The name Lucky Strike is appropriate for the bizarrely decorated, intensely flavorful Sichuan restaurant that has latched parasitically onto the westernmost edge of the Hawthorne Theater. To say that the food is spicy is a misnomer; more appropriately, the spicy is food, really good food.
If you think you lack the funds, experience, or equipment to climb a mountain, explore lava caves, or go white water rafting, think again. The College Outdoors program at Lewis & Clark can equip, prepare and guide you through almost any adventure in the wilderness- at a fraction of the normal cost.
By now, most to all Lewis & Clark students who have eaten at the Bon realize that there are copious amounts of vegan and vegetarian options. Generally, in the Bon, and other Bon Appétit areas, there are small, circular markers directing the future consumers to whether or not foods contain gluten, meat, seafood, etc. Vegans note the earthy-green circle while vegetarians look for the burnt-orange circle. These circles indicate that the food is in line with your chosen dietary restrictions. There is a difference between vegan and vegetarian stickers, so note that detail and don’t accidentally eat dairy products if you don’t want to.
For some, it is refreshing to move to a new place where no one knows your name, your hometown, or your idiosyncrasies. The transition from high school to college is one of these rare opportunities—a chance, if you so choose, to create a new identity and abandon the old. For two first year boys, who requested that for this article they be referred to by their chosen names, “Peter Canterbury” (’14) and “Nick Winkle” (’14), the first three weeks of school have been an unexpected experiment in what it feels like to adopt a new persona.
As college students, we are far from connoisseurs of pizza. The standard, Saturday night, past 1 a.m. fare is starchy and effective at cutting through our bouts of late-night hunger, but hardly something to get excited about.
In the most recent edition of The Princeton Review college rankings, Lewis & Clark gained standing over other colleges in the country in two separate categories: most popular study abroad program and most beautiful campus.
Currently there are 44 million young people, ages 18-29, in the United Sates. In the 2008 election only 22.4 million of those voted. The mission of the Re-Energize the Vote Program is to raise youth voter registration and turnout by 5% from the 2006 election cycle.