Republicans take control of Congress
Republicans regained complete control of Congress last night, retaining their hold on the House and winning control of the Senate.
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Republicans regained complete control of Congress last night, retaining their hold on the House and winning control of the Senate.
Republicans regained complete control of Congress last night, retaining their hold on the House and winning control of the Senate.
Members of the University community weighed in on next week's elections last night with Politics Prof. Larry J. Sabato and members of the College Republicans and University Democrats. The discussions took place in a lecture hall in the Physics Building.
Black and Hispanic students scored higher on most of Virginia's Standards of Learning exams this year than in the past year and closed the gap with the general student population on some exams.
New regulations forcing radio stations to pay for Web broadcasts went into effect this week, causing many college radio broadcasters to stop playing music over the Internet.
Charlottesville residents might want to hold off on buying camels and cacti after all.
In recent months the Department of Defense has pressured law schools across the country to reverse their policies barring military recruiters from their campuses.
Governor Mark R. Warner announced last week that Virginia retained its optimal AAA bond rating, a development Warner is using to make a case for the passage of the General Obligation Bond.
Anticipating cuts in state funding, University officials announced Oct. 3 they will institute new budget cuts immediately.
While most University students probably attributed the Virginia football team's 0-2 start to turnovers and sloppy defense, the traumatic aftereffects of a massive theft also might have had something to do with it.
The annual U.S. News & World Report College Rankings are one of the most influential and eagerly anticipated evaluations in the higher education world, affecting everything from the decisions of prospective students to the self-esteem of university administrators.
Recent Congressional subcommittee hearings have brought to light the possibility that an indeterminate number of foreign students could be unable to enter U.S. schools next fall because of delays in the activation of a foreign student tracking system.
At a forum at the University's Darden School, former National Security Advisor Brent Scowcroft and former Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger discussed the ramifications of a potential attack on Iraq, though neither of them took a position explicitly for or against an invasion.
Prompted by the current economic malaise and rising tuition costs, student loan default rates rose for the first time in 10 years, U.S. Secretary of Education Rod Paige announced last week.
The House of Representatives passed a bill last week that seeks to encourage more teachers to work in the nation's poorer school districts by waiving aspiring educators' student loan debts.
Fewer foreign students from the Middle East are attending the University and other schools around the country, a decline directly attributable to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and events in their aftermath.
Although a large proportion of American Latinos go to college, many of them do not receive their degrees, according to a report released last week.
Daniela Bell, Graduate Labor Union president, sent University President John T. Casteen III a letter yesterday asking him to reverse library staff cutbacks and reductions in library hours.
As University students and administrators gather in Richmond today in support of a higher education bond referendum on the November ballot, the bonds' prospects are muddled by questions of public apathy and voter turnout.
SAT Math averages up two points to 32-year high