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(04/19/00 4:00am)
Black and white pictures on the walls of the Alderman Café depict the library 30 years ago -- containing little more than rows of card catalogs and a checkered floor. Few would have guessed the Memorial Hall of Alderman Library might someday house the "Alderman Cybercafé" where students and faculty balance wireless computers atop their laps, sip steaming lattes and glance though books and newspapers.
(04/05/00 4:00am)
She wears a white wristband that looks like a hospital bracelet. Written on the band in black marker are two names. Each name represents two people who have been hospitalized, two people who have leukemia.
(03/27/00 5:00am)
The cashier with green press-on nails and wispy blonde hair looks up shyly when asked whether Lucky Seven regularly stocks Playgirls.
(03/08/00 5:00am)
Fourth-year College student Katie Bolcar is used to leading search and rescue groups through the woods. She hikes ahead alone, the burly middle-aged loggers in the group forging after her with walking sticks. Bolcar decides it is difficult leading a group of older men, telling them what to do and where to go. She worries that some of the men are splitting from the group to try to usurp the lead from their comparatively younger guide. But she knows there is still one goal binding the group together - finding a missing little girl.
(02/22/00 5:00am)
The day was hotter than usual, even if it was South Carolina. Our T-shirts stuck to our backs as we climbed out of the cramped car, each of us armed with a notebook. It was the day of the South Carolina Republican primary, a pivotal head-to-head matchup between Arizona Senator John McCain and Texas governor George W. Bush.
(02/17/00 5:00am)
What, one might ask, is the literary equivalent of two all-beef patties with lettuce, tomato, mayo and American cheese all squashed between a sesame seed bun? The answer: The ubiquitous Big Mac finally has made its way to college application essays as ... drum roll, please ... McEssays!
(01/31/00 5:00am)
The men live in group housing at the edges of the apple orchards from April until early winter. Afterward, they travel south to find work in the Florida citrus groves. Their families are a bit better off. At least they own homes, trailers or apartments. Still, they must move frequently to find jobs. Their children are shuffled around as well, and many lag behind the academic skills of their peers.
(01/21/00 5:00am)
Without the large black and white sign featuring a motorcyclist's silhouette, few people strolling down Elliewood Avenue would notice that the converted house is actually the Buddhist Biker Bar & Grill.
(11/08/99 5:00am)
The ballots are in: about 11,000 students from around the state voted in the largest mock Internet election ever, held Oct. 26. But for the Youth Leadership Initiative program at the University's Center for Governmental Studies, the vote was not simply a chance to make history. Instead, it was one step closer to YLI's goal of getting young people involved in the political scene.
(10/26/99 4:00am)
A woman with fluffed blonde hair sits in the corner office of the Creative Writing Department. She gets up, moves around the cluttered office piled high with papers and passes a shelf stuffed with books of poetry -- Pablo Neruda, Elizabeth Bishop, along with various anthologies. But now Lisa Russ Spaar will be able to add one more poetry anthology to her collection, only this time, it will be her own.
(10/08/99 4:00am)
Amid the recent controversy surrounding the current admissions policy at the University, the University chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People is gathering steam to launch itself onto center-stage of the community's political forum.
(10/01/99 4:00am)
Although swing dancing has gained popularity in recent years, due in part to Gap ads that feature khaki-sporting dancers and the rise of youth swing dance clubs, no one is more familiar with the roots of this genre of dance than the Grandfather of swing himself - Frankie Manning.
(09/24/99 4:00am)
Although the television sitcom "Cheers" ended several years ago, the same friendly, personable atmosphere portrayed in the bar where "everybody knows your name" can be found right here on the Corner at St. Maarten Café.