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By Victoria Slater, Managing Editor
Photo by Amy Toland
A packed Wilks Theatre welcomed Nicholas Burns and Francis Townshend to Miami University's fifth biannual Janus Forum Wednesday evening, as they addressed the question: has the Obama foreign policy made us safer from terrorism?
Victoria's Secrets
I spent nine years of my childhood at Saint Agatha School, a tiny redbrick Catholic k-8 institution of about 400 students, comfortably nestled in the pretension and prosperity of Upper Arlington, Ohio. Saint Agatha had all the characteristics of your quintessential Catholic school: God's blessing and judgment, ill-fitting uniforms, brain washing issued after each Morning Prayer.
Family and friends celebrate "the girl who could light up a room"
What were your greatest accomplishments as dean of the College of Arts and Science?
Students weigh in on holiday travel - despite cost and distance, getting home is a priority to most
Dawisha featured above
As I walked down Mother Teresa Boulevard on my last day in Pristina, Kosovo, I was overcome with a wave of bittersweet nostalgia. Eight weeks prior, I walked sluggishly down that same white stone street, jetlagged and disoriented. My mouth was agape as I took in all the new sights and smells, experiencing the gentle bustle of the hot early summer day. The crowded corner coffee shops, the vendors lining the streets with books, sunglasses, and children's toys, the head-scarfed beggars sitting in the shade of the sapling trees, heads bowed in prayer, the statues of revered wartime heroes, the husky Albanian language drifting from the mouths of the people that call this city home, that was all new to me. But in that moment, I ambled down this street with ease, perhaps with the air and language of a foreigner, but with the look of someone who had truly experienced this place. That city had so much soul, and I was not quite sure if I was ready to leave it.
When Miami University alumna Amelia Carpenter ('12) was assigned a story for the Recensio yearbook, she had no idea she would be transformed into Nancy Drew.
Discovering new species of life on Earth seems like something done only in the deepest trenches of the oceans or the highest canopies of untouched jungles. But for Miami students in the Microbiology (MBI) 223 and 224 classes, an undiscovered creature can be found in a place as normal as the soil on which we walk everyday.