Interview with President Ayers
Last Friday, Edward Ayers announced he would be stepping down as university president after next academic year.
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Last Friday, Edward Ayers announced he would be stepping down as university president after next academic year.
The following interview with Brendan Rhatican, author of A Letter to Women, is published verbatim.
There's something about a job interview that is a lot like a first date. Correct name pronunciations are still being disentangled by the tongue. Hometown and hobbies are still being explored with half-artificial curiosity. The questioned person is struggling to focus more on what he or she is saying rather than on whether to look his or her interrogator directly or from a more attractive angle.
Charlie Sheen's media rants are the stuff of poetry. Whether the high priest Vatican assassin warlock is talking about his goddesses, explaining the inner-workings of his brain or lampooning his employers, he is undeniably entertaining. He is not afraid to use offensive and absurd humor, and he's frustrated that people take it too seriously, rightly so. He is amazing. That term probably isn't good enough, but unfortunately I, like Sheen, am bound by these terrestrial descriptions.
F.W. de Klerk, former President of South Africa, spoke at 7 p.m. Tuesday in a sold out Jepson Alumni Center.
Hawthorne Heights has fallen off the radar of many of its old fans for the last few years. However, they are not gone by any means. We were given the opportunity to interview Eron Bucciarelli, drummer from Hawthorne Heights, last week before the sixth leg of their acoustic tour at Strange Matter on Grace Street.
If you know me personally, you know that I live and breathe music. For the most part I listen to an eclectic mix of thrash, pop-punk, folk and alternative, or as most people would call it, emo. That aside, I was recently given the opportunity to interview one of my favorite bands of all time.
"If something happens today, do you want to us to resuscitate?"
I was standing in my friend's UFA kitchen last weekend, talking with him about whatever series of unusual events was taking place in each of our respective lives.
It's that time of year. During the next few months University of Richmond students will be tweaking their resumes, polishing interview skills and trying to increase their understanding of current events in and out of the global marketplace. Thousands of college students apply for jobs; only handfuls receive offers. In a world where every potential quality of an applicant counts, differentiation from the masses becomes essential. How can you make yourself different?
Colson Whitehead was born in 1969 and grew up in Manhattan. He attended Harvard College, then spent two years working as a pop culture critic for the Village Voice. In 1999 his debut novel about elevator inspectors, "The Intuitionist," received wide critical acclaim, with the New Yorker calling it strikingly original and scintillating.
The Modlin Center at the University of Richmond will open its 2009-2010 season on Sept. 8 and 9 with The Actors' Gang performances of Daniel Berrigan's award-winning play, "The Trial of the Catonsville Nine."
She steps out of the rain and into the coffee shop, wearing a sweater and jeans, carrying a red umbrella and an unexpected accessory. Sam, her toddler son, is perched happily on her hip and giggles with a wide grin.
I like to think of myself as an objective gatherer of news and information - an unbiased observer of all things around me. But something I saw at the Spiders vs. Georgetown game a few weeks ago has been weighing on my heart since: pastels.
By the Career Development Center Staff
YOUR FOUR-YEAR COLLEGE PLAN
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