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Charlottesville may create arts district

Charlottesville's thriving artistic community may benefit from a bill that would allow the city to establish an arts and culture district. The General Assembly bill would authorize the city to grant tax breaks and other incentives to attract more art-related businesses to the Charlottesville community. "Charlottesville has one of the best arts communities in the state," Charlottesville Mayor Blake Caravati said.


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Honor finds

According to the 1999-2000 Honor Committee Case Statistics, more Asian students were investigated for honor offenses than any other minority for the second year in a row. During the 1999-2000 school year, 13 of the 61 Investigated Panel cases involved Asian students. Of the other minority groups at the University, 10 cases involved black students and five involved Latino students.


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Ayers receives first-place e-Lincoln award

Gettysburg College awarded its annual e-Lincoln Prize to two University electronic archives of the Civil War era. "The Valley of the Shadow: The Eve of the War," a CD-ROM and Web site, won the competition's $40,000 first place prize.


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Housing department to reject Woody petition

Woody House residents are pushing for compensation from the University's housing division for inconveniences they suffered this year. The first-year residents filed a petition last week seeking priority on-Grounds housing registration for next year as reparation for difficulties the students faced during their mid-year move to the new facility. The housing division, however, is "not willing to consider priority registration as a solution in the future," Evans said.


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Ruling jeopardizes Napster's survival

Once again, Napster users have been handed a blow by the courts. Yesterday, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the file-transfer program will not be shut down immediately, but it has a clear chance of closing in the future. A three-judge panel agreed with a lower court's ruling that Napster must stop users who trade songs without copyright permission, and it sent the injunction back to the lower courts to be reanalyzed and rewritten. "This is definitely going to change the way we view rights to music and art," first-year Law student Jeff Lynn said. Napster is an online file-sharing service for downloading MP3 music files. Napster officials are dissatisfied but not totally discouraged by the ruling.


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House passes bill requiring student vaccine

Have you ever experienced a high fever, severe headache, nausea or extreme tiredness? These symptoms sound like the flu, but they could be early signs of the potentially fatal meningococcal disease, commonly called meningitis. Increasing concern about the spread of meningitis on college campuses prompted the Virginia House of Delegates to unanimously pass a bill addressing the issue Feb.


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QualChoice contraceptive plan criticized

The QualChoice proposal to the student health insurance plan is under fire by several student groups for the increase in price based on the new inclusion of contraceptive coverage. "The Contraceptive Coverage Committee finds QualChoice's proposal unacceptable because it imposes extra cost on two levels: first by increasing all students' total premium by 2 percent and second by charging an $18-$20 co-pay," said Lise Adams, first-year Law student and Committee co-founder. Contraceptive Coverage Committee members and other University students questioned Student Health and QualChoice representatives about the new insurance proposal at a forum Feb.


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Napster forces users to pay the price

This is the first column in a biweekly series about current technology issues. Every other week, we will analyze the latest products, developments and happenings in the technology world. For a student seeking a new song or album, there has been one place to go: Napster.


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DMB will play for charity at stadium

Avid fans of Charlottesville's own Dave Matthews Band are anxiously anticipating intense competition for tickets to see the kick-off performance of the band's summer tour at Scott Stadium. The benefit concert is scheduled for 6 p.m.


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Selection board picks new Lawnies

The Lawn Selection Committee notified recipients of the coveted 47 Lawn rooms last week, sending out acceptance letters on Wednesday. While competition is fierce, undergraduates consistently vie for spaces to live where some say is the heart of the University. "There's more to U.Va.


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Competition tests Commerce students' consulting talents.

While some students celebrated the start of the weekend Thursday night, 64 Commerce students competed for thousands of dollars in prize money from a national consulting firm. Last Thursday and Friday, aspiring businessmen and women participated in the second annual Navigant/McIntire Case Competition. The contest, sponsored by Navigant Consulting and the McIntire Consulting Group, presented 12 student teams with a real-life problem involving one of Navigant's clients, for which they had to devise a solution.


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Honor members respond to BOV, referenda issue

Although Honor Committee members did not discuss the relationship between the Board of Visitors and the upcoming honor referenda during their meeting last night, several representatives expressed strong opinions on the issue. According to a document obtained by The Cavalier Daily, the Board requested at a 1999 meeting that the Committee make significant changes to the honor system in return for an agreement to litigate a pending honor case. The document, an official memorandum summarizing a meeting between the Board's Special Committee and 1998-99 Honor Committee members, also states that if such changes did not receive student approval, the Board would make the changes it saw necessary by decree. "There is no relationship between that meeting and the changes being made now," graduate Education Rep.


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