The Cavalier Daily
Serving the University Community Since 1890

Opinion


Opinion

Woe is Virginia football

LAST WEEKEND?S football game against Richmond saw a strong reaction against the athletic department?s no-sign policy, with hundreds, even thousands, of students showing up to the game with smuggled-in contraband in the form of blank pieces of paper.


Opinion

Clemons 2.0

MY FIRST trip to Clemons this semester was a little like living a bad dream. Half dazed at half past eight, I dragged my feet to the temporary back entrance only to discover that it was no longer in use.


Opinion

Age is just a number

WHO OF the following is drinking responsibly: A 21-year-old who downs a fourth-year fifth, or an 18-year-old who has a glass of wine with dinner?Who can best guide you as you learn to drink moderately: Some guy standing over a keg at a party and filling cups as they?re shoved at him, or a trusted friend joining you at a quiet restaurant?These are not difficult questions.


Opinion

A sticky mess

IT?S BACK to the basics. With much of the economy in a tailspin and commodity prices soaring, Americans are once again finding themselves having to brush up on their fundamental economics, and more carefully scrutinize the platforms of their local and national politicians.The economy won?t fully recover anytime soon, but a few short-term fixes put in place were fairly uncontroversial.


Opinion

Labor pains

HOLIDAYS fall into two categories: those that warrant a day off from work, and those than don?t.


Opinion

The ObamaNader

WHILE Barack Obama has earned his party?s nomination, most Americans do not know Ralph Nader is running for president.


Opinion

The routinization of Barack Obama

EXACTLY 45 years after Martin Luther King?s visionary ?I Have a Dream? speech, a feverish crowd of 80,000 packed itself like sardines into the feisty atmosphere of Invesco Stadium in Denver, waiting to hear nothing less than its sequel.


Opinion

Construction conundrum

THERE is a new tradition at the University, and it?s called construction. Its impact can be seen in any number of places, from what used to be the Ruffner Hall parking lot to the intrusive-looking South Lawn Project, from the new Emily Couric Clinical Cancer Center being built on Jefferson Park Avenue to the slowly emerging, state-of-the-art dorms in the Alderman Road area.In all of these locations, our beloved tradition of building something new or updating something old stands as a professed beacon of progress, a supposed indication that the University is not only prospering, but also constantly growing to keep pace with its burgeoning population.


Opinion

Cheap thrills

ONE OF the best parts about the beginning of one?s fourth year is picking up one of the ?109 Things To Do Before You Graduate? posters.


Opinion

The government we deserve

AS I BECAME quietly furious while reading Jane Mayer?s recently released book ?The Dark Side,? which chronicles our republic?s abandonment of its two-hundred-year tradition of honorable treatment of war prisoners, I pondered a speech from Shakespeare which seared itself into my imagination thanks to its white-hot anger.


Opinion

A worrisome sign

AS I WATCHED the television cameras scan across Chinese spectators mimicking the officially sanctioned Olympic cheer and conforming to ?spectator etiquette campaigns,? my mother handed me a Washington Post article saying the University had banned all signs at home athletic games.


Opinion

Gold medal injustice

IF YOU used a fake ID to buy a beer last week, you may have had Olympian company: He Kexin, the Chinese gymnast who won gold on the uneven bars, is widely suspected of using a passport that misrepresents her age ? a fake ID prepared by her government in order to evade the requirement that Olympic gymnasts be at least 16 years old.


Opinion

Foul play

THE OLYMPIC Games have long been associated with scandal. From judge bribing to doping controversies to equipment malfunctions, the Olympic Games have seen it all.


Opinion

Examining experience

ABOUT two months out from the presidential election, Obama and McCain are on the verge of hitting full stride with their constant bickering and politicking.


Opinion

Blazing the trail to war

PUNDITS and politicians have blamed both Georgia and Russia over the recent explosion of violence in the contested Georgian province of South Ossetia.

Puzzles
Hoos Spelling
Latest Video

Latest Podcast