City College Journalism Students Reel in 18 Awards Students in City College’s journalism department won 18 awards in the 44th Annual San Francisco Press Club’s Greater Bay Area Awards. The prizes include eight first place awards.
Roe v Wade In Texas Reflects Current State of Women’s Healthcare The Supreme Court recently rejected a request to block a law in Texas that “bans physicians from providing abortions "if the physician detects a fetal heartbeat," including embryonic cardiac activity, which can be as early as six weeks into a pregnancy,” despite much protest from many Americans.
CCSF Alumnus attended Capitol Riot A San Francisco resident and City College alumnus participated in the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol. Now, he’s being sued by the FBI.
All Talk, No Solution. Will the Next Presidential Nominee Finally Give Us An Answer? Amid the COVID-19 pandemic crisis and everything else that is going on right, both main candidates demonstrated no real plan to address the most pressing issues in the country.
My Experience As a Census Worker As a census worker for the 2020 Census, Guardsman reporter Timothy Hill shares his experience in the streets of San Francisco, CA, and Reno, NV working for the Census during such a chaotic year.
The Trump Administration Crusades Against the Foreign Students Once Again ICE is now proposing a new rule that will put a limit on the time duration that foreign students can stay in this country. Foreign nationals from selected countries will be granted an even shorter visa duration than the other ones.
Wildfires, Orange Colored-Skies and Climate Change; Too Little Too Late? After decades of warning, climate change has now caused enough destruction to be a concern of the majority of the population. With the 2020 California wildfires season, record-breaking temperatures, and other related disasters, the question that stays is whether we can do something to prevent furthe