Study shows diversity lowers drinking
Binge drinking on campuses by the nation's at-risk demographic -- white, underage males -- is lower at schools with greater numbers of women, minority and older students, according to a recent Harvard study.
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Binge drinking on campuses by the nation's at-risk demographic -- white, underage males -- is lower at schools with greater numbers of women, minority and older students, according to a recent Harvard study.
Tie and business suit-clad students with resumes in hand descended on the University's Minority Career Day yesterday.
Long believed to be havens for hippies and bastions of liberalism ringed with high ivory towers, American campuses can no longer be painted with such broad strokes, according to a Harvard study.
Beginning in the spring of 2005, a score of 1600 on the Scholastic Aptitude Test will not be quite the ego trip it is today.
University employees will be asked to choose between two University healthcare plans next month
Student Council Executive Vice President Rabeen Pasha introduced a resolution expressing Council's gratitude to the Seven Society for their donation of $10,777.77 to Council's Homecoming Committee last night.
A bull broke free from a stockyard Saturday, Sept. 27 and roamed the streets of Charlottesville for 10 hours before being subdued the following morning.
University Athletic department officials say they are troubled over rumors that University students are scalping tickets online to Virginia Tech fans for the Nov. 29 Tech-Virginia football game.
Members of the U.S. Congress brought home the bacon for universities and colleges in record-setting amounts during fiscal year 2003.
As taps wafted across the Amphitheater, students rose from their academic pursuits as cadets saluted in remembrance of prisoners of war and those missing in action.
The U.S. Senate approved an amendment Wednesday prohibiting the Bush administration from changing the federal student-aid formula.
The University opened a new wing of Fontaine Research Park yesterday.
Member companies of the Recording Industry Association of America have filed 261 civil lawsuits against "major" Internet file sharers, the trade association announced Monday.
The Charlottesville City Council unanimously passed a resolution Tuesday night calling for the Virginia General Assembly to invest more state funding in public education.
The University of Michigan unveiled a new undergraduate admissions policy Thursday, which both promises substantial changes to the mechanics and structure of undergraduate admissions and a continued commitment to diversity.
Little green men may not be coming, but people across the Commonwealth -- and the world -- are in tizzy about the planet Mars.
A mammoth piece of construction equipment sits in the middle of a deserted lot on Gordon Avenue. Its front window has been knocked out, and until Monday morning, beer cans littered the ground. As of yesterday, no arrests had been made.
The University received a substantial pledge yesterday, totaling $23.5 million, to bolster the University's music program. The pledge from Carl and Hunter Smith will fund in part the construction of a 100,000 square foot performing arts center and endow a concert and marching band.
Coinciding with the announcement of a $1.5 million donation for the creation of a concert and marching band, University officials informed the Pep Band yesterday it will no longer perform at University athletic events.
The University Student Health Center will continue to issue prescriptions for emergency contraceptives despite calls from Del. Robert Marshall R-Manassas urging the Center to discontinue prescribing the medication.