| Stories for
Wednesday, April 21st, 2004 |
Lama Ole Nydahl spoke about developing fearlessness, joy, active compassion and seeking truth through Buddhism to approximately 30 people at the Coffman Union bookstore Tuesday.
The Minnesota Student Association Forum began molding next year's Student Services Fees process at its Tuesday meeting.
At its creation, University officials put the College of Liberal Arts honors department in Johnston Hall on what was supposed to be a temporary basis.
Students and drug activists voiced their support for marijuana legalization Tuesday afternoon at the annual 4/20 rally at Northrop Plaza, which the National Organization for the
Reform of Marijuana Laws organized.
Several University groups will hold an open house from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday in Coffman Union's Mississippi Room to celebrate partnerships between the University and the community.
After 46 days without buses, students who could not use their U-Passes will be refunded, Parking and Transportation Services officials said Tuesday.
The NCAA Division I Management Council voted unanimously to repeal a rule that limits men's basketball scholarships Monday, preferring a format based more on universities' academic results.
Minnesota's women's track and field coach Gary Wilson is sending some experienced athletes and some first-timers to this weekend's Drake Relays.
So far this season, hitting has been a lot like comedy for Minnesota's softball team: timing is everything.
The last time a true freshman started consistently for Minnesota's baseball team was five years ago, when Cottage Grove, Minn., native Luke Appert stepped in as designated hitter and showed the upperclassmen up, leading the team with a .346 average.
Rarely do the subjects of French cuisine and astrophysical optics overlap. But for Peter Wehinger, telescope mirrors and egg dishes are not mutually exclusive.
Climbing the final feet of Emerald Peak on Mount Graham in Arizona, the Large Binocular Telescope's building rises out of a blend of rocky terrain and spruce fir trees.
From the Apache reservation, the Mount Graham telescope looks like a small, white box positioned on top of the green mountain jutting out of the sand.
Coffman Union is a giant $72 million quarantine room. Coffman is so sterile and professional that some people undoubtedly mistake the lobby for a hospital waiting room.
In response to Jon Marthaler's Monday opinion entitled, "Open letter to Victory Sports," there are two sides to this story regarding Victory Sports One.
This last week, I found myself beneath an expansive monument of stone-carved men exploding with concrete muscle, fists thrust into the humid air, and trudging on a pool of cemented blood shed by U.S. soldiers during the war of 1812.
The Apache people consider Mount Graham, near Stafford, Ariz., a sacred site.
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