A Texas A&M student performed CPR on a patient at St. Joseph’s Health College Station Hospital and ended up saving their life.
He joined rebel convoys in Africa and turned his time with GIs in Afghanistan into an Oscar-nominated film. But his subject wasn’t war – it was people. Ahead of a major show, our writer remembers his former colleague
During the centenary year of former President George H.W. Bush’s birth, law student Eoghan Fey writes about the virtues of Bush’s public service.
He immersed himself in the first person shooter virtual reality game of Firewall: Zero Hour. He said he hasn’t needed medication ever since.
Driving with his wife, Mercado saw the scene of the collision involving a motorcycle and a compact SUV at Three Notch Road and Tom Hodges Drive in Hollywood, Maryland. Realizing he was the first on scene he went into action without a second thought.
An effort to reverse Colorado’s abortion rights protections this November will not be on the ballot. The Colorado Life Initiative announced Thursday that it had fallen short of the 124,238 signatur…
Askeo International Mat Club in Vancouver has been twisting life skills into sports for 17 years, where Damon McPherson is teaching the gospel of grappling life’s stiffest challenges.
Being a student-athlete is a full-time job and a demanding status to maintain – student first, athlete second. But often the separation between the two roles can be blurred. The best way to stay on track and not fall behind is to establish a healthy work-life balance.
Work-life balance is “equal time or priority to personal and professional activities,” a Forbes article states. For student-athletes, personal and professional activities become one; their sport is their passion but they have to learn to balance it with academics.
University of New Mexico senior and catcher for the baseball team, Kyle Smith, said that his work-life balance emphasizes defining time for his personal needs and not getting tunnel vision when it comes to baseball.
The never-ending commitment took its toll on my creativity and my mental health. Having a baby was the last straw, says author and broadcaster Hannah Witton
Research from Cornell University might have brought us one step closer to detecting extraterrestrial life.