It’s cram time, but don’t let that stop you from catching up with the latest news. With the start of the 2012 Fall semester comes a new chapter, and the excitement has only just begun. We at the Prospector welcome new and returning students to all the campuses in the Yuba Community College District.
What we will bring you are up-to-date news and information that will help you get through your educational career, as well as your party life. Whether it’s the latest gossip, highlighting a controversy, or a simple quality advice, we will make sure you receive what it is that you require of us.
And hey, don’t limit that to just us. If you’ve got something, like an issue you’re dealing with, or just wanted someone to write a story on that friend or favorite professor of yours, then suggest it to us and we’ll make sure it’s on the highlight reel before you can even finish typing our web address in your browser.
Stick around with us and I guarantee that you won’t be disappointed.
Capa is the mild-mannered, culturally-confused English major of The Prospector. As an aspiring novelist he thrives to write simply for the sake of writing. Other than writing he spends most of his free time on music and video games, sometimes even combining the two. Also likes to think he’s up in the-know with technology. No, not really. Reach him at prospector.clo@gmail.com for comments and/or suggestions.
ben blankenship says
I am concerned with how and why monies were spent on a police academy building when they lost the right from the state to teach POST certificate. Word is they lost it before the plan to break ground was in effect, but they went ahead and built it anyway.
Neil says
A story regarding Title 5 changes would do great to “help [us] get through [our] educational career.” You know, changes regarding repeatable classes and whatnot.
You could say how campus offices are shredding all hardcopy documents and referring students to online material simply to cut the cost of printing, no matter the created inconvenience.
Another good one: how some professors who’ve recently moved to the Sutter Campus feel about this Marysville campus: “It’s a mess.” How poorly planned construction projects displace professors both in a literal sense as well as their individual and collective morales. Not to mention the effect on students (for instance, where the hell do you go to study?)
You say “exciting.” I’m not convinced.