Exploring the growing role of artificial intelligence in filmmaking
From the Newsstands: This story appeared in The Eagle's December 2024 print edition. You can find the digital version here.
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From the Newsstands: This story appeared in The Eagle's December 2024 print edition. You can find the digital version here.
American University hired Duane Simpkins to take men’s basketball to a higher level. The way the season started last year — beating teams that they were expected to beat, like Siena, and losing to the better teams, like Villanova — was a good sign. It showed that the team knew how to win and wasn’t folding under the new coach.
From the Newsstands: This story appeared in The Eagle's December 2024 print edition. You can find the digital version here.
Regina Guest woke up on Nov. 6 to a lock screen full of texts from concerned friends and family. She knew who had won before she even opened her phone.
New year, same age-old not-so-jolly debate: when is it acceptable to start listening to holiday music? Is November too early to start listening to holiday tracks? What about the day after Thanksgiving?
As we near the end of the fall 2024 semester, and The Eagle’s final edits are wrapping up, a few of our graduating seniors are putting their final touches on the paper.
Growing up with a single mother and a father in Ireland, Danny Noone, first-line center for American University club ice hockey and Kogod School of Business junior, has never been in a financially stable environment. This never stopped him from falling in love with ice hockey, an expensive youth sport. Throughout Noone’s youth hockey career, his mother financially supported him; however, now in college, he’s on his own.
President of the newly founded women's club basketball team Astha Bernard, a sophomore in the School of Public Affairs, takes one last look into the stands before joining her team's huddle. Her eyes begin to water. She tries to fight the tears, but fails. It’s the first time since her senior year of high school playing competitive basketball.
From the Newsstands: This story appeared in The Eagle's December 2024 print edition. You can find the digital version here.
From the Newsstands: This story appeared in The Eagle's December 2024 print edition. You can find the digital version here.
From the Newsstands: This story appeared in The Eagle's December 2024 print edition. You can find the digital version here.
From the Newsstands: This story appeared in The Eagle's December 2024 print edition. You can find the digital version here.
The following piece is an opinion and does not reflect the views of The Eagle and its staff. All opinions are edited for grammar, style and argument structure and fact-checked, but the opinions are the writer’s own.
The following piece is an opinion and does not reflect the views of The Eagle and its staff. All opinions are edited for grammar, style and argument structure and fact-checked, but the opinions are the writer’s own.
Jake Crim knew this injury was different from the moment it happened during a routine game with his team, Stumptown AC, in 2021. In an innocent backpedal run, it was barely noticeable to the untrained eye that Crim had tripped over his own feet. He hit the ground almost immediately, curled in a ball and grasping at his ankle.
The following piece is an opinion and does not reflect the views of The Eagle and its staff. All opinions are edited for grammar, style and argument structure and fact-checked, but the opinions are the writer’s own.
Award-winning actor and mental health advocate Sean Astin will deliver the keynote address at American University’s 148th commencement on Dec. 15 in Bender Arena, according to an announcement sent to the University community on Dec. 2.
American University’s Student Government Undergraduate Senate called for improvements to the safety and accessibility of the Spring Valley Building in a unanimously passed resolution at an undergraduate senate meeting on Nov. 16.
Nervous about finals? Excited for winter break? No matter how you’re feeling, read more to find out what the future holds for you (yes, you!).
The Eagle has published a staff diversity report for the past two years in an effort to maintain transparency with the American University community. Results from a Fall 2024 Staff Acceptance Survey indicate that the population of staffers with disabilities and representation among Black and Native American staffers also fell between spring and fall 2024. The Eagle’s white population also fell a little over 15 percent.