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Opinion


Opinion

New priorites for the BOV

AFTER every meeting of the Board of Visitors, I try to let my fellow students know more about the Board's activities. If I were to sum up the theme of the recent meetings, they would be "challenges ahead." Two weeks ago, all the committees of the Board met in Charlottesville to discuss their agendas and plan for the meeting of the full Board that took place last Thursday and Friday.


Opinion

Bush's empty promise

BASED on President Bush's past advocacy of democracy across the globe, one might have expected that he would pledge in his recent State of the Union address to topple what he has repeatedly characterized as the antidemocratic government of Iran and replace itwith a "true democracy." After all, way back in 2002, Bush named Iran as a part of the "axis of evil," along with Iraq and North Korea, and since that time Iran has pledged to wipe Israel off the map and has continued in its quest to develop nuclear technology.


Opinion

Thinking seriously about honor

A CONTROVERSIAL Honor proposal made news on Monday. Offered last semester by a support officer, it would have created a separate panel of three Honor Committee members to vote on seriousness after a jury had convicted a student on act and intent.


Opinion

Negotiating freedom

THE RADICAL and violent Hamasparty has recently been votedinto power in the Palestinian elections, creating new tension with Israel while Iraq, as always, operates as a continuous quagmire with no end in sight.


Opinion

The student loan shakedown

LAST WEEK, our fearless president stunned the nation when he offered to take unscripted questions from an audience of college students at Kansas State University in front of CNN cameras.


Opinion

A Podcasting dilemma

"PODCAST" became a buzz word for the first time in 2005, refering to downloadable audio programs that can be played on iPods and similar devices.


Opinion

Revealing realities of poverty

OF ALL the theories, ideas and formulas put forth in the study of economics, there is one that is repeated and affirmed so often that even the most thick-skulled student sitting in the very back of an ECON 201 lecture could not possibly miss it.


Opinion

Ranting, not rating

RECENTLY, some professors have wondered why a Web site like ratemyprofessors.com needsto exist. According to The Chronicle of Education, one disgruntled professor has retaliated to this Web site with one of his own: rateyourstudents.blogspot.com.While professors might find it cathartic to mock ratemyprofessors, they should realize that such a forum has inherent value and that venting about the site through rateyourstudents is exemplary of the overarching problem of poor communication between students and professors. Professors represent a diverse array of values, personalities and pedagogical methods: some are eccentric, some are hilarious, some are stern but caring, etc.


Opinion

Saving history, with a price

ON THE Tuesday before last, January 17th, a series of residences and other buildings in and around the Rugby Road-14th Street corridor were designated as a new historic district by the Charlottesville City Council.


Opinion

Focusing on improvement

THE LEAD editorial today is about the goals the editors have set for the paper this semester. Look it over, because they set those goals for your benefit, to create a better, more informative, more useful product for you.


Opinion

Forgetful elephants

LEGEND has it that the GOP got its symbol from elephants' supposedly long memories. Just as many Republicans no longer recall what it is that they reputedly "never forget," some also fail to remember their core belief in limited government.


Opinion

Importing poverty

PERHAPS no problem in our time has proved as intractable as the issue of poverty. The poverty issue has an uncanny way of generating vague and abstract rhetoric as opposed to concrete policy solutions.


Opinion

Educating the educated

THE NEXTtime you may think that a University student will be able to help you figure out if you have enough gas to make it to the nearest station, you may want to think again. A recent report by the American Institute for Research earlier in the week found a disturbing trend amongst college students in terms of comprehension and application.


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.