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.
Dear Editor, Student Senate and Student Body President, I am writing this letter in support of the AAUP and the professors here at UNH. While it may be inconvenient for those students wishing to take summer classes, the more important issue is that our professors receive the pay and benefits they feel they deserve.
To the Editor: Friday's article titled 'Got whole milk?' got me thinking. Being a science major, and after taking numerous nutrition classes, some of the points in the article startled me. I will preface these comments with a personal addendum: I don't drink milk, and certainly not whole milk, due to my dislike of the taste and the uncomfortable feeling left in my stomach after drinking a tall, cold, glass.
OK, sharing is usually a good thing but when it comes to sharing colds, flu and other contagious illnesses there is such a thing as too much sharing. Our bodies are pretty amazing. They work hard, digesting food, pumping blood and oxygen, sending signals from our brains and much more.
To the Editor: Good article, but why the picture of an announcement board for the MLK commemorative address story? If a picture is worth a thousand words, then what was the picture taken of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Celebration brochure on an announcement board worth? The answer to this question remains a puzzle to me.
In the Feb. 26 issue of The New Hampshire we asked our print readership to participate in an interactive poll using the GossRSVP text message system. Lately some of the top presidential candidates have had to adamantly defend their character as a politician.