December 6, 2008
- 10:00 am
By Lauren - University of Michigan
It’s the Holidays! Time for giving fabulous gifts to everyone in your life. But, crap, we’re in a recession and we’re poor college students to boot. So here’s a trick to put a little glamour in your loved ones’ lives without breaking your piggy bank.
Holiday season means beauty gift sets – a box jammed packed with fabulous high end makeup at a deep discount. So here’s a list of great gift sets that make a great gift, even when you break them up. You can cross a bunch of people of your list just by splitting up these sets and giving one product to each person on your list. Or group two or three items to give a whole look for just a little dough.
Bare Escentuals Bare Pleasures Eye Shadow Set – Sephora.com
9 Gifts for $48 ($99 value)
Bare Essentuals has fantastic loose eye shadows that women of all ages adore. This set has NINE different shades. You can give one to your mom, aunts, suitemates, and nieces still leaving a few shades leftover to keep for yourself. You can even pair the colors off to create custom eye shadow duos to add a personal touch. Read More »
Tags: bare escentuals, bare essentials, beauty, beauty box sets, beauty gift sets, beauty gifts, budget gifts, duwop, holiday gifts, lorac superstar collection, makeup, makeup advice, philosophy, recession, sephora, the coookie exchange
November 23, 2008
- 3:30 pm
By CC Staff
I had a philosophy professor once tell me that the greatest thinkers were the synthesizers, the ones who took two or more good things and combined them. And I think he’s got a point: peanut butter and jelly, sporks, hybrid cars…the world is a better place because of these things. And a new website is combining two of my favorite things: fashion and photography. Flickrista will change the world of fashion as we know it (a new kind of guerrilla fashion, all you Little Js out there?) while showcasing a rotating crop of eye-gasmic photos, as well.
How does it work? Flickrista is a daughter site of Flickr, the widely-popular photo-sharing site. Flickr members can submit their fashion photography to the Flickrista group pool, from which Flickrista editors will choose the best pics to feature on the site. The benefit to this process is that stylists, models, and photographers alike can all get their work noticed and Flickrista group members can interact with one another by sharing comments and suggestions. And new photos are always being posted, which means more opportunities for inspiration- whether your weapon of choice is a camera or a kitten heel.
[photo courtesy Dezdemonchik via Flickrista]
Tags: camera, editing, fashion, flickr, flickrista, group pool, hybrid, kitten heel, peanut butter, philosophy, photography, spork, Style, website
July 22, 2008
- 11:30 am
By Kathryn S
Last week, I wrote about choosing a school. This week, I get a little more specific: choosing a program. This might seem like a no-brainer; I mean, you’re probably not going to attempt an MFA in Puppetry if you just spent four years studying Atmospheric Science, right? Well… you never know. Afterall, Elle Woods went to Law School after majoring in Fashion Merchandising or something. Besides, I can tell you from experience that even if you think you know what you’re applying for, you better double-check.
Case in point: In college, I majored in English, and I was one class shy of earning a film minor. My final semester of college, no film classes that would fulfill my final requirement were offered, and even though I had taken film classes that weren’t part of the minor’s plan of study, they wouldn’t give me the “Film Studies Minor” title unless I took a class that wasn’t freakin’ available. I still get riled up about that, as you can see.
Anyway, I was seeking a Masters degree in English, though I really enjoyed Film Studies as well. Now, when you apply for a grad school program, you might have to choose a field within the realm of your chosen subject. For example, many English programs divide their grad students into Rhet/Comp or Lit majors; my friend is currently getting a PhD in Psychology, but her specialization is Early Childhood Development. So while you may earn a degree in a broad major like Politics, Journalism, or Philosophy, you may have to narrow it down to a specific topic when you apply to grad schools. Read More »
Tags: academic programs, academics, application fee, Bachelors degree, bibliography, college, competitive programs, Composition, concentration, credit requirements, doctorate, elective, elle woods, english, epistolary, fashion merchandising, film, first choice, gen ed, grad school, graduate, history, Hitchock, instructor, law school, Legally Blonde, literature, major, masters degree, minor, novel, PhD, philosophy, plan of study, Political Science, professor, puppetry, rejection, research, Rhetoric, specialization, study, teaching, undergrad
January 22, 2008
- 11:30 am
By Elizabeth-Baruch College

“What the F$%k is an AVATAR?“, I thought to myself just a little over a year ago. My nine-year-old nephew told me that he’d bet $5 that his avatar online was cooler than mine. Considering mine would have been a lost girl drawing a….total blank….he was probably right.
Having felt embarrassingly ignorant to this concept once myself, I’m gonna score some karma points by giving you the rundown of what exactly all these nine-year-olds are talking about.
Avatar, in Hindu philosophy, actually means a bodily manifestation. The concept isn’t so glamorous when applied to the internet and computing, though. While an avatar is still a bodily manifestation of some sort when on the internet, it’s more like a cartoon character that you pick to represent yourself rather than a higher being.
The whole craze actually started in 1985 with a computer game called Ultima. The “avatar” was the visual on-screen persona of the player. Nowadays, everyone from elementary school kids to grandparents looking to find friends online have become familiar with this concept. Read More »
Tags: AIM, avatars, blogs, cartoon, chats, computer game, forums, hindu, mohawk, philosophy, ultima, video game
October 31, 2007
- 9:31 am
By CC Staff
I pored over the U.S. News and World Report’s college rankings when I was a senior in high school. How far up could I go, I wondered? What was the most-highly ranked college I could get into?
I mean, I knew I was Harvard-caliber, I just didn’t have the grades– I was above grades! I could have totally gone Ivy-League if I had wanted to, but I chose the route of a small school with a philosophy, a mission (and a respectable ranking).
My freshman year, I ended up at a small liberal arts school that was ranked #30. Not bad, considering it was ranked #25 in terms of selectivity. I figured its teeny endowment brought the main ranking down. I was satisfied, my family was satisfied, my peers were satisfied. I had landed.
But when I got to college, of course, I realized that these rankings meant absolutely nothing. What did I care about my college’s freshman retention or alumni – giving rate? And the insidiously low student to faculty ratio was moot if you were in a crappy class in which none of the other six students talked. I found myself pining for large, anonymous lecture classes. Did I wanted a lower – ranked education?
The old, corny adage rings true over and over again: college is what you make of it. Seriously. All campuses have pretty trees and old buildings. All student bodies have geniuses and idiots. Yale has a dining hall. Podunk University in Mississippi has a dining hall.
And they both have horrible food. It’s all the same. Read More »
Tags: admissions, alcohol, Austin, bad food, cafeteria, college, college rankings, drinking, drunk, food, freshman year, harvard, Ivy League, liberal arts school, party, party school, philosophy, university of texas, us news and world reports