McDonnell rejoins law firm, starts teaching at Regent University
By Mairead Crotty | February 8, 2017Former Gov. McDonnell will begin lecturing at Regent University, practicing law and acting as the Principal of the McDonnell Group.
Former Gov. McDonnell will begin lecturing at Regent University, practicing law and acting as the Principal of the McDonnell Group.
The meeting also marked a change in Student Council’s leadership, following third-year Curry student Brett Curtis’s resignation as chair of the Representative Body.
Charlottesville City Council passed a motion Monday to remove the Confederate statue of Robert E. Lee from Lee Park.
Attorneys for Rolling Stone Magazine, Wenner Media and journalist Sabrina Erdely filed a claim disputing the cost of a recent defamation trial concerning plaintiff Nicole Eramo.
The University’s School of Law volunteered at the Legal Aid Justice Center, which will be launching a new pro bono clinic this coming semester.
The vacancy left by Campus Cookies will be filled by Red Eye Cookie Co. The Red Eye Cookie flagship location opened in 2014 in Richmond.
Assoc. Dean John Gates is working to improve diversity within the Engineering school.
The University announced Friday the members of a special committee that will search for and recommend University President Teresa Sullivan’s successor.
Susan Davis, associate vice president of student affairs, has been awarded the Z Society’s highest honor, the Pale Z award.
University alumna Joanne Freeman’s research on political combat and dueling served as a historical sounding board in the hit Broadway musical ‘Hamilton.’
The firm is representing two brothers, Tareq Aqel Mohammed Aziz and Ammar Aqel Mohammed Aziz, who are from Yemen.
The Virginia House Rules Committee tabled a proposed bill that would have studied the advantages of expanding the state’s DNA databank for criminals.
Judge Neil Gorsuch was announced as President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee Tuesday.
The online graduate engineering program at the University was recently ranked among the top 15 in the country by U.S. News and World Report.
The National Pan-Hellenic Council kicked off Black History Month with an event at Nau Hall Tuesday night.
Since the unanimous vote by College faculty in October, the Carter G. Woodson Institute for African-American and African Studies has reached the final step in becoming a department.
A group of Albemarle residents and community members have filed a lawsuit against Foxfield Racing Association with the intention to prevent any potential sale of the racecourse and surrounding land.
HB 2001, a tabled bill, would require the University to cooperate with U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement on enforcing federal law.
Tom Perriello, a gubernatorial candidate campaigning for the Democratic Party’s nomination, sat down with The Cavalier Daily Thursday to discuss his goals for college affordability, President Donald Trump’s executive order and campaigning.
The College Republicans and University Democrats collaborated to release a joint statement Tuesday, criticizing President Donald Trump’s recent immigration executive order.