Newswire

Bees VS. Cells

by Liz Wolff, SUNY Cortland, June 27, 2007

Recently there has been a lot of talk about disappearing bees. Beekeepers in the U.S., Canada, and Britain have reported an astonishing decline in honeybees within the last several months. Vanishing bees are bad news for humans. If this trend

The Future of Our World

by Kristen Pinsent, SUNY Cortland, June 20, 2007

As a college student of the 21st century, I have been introduced to a lot of new events that have been both interesting and some that have been shockingly scary. I have found that I am passionate about certain things,

Corn v. Sugar Cane and the Unites States v. Brazil

by Fernanda Katz, SUNY Cortland, May 21, 2007

Brazil is betting all its cards on ethanol as the real thing as an oil substitute. So ethanol would be the most probable alternative for oil. For a country like Brazil, if ethanol turns out to be the alternative for

It’s Your Music (Store)

by Adam Berenstein, SUNY Cortland, May 7, 2007

Quick: what do Mims, billionaires, and international law all have in common? You. You’re making music download stores like iTunes the most important way music is bought today. Why are stores like iTunes, eMusic, and Napster important? One reason

Dixie "Twits"- 5 for 5

by Kristen Pinsent, SUNY Cortland, March 8, 2007

Freedom of speech, its one of the reasons that we pride ourselves in being American. We have fought wars, both overseas and even in our own country to keep it. Black communities were suppressed and fought for decades for freedom

Global Warming, an "Inconvient Truth" indeed.

by Kristen Pinsent, SUNY Cortland, February 23, 2007

Most college students and some high school students, have more likely then not, been introduced to the concept of global warming. I know in my sophomore year of high school biology is when I was first introduced to the problem.

Advertising or Attack?

by Katie Hudy, SUNY Cortland, February 19, 2007

“2 Arrested in Boston over Bomb Scare”; “Boston bomb squad detonates packages found in 4 places”. These are just two of the many headlines of web editions of major U.S. papers on February 1, 2007. To read this, one may