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(01/22/15 5:12pm)
Jared Ingersoll is a senior from Harrison City, Pennsylvania, majoring in chemistry. He plays on University of Richmond’s ice hockey team and also works for UREMS. Ingersoll became an EMT because he was interested in health care as a freshman. He has worked on UREMS for three years and plans to apply to medical schools in June. Ingersoll’s favorite aspect of the job is how unexpected it can be. Every call is different, and his job is never boring. His biggest challenge is balancing school work and other activities alongside being an EMT, but it’s manageable and forces him to work on his time management skills. Ingersoll wants other students to know that alcohol-related calls are only 30 percent of what UREMS responds to. A lot of calls are serious and can range from chest pain or an allergic reaction to cardiac arrest. Something you don’t know about Ingersoll? He worked as a customer service agent for Spirit Airlines a few summers ago, and “basically got paid to be yelled at by upset customers.” Here’s a glimpse into a day in his life:
(01/22/15 3:13pm)
The University of Richmond sexual misconduct policy has expanded from three pages to 31 pages, and now includes details on the definition of consent, clauses on domestic violence and overhaul to the policies on stalking, among other changes.
(01/22/15 1:37pm)
“It was pretty uneventful, which is exactly what we like.”
(01/21/15 3:25am)
We live in a time where controversy is contagious, and the media outlets seem to have an unlimited supply of social issues to throw our way. One of the biggest recurring themes in news headlines is the subject of marijuana and its proposed legalization in the United States.
(01/20/15 8:58pm)
About 150 audience members rose to their feet in applause after an emotional keynote address from President Ed Ayers at Richmond’s Martin Luther King Jr. holiday commemoration ceremony Monday evening.
(01/20/15 1:55am)
On a brisk, October morning, 31 University of Richmond baseball players congregated on the frosty outfield grass of Pitt Field, huddling into a tangle of wind-milling arms and high-kicking legs as they warmed up for practice. After completing their stretches, the players jogged back to the dugout. Except one.
(01/13/15 5:19am)
People always tell me that I have a lot of valid insight about travel, being “out” and life in general. I think they’re right. Like many LGBTQs, I know not to walk down road "A" because the one time I did as a drunk college student I was catcalled – but not the names that would reaffirm you look good in your new skinny jeans. The calls were more like derogatory gay slurs that can make you feel like those great jeans were a waste because the only label people see on you is “gay.”
(12/08/14 10:35pm)
Sunday night during Midnight Munchies, the pre-finals extended hours in Heilman Dining Center, a group of at least 20 people protested issues of social and racial equality.
(12/04/14 1:03am)
Audience members embarked on a musical journey during the Cuban Spectacular concert, performed by the University of Richmond Jazz Ensemble and Combo and directed by Mike Davison, professor of music and director of the Jazz Ensemble.
(12/03/14 4:09pm)
Intense. Competitive. Talented. Complementary.
(11/26/14 5:38pm)
Athlete of the week: basketball's Kendall Anthony
(11/25/14 5:40pm)
Issues regarding campus sexual assault have routinely garnered national attention throughout this year, as everything from White House plans to investigate Title IX violations, to mattress-carrying advocacy efforts by undergraduate sexual assault survivors, to last week’s harrowing story of a gang-rape at UVA, have thrown the national spotlight onto how colleges confront this widespread scourge.
(11/24/14 6:09pm)
Japanese, Indonesian, Indian, Brazilian and West African harmonies brought students, alumni, faculty, children and community members together during the music department's Global Sounds Concert on Sunday, Nov. 23.
(11/22/14 9:51pm)
While many students may know that the Mary Morton Parsons Music Library exists, few likely know about the extensive collection that is housed there, or some of its other features.
(11/23/14 1:55am)
Fresh off another Sundance award, director Cutter Hodierne will bring his acclaimed film “Fishing Without Nets” to campus Monday to show students what Somalian piracy looks like through the eyes of the Somalis. Hodierne’s father is none other than Robert Hodierne, chair of the journalism department here at University of Richmond.
(11/21/14 9:48pm)
Splashed across the windows of a rundown building in an inner-city neighborhood are the words, “HEY YOU! Stop whining about civil liberties. A POLICE STATE is a SAFE STATE.”
(11/20/14 8:08pm)
SpiderBoard organized an event for students to take an amateur painting class as a way to de-stress leading up to finals.
(11/19/14 10:19pm)
"The Stop: How the Fight for Good Food Transformed a Community and Inspired a Movement" by Nick Saul and Andrea Curtis, this year’s campus-wide One Book, is bringing dialogue about poverty, hunger and healthy eating to University of Richmond’s campus through classroom discussions, service events and speakers.
(11/19/14 10:13pm)
A love of fitness and bodybuilding led a campus policeman to a 32-year-long career in law enforcement in which he served on the governor’s detail, busted drug dealers and even delivered a baby on the highway.
(11/19/14 1:43am)
Despite its rookie status, the Jepson School of Leadership Studies’ Ethics Bowl team won fourth place at the Regional Competition on Nov. 8 and secured a spot in the National Intercollegiate Ethics Bowl Competition in February.