Stock Market | FinancialContent Business Page financialcontent.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from financialcontent.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Dear Jack and Meg,
Oh well. Oh well. Oh well. I’m searching my head for something clever to say.
Don’t go away. I’m sure you’ve heard it all before, but I every time I see you, I wonder why, why since you released your statement on February 2nd calling an end to the thirteen-year odyssey that has been the White Stripes, I’ve been mad with grief. I just don’t know what to do with myself.
You see, I was sitting there in a comfortable chair when my friend first handed me, burnt copies of
Album Review: Red Fang – Murder the Mountains ufvcascade.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ufvcascade.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Thursday, March 10 saw a rare and unusual spectacle at UFV’s student-run restaurant, Casey’s on Campus: a wildly successful student event. Put on by members of Geography 460, the event was an information gathering session for the future UFV-centered area of Abbotsford – or “U District,” – for which planning is currently underway.
The class, a practicum and planning course that meets on Saturdays, is led by professor Cherie Enns, who has also been involved in the university’s global development efforts. A small and dedicated group of students in the class, which includes Scott Varga, Kristin Galcso, Chris Ovens, Milan Francisty, Angeline Mushumanski, Jessica Kugler, were responsible for organizing the event, which registered over 300 attendees – no small feat on a typically disengaged campus.
Print Edition: June 10, 2011
From
The Raw Shark Texts to
Atlas Shrugged and every Chuck Palahniuk novel in between, it’s not too hard these days to find a book (or film) that plays devious tricks on your mind. Rarer is the breed that takes you for that mental rollercoaster ride and then leaves you thinking about the underlying message for days to come. Enter Peter Darbyshire, with his follow up to the critically-acclaimed
Please.
The Warhol Gang takes place in a dystopian future… or wait, does it? The chilling realization of Darbyshire’s novel is that the world he writes about – one of malevolent marketing companies and the brainwashed masses who live to consume – is really not a big stretch from what we experience day to day. Taking a break from reading