Student Council reopens following forced closure
学生会在遭遇被迫停办后重新开办
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学生会在遭遇被迫停办后重新开办
黑人学生会联合组织批判非裔美籍事务所(OAAA)
《美国新闻与世界报道》:2015年全美最佳综合性大学排名弗吉尼亚大学排名下降
U.Va.公安部门佩戴随身相机:警员整装上阵,治安人员接踵而至
BOV:大学应该如何关注排名?
You’re in college. On top of that, you’re in a few clubs. At the University, that means you probably own dozens of shirts from different organizations and events.
This article is a guest blog post by John Cooper, a 1988 graduate of the Law School and a parent of a Virginia first year.
After a fall semester like the one our community has lived through this year, Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel’s words hit close to home: “In… a free society, only some are guilty, but all are responsible.” As clergy members who work with students at the University, we feel this responsibility too. No one is immune to the effects of sexual violence, which ravages not only individual bodies and lives but also the trust and well-being of communities like ours. This is a cultural problem that affects students and groups throughout the University — Greek life, sports teams, political clubs, Dean’s listers and those of us in religious organizations.
The poncho is a fun and exciting garment resurfacing in this year’s outerwear. Typically worn by women, the traditional poncho, as it originated among South American indigenous groups, is versatile, lightweight, comfortable and gender-neutral.
Fellow Wahoos,
It’s finals time! As the end of the semester swiftly approaches, students are more concerned than ever with what to wear to make a lasting impression before leaving for break. In these stressful last days, there are many different fashion dilemmas to be navigated.
Like virtually all of the UVA community, I am deeply disturbed by the circumstances in which our beloved institution is receiving so much negative publicity throughout the past week.
I am writing to express my support for Dean Nicole Eramo. As someone who has worked with sexual assault survivors in the criminal justice system for years, I have witnessed the effects of her work on behalf of those students taking the brave step to come forward with their experience.
An Open Letter to the Men of the University of Virginia:
Several events will be taking place in upcoming weeks explaining what exactly rape culture is, and we should all strive to attend. In the interim, this is a literary update.
Like most of us at UVa right now, I am angry, disgusted, sad, and frustrated. Among many other things, I have serious concerns about how gang rape charges against a fraternity can be known and not investigated by law enforcement, even if the student decided not to press charges. I find that disturbing and something we need to change institutionally. As a community, we need to make major changes, in both our institutional and peer cultures. Such changes are not easy. They do no come overnight. And they are not made by single actions alone. They take concerted, thoughtful efforts by all of us. I believe that the worst thing we could do as a community is to decide what we think the answer is without listening carefully to the voices of those women who have survived sexual assault in our community, and in our rush to do something, to do things that survivors themselves find counter-productive. For example, at least one of the women quoted in the RS article, herself a survivor, has expressed concern about how her quotes were used in the article and in the article’s portrayal of Dean Eramo, whom, she said, is a strong supporter of survivors. At least one of the student sexual assault support groups on grounds has echoed this sentiment. I hope we can all listen, as well as take action, in the coming days, weeks, months, and years and keep our focus on the (mostly) women who we all should be trying our hardest to support and on changing the cultures, both institutional and peer, that supports the behavior in the first place, as well as that are responding after the fact. If you or someone you know is a survivor of sexual assault and in need of support, the Sexual Assault Resource Agency’s 24-hour hotline is: 434-977-7273.
For several semesters in 2010, 2011, and 2012, I taught a large lecture course, at the University of Virginia, on gender-based violence: SOC 2380. Enrollment for the course varied from 100 to 175 students per term. It was a depressing course to teach, and I was never happy teaching it. And yet, the course seemed to help some of the women students enrolled, some in terms of understanding their situation if they were survivors, and also — a hopeful thing — some in terms of how to avoid becoming victims. After its publication, I taught Liz Seccuro’s memoir as one text, among others, for this class.
It's not enough, Dr. Sullivan.
There is a line in the RS article that haunts me. This one line made me literally ill when I read it. Literally, physically ill.
Dear Students,