The Cavalier Daily
Serving the University Community Since 1890

News


News

Students provide aid in filing taxes

University students are volunteering to help qualifying community members file their federal and state tax returns for free in conjunction with the Internal Revenue Service's Volunteer Income Tax Assistance program. The University's involvement with VITA was revitalized in 2007 when the Law School partnered with Madison House's Creating Assets, Savings and Hope program.


News

Honor names executives

[caption id="attachment_42027" align="alignleft" width="300" caption="After the resignation of former Honor Representative Brandon Kist, third-year College student Ann Marie McKenzie was appointed to the Committee.


News

Professors discuss new media, Google

Three University Media Studies professors spoke about the positive and negative impacts of Google Friday in the panel "Google, the New Media: the Present and Future." The event was part of the 17th annual Virginia Festival of the Book, a program of the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities which lasted from March 16 to 20. Media Studies Prof.


News

Wade Apartments sells buildings

[caption id="attachment_42591" align="alignleft" width="300" caption="Jefferson Commons apartments, located on Jefferson Park Avenue, were sold Tuesday to the company which acquired GrandMarc last October.


News

Police investigate fraternity e-mails

The University Police Department received search warrants Tuesday for e-mail and Home Directory contents for fraternity brothers and a first-year pledge as part of the continued investigation into Zeta Psi fraternity following the pledge's hospitalization March 1.


News

Authors discuss slavery tales

Authors of three books about slave resistance before the Civil War discussed their works at the University Bookstore yesterday at the panel "Fleeing Slavery: Revolts and Escapes." The event was part of the five-day Virginia Festival of the Book, which began Wednesday. About 70 people attended the event, including University students and faculty, as well as Charlottesville residents and visitors.


News

Education funds wane

Driven largely by a 35 percent increase in student enrollment in public colleges and universities during the past decade, state funding for those institutions reached a 25-year low in 2010, according to a State Higher Education Executive Officers Association report released March 8.


News

Website solicits students

[caption id="attachment_41975" align="alignleft" width="300" caption="The Essay Exchange encourages university students to submit their applications for profit.


News

Court agrees to consider appeal

Continuing a debate that has spanned nearly a full year, the Virginia Supreme Court has decided to hear an appeal regarding Attorney General and University alumnus Ken Cuccinelli's right to subpoena documents from the University. Cuccinelli is appealing a ruling made by the Albemarle County Circuit Court last August that denied the attorney general's request for access to various e-mails and other materials relating to the work of former University Environmental Sciences Prof.


News

StudCo program serves hundreds

[caption id="attachment_41861" align="alignleft" width="300" caption="The Diversity Initiatives Committee is pleased with the success of the Hooliday Dining Program.


News

Plan aims to alter ratio

The University has announced efforts to reduce the number of maintenance projects postponed because of lack of funding as compared to finished ones, lowering the deferred maintenance ratio. The University is in year seven of a 10-year plan approved by the Board of Visitors to increase the operating maintenance budget.


News

Study analyzes college counseling statistics

Thirty-two percent of college students have received some form of mental health counseling in their lifetime, a study released yesterday by NASPA and the Center for Collegiate Mental Health at Pennsylvania State University reported. The researchers conducted web-based surveys of a random sample of 21,000 students, the majority of whom were not in treatment for a mental health disorder. The office of Counseling and Psychological Services is unsure whether the survey's findings hold true at the University because only nine percent of the student body visits the office every year, CAPS director Russ Federman said. University students primarily seek counseling for depression, Federman said.


News

Engineers reveal prototype

[caption id="attachment_41751" align="alignleft" width="300" caption="The scramjet engine can travel at 3,700 miles per hour, and in the future may allow a plane to travel from Hong Kong to New York in only two hours.

Puzzles
Hoos Spelling
Latest Video

Latest Podcast

Since the Contemplative Commons opening April 4, the building has hosted events for the University community. Sam Cole, Commons’ Assistant Director of Student Engagement, discusses how the Contemplative Sciences Center is molding itself to meet students’ needs and provide a wide range of opportunities for students to discover contemplative practices that can help them thrive at the University.