University reinstates library hours
After reducing library hours early this semester because of the budget cuts, the University will restore hours to both Alderman and Clemons libraries, University Librarian Karin Wittenborg announced yesterday.
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After reducing library hours early this semester because of the budget cuts, the University will restore hours to both Alderman and Clemons libraries, University Librarian Karin Wittenborg announced yesterday.
A break-in on the fourth and fifth floors of Cabell Hall over the weekend forced police officers to close the top two floors of the building yesterday morning while they investigated the damages.
At their annual retreat Friday in the Alumni Hall Ballroom, the Faculty Senate discussed the consequences and some potential responses to the budget crisis. Before adjournment, College Dean Edward L. Ayers said the University could best defeat the budget crisis through a large tuition increase.
In the surge of patriotism following the terrorist attacks, in which American flags seemed to blossom in car windows and storefronts like wildflowers, the nation was forced to revise its self-image, that once promised the country could never be harmed.
After 25 years of collaboration with African universities, the University won recognition from the United States delegation to a United Nations summit devoted to international environmental issues.
First-year dormitories came alive Saturday as over 3,000 first-year students, along with parents and siblings, descended upon Charlottesville for Move-In Day.
Gloomy budget forecasts and more grim fiscal news from Gov. Mark R. Warner hit home August 19 when University Librarian Karen Wittenborg announced that University libraries are reducing staff and cutting back hours to accommodate further budget cuts.
This semester, the federal government has mandated that colleges and technical schools across the country enter all new international students into an internet-based data system.
As part of the July 19 closing ceremony that concluded their six-week program, the Medical Academic Achievement Program, which prepares talented minority undergraduates from across the country for medical school, donated $512 to the Charlottesville Free Clinic.
The vacuum left by Vance Wilkins' resignation from the Virginia House speakership will likely be filled by William Howell, R-Stafford, who graduated from the University Law School in 1967.
A former University Medical Center employee, convicted of sexually assaulting two patients while on duty in the psychiatric ward in April and May of 2001, was sentenced to 10 years in prison Tuesday morning.
Thirty rising high school seniors from across the country received a lecture on business ethics from Darden Prof. Alexander B. Horniman yesterday as part of a three-week program that brings minority students to study at university business schools.
In the wake of the resignation of Virginia House Speaker Vance Wilkins Jr., Richmond lawmakers have become more outspoken about the issue of sexual harassment.
A collection of original notes taken by early American writer Washington Irving have found a new home in the University's Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library.
The Board of Visitors unanimously approved a $1.44 billion budget for the 2002-03 fiscal year at its June meeting, in spite of a significant decrease in state funding.
Six of the teenagers convicted of carrying out assaults on University students received sentences from Charlottesville Juvenile Judge Susan L. Whitlock last Tuesday, bringing some closure to the attacks which have exacerbated tensions between the city and the University in recent months.
Three University students are under investigation for allegedly planting a mailbox bomb on Bruce Ave. in Charlottesville early Sunday, May 5.
As part of an ongoing attempt to address possible weaknesses in the nation's defense against terrorism, President Bush's top computer-security adviser Richard A. Clarke called on universities to help develop strategies for protecting the nation's technology systems.
Protesters flocked to downtown Washington, D.C., by the thousands Saturday afternoon to bring national attention to several causes, including the plight of Palestinians in the Middle East.
The Black Voices vocal group withdrew its request for financial support from the Student Activities Fund at the Student Council meeting Tuesday evening after receiving notice that the appropriations committee had introduced a bill to audit the group's finances.