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(09/13/04 4:00am)
On Sept. 11 this year, the only sound over Arlington Cemetery was the air traffic flying overhead during a somber moment of silence at 9:37 a.m. for the American Airlines flight 77 victims and Pentagon victims. In attendance for a wreath-laying ceremony at the Pentagon 9/11 memorial were some Pentagon officials including Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams, and Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Peter Pace.
(09/13/04 4:00am)
In the 16 years since David Henry Hwang's "M. Butterfly" made its Broadway debut, the issues it treats have only become more relevant to social and cultural discussions.
(09/09/04 4:00am)
During the 2003 season, the Eagles soared above the competition, sweeping the Patriot League championship meet in both men's and women's cross country.
(09/09/04 4:00am)
TELLURIDE, Colo. --
(09/02/04 4:00am)
Two AU College Republicans who are in New York City for the Republican National Convention this week were encouraged by the upbeat atmosphere there, despite the appearance of anti-Republican protesters at one of their events.
(09/02/04 4:00am)
Having amassed a 49-0 Patriot League record over the past three years, it comes as no surprise that the AU volleyball team is again expected to be the class of the league in 2004.
(09/02/04 4:00am)
During my sophomore year at AU, my roommate Erin, a veteran do-gooder, informed me that we would be going to the synagogue down the street to get blood tests. A little girl who was a member of the congregation had leukemia and her family was searching for potential bone marrow matches.
(07/12/04 4:00am)
Posted July 29, 2004. Updated July 30, 2004.
(07/12/04 4:00am)
Posted July 30, 2004.
(07/12/04 4:00am)
The years of uncertainty about baseball's Montreal Expos might finally come to a head this month. The Associated Press recently reported that league officials will decide where to put the struggling franchise after the July 13 All-Star Game, and Northern Virginia and D.C. seem to be the frontrunners. Here is how they match up in some crucial factors.
(07/12/04 4:00am)
Posted Aug. 20, 2004
(06/21/04 4:00am)
Some members of the AU community described their first viewing of the World War II Memorial with mixed feelings or disappointment. The monument, which opened to the public April 29 and was dedicated a month later, is the only memorial to a 20th century event on the central axis of the National Mall.
(06/21/04 4:00am)
Legendary industrial trio Skinny Puppy returned to D.C. to perform for the first time in nearly a decade. Their new record, "The Greater Right of Wrong," is their first release in eight years.
(04/26/04 4:00am)
Last week, White House and Pentagon officials denied allegations of a plan to reinstate a military draft to aid action in Iraq - an idea that has some AU students worried.
(04/22/04 4:00am)
"I'm Not Scared" is an Italian film. It is, however, a drastically different picture of Italy than "innocent abroad" movies like "Under The Tuscan Sun" or "Stealing Beauty." It is the second international attempt by award-winning director Gabrielle Salvatores after his masterpiece "Mediterraneo" won the Oscar for best foreign film in 1991.
(04/12/04 4:00am)
National World War II Memorial to open to public in May
(04/12/04 4:00am)
Mentioning monuments in the same sentence as Washington, D.C., seems redundant to most people. True to D.C.'s reputation, another monument was given the go-ahead for construction.
(04/12/04 4:00am)
Autopilot Off
"Make a Sound" (Island Records)
Sounds like: The Foo Fighters taking shots of Story of the Year and Thursday.
(04/08/04 4:00am)
Ella Enchanted
***
PG, 95 m
with Anne Hathaway, Hugh Dancy, Cary Elwes, Minnie Driver and Vivica A. Fox.
Directed by Tommy O'Haver.
Opens tomorrow.
(04/05/04 4:00am)
Saturday night, about 9 or 10 p.m., I stood next to my father in Bender Arena, listening to a now fossilized icon of a culture and social climate that we can now only understand with archeological accuracy. "Oh, where have you been, my blue-eyed son? Oh, where have you been, my darling young one?" As Bob Dylan wrestled these tired words from his aging throat, I remember thinking, "My thoughts exactly." To the surprise of no one, Dylan did little talking Saturday night. He avoided songs like "Masters of War," "With God on Our Side," and other indictments of irresponsible governance. Sure, we heard that "The Times, They are a-Changin," but in the words of Dar Williams, "I guess they a-changed back."