Cecil College’s official student-run news publication

Art Responds Covid Globe

I made this image of a Globe wearing the disposable mask as a sort of representation of how the whole world was effected by covid. I also added eyes to the globe to make it appear tired or exhausted witch is...

Eden by Eric Phillips

I sell Flowers. For the Devil. Move his Product. To those Above. Grow a Garden. Pick the Weeds. Fly to Heaven. Sell the seeds. To the Angels. Bring them under. “Eden” by Eric Phillips received first place for...

3CWP Writing Contest Winners Announced

The Cecil College Creative Writing Prize (3CWP) is an opportunity for all enrolled students at Cecil College to submit writing samples for a chance at a cash prize. Students are invited to submit original...

College Bookstore Reopens in Technology Center

Renovations on the Seahawk Roost Cafe in the Technology Center, which began December 16th, have concluded. A soft opening of the now combined bookstore and cafe space took place on Monday, February 18th. This opening was slightly delayed from the early February opening college representatives estimated last fall.

The Cecil College Bookstore Is Moving

Cecil College has recently announced that the College bookstore, currently located across from the North East campus in the College Crossing shopping development, will be moved into the current Seahawk Roost...

Struggling to Understand Blackness

As someone who is proudly both white and of African-American heritage, I have developed a love-hate relationship with this month. My love-hate relationship with February is because I, like a lot of multiracial people, have struggled with the concept of Blackness my entire life. Some may find this strange because they perceive Blackness and African-Americanness as being one in the same. Years of interactions with friends, family, and even strangers have led me to realize that there is an undeniable difference between being Black and being African- American. Though the two identifiers are used interchangeably, those who identify as Black rather than as African- American will tell you that they are not the same. It took me awhile to realize this for myself.