-
This season, most local arts groups are dealing with the same situation: the need to come up with an exciting lineup on a smaller budget. Six major organizations have approached that challenge in varying ways, and shared their strategies.
Virginia Symphony Orchestra
-
In any business, best results can be achieved when employees work closely together. In fact, it is not uncommon for personal relationships to develop ...
-
Earthquake victims from the south came in buses, piled into pickups and jammed into cars, driving almost 90 miles to find any care they could - even at Haiti's poorest hospital.
Justinian Hospital doctors, nurses and residents worked through the first weekend treating 130 patients from Port-au-Prince, the capital city destroyed by the Jan. 12 quake, which killed an estimated 200,000 people.
-
Anew survey of senior financial executives reveals that significant capital planning and investment decisions are made utilizing manual approaches and...
-
Cover story
-
DUBLIN, Ireland -- Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c81473) has announced the addition of Libraries & the Mega-Internet...
-
It's been another very tough year for students applying to highly selective colleges. While some students are celebrating multiple acceptances, others are dealing with the disappointment of not being admitted to their favorite school.
Then there are students who have several acceptances, but they are from schools that are no longer good matches. Some students have had a change of heart about going far from home or staying close to home. Interests can also change during senior year, and a student who has struggled in calculus and physics and no longer wants to study engineering might now prefer a smaller liberal arts school.
-
After all, here was a founding father of bioethics, an elected fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and a member of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Science, the recipient of numerous honorary degrees, a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize-in short, someone who should be able to understand how crucial their research is-and he was calling it comparatively unimportant. Later, as a philosophy graduate student at Harvard, he extended his "Catholic" education by serving as teaching assistant to the great English historian Christopher Dawson, author of Progress and Religion, among many other books.\n We need the right image because in confronting our mortality we are dealing with a level of consciousness that is "deeper than that which can be wholl...
-
After five years and more than 4,000 U.S. deaths there, we all know better than to believe there's an easy way out.
TO APPRECIATE the debate over U.S. policy toward Iraq this week, first you have to understand the different agendas of the players. And then try to move beyond those agendas.
-
As in any sport during any year, local high school girls basketball teams are dealing with the turnover from the last graduating class.
Several players that had large roles last season are now gone, opening the door for newcomers as the season tips off. Today is the first date schools may schedule games.