So long to the scandal scarf
I WORE an old scarf around Grounds the other day and no one seemed to care -- this was when I realized that my life is no longer the same.
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I WORE an old scarf around Grounds the other day and no one seemed to care -- this was when I realized that my life is no longer the same.
In the early morning hours of Feb. 26, one year ago today, the University community was rocked by the alleged assault of then-second-year College student and Student Council presidential candidate Daisy Lundy in Poe Alley directly behind the West side of the Lawn.
The National Governors Association announced yesterday that Virginia Gov. Mark R. Warner will serve as the next chair of the association, according to the Associated Press.
Many Charlottesville residences and businesses, such as The Virginian restaurant on the Corner, were forced to cope with water line ruptures last weekend because of cold temperatures which caused pipes to freeze and subsequently burst, as reported in The Daily Progress.
University officials are saying they plan to file charges with the University Judiciary Committee in the wake of hazing allegations against the local Alpha Mu chapter of the Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity.
Over seven months after the alleged assault on then-Student Council Presidential Candidate Daisy Lundy, the Federal Bureau of Investigations continues to investigate the incident as a potential civil rights violation with at least one individual testifying before a federal grand jury.
An off-campus party at Virginia Tech Sunday evening resulted in the death of one student, who fell out of a third-story window. Five other individuals -- including another Tech student -- also were injured when they fell from the same window.
Last week, the Miller Center selected George H. Gilliam to serve as its new director of special programs.
In the wake of Hurricane Isabel, which struck the central East Coast Thursday and Friday, University and Charlottesville community members continue to regroup, as power slowly is restored and debris is cleared from roads and sidewalks.
The symptoms are all too familiar -- itchy eyes, running nose, coughing, sneezing, wheezing -- allergy season is upon us.
Budget woes, slipping national rankings and race relations were among the major issues which University President John T. Casteen III tackled in his annual State of the University Address yesterday in Old Cabell Hall.
Two workers sustained injuries and broken bones yesterday at the construction site of the new Emmet Street parking garage when a concrete slab fell, according to University Police Sgt. Melissa Fielding.
Shortly before 2 a.m. yesterday, Daisy Lundy, second-year College student and Student Council presidential candidate, was assaulted in Poe Alley, directly behind the West side of the Lawn.
Shortly before 2 a.m. this morning, Daisy Lundy, Student Council presidential candidate and second-year College student, was assaulted in Poe Alley, directly behind the West side of the Lawn.
Last night, the executive board of Student Council, under the signature of President Micah Schwartz, sent an e-mail to Elections Committee Chair Julie Teater recommending that the Coalition and the First Year Council be prohibited from endorsing candidates for the upcoming University elections.
As the United States and its allies amass troops in the Persian Gulf, many Americans at home continue to voice opposition to war in various forms.
Despite the University's 48-22 victory over West Virginia University in the inaugural Continental Tire Bowl on Dec. 28, controversy surfaced immediately afterward concerning a contentious half-time performance by the Virginia Pep Band.
Gov. Mark R. Warner announced Monday that he will not cut state funding to Virginia's K-12 public schools in the budget he will unveil to the General Assembly on Dec. 20.
Before going to Scott Stadium and cheering the Cavaliers to victory over Maryland on Saturday, many students participated in events aimed to deter them from drinking the fourth-year fifth.
If living on the Lawn is the ultimate honor at Mr. Jefferson's University, then living on the Range should be its logical counterpart, some graduate students say. But, it's not.