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(09/22/03 4:00am)
THANK you, Brett Meeks, for using your Life section column space to celebrate the life of Johnny Cash. Had you not done so, readers of The Cavalier Daily might not have had a chance to read words reflecting on the Man in Black's passing. Of course, several media outlets covered Cash's death, but as the University's primary source of news, the CD should have carried articles on the deaths of Cash and TV star John Ritter, who both died too late to be included in Friday, Sept. 12's issue. We can certainly argue that the impact each man had on the University itself may be minimal (though this writer sings Cash and the "Three's Company" theme song perhaps a bit more than most), but Cash and Ritter were both national figures whose deaths the CD should have reported in its Monday Nation & World pages.
(09/15/03 4:00am)
THE CAVS lost a football game against South Carolina last weekend, 31-7. That's a 24-point margin. That's a beating.
(09/08/03 4:00am)
FAITH Hill is a country crossover superstar. It's pretty hard to argue otherwise.
(09/01/03 4:00am)
AS THE University's primary news source, The Cavalier Daily plays an important role in the community. Though run by students, it is a real newspaper that must cope with the very real consequences of mistakes. The Cavalier Daily is an independent publication, in that it receives no funds from the University -- it pays rent to occupy its spacious pad in the basement of Newcomb Hall -- and it is overseen only by its Managing Board, five students elected to manage the literary, graphical and financial content of the newspaper. The staff, with the exception of the ads team, is unpaid, either by financial or class-credit means. They come to write, take photos, edit, design layouts or the Web site on a purely volunteer basis. This is, of course, a drastically different set-up than a traditional newsroom. It can lead to bouts of high turnover and low morale, but it can also demonstrate a remarkable level of dedication and resolve. The folks making this paper are learning while doing, but they are nonetheless responsible for slip-ups. Working for The Cavalier Daily can be a very stressful yet extremely rewarding undertaking.
(05/20/00 4:00am)
THE LAST time I really talked with him, Mark Brzozowski was leaving my townhouse after an evening complete with conversation, music and a keg of Rolling Rock. He, of course, couldn't quite partake in the debauchery, but I certainly could and did. He left after what now seems a phenomenally short visit.
(04/28/00 4:00am)
When I applied to the University over four years ago, one of the short essay questions asked what piece of art, music, science or literature had had the greatest impact on my life. I could have named, at that point, "A Midsummer Night's Dream" or "Catcher in the Rye," but that wouldn't have been the truth. Despite the advice from my AP English teacher not to do so, I wrote about U2's "The Joshua Tree."
(04/26/00 4:00am)
(This is the sixth and last in a weekly series of articles on road trips within reasonable reach of the University.)
(04/19/00 4:00am)
(This is the fifth in a weekly series of articles on road trips within reasonable reach of the University.)
(04/12/00 4:00am)
(This is the fourth in a weekly series of articles on road trips within reasonable reach of the University.)
(04/07/00 4:00am)
U2 is back ... sort of.
(04/05/00 4:00am)
This is the third in a weekly series of articles on road trips within reasonable reach of the University.
(03/29/00 5:00am)
This is the second in a weekly series of articles on road trips within reasonable reach of the University.
(03/22/00 5:00am)
"Done with indoor complaints, libraries, querulous criticisms, Strong and content I travel the open road."
(02/18/00 5:00am)
There's an episode of "South Park" when the little scamps are battling the evil robotic Barbra Streisand, when they realize that only one thing can destroy the beast: Robert Smith. Only Smith, flawlessly animated as a butterfly battler with the trademark spider-web hair, can best her big-nosed snobbery. And after he saves South Park, the Cure frontman prances into the sunset, while Kyle, after a myriad of thank-yous, yells "'Disintegration' is the best album ever!"
(02/14/00 5:00am)
Separation is a strange thing.