College Week draws faculty, students
This week, the Arts & Sciences Council is sponsoring College Week, an annual week of free events for students in the College of Arts & Sciences.
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This week, the Arts & Sciences Council is sponsoring College Week, an annual week of free events for students in the College of Arts & Sciences.
Two members of the Faculty Senate spoke at Sunday's Honor Committee meeting to promote a faculty survey on the honor system.
At their meeting last night, the Honor Committee announced its new Executive Committee for the 2005-2006 school year.
The University volunteered last week to pay a percentage of the cleanup costs for the Ivy Road Landfill, citing its waste contributions and ending a standoff between the City of Charlottesville and the County of Albemarle over the funding of the project.
Four assaults were reported in the University area over the weekend, three of which involved University students.
At last night's meeting, the Honor Committee discussed the issue and implications of the consensus clause, a referendum on the spring ballot.
The Honor Committee hosted a forum on Minorities and Honor last night, kicking off the weeklong Honor Forum to raise awareness of Honor issues before spring elections.
Student Council President Noah Sullivan spoke to the University Judiciary Committee last night advocating a proposed ballot referendum on hate crimes.
Student Council is expected to vote tonight on a spring ballot referendum to add a provision for hate crimes sanctioning to the University Judicial Committee Standards of Conduct.
The Honor Committee voted last night for a resolution to support debate on the sanction reform referendum expected on the spring election ballot.
The Board of Visitors voted Friday to change the Standards of Conduct of the University Judiciary Committee.
The fight to put sanction reform referenda on the spring ballot is heating up.
Student Council introduced three possible referenda last night that will be voted on at next week's meeting. If passed they will be placed on the spring ballot to be voted on by the entire student body.
The Honor Committee voted against a resolution to place a "forgiveness clause" on the spring ballot last night. The motion failed with a vote of 7-15 with one abstention.
The College Board announced yesterday that the number of students who passed an AP exam has risen in all 50 states.
At the conclusion of this year's formal recruitment, the Inter-Sorority Council reported a substantial increase in bid acceptance.
Residents of Echols were forced to evacuate their residence hall at 2:57 a.m. yesterday morning after a fire alarm sounded. They were permitted to return to their rooms around 3:40 a.m., although residents said they were allowed into the Chemistry Building lobby after about 10 minutes in the cold.
Imagine winning an iPod for turning over a pack of cigarettes, or getting a free massage for promising to help a friend quit smoking. For anyone who walked down the Lawn yesterday, these anti-smoking incentives were a reality.
The Virginia Baptists may sell the Baptist Student Center on the corner of Jefferson Park Avenue and Brandon Avenue.
Tickets went on sale yesterday for the 17th Annual Virginia Film Festival, which begins Oct. 28 and runs through Oct. 31.