“Beware the Ides of March!” is a quote made famous by William Shakespeare in the second scene of his play Julius Caesar.
Welcome to March 20, a day that has seen its fair share of transformative events throughout history. **Scientific Milestone: ...
The local clan of riverside turkey buzzards — or vultures if you want to get persnickety about proper nomenclature — have recently returned to their customary seasonal residence on the wooded island ...
The student-run production — a project of graduating Theatre and Musical Theatre majors — brings Shakespeare’s political tragedy ... pleas to stay home on the Ides of March. Salb’s performance as ...
A new production of Othello foregrounds what the play’s earliest audiences recognized: the psychological costs of war.
The early days of the NCAA tournament have made one thing clear: The theme of this year’s tournament is that chalk wins out.
The phrase “Give me liberty or give me death!” was reportedly first used 250 years ago. Patrick Henry said it in a crowded ...
UCLA earned the No. 1 overall seed over South Carolina in a slight surprise, and the Bruins will enter March Madness as our No. 1. The Bruins have only lost two games all season, and both of those ...
The Vernal or Spring Equinox takes place on March 20th at 5:01 A.M. This is when the Earth’s poles neither tilt toward or ...
The good news is that young people are resisting the giant knives of 10 million cuts deployed by a South African pro-apartheid fellow with his dodgy DOGE.
Never has cleaning been such a fine art. No dust will be left to settle, with galleries in a flurry of activity as they prepare to reopen in just over a week after being closed for more than two ...