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Meeting aims to promote positive athlete behaviors

First-year student athletes soon will have more guidance from their peers as they begin their University experiences if the Athletic Department implements a student-formulated plan. A team of five University athletes presented a plan developed to enhance orientation procedures as a part of the 14th annual "Athletic Prevention Programming and Leadership Education" conference hosted this weekend by the University's Center for Alcohol and Substance Education at the Doubletree Hotel. Forty-five colleges and universities, from all NCAA athletic divisions, participated in this year's APPLE conference, which boasted approximately 230 attendees from Maine to South Carolina. Each participating school sent a team of five student athletes and a team leader to develop substance abuse policies for their respective schools. The University's tradition of student self-governance was the initial inspiration for the APPLE conference, said Joe Gieck, the conference's organizer and a University professor of sports medicine and life skills director. "The program is unique in the fact that it gives student athletes a voice to develop their own substance abuse policies," Gieck said.


News

HAVING AN ICY BLAST

Local children took advantage of Saturday's significant snowfall yesterday afternoon to enjoy some serious sledding on the University's Nameless Field.


News

HAVING AN ICY BLAST

Local children took advantage of Saturday's significant snowfall yesterday afternoon to enjoy some serious sledding on the University's Nameless Field.


News

City hires off-Grounds inspector

Charlottesville City Council passed a resolution Tuesday to put off-Grounds student housing to the test. Council accepted a proposal made by the University to hire an additional housing inspector for the City specifically responsible for neighborhoods in the University area.


News

Failed pipe fitting brings fire engines to Carr's Hill

A team of fire engines arrived at Carr's Hill yesterday after a fitting on a heating pipe failed, emitting steam and hot water in the basement of the house, according to University spokesperson Carol Wood. Facilities Management repaired the damaged fitting shortly after the incident occurred. "Everything is back to normal," Wood said. --Compiled by Becca Garrison


News

Local charity events planned for tsunami relief

University student groups and local businesses are taking part in the global tsunami relief effort by organizing fundraising events on Grounds and in the Charlottesville community. Several student groups are collaborating on their tsunami relief events.


News

Correction

Yesterday's news article "Rail advocates optimistic about funding" reported that Meredith Richard was the vice-mayor of Charlottesville.


News

U.Va. awarded alcohol abuse prevention grant

The University's Center for Alcohol and Substance Education received a $675,600 grant this week to educate fraternities and sororities about the negative effects of alcohol abuse. The University is one of seven schools to be awarded the three-year grant from the National Institute of Health's National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. CASE members drafted the grant proposal for the Rapid Response to College Drinking Problem grant competition last June.


News

New wait list receives mixed reviews

The new electronic wait list system is alive in its pilot semester but has been met with mixed reviews by professors. The departments of biology, economics, politics, and Spanish/Italian currently are utilizing the electronic wait list to combat course over-enrollment. There are approximately 2,000 filled spots on the electronic wait lists.


News

Rail advocates optimistic about funding

Advocates of increased consumer rail service expect the Virginia General Assembly to appropriate funds for the demonstration leg of the TransDominion Express, a rail route proposed to span the state. According to Barbara Hartley, vice president of business advocacy for the Lynchburg Regional Chamber of Commerce, it is likely that the General Assembly will allot the needed funds. "While there is no part of the $23 million rail budget earmarked for the TransDominion Express, we are reasonably certain that the project will push forward," Hartley said. According to Rex Hammond, president and CEO of the Lynchburg Regional Chamber of Commerce, the route would stretch from Bristol, in the southwest corner of the state, to Lynchburg, where it would split into two legs, one culminating in Richmond and the other in Washington, D.C.


News

Handler takes Echols reins

Politics Prof. James R. Sofka announced Monday in an e-mail sent to all current Echols Scholars that he would be succeeded as dean and director of the Echols program by Associate Dean Richard Handler. The change is effective as of this semester. "There was a transfer in the Echols program," Sofka said.

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Co-president Armelle Worrel gives a behind-the-scenes look at U.Va.’s club pickleball team, highlighting the welcoming culture, national championship success, what it’s like to lead such a large team, and partnerships and sponsorships that help the program thrive. This episode explores what makes UVA pickleball a trailblazer and a vibrant part of student life on Grounds.