Photos by Daniel Cheon District Staff
Photos by Daniel Cheon and Bibiana Aguero District Staff
By Andrea Six Photos by Andrea Six Bull Street has a new coffee shop and it’s specialty is waffles. Blue Door Coffee joined the company of Arnold Hall, Foxy Loxy and Butterhead Greens Cafe last week when they opened on Oct. 17. The new shop is actually a replacement of City Coffee, a nonprofit cof
Photo by Angie Stong Written by Andrew Larimer This weekend at the Mondanaro Theater in Crites Hall, SCAD’s School of Entertainment Arts students performed the comedy “Lovers & Players.” Written by Kathryn Walat, a performing arts and dramatic writing professor at SCAD, this cleverly craft
Photo by Sai Sampath The counseling department in Bradley Hall is offering a new wellness class this year called Acutapping, which uses pressure points around the body to promote physical and emotional healing. Being the girl who once started bawling during a restorative yoga class, I was a little a
The healing process has begun. After the battle at midterms, SCAD students are spending the next few days recovering from grueling all-nighters, last minute changes and caffeine withdrawal. 10-week quarters inevitably mean compressed project timelines; and in order to make it out alive, it’s highl
Video by Simon Stevens and Charlytte Morrone Video EditorEditor of videos at District
By Charlytte Morrone Ever since I can remember, fashion has come as naturally as knowing how to walk — it’s instinctual. Fashion is its own language. It can communicate, inspire, encourage and will forever be personal. In this day and age, it takes no more than a few seconds to access the
Photo courtesy of Roy Carey Ware Written by Charlytte Morrone “My girlfriends in school liked boys and I liked boys, too,” Roy Carey Ware told me in his downtown Savannah apartment. Ware, a third-year fashion design student from Newburgh, New York, opened up to District about his personal exp
Photo by Katherine Rountree The first-grade teacher put magnetic letters on the board and asked Piper what it spelled. She couldn’t read it. It was her name. That’s when the teachers “definitely knew that something was wrong.” Piper Otterbein is a second-year accessory design major from Oran