Llamas and other frivolities
By Maggie Jones | January 19, 2007I have this strange sort of "like" for llamas. I wouldn't quite call it an obsession, but it is pretty close.
I have this strange sort of "like" for llamas. I wouldn't quite call it an obsession, but it is pretty close.
It is -- literally -- faster than a speeding bullet. The supersonic combustion ramjet, or scram-jet, currently being designed at the University's Aerospace Research Laboratory is expected to fly at 3,700 miles per hour, nearly twice a bullet's speed. The University is working in conjunction with the Virginia Space Grant Consortium, which includes researchers at Virginia Tech, Old Dominion University, Hampton University and the College of William & Mary. At that speed, the five-hour plane ride from Charlottesville to Los Angeles could be cut down to about 40 minutes, according to Aerospace Research Laboratory director Christopher Goyne.
Over Winter Break, the field of technology made several impressive breakthroughs. A 108-inch TV was unveiled, Apple announced its way cool iPhone, video game nerds scrambled to find a PS3 to buy and my grandmother has developed an addiction to Nintendo Wii.
The new year is well under way, but a few Life columnists took a look back at 2006 (in their own special way) to see what was popular, and what they hope will stay in the past. HOT: Retirement University alum and New York Giants running back Tiki Barber announced that this NFL season will be his last before he enters the world of broadcasting.
Coming back to the University in the fall is always strange and imposing, because you've lost the habits of life here and adapted to a whole other, and hopefully less bizarre, world.
Happy 2007, everyone! 2007, wow, it feels weird to type that, let alone mentally process it. Year of 007.
This weather is freaking me out. It was, like, 70 degrees the other day. Do you realize what that MEANS?!?!? It means, from now on it will no longer be impressive to say you streaked the Lawn in the middle of January.
Friday, April 5, 1968 "America is shocked and saddened by the brutal slaying tonight of Dr. Martin Luther King.
I've come to discover that, not only do some people read my column, but a few even pay heed to what I have to say.
For the past semester, I've had the privilege of being a Cavalier Daily Life columnist. I call it a privilege because not everyone has the chance to write about pretty much whatever they want in the space of 120 lines in one of the most reputable college newspapers in the country with a print circulation of 10,000 and an extensive online readership. The title in my byline is broad indeed, as it implies that I am free to write about ... life.
A room in the Academical Village with Grounds as a front yard and some of the most interesting people you'll ever meet as neighbors; no, it's not living on the Lawn -- it's living on the Range. The Range is located around the outside of the Gardens of the Lawn and is a distinguished housing option for graduate students.
Thousands of people crammed onto the Lawn, the cheerful holiday jingles of a cappella groups, steaming mugs of hot apple cider -- everyone and everything comes to a standstill when, as if by magic, the entire Lawn is lit up in gold.
Like many of the other classy ladies here at the University, I took advantage of Thanksgiving break to get my hair did.
Both VH1 and Comedy Central are having their end of the year wrap-ups in December (probably so they can play repeats of the events every other hour until February). So, I figure I can get away with it this early, too, especially since this column is my last until 2007 rolls into Charlottesville.
For one hour every Sunday night, Pavilion VIII becomes home to a group of students striving to warm up America.
Winter is quickly approaching, sicknesses in various forms are spreading and final exams are the only obstacles between students and break.
It's almost time for finals, and the one thing on everyone's mind is test-taking. Everything we've been learning all semester will soon culminate into an examination of what we can put on paper when the books are closed and the timer is ticking away. You see, tests are where the men are separated from the boys.
Interested in how the world works? The Sociology department can offer some answers, Department Chair Paul Kingston said. "It goes down to a lot of root interactions and social causes of things," fourth-year College student Yasir Latifi said. The sociology department offers a variety of classes, many of which fill up quickly. "We take pride in being so popular," Kingston said.
It's interesting that at the gym everybody is already in great shape. Who are these people? I bet these same folks go to Alcoholic Anonymous meetings just to say, "Hi.
U niversity students have at least one or two favorite movies they can never see too many times. With such a wide variety of movies and tastes, it's hard to decide which movies every college student should see.