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Delivering American University's news and views since 1925
Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2025
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Legal News

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Police blotter

Wednesday, Jan. 2 A Public Safety officer reported witnessing a traffic accident between an AU vehicle and a student vehicle on the roadway in front of the Beeghley Chemistry building. Thursday, Jan. 3 A Public Safety officer found a hole in the wall in front of room 330 on the third floor of Mary Graydon Center.

The Eagle

Men's basketball goes road tripping

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Last we saw of men's basketball, Brian Gilmore hit the clinching free throw in front of television cameras and an electric crowd at Bender Arena to seal a win over Jacksonville University. Since then, the Eagles have embarked on a school record seven-game road trip, including an historic win at College Park against the University of Maryland, AU's first against the Terrapins in 80 years.

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National brief

Toy maker Mattel Inc. announced last week it would produce a special collectible Barbie in honor of Alpha Kappa Alpha, the nation's first Greek-lettered sorority established by black women. The doll will be clad in the sorority's colors, pink and green. The doll is the first in the company's history to be based on a sorority or other organization founded by black women, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

News

Dorm recipe: Outrageous orzo peppers anyone's palate

Whenever I buy pasta, I usually gravitate towards the penne or the farfalle box because that is what I am used to eating. But those get old, and I wanted to try something new. I had never heard anything about orzo pasta before and thought I would give it a shot.


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News

AU Abroad delays start of Kenya program

Media coverage of post-election violence in Kenya has exaggerated the situation and oversimplified the conflict, according to AU students currently studying in the country. All students who had planned to study abroad in Nairobi, Kenya, this semester are now on-site.


Opinion

Life in the district: Surviving awkward semester breaks

With this year's spring break likely to be spent frantically searching for jobs or an excuse to stay in school for another few years, this winter break marked the final time many AU seniors visited home before plunging into the "real world." However, ever since the first Thanksgiving break freshman year, when we raved about how fantastic our new college lives were, it seems like each subsequent visit home has been progressively more bittersweet.


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News

Campus calendar

Thursday, Jan. 17 AU jazz ensemble auditions 8 p.m. WHERE: Katzen 151 INFO: The AU Jazz Program is looking for musicians to audition for various jazz ensembles. CONTACT: For more information, contact William E. Smith at 202-885-3433. University library tour, introduction to ALADIN and academic integrity info session 4-5:30 p.


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News

International brief

Christian critics have voiced their outrage over a statue of Jesus Christ on display at a museum because it depicts him as having an erection, the Sun, a British newspaper, reported last week Friday. Stephan Green, the national director of evangelical Christian group Christian Voice, deemed the statue blasphemous.


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News

Art professor dies of cancer at 62

Ron Haynie, associate professor of art and former chair of the art department, died of cancer on Jan. 4 at Sibley Memorial Hospital. Haynie, 62, obtained both his bachelor's degree in fine arts and his master's degree in painting from AU. After several years of teaching at Dumbarton College and Trinity College, he returned to AU as a faculty member in 1970.


MORTAL COMBAT - In the latest installment of the "Kingdom Under Fire" series, "Circle of Doom" players control one of six characters instead of commanding an army. Here, a character fights multiple enemies, demonstrating the game's new combat systems.
News

Review: 'Kingdom' invades diverse genres

The "Kingdom Under Fire" series has come a long way from its roots as a relatively unknown real-time strategy game. "Kingdom Under Fire: Circle of Doom" is the chronological sequel to "KUF: The Crusaders," which successfully established the series as a reliable strategy game on the original Xbox.


NEW FRONTIER - Customizable characters and side quests allow for flexibility in gameplay in BioWare's new game, "Mass Effect." Players' decisions greatly shape the direction in which the game goes. Players can travel to hundreds of planets across the gala
News

'Mass Effect' explores space

Grade: A- Forget "Star Wars," "Star Trek," "Battlestar Galactica" and all the other sci-fi universes you may be used to. BioWare, a well-known Canadian developer of critically acclaimed role-playing games, ushers gamers into the world of "Mass Effect," a deep, innovative world filled with political tension, well-developed characters and an exciting story that will leave gamers wanting more.


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Opinion

Thumbs up...thumbs down

Thumbs Up to... Sporadic 70-degree weather... Unseasonably warm days are nice breaks from freezing, occasionally snowy morning treks to class. Free Metro rides... WMATA should make mistakes more often. Class squatting... It might be wrong, but it's the only way some of us get to take the classes we want.


Sports

Sideline scholars: Game on: 10 reasons to head to Bender

While some of us spent the last three weeks catching up on all of the Bravo TV shows we have missed out on at school (my favorite is clearly "Project Runway"), others were busy practicing and perfecting their athletic skills. The men and women of the various AU sports teams spent their days out on the playing fields, working hard to bring home wins so that non-athletes had something to brag about to their friends at those Big Ten schools like Michigan, Ohio State and Indiana.


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News

Consultant tackles bureaucracy at AU

The university hired a consultant to analyze problems with bureaucracy in the Financial Aid, Registrar and Student Accounts offices and to create a plan to help them better serve students, according to Student Government Comptroller Amanda Hesse. "It's to try and create a more user-friendly bureaucratic system for the students," Hesse said.


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Sports

Hardball in the House: Steroids and baseball

For the second time in four years, baseball played its biggest game. Not on the lush green grass of Fenway Park or Yankee Stadium, but in the cold, sterile chambers of the U.S. Capitol. With Commissioner Bud Selig and Major League Baseball Players Association leader Donald Fehr appearing before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, the national pastime was found defending itself from the harsh stigma of a steroid scandal in the nation's capital.


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News

U Street area restaurant connects community, dishes up poetry

Much like the poetry in which it is rooted, the beauty and interest of Busboys and Poets lies in its contrast. Sunlight streams through the expansive windows during lunch hour at Busboys and Poets, the restaurant, coffee shop and bookstore located in the heart of Washington's bustle two blocks from the U Street Metro stop.


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News

Restart of dig awaits approval

The dig for World War I-era weapons buried under and around AU's campus stopped Dec. 5 because a munition recovered weeks earlier contained explosive material not described in the site's safety plan, project officials said at a Spring Valley community meeting Jan.


Opinion

What a travesty: Fenty's first year a mixed success

This month marks one year since Mayor Adrian Fenty took office. Let's review the first year with this young, ambitious politician at the helm of our city. As a D.C. councilmember representing Ward 4, Fenty gained a reputation as a can-do leader who focused on the needs of the less fortunate members of the District.


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Opinion

Staff editorial: Beating AU bureaucracy

We can certainly all agree that AU has its bureaucratic moments, but does hiring a consultant to identify the problems we've long lamented about do anything substantial for the university? That answer very well depends on what you think the problem is. On one hand, navigating the processes of the Financial Aid, Registrar and Student Accounts offices is a grueling, degree-worthy endeavor - and reaching each by telephone is even more demanding.




Section 202 hosts Connor Sturniolo and Gabrielle McNamee are joined by fellow Eagle staff member and phenomenal sports photographer, Josh Markowitz. Follow along as they discuss the United Football League and the benefits it provides for the world of professional football.


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