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SessionsBy Year

Sports Podcast

By: Marinela Rivas

PEACE, LOVE, AND BLACK RESTAURANT WEEK

By Savannah Grooms                                                              April 22, 2023 From crispy fried chicken wings...

Kenneth Blakeney is Building a Winning Culture at Howard University

By: Brett Fauntroy Kenneth Blakeney has managed to succeed at...

Books About Books Trendy With Time-Strapped Teens

By Jennifer Kuo UJW ROCKVILLE, Md. - Early one morning in the advanced-placement English Literature class at Thomas S. Wootton High School, Jay Mottla, a senior, sits at his desk, opens his book and begins reading Crime and Punishment. But instead of the 560 pages that students around him are reading, Mottla reads the abbreviated version of 99 pages published by SparkNotes.

Reality TV Virtually a Habit

By Juliana Sesay UJW SILVER SPRING, Md. - Everywhere you turn, there is a new reality series popping up on television. If the trials of aspiring chefs tickle your fancy, all you have to do is flip to FOX 5's Hell's Kitchen. On ABC, you can watch British women transform stubborn and unruly children into obedient little kids on Supernanny. Or perhaps, the saga of a group of young adults living together is your ideal TV show.

Internet, Recession Put Newspapers in Harm’s Way

By Hojung Deena Lee UJW ELLICOTT CITY, Md. -- The sci-fi movie, I Am Legend, starring Oscar-winning actor Will Smith, might not be so unrealistic anymore. At least not at the offices of The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, the city's oldest newspaper that ended its 146-year print history on March 17, but continues its online presence. The offices overlook the tranquil, barren vista of the Puget Sound River, which also seems to pervade inside the offices of the Post-Intelligencer, where rows of empty desks fill the cavernous newsroom.

Students Dancing Around Cost of Prom

By Leslie Redmond UJW WASHINGTON -- The high school prom is normally a moment students won't forget. But due to the poor economy, prom fees will be what seniors remember at McKinley Technology High School. Normally, students go all out to get sharp and dress to impress at the prom. But some students are playing it close to the vest this year because the affair can be an expensive one once you figure in the cost of a ticket, clothes and transportation to the Camelot ballroom in Upper Marlboro, Md.

Nutrition Is Key to Athletes’ Output

By Campbell Burr UJW WASHINGTON -- Aching legs, sweat, exhaustion. The University of Connecticut Huskies and the Syracuse University Orange men's basketball teams battle in the sixth overtime, three hours and 46 minutes after tip off of the Big East Tournament quarterfinal in March. At 1:22 a.m., Syracuse wins, ending the longest game in Big East Tournament history. How did underdog, Syracuse, pull 10 points ahead at the end of the game? Some credit the team trainers. Others praise the coach. But few consider a backbone of the team: the nutritionist.