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Marshawn Lynch, Seattle Seahawks running back handed out turkeys to people in need in Hawaii this Thanksgiving.
Photo courtesy Sports Illustrated

How Professional Athletes Celebrate the Holidays

Lizzie Rubright, Head Sports Writer December 8, 2020

With the holidays quickly approaching, people are prepping their kitchens and buying their gifts, even professional athletes. They have their own families and their own traditions surrounding Thanksgiving...

Nick Scalera/NJ Advance Media

Winter Sports Pushed Back till 2021

Lizzie Rubright, Head Sports Writer December 4, 2020

On Monday, October 12 Governor Phil Murphy announced that all “medium” and “high” risk sports can hold contact practices and indoor games with restrictions. However, on November 19 the NJSIAA pushed...

Joe Biden and Donald Trump face each other in the 2020 US election. Graphic from BBC.

Election Updates/Final Days

Hailey Onweller, World/US News Editor November 4, 2020

Road to Election Day October 30, 2020 Last Minute Strategies With the election coming up rapidly, Trump and Biden focus on the swing states such as Arizona, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Texas and...

Twitter’s C#ns#rsh#p

November 2, 2020

Twitter's C#ns#rsh#p Since the very beginning of America, censorship has always been an issue. But when tweets regarding presidential candidate Joe Biden mysteriously got taken down, Americans began...

At the final presidential debate of the 2020 campaign, President Donald Trump (left) sparred energetically with former Vice President Joe Biden (right), though the introduction of a new mute button kept the crosstalk which had plagued the last debate to a minimum. In the final stretches of the campaign, Trump sought to rebrand himself, promising economic recovery and a swift end to the pandemic. Biden, on the other hand, made several progressive policy commitments in immigration and climate change, a departure from his generally risk-averse strategy. Photo credits: Brenden Smialowski / Getty Images.

Closing Remarks: The Second Presidential Debate

Vincent Jiang October 30, 2020

In a campaign of surprises, 2020 has perhaps offered up the greatest surprise yet with the second and final presidential debate on October 22: a coherent, cogent discussion of the issues. After the explosive...

source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruth_Bader_Ginsburg

The Legacy of Ruth Bader Ginsburg

Sarah Sehgal, Staff Writer and Publicity Team Manager October 27, 2020

Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg died at age 87 on September 8, 2020. This was a devastating day for many but her legacy will be one remembered for generations, as she was a feminist icon. Many...

Poster from YoutubeRed

Cobra Kai: The Karate Kid Saga Continues

Sebastian Gutkin, Junior Editor October 26, 2020

As the saying goes, “Strike first. Strike hard. No mercy.”... and watch Cobra Kai on Netflix. That’s right, Ralph Macchio and William Zabka have reprised their roles as the karate kid, Daniel Larusso,...

Recipes in Quarantine

Recipes in Quarantine

Dana Russell, Entertainment Editor October 21, 2020

Joys of cooking in COVID All this free time during quarantine has inspired many to try new things. From arts and crafts, to home exercises, quarantine has given us time for some personal improvement....

Vice-presidential nominees Senator Kamala Harris (left, D-CA) and incumbent Vice President Mike Pence (right, R-IN) square off at the first and only vice-presidential debate. In many ways, the debate reflected a throwback to the past, featuring a veneer of civility that is distinctly unfamiliar in the Trump era. Yet the two candidates, in many ways both better representatives of their parties’ bases than their respective running mates, are also clearly padding their resumes for their own future presidential ambitions; they could very well be facing a rematch four years later. Photo credits: Morry Gash / Pool Photo.

A Preview of 2024: The Vice-Presidential Debate

Vincent Jiang October 21, 2020

The first and only vice-presidential debate of the 2020 election, held on October 7, 2020 at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City, was at once a reflection of the past and a prophecy for the future....

PS5 vs Xbox

October 21, 2020

Cardboard cutouts of fans take the place of real fans amid Coronavirus

College Sports and the Coronavirus

Lizzie Rubright, Head Sports Writer October 17, 2020

College Sports and the Coronavirus No fans celebrating, it’s empty, it’s quiet. It’s not like the cardboard cutout fans can yell. Even after a game winner it’s silent, that is how college sports...

Memories of a bygone era in bipartisanship: Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg (right), who passed away September 18, 2020, accepts her nomination from then-President Bill Clinton (left) in June 1993. Ginsburg was confirmed by the Senate with an overwhelming 96–3 vote, but President Trumps nomination of Amy Coney Barrett to succeed her is likely to start an apocalyptic confirmation battle in todays hyperpartisan Washington. Photo credits: U.S. National Archives and Records Administration.

Ginsburg Vacancy Sparks Apocalyptic Senate Battle

Vincent Jiang September 29, 2020

Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death has unleashed a battle in the Senate every inch as fiercely partisan as her life was. The 87-year-old Supreme Court Associate Justice, long cheered by Democrats for her scathing...

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