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Accidental shooting leaves Albemarle County Police officer injured

An unintended shooting injured an Albemarle County police officer yesterday morning, as he prepared for an annual firearms qualification session. The shooting occurred at the Rivanna Rifle and Pistol Club on Old Lynchburg Road. Officer David Wallace's own standard-issue service weapon accidentally discharged one shot, striking him in the knee. He is listed in good condition at the University Hospital. In addition to his duties as a patrol officer with the Community Policing Division, Wallace is a firearms instructor for the police department. The police department is investigating the incident.


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Study shows fewer identify as Southerners

A recent study by researchers at Vanderbilt University reports a decline in the number of Americans identifying themselves as Southerners. Between 1991-2001, the number of people living in the South who consider themselves Southern dropped by 7.4 percent, from about 78 to 70 percent. Vanderbilt Sociology Prof.


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Art museum to launch 17th annual literary competition

The University Art Museum is preparing to open its annual Writer's Eye writing competition Oct. 6. The program invites University students along with adults and elementary and high school students to submit original works of prose or poetry inspired by selected works of arts on display in the museum's collection and special exhibits. The competition is organized by the museum's docents and judged by local teachers and writers, journalist and fiction writer Mariflo Stevens and retired University English Prof.


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Papers of civil rights activist given to library

The papers of civil rights pioneer Alice Jackson Stuart, who was denied admission to the University in 1934, recently were given to the University library by her family. Included in the documents is correspondence between Stuart and the University, who rejected her application to graduate school on the basis of race and "other good and sufficient reasons." She responded with a letter requesting specifics on the other reasons. The conflict led to a court case in which Stuart was represented by the NAACP.


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Dean 'meetup' rallies student support

Over 60 students and community members gathered last night at the Newcomb Hall Theater as part of National Dean in 2004 Meetup Day. Over the past few months, meetups -- community gatherings that are arranged online -- have joined 'blogs,' or Web logs, and e-mail lists as popular methods of grassroots organization. "Meetups have really been the firepower behind the Dean surge," said David Wassermann, chair of Hoos for Howard Dean, which sponsored the event. Last night's meeting provided an opportunity both to educate those who didn't know much about Howard Dean and mobilize those who already support the former Vermont governor, Wasserman said. "We're hoping to get converts from these meetings," he said. In an effort to recruit supporters, Hoos for Howard Dean set up a table on the Lawn this week.


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Council revamps CIO appropriations process

In accordance with new policy, the Student Council Appropriations Committee will allow both new and established Contracted Independent Organizations to apply for funds this fall. "Student organizations are the life-blood of the University community," Vice President for Organizations Eli Dejarnette said.


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Sevens finance homecoming committee

Student Council's homecoming committee received a letter Tuesday evening informing them they will receive a $10,777.77 donation from the Seven Society, one of the University's most active secret societies. The Seven Society's gift is in recognition of the committee's efforts to improve student-alumni relations and reinstate a homecoming tradition at the University.


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Medical Center named to top 100

The University Medical Center placed among the nation's top 100 hospitals for the fifth consecutive year, according to a report released this week by Solucient, a national health care corporation. The University Medical Center joined 15 other "major teaching hospitals," or centers which can provide inpatient care to over 400 individuals at one time, in Solucient's publication entitled "100 Top Hospitals: National Benchmarkers." Solucient's criteria for top hospitals include quality of care, operational efficiency, financial performance and adaptation to the external environment.


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Correction

The Sept. 26 story 'VDOT approves connector road for arena' contained two factual inaccuracies: The connector will be a 25 mph road, not 35 mph. The article also suggested that Massie would close permanently, but, in fact, it will close only on occasions where there is an event in the arena. Clarification Glatting Jackson, the first group of consultants to do a traffic study for the University, had some inaccuracies and the University is no longer using that as guide.


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Faculty Council outlines objectives

Representing thousands of University faculty and staff members, the University's General Faculty Council is pursuing a number of new initiatives this year to better serve a broad-based constituency that ranges from teaching faculty to librarians. A major issue the GFC will tackle this year is clarifying the University administration's interpretation of the "expectation of continued employment" policy for general faculty, said Donal Day, a member of the GFC policy committee. General faculty are not considered tenure or tenure-track faculty or classified staff.


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Latest Podcast

On this episode of On Record, we sit down with Ava Wolsborn, University Dance Club vice president and third-year College student. Wolsborn discusses the importance of inclusivity, accessibility and sisterhood within the club. Additionally, she highlights UDC’s upcoming showcase in April.