by CTS_Admin | Dec 8, 2020 | 2020-2021, Biology, Fall 2020, Psychology
Andrina Aepli suggests that children and adolescents are losing sleep because of increased caffeine intake in October 2015’s Brain Sciences Journal. In her study, “Altered Sleep Behavior and Deep Sleep,” Aepli discusses how caffeine leads to a decrease in sleep and a...
by CTS_Admin | Dec 8, 2020 | 2020-2021, Culture, Fall 2020, Gender, Literature
In the past few decades, the word feminism has developed an extremely negative connotation in society. The reason for this is likely due to the meaning of the word shifting, at least for many, from that of equality to one of domination. However, despite this...
by CTS_Admin | Dec 8, 2020 | 2020-2021, Fall 2020, Political Science
Here are listed a few things that are older than the ratification of the 19th amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which guaranteed a woman’s right to vote in the United States: Peanut butter, recreational skiing, smoke...
by CTS_Admin | Dec 8, 2020 | 2020-2021, Culture, Education, Fall 2020
It is the common narrative with which Christian students are constantly warned: students lose their faith when they go to college. They must be careful or they will be swayed by the atheistic, humanistic presentations of reality and will no longer have room amid their...
by CTS_Admin | Dec 8, 2020 | 2020-2021, Biblical Studies, Fall 2020, Gender
Many early Christian theologians based their conceptualization of women on culture rather than scripture. Their teachings have influenced the Christian characterization of God and society’s valuation of women. In one view, Charles Hodge, a nineteenth-century...
by CTS_Admin | Dec 8, 2020 | 2020-2021, Fall 2020, Political Science
Hundreds of articles and op-eds open with the statement, “Every four years…”. The presidential election of the United States is a grand public event unceasingly circulating in the minds of every American. Is this current presidential election system how the founders...