The Cavalier Daily elects editors for the 134th term
The Cavalier Daily held its 134th term elections Monday, selecting third-year College student Ava MacBlane as the paper’s next editor-in-chief in an uncontested election.
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The Cavalier Daily held its 134th term elections Monday, selecting third-year College student Ava MacBlane as the paper’s next editor-in-chief in an uncontested election.
Content warning: this article contains specific details related to Sunday’s incident and may be triggering for some readers.
Support for the University community has poured in from local, state and national politicians and other universities following Sunday’s fatal shooting.
Events continue to be hosted at the former houses of Kappa Alpha and Phi Gamma Delta following the termination of both groups’ Fraternal Organization Agreements with the University. Kappa Alpha and its national headquarters made the decision to operate independently of the University, while residents of the Phi Gamma Delta house have been hosting events under the name “Club 128” after national headquarters revoked the chapter’s charter.
The Center for Politics held a conference Friday to discuss the state of democracy five years after the events of Aug. 11 and 12, 2017 and one year after the insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va), shared his thoughts on faith and threats to democracy before honoring U.S. Capitol and D.C. Metropolitan police officers who received the first-ever Defender of Democracy awards.
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The Charlottesville Police Department responded to an unspecified incident Monday at 8:32 p.m. in the 100 block of 14 Street, per a community alert sent by Timothy Longo, chief of the University Police Department and vice president for security and safety.
Student Council held its first meeting of the fall semester Tuesday. The group heard updates related to funding reform and support and voted to table an amendment to the 2022 summer budget.
The President’s Opening Convocation and Honor Induction took place in John Paul Jones Arena Sunday after the event was moved inside due to inclement weather. The Class of 2026 and transfer students heard from Class of 1994 alumnus Michael Lenox, Tayloe Murphy, professor of business administration and senior associate dean and chief strategy officer, University President Jim Ryan and several other leaders in the University community.
Senior U.S. District Judge Norman Moon granted the University’s motion for a summary judgment in the case of Kieran Ravi Bhattacharya v. James B. Murray, Jr., et al., Friday. Former medical student Kieran Bhattacharya was dismissed from the University’s School of Medicine in 2018 and later sued the school claiming he was dismissed for asking Beverly Colwell Adams — then-assistant dean of students and associate professor of psychology — several questions about whether microaggressions could only be directed toward members of a marginalized group at a panel event.
Nearly four years after the violence of the “Unite the Right” rally, Charlottesville City Council removed the Robert E. Lee statue standing in the center of Charlottesville’s Emancipation Park — now, the community grapples with the question of what should become of those 1,100 pounds of bronze.
After completing a search for a new dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, the University announced Thursday that Prof. Christa Acampora will fill the position beginning Sept. 1. Acampora succeeds Provost Ian Baucom in the role and replaces Interim Dean David Hill.
The Charlottesville Police Department responded to a shots fired incident Sunday at 3:52 a.m. in the area of 14th Street NW and 13th Street NW, per a community alert sent by Timothy Longo, chief of the University Police Department and vice president for security and safety.
University President Jim Ryan responded to the recent mass shootings in Buffalo, New York, Laguna Woods, California and Uvalde, Texas in a tweet Thursday morning. In the statement, Ryan emphasized that these incidents should not be accepted as a normal occurrence and urged members of the University community to check in with colleagues and friends.
A jury found George Huguely liable May 2 for $15 million in compensatory damages and other punitive damages in the murder of Virginia women’s lacrosse player Yeardley Love. Love’s mother Sharon Love and sister Lexie Love Hodges will each receive $7.5 million in damages.
The University announced the names of three keynote speakers for Finals Weekend Monday. Former basketball player Ralph Sampson will speak at Valedictory Exercises May 20, while Claudrena Harold, chair of the history department, and Dr. Taison Bell, assistant professor of pulmonary and critical care medicine, infectious diseases and international health and director of the medical intensive care unit at U.Va. Health, will speak at Final Exercises May 21 and 22.
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Student Council voted to pass SR22-04, a resolution denouncing the University’s lifting of certain indoor mask mandates, and SR22-05, a resolution in support of the referendum that would reform the Honor Committee’s single-sanction policy, at its meeting Tuesday night. The representative body also heard executive updates on a variety of topics ranging from spring break transportation and support to the search for a new Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences.
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