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(04/28/22 5:21pm)
As seniors prep for graduation, and students wrap up their remaining finals before taking off for the summer, you may want to reconnect before saying goodbye. UP CPB will be hosting Anchor’s Away to celebrate the end of the 2021-2022 academic year. The event is scheduled to take place on Thursday, April 28th from 4:30 - 7:30 p.m. on the Bluff behind the Commons.
(04/28/22 1:46am)
All my life, white teachers and professors have told me that I can be whatever I want. The issue? I’ve never been told that by anyone that looks like me.
(04/28/22 6:26pm)
While it might feel like eons away, in just a few short days, the class of 2022 will walk across the stage in Chiles center and become a college graduate. Over the past four years many have experienced their happiest moments, many have experienced some of their hardest struggles – perhaps even both. We have laughed, we have cried, and we have grown a lot in the process.
(04/26/22 11:30pm)
Community members gathered in front of the Chapel of Christ the Teacher to welcome UP’s 21st President, Robert Kelly, joined by his wife Bridget Kelly and their kids. He is the first lay person and African American to take the role.
(04/26/22 10:20pm)
It’s 7:30 a.m. on my first day. The sun is bright, I can see the ocean from my bed, and I am warm. I think this is what people call ‘pure bliss.’ I want to run around and yell and be all disgracefully excited, but the other workers seem accustomed to this luxury, so I act like it’s no big deal.
(04/26/22 10:17pm)
My first time going to see an artist live was at a baile, which is a concert and a dance where they typically play regional Mexican music. It’s one thing to listen to the songs on Spotify — but it was entirely different getting to see the grupos, or groups, perform live. Hearing the sound of the instruments, the trumpets, the guitars, and the singer’s vocals sounding exactly the same live, all while being able to dance… it was a sick first concert.
(04/26/22 2:37pm)
UP’s administration has approved funding for a new DEI staff position: Director of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion. The decision fulfills a recommendation made in the Ortiz report, a recent assessment of UP’s investment and climate related to making the University more inclusive.
(04/26/22 2:24pm)
UP’s tuition will increase by 3.9% — from $49,242 to $51,353 for full-time undergraduates — for the 2022-2023 academic year and room and board will go up 2.9%. This is the first tuition increase since the 2020-21 academic year due to UP holding a flat tuition because of COVID-19.
(04/26/22 12:10am)
The Portland Women’s Club Lacrosse team is heading to Nationals in Austin Texas, from May 4-7.
(04/25/22 6:40pm)
It's April 10, 2022 and Kris Reaves is back on the field he once called his home turf.
(04/25/22 1:17am)
There’s more to an athlete's attire aside from their uniform, practice gear and team gear.
(04/23/22 1:09am)
Doors into campus buildings have been on ID card access only after two incidents in two days of sightings of a man walking in nearby neighborhoods carrying what appeared to be a rifle.
(04/22/22 6:00am)
UP’s class of 2022,
(04/22/22 7:45pm)
By the end of four years of classes, labs and lectures in the Shiley School of Engineering, most engineering students have spent countless hours acquiring skills to one day apply to real problems.
(04/21/22 7:13pm)
As the school year comes to an end, students are fully engulfed in school work and final projects. While this time might be dreadful for some, for a certain group of students it will be an opportunity to show the UP community their extensive research projects that they have worked on all year long with the Public Research Fellows (PRF).
(04/29/22 4:06am)
Dear readers,
(04/20/22 8:58pm)
Last Saturday night I saw the Colorado Symphony Orchestra perform Gustav Mahler’s 2nd Symphony. The epic piece ended with a booming finale, gongs clashing and sopranos spinning high B flats. The second the conductor lowered his baton, an audience member yelled “Bravo!,” the full concert hall jumped to their feet for a standing ovation, and I began to tear up.
(04/20/22 8:42pm)
How did you all spend your spring break? Some of you might have gone to Cabo, stayed on campus, or gone home to see family and loved ones. On the other hand, I had the most unique spring break that, If you asked me three years ago, I could never have seen myself doing. Along with nine other students, our professor Jeff Kersen Griep, and his wife Emily, I traveled to Belfast, Northern Ireland: a place that has been the center of intercultural conflict for generations, a place of sectarianism and division, and a place of modernization, healing, and progress. Throughout this trip, I learned more about myself, the world around me, and how I can use the lessons learned in Belfast in my future career path.
(04/20/22 7:31pm)
With finals approaching and dead week upon us, it has come to that time of the semester where students are cramming hours of studying into their busy schedules. But with grades and deadlines occupying our thoughts, we often forget to take a moment to breathe and take care of ourselves.
(04/19/22 3:37am)
So far, this month has been eventful for the spring teams. Track and field competed at both the Stanford Invitational and the Hayward Invitational. Both of the tennis teams are in the midst of their WCC season. Baseball is also competing in the WCC conference. Rowing picked up a few wins and looks to compete at home. Women’s soccer finished their off-season play with a win. Men’s soccer traveled to Corvallis to take on Portland State in their second to last game of the spring season.