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South Lawn project faces criticism in national media

At last Thursday's Board of Visitors meeting former rector Gordon F. Rainey jokingly suggested that the Board send its architectural plans to the New York Times, a reference to Adam Goodheart's New York Times article published in late May which criticized the University's architecture and the structural plans for the South Lawn project.


News

Prof. under fire over funding source

A University environmental science professor has come under fire recently from environmentalists and ethicists after reports surfaced that the professor, who is skeptical of the extent to which humans play a role in global warming, had received money from a coal-burning utility. The New York Times reported in a July 28 story that the Intermountain Rural Electric Association, a coal-burning utility co-operative, gave money to Environmental Science Prof.


News

BOV approves new cancer center plan

The University Board of Visitors Buildings and Grounds committee approved the design for the University's Clinical Cancer Center during its meeting July 27. The main purpose of the new cancer center will be to house all of the cancer technology, research and treatment equipment in one building, said Peter Jump, University Hospital Center spokesperson. The cancer center will be located at the intersection of Jefferson Park Avenue and Lee Street where a covered parking garage now stands.


News

University provides limited aid for interns

Student interest in internships has been rising steadily for several years, and many universities across the nation are taking the rise in popularity into consideration when awarding students with stipends to off-set the cost of a low-paying or unpaid internship.


News

Correction

Correction The July 20 News article "Turner put on leave after probation agreement" erroneously identified Gregory Jackson as president of the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity.


News

Dept. of Education proposes database of student information

In June, the Secretary of Education's Commission on the Future of Higher Education put out a draft report proposing the creation of a national database to track information about individual students such as financial aid standing, for students at the nation's colleges and universities. In March 2005, the National Center for Education Statistics put out a study examining "the feasibility of collecting individual enrollment and financial aid information for each student in postsecondary education." The study examined both whether or not such a system could be and should be implemented.


News

NeW holds first ever national conference

WASHINGTON -- Last Friday, the Network of Enlightened Women, an organization founded at the University in the fall of 2004 to promote a conservative women's movement, held its first annual national conference in Washington, D.C. At the conference, entitled "A NeW Generation of Women," NeW founder and University Law student Karin Agness led women from more than 30 colleges as they gathered to strategize and share their schools' chapters of NeW.


News

University could see more grad funding

In recent years, The Chronicle of Higher Education and the National Research Council have ranked the University below some of the top schools in the country in regards to the number of graduate studies programs and funds allocated for them.


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Latest Podcast

In this episode of On Record, we hear from Dr. Amanda Lloyd, director of the Virginia Prison Education Program, which offers Virginia’s first bachelor’s degrees to incarcerated individuals. Dr. Lloyd discusses how and why the University chose her to lead this historic initiative.