Walking down the halls on the first floor of Walker Building, the cool scientific neatness of corridors, interrupted only by an occasional distilled water fountain, makes for a particularly unexciting setting. One student leader at the Shenango Campus is calling for a re-election following student complaints about what they say was a poorly conducted presidential election earlier this spring. Her office is typical of a working mom's. Pictures of her children on her desk and a youngster's watercolor paintings adorn her walls. Among the various comics clipped from newspapers, a red button with white letters screams for attention. The state Public Utility Commission approved a telephone service last week that allows customers to screen their calls, but the University has not yet made the option available to on-campus students. Despite threats to withhold funding until detailed accounts of state-related schools' spending are available, the state House of Representatives approved $259 million for the University's appropriation Monday night -- $10 million short of the University's request.
When the sun rises tomorrow, about 240 golfers and 55 celebrities will make their way to the University's Blue Course. The participants will be armed with Ping putters and oversized drivers -- along with an insatiable desire to help kids. My Opinion: Brian Epstein
Editorial Opinion: U.S. involvement in Haiti will not solve problems My Opinion: Fred Deakin