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
74 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(09/05/06 4:00am)
In an honor trial in January, former University student Stephanie Garrison was found guilty of lying. The case was initiated by Gavin Reddick, vice chair for sanctions for the University Judiciary Committee, who accused her of lying about completing her UJC sanctions for an underage drinking incident that occurred in March 2005, during her third year.
(09/04/06 4:00am)
Last May, Stephanie Garrison walked the Lawn during final exercises with the Class of 2006. But unlike the rest of her classmates, Garrison did not receive her diploma, even though she completed coursework for an undergraduate degree in politics.
(04/25/05 4:00am)
With the onset of spring and the coming of warm weather, many students will reach for a cool beverage to quench their thirst as temperatures rise in Charlottesville. And while the perpetual Coke vs. Pepsi debate found its way to the spring ballot this semester with a referendum about possibly switching soft-drink providers at the University, the question arises: Are students drinking enough water?
(02/23/05 5:00am)
According to its constitution, the Honor Committee can hear cases of lying, cheating and stealing at the University. According to its Standards of Conduct, so can the University Judiciary Committee.
(01/25/05 5:00am)
The Honor Committee heard two opposing proposals on the issue of sanction reform at its meeting Sunday night.
(01/21/05 5:00am)
University student groups and local businesses are taking part in the global tsunami relief effort by organizing fundraising events on Grounds and in the Charlottesville community.
(12/08/04 5:00am)
After being fired from his English teaching position for taking an unauthorized field trip with his detective fiction class earlier in the semester, graduate Arts and Sciences student Justin Gifford is back in the game, gearing up to serve as a teaching assistant for Shakespeare II next semester.
(12/06/04 5:00am)
As the single sanction debate heats up on Grounds, students now can go online to read about and discuss the issue through a new Web site sponsored by the Honor Committee.
(12/03/04 5:00am)
This April, the University will host the first-ever international undergraduate research conference.
(12/01/04 5:00am)
With obesity and obesity-related diseases on the rise, the United States is facing a national health crisis, and the issue especially is hitting home in Virginia, Gov. Mark R. Warner said yesterday in a speech concluding the two-day Governor's Summit on Healthy Virginians held at the University.
(11/23/04 5:00am)
In response to complaints from students and faculty about unwanted e-mails infiltrating their mailboxes, ITC recently launched a new ad campaign to raise awareness about its spam-filtering systems.
(11/17/04 5:00am)
Since its creation in 1842, the honor system has employed the single sanction of expulsion to uphold the highest standard of academic integrity at the University. Recently, however, the sanction has come under fire as the subject of intense debate that has divided the University community into pro- and anti-sanction camps.
(11/15/04 5:00am)
The Faculty Senate Academic Affairs Committee presented its "Faculty Perspectives on the Honor System" report to the Honor Committee last night to keep the University community apprised of faculty members' concerns with honor.
(11/09/04 5:00am)
Members of the Sanction Reform Committee presented opposing ideas for reform at Sunday night's Honor Committee meeting.
(11/08/04 5:00am)
The prosecution introduced the bulk of its forensic evidence in addition to key witness testimony on Friday in the second-degree murder trial of former University student Andrew Alston. Alston is accused of second-degree murder in the Nov. 8, 2003 stabbing death of Charlottesville resident Walker Sisk.
(11/05/04 5:00am)
A former University student who was found guilty of an honor offense and expelled from the University has filed a complaint against the Honor Committee, alleging multiple counts of unfairness in his trial.
(11/01/04 5:00am)
Disparate rates of case initiations against certain groups of students but an unbiased trial process still result in a disproportionate number of international students, African-American students, male students and athletes being dismissed from the University for honor offenses, according to a Faculty Advisory Committee report released by the Honor Committee last night.
(10/25/04 4:00am)
A member of the University Judiciary Committee announced his resignation over the weekend because of what he saw as misconduct by an ad hoc committee.
(10/22/04 4:00am)
Red states, blue states. Republicans and Democrats. Fox News versus CNN. In the final weeks of the presidential race, the United States of America seems anything but united.
(10/18/04 4:00am)
The Academical Village stands as a symbol of Thomas Jefferson's ideal of faculty and student collaboration. That spirit has now expanded to the Architecture School, thanks to the creation of two new outdoor classrooms at Campbell Hall, planned and constructed by a professor and his students.