Budget cuts could multiply in future years
As the commonwealth's financial condition continues to worsen, the University might be forced to cut its budget by upward of 20 percent in each of the next two years.
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As the commonwealth's financial condition continues to worsen, the University might be forced to cut its budget by upward of 20 percent in each of the next two years.
The Virginia Department of Transportation declared the University's first study of the traffic effects of the proposed parking garage at the corner of Emmet Street and Ivy Road to be insufficient.
Two distinct yet related questions shape the future of affirmative action - whether the practice will continue and whether the practice should continue.
Affirmative action so often is construed as a black and white issue that the complexities of the practice often are ignored. As well as affecting blacks and whites, affirmative action programs can be applied to other racial groups or to distinctions based on gender, class, geography or a myriad of other factors.
While legal challenges progress against affirmative action, the policy still remains a very real part of the University, affecting both student admissions and faculty recruitment.
This is the first of four articles in a bi-weekly series on affirmative action.
Potential 2004 presidential candidate Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., yesterday discussed civil liberties issues in wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
A small fire in the roofing of Maury Hall caused students and faculty to evacuate the building yesterday afternoon.
Last week a group of 5,228 students became the 183rd class admitted to the University. While these students now hold their fates in their own hands and can mull their decisions in peace, the fates of the thousands of future University applicants rests on the resolution of a variety of issues related to college and university admissions.
On the steps of the Rotunda on Saturday, about 50 protesters gathered to demand the University pay subcontracted workers a "living wage." This is an issue the Board of Visitors may address at its next meeting.
In spite of the nation's economic recovery, this year's class of college graduates faces a barren job market that could prove the worst in almost a decade.
Commonwealth Attorney David Chapman decided last week not to seek hate crime charges against a group of Charlottesville High School students accused of perpetrating a series of assaults against University students occurring between last September and this January.
University graduate students voted last week to form a student union and will vote next week on whether to affiliate with a larger professional union.
University President John T. Casteen III named Dr. Arthur "Tim" Garson Jr. the University's new vice president and dean of the School of Medicine yesterday afternoon.
While students at Virginia's colleges and universities face mounting tuition costs, institutions of higher education all over the country also are charging their students more money to attend school.
A group of aspiring teachers is helping children in need and getting a jump-start on their careers in the process.
Following a string of erroneous bomb threats on University buildings, the administration has revised and clarified its policies for such situations.
For many students, it means no more shortcuts. The walkway between Clemons Library and Peabody Hall will be blocked for the next two years, as construction proceeds on the new special collections library to replace Miller Hall.
Starting today, third-year college students Steven Reinemund and Micah Schwartz square off in an election for Student Council President for the second time in the last week.
University students have bought acclaimed performing artist Dave Matthews' music for years - now Matthews decided to buy from the University.