Shotgun! Ride along with UNH police
TNH design editor Joseph Cox shares his experience of a ride-along with a UNH police officer.
TNH design editor Joseph Cox shares his experience of a ride-along with a UNH police officer.
News Editor Katie Lesnyk reviews The Story So Far's new album, "Proper Dose"
Arts Editor Grace Hanley reviews Daniel Sloss' comedy special, "Dark"
A conflicted fan gives Pinegrove a second chance
October is here. Football started five weeks ago, but as the temperature drops, people are more likely now to stay inside on Sundays and watch the games. As far as fall sports go in most peoples’ minds, this is it – we’ve waited all summer. But there’s a growing rift in the NFL that seems to be driving some of its most loyal viewers elsewhere, like *gasp* baseball, the boring sport. Ratings for the latter have rocketed over the past year and I suspect it has something to do with the tiresome narrative that’s taken over the NFL.
Desmond Tutu once said “If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor.” What is an oppressor? It’s Brett Kavanaugh. But how can one person encompass such an ugly word? When anyone, regardless of race/gender/etc., forces someone to go through unjust treatment and force intense mental distress on a person – that is when they are truly an oppressor.
Managing Editor Ian Lenahan gives his take on September 22nd's very wildcat wedding.
Senator Maggie Hassan weighs in on the financial struggles college students feel with student loans.
TNH's Benjamin Strawbridge reflects upon growing distrust in the news media and where one can find real news.
Although I tend to prefer to cover songs that have a positive or meaningful message, today I thought I’d discuss the trend throughout genres to use music to seek revenge on an ex. Sure, country music is known for its tales of heartbreak and pop has more recently been used, at least by some female singers, as a way to jeer at past loves who have caused pain. However, rock music is not particularly known for this. Still, the phenomenon does exist – even in older rock music – such as in Journey’s “Lovin’, Touchin’, Squeezin.’”
Sorry, Duke Blue Devils fans. I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but because your team could not surpass the pesky South Carolina Gamecocks, your 2017 March Madness brackets have officially been busted. I am not trying to call out my Sports Editor Brian Dunn, who picked the Blue Devils to win it all, but more or less am here to make you feel better as we gather to watch the Sweet 16 on Thursday and Friday.
So it’s a pretty old song and maybe discussing its meaning is a little redundant, but it’s a song that I really love and it doesn’t get talked about nearly enough. That is, “Closer To Fine” by the Indigo Girls.
This is the first time I’ll have ever said that I have social anxiety in a public format. I used to be unable to tell my family members, let alone friends or complete strangers about it. It’s a shame that our culture instills in many of us. To not be comfortable with who we are, the challenges we face and the many ways in which we deal with those challenges.
Ninety percent of the time I am joking on Twitter when I refer to the black and gold. I say it at least three times every game, “the Bruins are back,” but, in reality, it’s truly hard to believe that fans could be in a position to say that and, for the most part, not sound crazy at this stage in the season. But it begs the legitimate question: are the Bruins really back? Not back as in “2011 Stanley Cup Champion and dominant Eastern Conference presence” kind of back, but is this Boston Bruins team looking like a playoff team for the first time in three seasons? Yes. You have to recognize what this organization has done over the past couple of weeks to bring this Bruins team back to a somewhat legitimate standing from where they were only a couple of weeks ago.
So why is Disney so popular, anyway? Even among us college kids, each new Disney movie sparks interest, whether it ends with controversy, derision, or awe. Well for one, the music in their movies continues to be not only beautiful, but it has become inspirational and awe-provoking at times. It also provides a lot of clarity either into other cultures than our own or into relatable individual and group mindsets of our own era or those long gone.
On Tuesday Feb. 7, the Boston Bruins fired their head coach Claude Julien after 10 seasons at the helm.
Usually, I’d be on here ranting about politics, but I’d like to mix it up a little bit this week. Since I reprised my Netflix account this past summer, I’ve found that my tour through television isn’t nearly over with. I’ve labored away for years watching the classics: “The Wire,” “The Sopranos,” “Deadwood,” “Breaking Bad,” and others. It is overwhelming how great television is.
It’s 11:48 p.m.
President Donald Trump came to political significance questioning the birth place of former President Barack Obama. I think few media outlets focused on this enough during the campaigns and, now that he is our president, it is only more sickening. His rise to prominence in our political atmosphere was racism and continues to be. Trump shows no shame or empathy and it may lead to an early impeachment.