Raising minimum wage artificially is damaging
By Kenneth Lucas | Aug. 30, 2006Raising the minimum wage does more damage than good - this is economic fact. An overwhelming number of economists in this country and in Canada say that ...
Read More »Raising the minimum wage does more damage than good - this is economic fact. An overwhelming number of economists in this country and in Canada say that ...
Read More »As the old saying goes, when life gives you lemons, you make lemonade. If the members of the Student Government Association (SGA) remember that axiom ...
Read More »Earlier this month, British airport security detected a plot by terrorists to bomb trans-Atlantic jetliners in midair. When the terrorists' plans were ...
Read More »Author's Note: The author of this article attests to the fact that he was drunk while writing this because he is depressed about graduating. However, ...
Read More »As the school year is quickly coming to an end and students are trying to secure jobs for the summer, I would like to offer a small piece of advice. Most ...
Read More »Contradicting Intelligent Design I have read with interest the plentiful coverage of Intelligent Design (ID) in The Signal this semester. Almost 150 ...
Read More »Republicans defend Buchanan Good journalism, as I understand it, is presenting truthful information to the people. Although editorials are different ...
Read More »Think for a moment that there are stories other than yours, and that there are dreams and ambitions perhaps greater than your own. Now sustain this thought ...
Read More »The immigration debate struggles to determine whether the United States should grant amnesty to (or at least allow citizenship of) immigrants who come ...
Read More »Just last week, I had the distinct pleasure of reading the "Immaculate Deception" comic in the April 12 issue of The Signal that featured a picture of ...
Read More »Sadly, I must say that I have noticed an ongoing trend with the material found within our campus newspaper, The Signal. Over the past three to four months, ...
Read More »Our comic efforts aren't consistently poignant, but once in a while we try to use our public stage, meek as it is, to deliver a message, and to varying ...
Read More »Putting a monetary value on something like art is impossible, yet works of art are bought and sold every day. It is also impossible to say how much a ...
Read More »It seems the winds of change may sweep through the stuffy halls of the Capitol this fall. After almost half a dozen years of Republicans in the White ...
Read More »"Man, look at this nerd! He think he's white?" a student shouted as I hurried to finish the last few pages of "To Kill a Mockingbird" before scurrying ...
Read More »On March 21, Gov. Jon S. Corzine presented his first budget proposal as the governor of New Jersey. Among the changes proposed in this budget are: an ...
Read More »Taxes are going up. And soon. Gov. Corzine has proposed a budget that will attempt to tackle New Jersey's debt by raising taxes and cutting funding. The ...
Read More »Illegal immigration sounds frightening, right? Does it conjure up images of tattered masses of desperately poor people going after your rewarding and ...
Read More »Although affirmative action is an issue for higher education in general, it receives particular attention at law schools nationwide - and I believe the ...
Read More »I thought I'd write about someone we all know and love ... well, at least some of us love. It's the woman of the hour, Cindy Sheehan. I know that she ...
Read More »