Creigh Deeds speaks on personal experience with mental health
As a part of National Suicide Prevention Week, Virginia State Sen. Creigh Deeds (D-Bath) gave a lecture Thursday evening concerning mental health awareness and legislation.
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As a part of National Suicide Prevention Week, Virginia State Sen. Creigh Deeds (D-Bath) gave a lecture Thursday evening concerning mental health awareness and legislation.
In the upcoming months, the Board of Visitors will be considering making changes to the Emmet/Ivy corridor. The discussion — which may begin as early as next week’s Board of Visitors meeting — will include plans to improve the area at the entrance of the University.
More than 100 students attended U.Va. Students United’s event “Disorientation” at OpenGrounds Thursday night. The event was taglined “New Rotunda, same old white supremacy” and was intended to “[expose] the real U.Va.”
In anticipation of a new football season beginning Saturday, the Athletics Department is revamping the Sabre Points Reward system.
Jens Soering, a former University student, is petitioning Gov. Terry McAuliffe to grant him an absolute pardon in light of new DNA evidence he says he believes proves his innocence. Soering is currently serving two life sentences for the 1985 murders of his ex-girlfriend’s parents, Derek and Nancy Haysom.
Block Party attendance has gone down from last year — and the behavior of attendees has generally improved, although the number of summonses increased from the 2015 Block Party, according to the Charlottesville Police Department.
After a record-setting number of applications, 3,706 first-year students will be welcomed to Grounds this fall as part of the Class of 2020.
This year, the University community felt much grief at the loss of eight students — Margaret Lowe, Kurt Hilburger, Paul Kim, John Paul Popovich, Ceili Leahy, Quentin Alcorn, Derek Sousa and Juliana Porter. Even though these students have died, their memory and legacy lives on in the University community.
The University is now requiring students to change their account passwords annually.
Messages targeting racial minorities and transgender individuals were chalked on Grounds in the early hours of April 18, raising questions about First Amendment rights and free speech on college campuses.
A panel-style event titled “Incarceration Nation” was hosted by the Young Americans for Liberty April 13. The event discussed problems with incarceration in the United States and possible reforms for these issues.
During the fall and spring semesters, students are given the opportunity to take a variety of courses with the University’s founder Thomas Jefferson as the center of the class’s curriculum.
Caryl Phillips, an internationally-known writer, will arrive at the University next week for a two-week stay as Kapnick Distinguished Writer-in-Residence.
Four people were shot at the Greyhound Bus Station in Richmond on Thursday afternoon. One of the victims, Virginia State Police trooper Chad P. Dermyer, died Thursday after suffering life-threatening injuries.
Attorney John Davis and the Williams Mullen law firm have been removed from fourth-year College student Martese Johnson’s case against the Virginia Department of Alcohol Beverage Control.
A new program allowing inmates in Virginia state prisons to receive college credit for courses taken while incarcerated was announced by Gov. Terry McAuliffe March 17.
President Barack Obama announced his nomination of Judge Merrick Garland to fill the Supreme Court vacancy left by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia March 16.
The Batten School held a forum for candidates running for the fifth district congressional seat Wednesday night.
The Virginia General Assembly elected Judge Stephen R. McCullough to the Virginia Supreme Court March 10. McCullough was previously a judge in the State Court of Appeals.
The Memorialization for Enslaved Laborers, or MEL, held an event Wednesday in Newcomb Hall to raise awareness of the organization.