Lessons for a lifetime
THE STORIES in this newspaper impact our lives in profound ways. One changed mine forever.
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THE STORIES in this newspaper impact our lives in profound ways. One changed mine forever.
Tapping into a steady supply of money is difficult for most college students.
Starr Hill's restaurant, brewery and music hall serves as a mecca to students looking for food and a good time in a casual atmosphere.
With sun-dried dirt smudged all over his T-shirt and khakis, Adam Vandervort painstakingly sifted the newly dug dirt.
S pray-painted in black letters against a white wooden back ground, the message on the makeshift sign stuck in front of a house on Cameron Lane could not be clearer.
It was the night before classes and everyone was buzzing with anticipation at the beginning of the spring semester. The last moments of absolute freedom before getting back on the academic chain gang were slowly slipping away.
BLACKSBURG, Va.-VT. The branded-orange logo easily caught the eye of even the most unresponsive drivers.
As she swatted a yellow jacket away from her soda, Newcomb balcony diner Sonia Gosain grimaced.
With its rolling hills and neoclassical architecture, Charlottesville seems to be the antithesis of an area like Manhattan. But there is one affliction that both the Big Apple and C-ville share, albeit to different degrees -- parking problems.
"Charlotte doesn't like us walking through the halls in our underwear," first-year College student Phillip Whipple said. "But we still leave our doors open."
Money. We all want it. We all need it to survive. And nearly everyone, even the most well-off, silver spoon-fed college student, has only a limited quantity of it, which must be dearly conserved.
TAZEWELL, Va. - I knew I heard something. It was only feet away from the house.
Although its sign may be smaller in comparison to the billboards of other Corner merchants, the orange and blue letters of Mincer's store are an unmistakable signal to Wahoos that they've come home.
"Stand up against the man!" second-year College student Andrew Starner yelled at a random student walking down the sidewalk from Monroe Hall.
The energy displayed by fifth-year Education student Megan McNulty transcends everything she does, which, on a typical day, includes teaching a dance class for five to seven-year-old girls, student teaching high school special education classes and working the box office of Culbreth Theater -- all this on top of her academics.
Streaking is such a pervasive part of the University experience that one often wonders if perhaps Jefferson himself didn't make that notorious sprint down the Lawn while Madison or Washington served as lookouts for the cops.
Against the background of the Higher Grounds' stucco walls, a tall man donned in paint-stained overalls conversed with another man in an expensive black wool parka half his size. At this restaurant, people from different backgrounds interact and enjoy the West Coast atmosphere.
Wild Saturday nights on Rugby Road and the excitement of streaking the Lawn on a warm spring night. Alongside these University traditions comes a new one, the perfect hybrid of modern technology and financial restrictions - the widespread downloading and playing of mp3 music files from the Web site of increasing collegiate fame, Napster.com, which is happening more and more on Grounds.
Altruistic perseverance or pornographic perpetuation? Psychoanalyst Paul Joannidies' third edition of "Guide to Getting It On!" is a book that raises eyebrows - well, in some cases, more than just eyebrows - of even the most dirty-minded (or sexually astute, depending on your perspective).
Mark Lindsey held the machine that once kept his heart beating in front of him.