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Guam High Panthers graduate with grit, pride

Guam High School Panthers graduated on Friday with years of grit and pride to show for.

PDN s Vibe journalism training for high school students begins in July

View Comments In 1992, the Pacific Daily News launched Yo!,  a youth internship program to train high school students as journalists. Almost three decades later, the program has trained hundreds of students and has been offered every year - with the exception of 2020, the cursed pandemic year. But this year, Vibe is back and it s going to be an amazing year, starting with our monthlong training in July. In addition to sessions led by former Vibe advisor Therese Padua Howe and current PDN reporter Anne Wen, interns will get the opportunity to hear from Vibe alumnae currently working as journalists.        Here is what some of them had to say about the program:

I don t know where that came from man says after meth and pipe found in pocket

View Comments A 56-year-old man was arrested in connection to the assault of another man who said he was punched someone threw a can of butane at him, according to a magistrate s complaint filed in the Superior Court of Guam. Jim Ignacio Quidachay was the suspect in an assault complaint on April 27 in Agat. A man told Guam Police Department officers Quidachay walked up to him in an aggressive manner with fists clenched as Quidachay began to strike him several times in his left and right forearm, the complaint said. The man reported Quidachay also threw a can of butane at him, and when the can missed him, Quidachay picked up a broom to hit him. The victim was able to grab the broom before he was hit, the complaint said.

UOG set to increase tuition in the fall

UOG set to increase tuition in the fall By Joe Taitano II View Comments A tuition increase for the University of Guam has been approved and scheduled for August, President Thomas Krise told lawmakers during a budgetary hearing on Monday. Randy Weigand, vice president for administration and finance, stated that a 5% increase in tuition at the beginning of the fall semester was built into UOG’s budget request. The university was able to delay an increase in tuition last year by using money from the CARES act to waive fees, Krise said, in order to account for students who found themselves in difficult situations as a result of the pandemic.

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