Letter from the editor:
No really, I mean it - if you're sick, stay away from me. I've had viruses and bacteria on the brain a lot lately, in part because I'm taking Germs 101 this semester, but now that we're beginning the two-week countdown to spring break, I plan to act like a certified germaphobe.
Last year I spent the better part of my spring vacation horizontal on a couch sniffling and sneezing due to a horrible cold, and the year before that I had to postpone my flights thanks to a nasty stomach bug. But not this year. This year, I will not get sick - and I expect you all to do your part to help me.
I've already wiped the computer keyboards and mice (or mouses?) in our office down with Clorox, and lectured our staff on the proper procedure for containing a cough or sneeze (use your sleeve, not your hands!). It surprises me the number of people who don't do basic things to protect themselves, like washing their hands after using the bathroom and before meals, not sharing drinks or utensils, etc. For more information, check out the piece by Judy Stevens, a nurse with Health Services, titled "Let's not share too much." And for Pete's sake, if you're really sick, don't come to class (especially not any of mine)!
And speaking of missing class… apparently there's a campaign to encourage people to play hooky from work or school today, February 29, Leap Day. It started with a Facebook group made [quasi] famous by Washington Post Columnist Gene Weingarten. Boasting 200-some members, "No Work on Leap Day Revolution!" was started by Karl Savage, a high school English teacher who makes the argument that Leap Day should be regarded as "24 blessed hours to do all of things that beleaguered humans don't have time for during the course of their pitiful little lives." In his "mini-manifesto," Savage calls on "every woman, child, and man who has a calendar to seize (back) the day and refuse to work for the Man on Leap Day!"
Well, as a responsible editor for a student newspaper, I would certainly never condone skipping class for no good reason... but he has a point. You have an extra day this year. What are you going to do with it?
Helen Hocknell Editor-in-Chief


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