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In a sea of graduation caps, how do you stand out? Increasingly, students are decorating their caps to showcase some part of their life.
Isabella Rooks, who will graduate Saturday with a degree in theater arts, is among the growing number of college students who bedazzle their mortarboards with gems, lace and glitter to add funny, serious, political or playful messages to the ceremonial accessory.
UNLV professor and folklorist Sheila Bock began studying trends behind graduation caps after she first arrived in Las Vegas in 2011. She began formally researching in 2015, taking photos from around the country and interviewing students on their graduation cap design choices.
Students at the three state universities and dozens of community colleges are graduating in ceremonies now and in coming weeks. Graduation caps let these students subvert traditional, and formal, commencement rituals.
In a sea of graduation caps, how do you stand out? Increasingly, students are decorating their caps to showcase some part of their life.
Pushed out by the Board of Regents and Chancellor Thom Reilly, UNLV’s dynamic president, Len Jessup, was a gentleman and a leader at his final meeting with the UNLV Foundation Board last week.
This month, President Donald Trump signed two bills aimed at combating sex trafficking just days after the Department of Justice seized the sex ad website backpage.com. But many sex workers and sex work activists — including those in Las Vegas — are arguing that the implementation of the Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act (FOSTA) and the Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act (SESTA), and the takedown of Backpage simultaneously endanger consenting sex workers.
Las Vegas is in the middle of a rebranding.
The seniors collecting diplomas at one of two commencement ceremonies scheduled at the Ê×Ò³| Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³» Saturday are in a slightly better position than last year’s graduates. The National Association of Colleges and Employment (NACE) is expecting that employers will be hiring four percent more graduates in 2018. In a recent survey done by NACE, college seniors were asked to determine which aspects of a job they find most important.