Fake ID culture
By The Front | April 26Partying. While we are all here to get an education, there is another aspect of college that some look forward to more than others.
Partying. While we are all here to get an education, there is another aspect of college that some look forward to more than others.
Red Square will soon be a demolition site. Not to break down structures, but to initiate forgiveness. Western’s campus is invited to write down personal resentments and destroy them by scribbling, stomping, cutting and shredding the paper.
Nestled in the basement of the Performing Arts Center, blissful and longing melodies float down the hall as voices are warmed and coaxed into hitting higher notes.
It takes just 10 minutes to walk from one end of the Western campus to the other. Along the way there are countless distractions, all fighting to grab your attention.
Approximately 40 million young adults suffer from anxiety, according to a study published in Issues in Mental Health Nursing in 2012. Through a deep inhale, exhale and a series of dynamic poses, sophomore Bianca Calagiu is using her yoga practice to lead herself and her students to a bright outlook on life.
Western students, middle school girls and parents mingled in the main auditorium of Kulshan Middle School on Friday, April 1, for the final event of the school’s Creators and Innovators Club along with Western volunteers.
“It is taking discarded items that are somehow not appealing and seeing what magic comes from them,” said Callesen, one of the featured artists at the Recycled Art and Resource Expo.