Webcomics animate the Internet
Traditional comics, like Garfield, Family Circus and Get Fuzzy, that are beloved by children whose parents pick up the Sunday paper, are slowly loosing gumption.
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Traditional comics, like Garfield, Family Circus and Get Fuzzy, that are beloved by children whose parents pick up the Sunday paper, are slowly loosing gumption.
A recent study released by UCLA College of Law suggests that in lesbian households, there is absolutely no abuse in those homes.
College is full of deadlines: midterms, 30-page essays, research papers, and final exams.
We trust doctors with our lives, but too often we too easily assume those years in medical school and time spent in ethics classes justify trusting the man in the white lab coat.
Getting lucky. Hooking up. Rounding the bases. Young adults consider sex a casual, everyday occurrence, and it’s becoming a gamble.
As of late, bullying and suicide stories have been rampant in the news. The ages and places are all different, but one thing is the same — people are hurting other people.
November could be a prolific month for avid television watchers everywhere.
The story of Goldilocks and the three bears pales in comparison to the story of Goldilocks and the search for extraterrestrial life.
Technology, for better or worse, has changed society. We live in a world of mobile phones, GPS in every car and instant search results.
There are things people just don’t say to each other in real life.
It’s not much of a surprise that the United States has the highest divorce rate in the world. It has become part of our culture and is completely normal, showing up in movies and television with little to no consequence. The solution to the high rate, as suggested by a recent New York Times article, may come as a surprise: watching other people get divorced.
Imagine yourself in a room. It’s full of test tubes, liquid nitrogen and vials of DNA. Welcome to the Frozen Zoo.
Parents spend 18-plus years watching their sons and daughters grow into young adulthood.
Your bromance is official, and you want to share it with the world, including those uppity English major friends of yours.
Remember back in the seventh grade when Mom and Dad offered you money to get those A’s?
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