Odds & Ends
Dozens of panels and discussions about the war in Iraq have come and gone, but tonight's debate will provide an opportunity for increased student participation.
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Dozens of panels and discussions about the war in Iraq have come and gone, but tonight's debate will provide an opportunity for increased student participation.
Some students attend the University for free, but they don't want you to know who they are. Lauded as some of the best and the brightest students in the country, Jefferson Scholars receive huge incentives to choose the University over their numerous other potential choices.
The similarities were the most striking. The languages, the customs, the values and the American experiences of the Muslim and Jewish communities are incredibly. All of the diversity programs around Grounds seem somehow artificial when compared to the Open Doors program. There is a huge and significant difference between discussing other cultures and briefly experiencing them.
Sex, drag queens, dinner in a Garden and a trip to Washington, D.C. all come together this week during "Proud to be Out" week sponsored by the Queer Student Union.
As if the stress of busy academic and social schedules was not enough, the constant developments in the war in Iraq add an additional weight to the load University students bear.
Since when do linen table cloths, gourmet food selections and a live band characterize a university dining hall?
It represents all facets of the College. It deals with students, faculty and alumni. It has money and authority at its disposal. Very few students, however, know of its purpose or existence. It is the Arts and Sciences Council.
"Are you going to be able to handle a $250,000, 35-feet-long, eight-feet-wide, 13-ton-vehicle? Can you deal with people who are going to yell at you?" Affirmative answers to questions such as these are merely the beginning of what is an intense preparation to become a University Transit Service driver such as second-year College student David Rogge.
Some say knowledge is priceless, but Student Charge accounts tell another story. The combined four-year bill students pay for their books can equal enough to purchase anything from a small car to a ridiculous number of shoes.Imagine a world in which almost half of the huge bill for books at the start of a semester is refunded at the semester's end.