Free for (almost) all: Duke gives iPods to incoming freshmen, other schools sign with Napster
Incoming first years who chose Virginia over Duke are no longer missing out on just a superior basketball program.
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Incoming first years who chose Virginia over Duke are no longer missing out on just a superior basketball program.
The loss of someone we love is always difficult to deal with, especially when that person was still on the verge of realizing his potential.
As every incoming first-year student currently making their first stay on Grounds knows, one of the main reasons to attend the University is its distinguished faculty and the access undergraduate students have to it.
HUMAYUN KHAN People who knew 2000 College graduate Humayun Khan through the Army say his heroic death is in line with his theory of service.
JOHN STEVE CATILO Two instructors who worked with fourth-year College student John Steve Catilo in Myo Sim Kendo said he was not only one of their most talented martial arts students, but also one of the most amazing people they knew.
There are any number of reasons to stay in Charlottesville this summer.
Ben McKenzie doesn't have it bad.
As graduating fourth years finally log in to ISIS to complete final registration, they are forced to confront the reality of their final semester. In answer to the question "Do you expect to receive a degree at the end of this semester?" they have to click "Yes."
As the end of the semester approaches, fourth years celebrate -- and mourn -- many "lasts" for their college careers. Last class registration. Last time having an entire month off for the holiday season. Last home football game.
The German phrase is gemeinsamer Raum. In English it means "communal space."
Dangerous Slip-and-Slide "The hurricane was a rather painful experience for me," third-year College student Kate Malay said. For Malay, the usual excitement provided by sliding into Mad Bowl during rain storms took a more agonizing turn.
We've all heard hundreds of stories that started the same way, with a thought we've had ourselves: When I woke up on Sept. 11, 2001, it was just any other day. But by 9:30 a.m., everything had changed.
Jonathan Hilliard has too much light in his room.On one of his four walls, daylight streams through the blinds from outside.On the opposite wall, light shines through from the hallway. And that light doesn't go out at night.
Myra Franklin knows how much work it takes on the part of how many people to get a kid all the way through school and into college.
The first years won't even know how good they've got it.
At the end of the runway, two buff bouncers guard the proverbial silk rope.
First is the call to prayer.On the lawn outside the Hillel Center, Muslim students prostrate themselves before God, facing in the direction of Mecca.
We are on the brink of war. Our country finds itself in a situation that bears striking similarities to circumstances more than a decade ago.
Every single spring break idea we had didn't pan out. No one wanted to shell out the money to leave the country. Even free housing in Maui wasn't enough to convince us to purchase ultra-expensive plane tickets. Then it hit us: when, in the rest of our lives, would we be handed a week off during Mardi Gras? Clearly, New Orleans had to be our spring break destination. Apparently we weren't the only University students who thought so.
With all the hustle and bustle that being a University student entails, it's easy to forget that U.Va. lies in the middle of a wider community with its own momentum and problems.