Thomas this fall aims to inspire more students to consider studying abroad in China.
O’Shaughnessy: The man, the myth, the legend
O’Shaughnessy buildings are not the only marks Ignatius Aloysius O’Shaughnessy has left on St. Thomas.
News in :90 — Sept. 20, 2013
This is News in :90 for Friday, Sept. 20, 2013.
Concordia’s $10,000 tuition cut doesn’t pressure St. Thomas
Numbers have remained steady this fall, despite Concordia University-St. Paul drawing a 65 percent increase in new students.
Two St. Thomas professors translate Pope’s interview
Theology professor Massimo Faggioli and Modern and Classical Languages professor Sarah Christopher Faggioli were two of the five U.S. scholars commissioned for the translation of the Italian interview.