Dothan Area Residents Among UA Graduates
The University of Alabama awarded some 2,500 degrees at spring commencement ceremonies held recently in Coleman Coliseum on the Tuscaloosa campus.
The University of Alabama awarded some 2,500 degrees at spring commencement ceremonies held recently in Coleman Coliseum on the Tuscaloosa campus.
The University of Alabama awarded some 2,500 degrees at spring commencement ceremonies held recently in Coleman Coliseum on the Tuscaloosa campus.
The University of Alabama awarded some 2,500 degrees at spring commencement ceremonies held recently in Coleman Coliseum on the Tuscaloosa campus.
The trial of Knight v. Alabama made me think of two stubborn men standing face-to-face on a narrow path blocking all movement from getting around them.
The University of Alabama’s new interdisciplinary transportation and science complex, Shelby Hall, was dedicated today in an afternoon ceremony with special guests U.S. Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.) and his wife, Dr. Annette N. Shelby, in attendance.
A new television episode of Turner South Broadcasting’s series “The Natural South,” will air Saturday, May 29 at 9 a.m., featuring University of Alabama Museum of Natural History volunteer paleontologists at a UA-owned dig site examining Mesozoic-era life, such as the 80-million-year-old gigantic water reptile now on display at the museum.
The University of Alabama College of Engineering’s department of chemical engineering will add a biological emphasis to its bachelor’s degree program beginning immediately. This shift in program emphasis also is reflected in the department’s name change to chemical and biological engineering.
The University of Alabama awarded some 2,500 degrees at spring commencement ceremonies held Monday, May 10, in Coleman Coliseum on the Tuscaloosa campus.
A few weeks ago I picked up USA Today and shook my head as I read that its star foreign correspondent had faked many of his top stories. To say that I was disappointed doesn’t begin to describe my feelings. I hope to be a professional journalist one day, but with two of the nation’s leading newspapers guilty of fabrication, plagiarism and other mortal sins of the craft, I wondered if I’d picked the right career.
Congressman Harold Ford Jr. (D-Tenn.) will deliver The University of Alabama School of Law’s commencement address on Friday, May 14, at 3 p.m. in Coleman Coliseum.