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(09/22/17 3:53am)
The City of Charlottesville put orange fencing and “No Trespassing” signs around the statues of Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson in downtown Charlottesville Tuesday to prevent the repeated removal of the black shrouds covering the statues.
(09/15/17 3:53am)
The full Board of Visitors convened at 8 a.m. Thursday morning to discuss, among other things, the University’s response to two protests that occurred on Grounds in the past month.
(09/14/17 6:11am)
Just over a month has passed since the events of Aug. 11 and 12, when white nationalist groups descended on Charlottesville.
(09/01/17 9:39pm)
Students and some members of the Charlottesville community gathered in Wilson Hall Thursday night for Disorientation #1: Defending Charlottesville from Fascism. A gathering on the steps of the Rotunda following the presentation ended with the arrival of University police due to a verbal confrontation between demonstrators and other students.
(08/31/17 7:38am)
University President Teresa Sullivan sat down for 50-minute interview with The Cavalier Daily Tuesday morning to address questions and criticisms related to the University’s response to events in Charlottesville on Aug. 11 and 12.
(08/31/17 7:33am)
On the evening of Aug. 21, the Black Student Alliance was joined by hundreds of students and community members in a peaceful march from the amphitheatre to the Thomas Jefferson statue north of the Rotunda to protest recent white nationalist events.
(08/31/17 7:25am)
The University’s School of Engineering and Applied Science has revived its year-long speaker series, the Excellence Through Diversity Distinguished Learning Series, set to begin Sept. 8.
(09/01/17 3:04am)
The white supremacist rallies of Aug. 11 and 12 brought, with shock and violence, scenes of a city and nation in disrepair. The tensions at the heart of Charlottesville, between its residents and the University they host, between its longstanding constituents and its oblivious gentrifiers, between its bloodied history and its liberal identity, had settled into an uneasy inertia. The Robert E. Lee statue would go and the parks would be renamed, but the waiting list for affordable housing would remain just as long and neighborhoods just as segregated. The terrorism Charlottesville suffered has reinvigorated those strains, and in turn demands that we reflect on what we can do to ease them.
(08/31/17 7:19am)
The “Unite the Right” rally that took place in Charlottesville on Aug. 12 sparked violence — including a deadly car attack — which required a coordinated effort of many medical agencies.
(08/22/17 3:44pm)
Several University political and student advocacy groups say they wished they would have been more prepared to deal with last weekend’s protests and violence by white supremacist groups during the “Unite the Right” rally held in downtown Charlottesville. The events have prompted a strong consideration for creating better safety policies.
(08/22/17 5:18am)
Counter-protesters demonstrated that hate would not go unanswered at the July 14 KKK rally.
(08/10/17 3:08am)
With the Aug. 12 “Unite the Right” rally only a few days away, conflict has risen between the City of Charlottesville and the rally’s organizer over where the event can legally be held. The American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Virginia and The Rutherford Institute became involved Tuesday after sending a letter addressing the issue to members of the Charlottesville City Council and the city manager.