Bellarmine community finds support in worship service after deceased infant is found on campus.
Bellarmine University has teamed up with the city of Louisville to provide a new, paved path system in Joe Creason Park on Newburg Road across from the new Owsley B. Frazier Stadium.
"Life is all about choices, so is food," said Susan Locke, Bellarmine's General Manager of Food Services. "We can't totally get rid of pizza and hamburgers, but what we can do is offer some healthier choices," Locke elaborated.
Normally, I don't listen to the radio for music; most of it is the banal epitome of mediocrity thrown into a garbage can after rotting for multiple days. Apparently the current reigning number one single, however, is from an eighteen-year-old boy, and has spawned a phenomenon of mutated dance moves and improvised remixes. My roommate played it over the weekend and I couldn't stop laughing.
Five hundred sixty-eight people boarded the Belle of Louisville and zero were driven back to Hilary's last Friday. According the Bellarmine Activities Council (BAC) president, Autumn White, Ball on the Belle 2007 was a success.
Residence Life says that rise in drinking is result of rise in enrollment, and proportionally figures are the same.
The third floor balcony in Anniversary Hall has been put under restriction. It now closes at 11 p.m. every night, weekends included, and does not open until 6 a.m. the next day.
Reports inconclusive in newborn death incident on Bellarmine's campus.
Friday, Oct. 19, Florida Senator, Mel Martinez stepped down from his position as a Republican National Convention (RNC) chairman.
On Oct. 17 Louisville's The Jazz Factory hosted a musical and poetic tribute to the indelible Thomas Merton.
World Bank looks to fully participate in micro-lending, possibly give more.
egregation stirs memories in many older Americans of the infamous Jim Crow Laws enacted during the hundred years following the Civil War. More than 400 state laws, constitutional amendments, and city ordinances legalized racial separation in the U.S. In Kentucky, not unlike other parts of the South, whites and blacks were prohibited from marrying (as late as 1955) or cohabitating, from attending the same school or ever using the same textbooks, and from using the same bathroom facilities, public parks, etc. Segregation in Kentucky was enforced all the way to our doorsteps: statutes barred the building of houses for blacks in white neighborhoods or vice versa and the renting of an apartment or house unless the renter was the same race as the other occupants.