
Mark Lloyd discussed media regulation and how broadband is changing the media landscape on Tuesday in the HUB Auditorium. The FCC’s chief diversity officer and associate general counsel mostly covered how the FCC plans to move forward in the increasing broadband substantially for the general public.

I've been told that UPUA Elections are going on and I should care for some reason. I recently discovered that UPUA has set up an official spot to complain about Elections Code Violations. If there's one thing I like to do, it is complaining about things. Especially frivolous things that nobody honestly cares about. It sure sounds like an election to me!

Okay. So Penn State pools together almost a quarter of a million dollars for all the end-of-the-year concerts to combine and ultimately become one epic music experience that (should) provide most of the students with some entertainment. Think again.

As Onward State's resident optimist, I took a look at Movin' On's headliners through my rose-colored Ray Bans in an attempt to shed a ray of sunlight into the wide-spread dissatisfaction surrounding the selection of the main acts. By taking a look at each artist, I searched below the angry Facebook comments for anything positive to rant about. Do you think O.A.R., Lupe Fiasco and Little Big Town are worthy to grace the same stage as past acts such as Fall Out Boy, Run DMC and Jimmy Eat World? Or do you think that Penn State's annual end-of-the-year concert is shaping up to be a let down?

P.T. Barnum once famously said that there's no such thing as bad publicity, but David Adewumi, along with his running mate Sri Pisupati, seems destined to contest that theory.
Though the UPUA election season only began 9 days ago, Adewumi has found himself time and time again thrust into the limelight, and, more often than not, it hasn't been positive press. Before the campaigning even began, Adewumi was ruled ineligible. At Monday's debate, he and Pisupati were conspicuous in their absence, and yesterday the two were convicted of four campaign violations that will set them back more than $200 of the allotted $600 for presidential campaigns.