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Bill would punish repeat peepers as felons

A bill that would escalate the penalties for repeated peeping convictions made it on Monday to the General Assembly's full committee on Courts of Justice, said Charlottesville Police Chief Timothy Longo. The bill, if passed, would charge someone convicted of three peeping offenses with a class-six felony, as opposed to the current law which charges all offenses with a class-one misdemeanor.


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Police arrest, issue summons for alcohol-related incidents

In a rash of alcohol-related arrests, the University Police arrested one male first-year student and issued summons to three other University students on grounds Monday night. University Police Captain Mike Coleman said officers arrested the first-year student on Emmett Street for underage possession of alcohol. "This was one incident of underage possession," Coleman said.


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Student decides to opt for closed honor trial

The open honor trial announced last week will now be closed, as elected by the defendant earlier this week. "This is a decision that the student made, so trying to speculate on why I really can't do," Honor Chair David Hobbs said. The trial date will remain the same. Last fall, another student opted for an open trial then closed it before the trial date. "Most students from the beginning want a closed trial," Vice-Chair for Trials Stewart Ackerly said.


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University nurses study rural health care

Faculty and students in the School of Nursing are currently conducting studies to gauge the effectiveness of programs attempting to provide aid to rural black adults with Type II diabetes, according to Sharon Utz, an associate professor in the School of Nursing. The study is being conducted by the Central Rural Health Care Research Center at the School of Nursing, said Utz, where about 15 researchers are involved in the study to deliver "culturally tailored diabetes education to African Americans in rural communities." The Center, which is funded by the National Institutes of Health, began the research with a descriptive study conducted mostly in 2004, said Utz.


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Site allows students to outsource homework

Some computer science students across the country have been taking advantage of new Web sites offering students the opportunity to outsource their homework to computer programmers worldwide. The Web site, rentacoder.com, functions like other auction Web sites, where students can put their homework assignments up for bidding alongside businesses and others in need of computer programming code.


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Survey finds SAT too long

A majority of recent SAT test takers would have preferred to take the newly expanded test on several different days, according to survey results released by Kaplan Test Prep and Admissions on Tuesday. According to Kaplan's press release, 65 percent of the 525 Kaplan students surveyed said they would have preferred to take the different sections of the test on different days.


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University to offer graduate pre-medicalcertificate

The University will offer a one-year pre-medical certificate program to post-Baccalaureate students beginning this summer, following the Board of Visitors Finance Committee's decision to approve the program by setting tuition Thursday. The program allows individuals without the necessary science prerequisites to complete them in one year.


News

MacArthur Foundation awards grant

The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation recently awarded the University a $4.5 million grant to support the final phase of research about mental health social policy.


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BOV Loans

Phi Delta Theta fraternity became the first member of the Inter-Fraternity Council to successfully apply for a Board of Visitor's loan to buy property Thursday, pending expected full Board approval on Feb.


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BOV assesses fundraising, diversity

Newly hired chief officer for diversity and equity William Harvey addressed the Board of Visitor's Special Committee on Diversity yesterday, proposing new committees and goals that he believes will help further the University's effort toward tolerance and equity.


News

Advocates seek more funding for universities

The state youth advocacy organization Virginia21 launched the Save $1,246 campaign to plug the gap between the recommendations of the State Council on Higher Education and current budget appropriations. According to Virginia21 Communications Director David Solimini, the Save $1,246 Campaign was initiated to convince lawmakers to close the funding gap between Virginia college and university base adequacy requests and current appropriations.


News

Correction

The Jan. 19 article, "U.Va. alumnus arrested for alleged 1984 rape," incorrectly labeled William Beebe as an alumnus in the headline.

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Latest Podcast

In this episode of On Record, Professor Ran Zhao, a Chinese professor and director of U.Va. in Shanghai, highlights how the program empowers students to immerse themselves in Chinese language and culture with intensive instruction and fun opportunities to explore the city. After all, learning a language means experiencing its culture firsthand.