Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Cavalier Daily's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
68 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(04/19/19 9:24pm)
Students stopped by South Lawn over the course of three hours Thursday afternoon to participate in a “Mental Health on the Lawn” event. Hosted by Madison House’s Help Line, If You’re Reading This and National Alliance on Mental Illness on Grounds — three student organizations dedicated to providing students with the resources and help they need for a wide variety of situations relating to mental health and mental illness — the event focused on promoting a healthy and transparent mental health culture on Grounds.
(04/15/19 2:14am)
Six residents in Bice House — an on-Grounds upperclass housing complex located off of Brandon Avenue — were notified early Sunday morning that they would be temporarily displaced following a fire at the complex Saturday evening.
(04/09/19 9:38pm)
The McIntire Department of Art — in conjunction with the University’s Institute of Humanities and Global Cultures, the University’s Center for Global Inquiry and Innovation, the Center for the Americas and the Page-Barbour Fund for Interdisciplinary Scholarship — held a symposium on Grounds Friday and Saturday discussing “Decolonizing the Digital Humanities: Indigenous Arts, Histories, and Knowledges From The Material to the Screen.”
(04/03/19 7:12pm)
Fourth-year University students received an email Tuesday from Trinity Irish Pub — a popular off-Grounds bar and restaurant where many students view Virginia sports games — announcing that viewership of the men’s basketball Final Four game against Auburn on Saturday evening will be limited to viewers who are 21 and older and pay in advance for a food and drink package.
(03/08/19 3:16pm)
La Sociedad de La Gente — an anonymous student group comprised of Hispanic and Latinx University students and their allies — circulated an open letter this week addressed to the Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life condemning their response to recent events of cultural appropriation in Greek chapters on Grounds. This statement follows the publication of an open letter last month from Native American Student Union entitled “Not Your Costume.”
(03/01/19 7:04pm)
University President Jim Ryan’s community working group — commissioned by Ryan in October 2018 to strengthen historically strained ties between the Charlottesville community and the University by identifying the area’s most pressing issues — released a report Friday morning naming jobs and wages as its top priority issue for the University to address in recent years.
(02/25/19 4:09am)
The Jefferson School African American Heritage Center was overflowing Friday evening with Charlottesville residents for a forum on race, city planning and affordable housing in the city.
(03/07/19 3:49am)
In downtown Charlottesville, The Haven stands tall as an inviting sanctuary to all those who come across it. Outside the church building converted to a homeless shelter, a sign reads, “Everyone needs a place to start.” Inside, dozens of individuals are resting in pews or downstairs enjoying a meal. The Haven serves as a shelter for the homeless population of Charlottesville, who may otherwise have nowhere else to turn to for assistance.
(02/04/19 2:47am)
The Kappa Sigma fraternity and the Zeta Tau Alpha sorority are facing criticism over recent photographs that depict members of each chapter engaged in alleged cultural appropriation during chapter-sponsored events.
(01/31/19 8:20pm)
The U.Va. Department of Student Health announced in a University-wide email Tuesday evening that a norovirus outbreak has occurred at the University.
(01/24/19 4:06am)
The arrival of University President Jim Ryan on Grounds last August brought a number of initiatives to the University community, ranging from early morning runs throughout Grounds to a promise during his inauguration on Oct. 19 that in-state students from families with annual incomes under $80,000 would be able to attend the University tuition-free.
(12/07/18 10:27pm)
James Alex Fields Jr. — the man accused of driving a car into a crowd of people during the white supremacist Unite the Right rally in downtown Charlottesville in August 2017, killing one and injuring dozens more — was found guilty of one count of first-degree murder, five counts of aggravated malicious wounding, one count of hit and run and three counts of malicious wounding.
(11/07/18 6:58am)
After a national Democratic win in the House of Representatives and Republican win in the U.S. Senate, students gave feedback about local race results at election watch parties.
(11/02/18 11:09pm)
The executive board of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity issued a statement Friday apologizing for being “unable to provide a welcoming space to all attendees” during a party hosted Oct. 27 by the I.M.P. Society and the Student Hip-Hop Organization at the Beta house.
(10/31/18 4:49am)
In a joint statement released Tuesday morning, the I.M.P Society and the Student Hip Hop Organization apologized for and denounced alleged “blatant discrimination and violence” at a party hosted by both organizations Saturday night at the Beta Theta Pi fraternity house.
(10/18/18 11:48pm)
In a University-wide email sent Thursday evening, the University administration condemned racial slurs and hate speech directed towards Latinx and other minority students on Grounds during the day Thursday.
(10/19/18 5:40am)
Habitat for Humanity of Greater Charlottesville is currently in the process of pursuing de-gentrification in and around the Charlottesville metropolitan area, which includes surrounding Albemarle County as well as nearby Fluvanna, Greene and Nelson Counties.
(10/25/18 2:47am)
Catalyzed by the white supremacist rallies in August 2017, the City of Charlottesville has faced a reckoning for a wide variety of racial disparities. Among demands to address racial housing inequities throughout the city, several anti-racist and housing justice advocates are calling for a $50 million bond to fund affordable and public housing needs in the area.
(09/20/18 3:44am)
As first-year students begin to find their rhythm in dorms and upperclassmen learn how to adjust to the responsibilities that come with a house or apartment, the pressures of finding housing for the next academic year have slowly started to seep into those already novel and complex routines.
(09/14/18 2:04pm)
In a meeting of the full Board of Visitors Wednesday afternoon in the Rotunda, Board members approved three new degree programs in the College and Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. The meeting took place during a condensed session of the Board of Visitors — initially intended to be a three-day collection of committee meetings — due to the uncertainty surrounding Hurricane Florence.