An arm and a leg
By Managing Board | November 15, 2010Students may gripe about high tuition costs, but soaring textbook prices are also a source of much anxiety.
Students may gripe about high tuition costs, but soaring textbook prices are also a source of much anxiety.
Thursday was Veterans Day - a day to remember and thank those who have so valiantly served our nation.
This may sound like an echo, but repetition is good way to help someone absorb a new idea. You should go to a Board of Visitors meeting. The Cavalier Daily's Managing Board wrote that last week.
Too many days are forgotten that should be remembered. The Berlin Wall fell Nov. 9, 1989, heralding the end of global Communism and the birth of the modern world.
Everyone is biased, and journalists are no different. It is unreasonable to expect them to be otherwise.
UVa Sustainability has recently launched its campaign for students to individually pledge their commitment to "consider the social, economic, and environmental impacts of their habits and to explore ways to live more sustainably during their time here at U.Va.
The Honor Committee and Board of Visitors are two entities many students know little about, but each plays a critical role in upholding the ideals of the University and determining the institution's future.
A Facebook group coupled with an online petition has been circulating recently that is attempting to "petition the directors of the Cavalier Marching Band to reinstate Rugby Road as an integral part of the college football experience effective immediately." Supporters of this song point to the fun, altogether light-hearted nature of the song and its long-standing history as a fight song at Virginia football games.
The national news media faces a difficult task in finding a necessary balance between impartial journalism and journalistic opinion.
Salem in 1692 was a dark place. Witchcraft was the talk of the town and accusations were rampant. The situation in Salem unraveled into a frenzy, with villagers fearing the devil was recruiting followers in their town, followers that would bring down the church.
As I prepare to return to the University for the annual November gathering of Cavalier Daily alumni this weekend, I do so with a tranquility and a sense of "fitting in" that I never truly felt as a student some four decades ago. The reasons for this are important for our new president, Teresa A.
Many students and alumni know relatively little about the University's satellite branch to the southwest in Wise, Va.
As he sits in a well-furnished classroom and confidently outlines his dreams of college and white-collar employment to Anderson Cooper, fifth-grade student Richar Anozier might as well be the poster child of American achievement.
Look at a map of the world at night and you will see a beautiful array of bright lights. Cities and urban centers gleam like gems.
Regardless of your political allegiances, last Wednesday was a relief. The Tom Perriello and Robert Hurt ads stopped dominating the airwaves; Larry Sabato brought more recognition to the University and lawns and front yards had grass again rather than political signs.
Next Monday and Tuesday, the University's Board of Visitors will meet in the Rotunda for one of its four annual meetings.
In a piece for Inside Higher Ed, Jack Stripling wrote yesterday about the College's Legacy of Distinction Fund, a $5 million fundraising effort spearheaded by College Dean Meredith Woo to hire new faculty members.
Fourth year has finally arrived! In May, I will finally be graduating, I will finally get to walk the Lawn and I will receive the "Honor of honors." Four years at one of the premier public universities in the country.