The Collegian
Monday, April 29, 2024

Features


Features

Step contest raises cultural awareness

While both Pi Beta Phi and Kappa Kappa Gamma sororities placed during the stepping competition on Friday night, the Delta Delta Delta sorority's leap-frog blindfold routine earned them the title as champion of Stepping 101. The event, which was on April 2 in the Alice Haynes Room, pitted The University of Richmond's six Panhellenic sororities against each other in a step dance battle.


Features

Landscape art to float in lake

The wooden sunflower sculpture that has been on the hill outside Boatwright Library for several weeks will be moved into the Westhampton Lake on Saturday. The sculpture, called "Heliotrope," or "flower that follows the sun," was constructed by the Land Art and Landscape class on March 20 as a culmination of a semester studying different kinds of land art throughout history, said philosophy professor Gary Shapiro, who taught the class with art professor Erling Sjovold. Heliotrope was designed by David Wood, an environmental artist and philosophy professor at Vanderbilt University.


Sheep set up in Jepson Quad
Features

The Madwoman is Coming

No doubt many Collegian readers have observed the black and white sheep cut-outs that seem to be slowly migrating across campus, plastered with cryptic messages reading "SHE'S HERE," as well as providing a convenient phone number to call for more information. I myself was rather confused, until someone in the know told me that the animals were part of an advertising campaign to publicize this semester's main stage play, "The Madwoman of Chaillot," written by Jean Giraudoux and directed by Dorothy Holland.


Features

D-hall concoction of the week: 4/8/10

Sauces, dips and chips, oh my! Chipotle and ranch: best with nuggets and fries Mix one part chipotle sauce (at the sandwich bar) with one part ranch dressing. Three-layer nacho dip: best with tortilla chips Layer one part cream cheese with one part salsa and top with one part shredded cheese.


Features

Featured Flick: How to Train Your Dragon

So here's the deal: I'm still a kid at heart. The rest of the University of Richmond student population could claim they wanted to grow up, be mature, yada-yada, and I would still say that I love cartoons, love these new CGI animated movies, and that I especially love "How to Train Your Dragon." In the film, a scrawny viking boy named Hiccup, voiced by Jay Baruchel, the high-pitched guy from "Knocked Up," befriends a dragon.


Features

Behind the syllabus: Dean Croushore

What do you do during the weekends? I sped my time working on my golf game (trying to get my handicap to single digits), revising my textbooks, which need constant updating because the economy changes so much and playing ball with my puppy Spice. What's the craziest thing you did when you were in college? Inspired by Bobby Fischer, I wanted to be the next world class chess champion, so I spent much of my college years pursuing that goal.


Features

Text hall of shame

(609): Senioritis has reached an all time worst (or best): just went to the cellar and chugged a beer on my 15 min break from class (606): is it sad were texting from one room apart? (709): I think were badass mothereffin deejays (201): dude, huge dilemma.


Features

Behind the syllabus: Ellis West

What do you do during the weekends? I do whatever my wife wants me to do, which ranges from working on projects in and around the house to going to cultural events like music concerts. What's the craziest thing you did when you were in college? The riskiest thing I did was hitchhike a few times between the University of Richmond and my home 700 miles away in West Tennessee.


Features

A medley of art performances honor John Cage

A celebration of the artist and composer John Cage, which featured music, dance and theater performances, was held at Camp Concert Hall in the Booker Hall of Music last night. "It will touch upon John Cage's influences on the visual arts, music, composition, writing, theatre and dance," said Heather Campbell, curator of museum programs.


Features

Featured Flick: Repo Men

Life is meaningless. The world is a conglomerated mess where make-me-buy-what-I-don't-need-and-can't-afford advertising is inescapable - a doubly wrinkled brain that is too complex to be blissful - and people are basically bags of meat with sob stories.


Features

Featured Flick: The Crazies

Ogden Marsh, Iowa, is a calm, idyllic farm town. The main street wanders off into the cornfields, barely reaching the quaint, burnable farmhouses that are too far away from each other to offer a sense of community in trying zombie times.


Features

To dine or not to dine: Balliceaux

Balliceaux is a spunky gem of a restaurant, with a menu that offers new American cuisine. Located in Richmond's Fan district, the restaurant is a unique departure from many of Richmond's more traditional Southern or European restaurants. The decor and layout cannot be classified under one design genre.