The 2009 Audi A4 may have the same name as its predecessor, but it is truly a different animal. If you are lazy and do not want to bother reading the rest of this review, just read this: Go buy this car. The new aggressive exterior and sleek lines of the A4's body are impressive. (0) comments
"The Uninvited" is the latest in a long line of Asian horror remakes, which has become a genre all its own. The cinemas have been flooded with Korean remakes (K-horror) and Japanese remakes (J-horror) and I'm starting to wonder if viewers have exhausted these remakes at the expense of original horror films like "The Strangers" and "Teeth. (0) comments
"HASTA LA VICTORIA SIEMPRE! (Always until Victory!)" These are the infamous words of the iconic and divisive Ernesto "Che" Guevara, whose bearded facade is found on T-shirts, posters and various other memorabilia. To some people, he is a divine idol embodying the true revolutionary spirit, a man who became a martyr for the liberation of the repressed. (3) comments
Representatives of the TCU Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender community expressed a lack of unity within the gay population in addition to the broader campus, according to a study on the support of LGBT students within the university. A research project led by sophomore social work major Shelly Newkirk and her mentor Tracy Dietz, associate professor of social work, extensively surveyed five students from the gay community. (1) comment
The ongoing joke told at freshman orientation depicts the mother of a student booking the Robert Carr Chapel, even before her daughter is engaged. Some truth lies in this joke. Kristi Ingram , the booking agent and wedding coordinator for the chapel, said the booking office at the chapel fields on average 20 calls per day regarding booking for upcoming weddings. (1) comment
Jamal Malik, played by Dev Patel, is a young man who knows too much. After coming close to winning the grand prize on the Indian equivalent of "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire," he is taken in for questioning for possibly cheating. The police use brutal means to find the source of his answers because a "slumdog" shouldn't know enough to set him apart from the usual doctors and lawyers that appear on the show. (0) comments