By Susan Kemp It’s usually around the beginning of week four fall quarter that reality finally hits. It’s not summer anymore. Then panic mode sets in. How is so much due already? Sometimes, when we become so burnt out, finally indulging ourselves in our favorite distraction comes as too much of
By Chantelle Emery On the journey toward a successful career in design, students need to immerse themselves fully into design culture. Without having to go far, you can connect with people within your discipline and always be in the know. The SCAD student group of AIGA, the professional association
By Susan Kemp If the kids from “South Park” signed up for a course in world history, it might take the shape of “Hetalia: Axis Powers,” the popular manga by Hidekaz Himaruya based on his web comic by the same name. Embracing the same slapstick humor as the comic strip, the fi
St. Paul’s presents “Collected Works by Harriet Speer” in Shipps Gallery at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church at 34th and Abercorn streets. Harriet Speer is a native of Augusta, Georgia who followed her Masters in Library and Information Sciences with a stint as a reference librari
By Katelan Cunningham I was at the midnight showing of “The Social Network” whispering to a friend about a trailer, when the movie just started. No titles. No music. No panning of scene or close-ups of fond objects of the protagonist. It just started. Whispers faded, rustling wrappers were slowl
Crime drops in Savannah The Savannah-Chatham Metropolitan Police Department reported a 24 percent drop in violent crimes and a 15 percent reduction in property crimes during the first three quarters of this year compared with the same time period in 2009. According to a SCMPD press release, the over
September 24 2:25 p.m. — A SCAD student reported that the right front quarter panel of his car had been damaged while parked at Dyson House. The student did not want police response. 5:34 p.m. — Security responded to a “trouble” alarm at Boundary Village. The alarm was determined to be a fal