By Jessi Gilbert This weekend, 3rd Act, SCAD’s performing arts club, will present “Zombie Prom,” a comedic musical set in the ’50s. The plot follows Toffee and Jonny, two high-school seniors who fall in love. When Toffee’s parents intervene and break up the romance, Jon
A Call for Help The Chatham Savannah Animal Control Department issued a call for help today. The facility at 7211 Sallie Mood Drive is over capacity with abandoned dogs and cats, creating dangerously low food levels and the threat of lethal action. “We have about 70 animals we could euthanize,”
By Amy Paige Three suspects will be charged in the fatal slaying of Sean Giroir, a 20-year-old SCAD student from Houston, Texas, who was killed Oct. 28 at 1900 block of Barnard Street, where he lived with a second victim, Michael Levi, who is being treated for a gunshot wound at Memorial University
By Myrriah Gossett The kitchen, to some, is a scary place where only your friends who have worked in restaurants or your mom ever ventured. Fear no more. Staying on a college budget is a lot easier when eating at home instead of deciding which restaurant you’re going to for breakfast, lunch and di
By Chantelle Emery Jewelry making is an art form that may be foreign to some, but familiar to others. Regardless of which group you fall into, the Metals and Jewelry Student Association (MJSA) is a place that accepts all with a common interest in making jewelry. “It’s more than just a club, it
By Anna Geannopoulos Who: Joe Seipel, Vice President of Academic Services “I don’t think it is something people learn in a lot of other occupations—to feel comfortable just jumping into something and not fearing failure. Artists get used to it. We go to critiques all the time. You know wha
By Shannon Gentry Vegans live a tough lifestyle preference that’s difficult to maintain as an individual but even more difficult to cater to daily. No cheese, no butter, no eggs and nothing with any animal byproducts period. Veganism is especially difficult for a college student relying on meal pl
By Amy Paige Condon Paying attention to the issues of our time gets lost somewhere between mid-terms and studios, part-time jobs and full-time social lives, boys and girls, Facebook and YouTube. So much technology and information competes for those few lucid moments, it’s easy to miss the slippage
By Ammy Paige Condon A gathering of fibers and architecture students and their professors is ushered in silence. As they step down from the dike carved from the earth more than 200 hundred years before by hands as dark as the soil they landed on, a surreal landscape of 231 cypress knees rising like
“Life as We Know It,” Katherine Heigl’s (“Grey’s Anatomy”) and Josh Duhamel’s (“Vegas”) latest release ranked number two at the box office on opening weekend, hauling in more than 14 million bucks. It is on its way to establishing itself as a tim