by Katerina Kienle in News
Breakout star Zach Galifianakis, recently renowned for his role as Alan Garner in the hit summer blockbuster, The Hangover, is expected to draw quite the crowd when he arrives at Loyola University next Saturday, Sept. 12 to perform for the Evergreen campus.
by Andrew Zaleski in News
Glove is to hand as shoe is to foot. Cat is to meow as dog is to bark. Write is to pen as sew is to needle.
Before 2005, analogies were just one of a slew of topics that kept high school seniors preparing incessantly for the College Board's SAT examination, the standardized test most American colleges and universities use as a metric by which to judge high school students' readiness for a college curriculum.
by Katerina Kienle in News
It's late morning on Saturday, Aug. 23, in the Inner Harbor and the upstairs deck of the Rusty Scupper is bustling with more than the average Baltimoreans coming for lunch. Teams of journalists sit in rows, waiting patiently in the muggy morning heat while television producers, camera men, and photographers scamper around making final adjustments to lighting, wires and an ABC logo backdrop.
by Sara Cesky in News
Agonizing over what to eat for dinner will not be a problem for Loyola students as they settle into their new schedules this fall semester. After signing a 10-year contract with Loyola last year, Sodexo has made it a top priority to change the dining halls and venues across campus in an attempt to accommodate students' ever-changing appetites.
by Amelia Wolfe in News
Early this summer, Loyola students received an e-mail informing all students and faculty about an up-and-coming transition to a new e-mail system called Live@edu. Opinions among students were mixed, with some students viewing the transition as an inconvenience and a confusing new change that comes with being a university, while others saw Live@edu as a safer and better e-mail system than GroupWise.
by in News
A bench sits in the garden of St. Mary's Church in Annapolis, Maryland, though it is more than just a bench. Sitting on it is a life-sized bronze statue of Blessed Francis Xavier Seelos, a nineteenth-century missionary and former pastor at St. Mary's who is a candidate for sainthood.
by Andy Ouriel in News
After hundreds of requests for Congressman Bob Latta to hold a public town hall-style meeting on health care reform were ignored, over 50 citizens within Ohio's Fifth District vehemently protested in front of his local office by repeating slogans and holding up bright, blue signs stressing the need for nationwide, affordable health care coverage for every American citizen.