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Independent Student Newspaper of UW Oshkosh Campuses

The Advance-Titan

Independent Student Newspaper of UW Oshkosh Campuses

The Advance-Titan

Independent Student Newspaper of UW Oshkosh Campuses

The Advance-Titan

Katie Pulvermacher / Advance-Titan
With changes to technology, the process of filling out a resume has also changed drastically, opening up many opportunities for both applicants and employers.

Technology has changed the resume

Katie Pulvermacher, Staff Writer April 21, 2021

Everyone is faced with confining their life’s education and experiences to one or two pages by writing a resume to use on jobs they are applying for. In the conference paper titled “The Basic...

Carter Uslabar / Advance-Titan
Cassandra Ross, right, embraces a protester overcome with emotion at an Appleton Black Lives Matter protest in May 2020 following the murder of George Floyd at the hands of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin. Ross organized the Appleton protest, which marched down College Avenue before ending peacefully in Houdini Plaza and the intersections of Oneida Street and College Avenue.

‘Justice is not just Chauvin’s conviction, justice would be George Floyd being alive’

Sophia Voight, Assistant News Editor April 21, 2021

Following former Minneapolis officer Derek Chauvin’s guilty verdict in George Floyd’s murder, local leaders and organizations rejoiced over accountability being delivered for Floyd’s death, but acknowledged...

Courtesy of Jim Koepnick
Local activist and UWO alumna, Ciara Hill (pictured), said local government and law enforcement need to acknowledge their part in upholding the systemic oppression of people of color in order to bring about equality and equity in Oshkosh.

Police violence still plagues country a year later

Tom Antrim, Staff Writer April 21, 2021

Last year the United States had a rude awakening. The injustices that people of color, especially African Americans, endure was brought to the forefront. Minorities in the western world have...

Courtesy of UWO Flickr
UW Oshkosh Associate Professor of anthropology Jordan Karsten hopes to help solve a cold case.

Oshkosh students dig for bones

Katie Pulvermacher, Staff Writer April 21, 2021

Anthropology students at UW Oshkosh, along with their professor and the Winnebago County Sheriff’s Office, are hoping to unearth the remnants of a missing man who was presumed murdered on August...

Courtesy of UW Oshkosh / UWO Theatre Department
“The Imaginary Invalid” cast following COVID-19 safety protocol at their rehearsal on April 15. There is a large student discount on tickets, which are now available online.

UWO Theatre overcomes COVID-19

Cassidy Kennedy, Staff Writer April 21, 2021

As they say in theater, “The show must go on.” After being shut down due to COVID-19 restrictions, the UWO theatre department is again coming back to produce and broadcast a double feature. This...

Courtesy of Advance Titan

Spring hiking spots

Lexi Langendorf, Arts & Entertainment Editor April 14, 2021

When COVID-19 hit and quarantine began, many of us turned to exercise and the outdoors to help cure the lonely isolation we were abruptly forced into. Hiking is one of those good things that came...

This week in UWO history

This week in UWO history

Advance Titan, Advance Titan April 14, 2021

April 17, 1998 — Gov. Tommy Thompson signs a bill prohibiting the use of social security numbers as identification in educational institutions. The law – which will affect Oshkosh students beginning...

Courtesy of Nothing

‘Guilty of Everything’ is a cohesive masterpiece

Tom Antrim, Staff Writer April 14, 2021

An alternative rock band referred to as “Nothing” possesses one of the most touching indie rock albums ever. While the band’s name might imply that they do not create anything memorable or...

Courtesy of Kylie Balk-Yaatenen / Advance-Titan
“The Battlefields of Memory,” a new exhibit in the Annex Art Gallery, explores hope through the artifacts, objects and stories of Hmong people’s lived experience of war and living in America.

Artist honors Hmong history

Kylie Balk-Yaatenen, Staff Writer April 14, 2021

Cia Siab’s exhibit “The Battlefields of Memory” in the Annex Art Gallery explores hope through the artifacts, objects and stories of Hmong people’s lived experience of war and the dysphoria of...

Courtesy of Cassidy Kennedy / Advance-Titan
Planet Perk recycles all of its paper products, saving an estimated 85,000 pounds of paper per year.

Planet Perk celebrates Earth Day

Cassidy Kennedy, Staff Writer April 14, 2021

It is that time of year where students are stressing about the amount of school work they have with finals just around the corner. Planet Perk, a coffee shop and cafe, is the perfect study spot,...

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