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(02/08/02 5:00am)
I've known very few, and I do mean very few, films based on novels, particularly classic novels, that actually stay close to the book. Walking into the theater to see "The Count of Monte Cristo," I wondered if the director would honor the story. In many ways, despite a rather melodramatic screenplay, he did not.
(11/16/01 5:00am)
The University has tried to implement new technology in all areas of academia, and the McIntire Music Department is no exception.
(11/15/01 5:00am)
As Gov. James S. Gilmore III prepares for the last days of his term, he is working to tie up business lingering from the beginning of his four years in office.
(11/02/01 5:00am)
As the semester winds to a close, so does the Changing Face of Technology series sponsored by the University's Women's Center.
(09/28/01 4:00am)
Since the summer, gubernatorial candidates Mark Warner (D) and Mark Earley (R) have been gearing up for the Virginia elections on Nov. 6. But after the recent terrorist attacks, both campaigns have changed tones.
(09/19/01 4:00am)
With the possibility of an impending war, the members of University's Reserve Officers Training Corps program are reaffirming their ideals of service to their country.
(09/10/01 4:00am)
Every year students attend late night meetings and those bogged down by the demands of classes, spend late hours in the libraries. With no bus service past midnight, students walking through Grounds after dark often have many safety concerns. This year the Student Council and administrative safety committees have worked hard to help ease student concerns.
(04/24/01 4:00am)
It's all in the way you wear it.
(04/17/01 4:00am)
Black women explored their role at the University and in the larger world this weekend as they examined how their race and gender are most powerfully articulated in society.
(02/20/01 5:00am)
In the 1950s, segregation began to be lifted not only in schools but in communities, making it possible for blacks and whites to attend the same schools. As this ensued, sudden changes began to occur at the University. Previously an all-white, primarily male institution, it began accepting handfuls of black males in 1955 and each year afterward. Before the close of the 1960s, black males had situated themselves opposite their white classmates both inside and outside the classroom. One such student was the first black Student Council president, James Roebuck.
(02/12/01 5:00am)
U.S. News & World Report magazine last week named University Hospital's intensive medical care units as one of the top 100 intensive care units in the country.
(02/02/01 5:00am)
Looming in the middle of Central Grounds, the Office of Admissions has long been one of the focal points of the University, but few think of this building as having an integral part in black history.
(11/30/00 5:00am)
Flashback to the Friday prior to Thanksgiving - the "Sisters of Diversity" are swaddled in sweats, heavy T-shirts and baseball caps, finalizing plans for the University's first multicultural sorority. Second-year College students Bahareh Moradi, Po Soo-Hoo and Danielle McCamey, along with third-year College student Suhey Nevarez, compose the interest group that is striving to start the sorority.
(11/06/00 5:00am)
Timothy Dennehy sits down in a Runk Dining Hall booth. As he eats, he keeps up a steady stream of conversation. This alertness translates well into his job as Music Director for the Catholic Student Association. There is a snapping energy in his blue eyes, made even more apparent by the fact that he just came back from a run. He pauses to talk about his frank "coming out" to the Catholic student group last spring.
(10/13/00 4:00am)
Emir Delic's basement shakes violently as grenades fall around his home. Trying to forget, he plays chess. But as grenades hit his city, the chess pieces fall over. It shakes him into the violent reality of war.