The Cavalier Daily
Serving the University Community Since 1890

Opinion


Opinion

Donors beware

EVEN WITH annual tuitions and fees approaching $40,000 at many institutions, colleges and universities are not losing any persistence at passing the hat.


Opinion

A referendum on honor

THIS UPCOMING election, one of the referenda on the ballot will be the consensus clause. The consensus clause states that to change the single sanction system in the honor code, 33 percent of students will have to vote for the change.


Opinion

Rewarding merit

ONE OF the great strenghts oftheAmerican university system is its competitive character. The University community worries constantly about its status as one of the nation's top public universities, and rightly so: Our position is precarious and can change at any moment in this cutthroat world of competitive admissions.


Opinion

Searching for a president

ALL THREE candidates for Student Council president support the three most important current student initiatives: the living wage, on-Grounds production of green energy, and purchase of renewable energy credits.


Opinion

Rethinking hate incidents

ON THURSDAY, the University Judiciary Committee voted on a proposal to submit a referendum to the student body creating harsher sanctions for violations of the Standards of Conduct "motivated by the age, color, disability, national or ethnic origin, political affiliation, race, religion, sex (including pregnancy), sexual orientation or veteran status of the victim." This proposal, though well-intentioned, is more dangerous than it is useful because it poses a threat to individual liberties and has little chance for success in decreasing such incidents. The most obvious difficulty with the idea is that it is difficult to ascertain the true motives behind a hate incident.


Opinion

Shooting for gun control

A PPARENTLYquailhuntersposeas much a threat to national security as terrorists. Last weekend, Vice President Cheney and his friend Henry Whittington, a 78-year-old attorney, were hunting quail in Texas, and the vice president sprayed his companion with birdshot.


Opinion

Comic beliefs

THE FALLOUT from the recent Danish cartoon saga has torched buildings, shattered business contracts and sent waves across the debate of how to deal with the Muslim world without encroaching our ever-so-valuable democratic rights.


Opinion

The dilemma for conservative women

A NERVOUS student stands amid a sea of expectant faces in Washington D.C. "How can women be active in conservative politics, yet still be loving wives and mothers?" Anne Coulter asks.


Opinion

V is for victory

A COLLEAGUE heard I'd be acting in this year's production of "The VaginaMonologues" and high-fived me for having the courage to "dance on stage dressed as a giant vagina.


Opinion

Learning without bias

CONSERVATIVES contend that institutions of higher learning remain one of the last strongholds of the left, and the influence of professors on impressionable students cannot be underestimated.


Opinion

V is for vulgar

THIS YEAR "The Vagina Monologues" will be performed on over 600 college campuses nationwide. "The Vagina Monologues" is performed to compete with one of the nation's most endearing holidays.


Opinion

Rationalizing the market

"CAPITALISM has changed," said Jack Bogle, "and it has not changed for the better." Bogle, founder and former CEO of one of the two largest mutual funds on earth, visited the University last Wednesday to warn about an impending crisis for capitalism.


Opinion

The reality of intolerance

WHERE defamatory speech is concerned, hypocrisy runs rampant. Speakers are constantly attacked for statements they make, the veracity of their claims challenged by those whom they speak against.


Opinion

Unreasonable anonymity

FOUR DECADES after the civil rights movement reaffirmed the Constitution's guarantee of racial equality, it is an unfortunate truth that race relations continue to be an issue in America.


Opinion

Something's rotten in Denmark

DON'T LOOK now, but I think someone managed to offend Muslim extremists. As if the present incursion into Iraq, renewed military presence in the holiest of regions in Saudi Arabia, rampant pork eating, literature reading, dirty dancing, free speaking, music listening, alcohol drinking and general Western hedonism weren't enough, Muslim fundamentalists can now add cartoons to the list of things worthy of jihad.


Opinion

Lessons from Katrina

ACROSS the devastated Gulf Coast, recovery from Hurricane Katrina continues. The rebuilding process is meeting with slow but encouraging success, although donations have slowed to a trickle and the issue has long disappeared from the national news.


Opinion

Taking the environmental lead

A SERIES of staggering statistics brought to light by the Environmental Quality Institute at the University of North Carolina at Asheville indicate that most states are facing considerable problems with the toxin mercury.

Puzzles
Hoos Spelling

Latest Podcast

In this episode of On Record, we hear from Dr. Amanda Lloyd, director of the Virginia Prison Education Program, which offers Virginia’s first bachelor’s degrees to incarcerated individuals. Dr. Lloyd discusses how and why the University chose her to lead this historic initiative.