ANOTHER FOUR YEARS: Pres. Obama earns second term
By 11:20 p.m. Tuesday, the major media networks declared President Barack Obama the winner of Ohio and the 2012 presidential election. Obama will be sworn into his second term Jan. 20, 2013.
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By 11:20 p.m. Tuesday, the major media networks declared President Barack Obama the winner of Ohio and the 2012 presidential election. Obama will be sworn into his second term Jan. 20, 2013.
By 11:20p.m. on Tuesday night, the major networks declared current President Barack Obama the winner of Ohio and the 2012 Presidential election. Obama will be sworn into his second term on January 20, 2013.
Youth are likely to prefer President Barack Obama to Republican challenger Mitt Romney regardless of college experience, according to a report released last week by researchers at Tufts University.
The worst of Hurricane Sandy is yet to come for the vast majority of Virginia residents, Gov. Bob McDonnell said during a press conference in Richmond Monday afternoon.
Internet platforms such as Twitter and Facebook are not just social tools anymore, a survey released Friday indicates. A third of college and university faculty are now using social media in the classroom, according to the survey.
Charlottesville City Council Monday evening unanimously endorsed a resolution that would allow Jason Vandever, the chief deputy city treasurer who is currently the acting city treasurer, to continue in his post through the November 2013 elections.
In a one-hour debate Monday evening addressing everything from job creation to the upcoming Supreme Court decision on affirmative action, former Democratic Gov. Tim Kaine and former Republican Gov. George Allen hardly paused to catch their breaths between attack lines.
In a one-hour debate Monday evening addressing everything from job creation to the upcoming Supreme Court decision on affirmative action, former Democratic Gov. Tim Kaine and former Republican Sen. George Allen hardly paused to catch their breaths between attack lines.
The Trump Organization, owned and operated by celebrity CEO Donald Trump, purchased Albemarle Mansion last week.
During a debate last week with former Sen. George Allen, R-Va., the first in the campaign for Sen. Jim Webb’s seat, former Gov. Tim Kaine, a Democrat, said he would consider a “minimum tax level” if it were proposed by another senator.
The One Love Foundation, which seeks to uphold the memory of former University student Yeardley Love, last week unveiled a new app to help identify the risk of intimate partner violence.
Student Council received 368 applications for positions on 16 different committees, 26 fewer than last year’s record-breaking fall recruitment.
Research funding at the University, already under strain, stands imperiled by looming federal budget cuts. Automatic cuts in federal spending to the tune of $1.2 trillion between 2013 and 2021 will take effect in January unless Congress can reach a bipartisan compromise on a deficit reduction plan.
The National Science Foundation has awarded the University a five-year, $18.5 million grant to fund a research center for self-powered health devices in partnership with three other schools, the University announced last week in a press release. The center will be headquartered at N.C. State.
The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, a group that promotes free speech on college campuses, Thursday named the University among the top seven colleges in America for free speech.
U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan last week reinstated a fine against Virginia Tech for failing to notify students in a timely manner about the 2007 campus massacre.
A Virginia voter identification law set to take effect this fall will likely have a limited effect on the election’s outcome, pundits say. But rules that delay the counting of provisional ballots until days after Election Day could create problems for campaigns and election officials in the commonwealth, which is shaping up to be a battleground state.
President Barack Obama held a phone conference with college media outlets Tuesday from Ames, Iowa, continuing his recent push of aiming campaign resources toward youth voters.
Michael Strine’s resignation earlier this month from his position as the University’s executive vice president and chief operating officer means the University starts the academic year without a chief operating officer or a chief financial officer, as former University CFO Yoke San Reynolds retired in May.
Federal Trade Commissioner J. Thomas Rosch addressed Economics Prof. Kenneth Elzinga's antitrust seminar class yesterday to discuss the responsibilities of the FTC and the impact of the group on U.S. policy.