Calling foul on Council's crowd control proposal
By Alex Rosemblat | October 31, 2001BASKETBALL season starts this week. Those words are music to the ears of many University basketball fans.
BASKETBALL season starts this week. Those words are music to the ears of many University basketball fans.
EVERYTHING has changed, politics included. It's hard to know what "politics as usual" might mean these days.
IMAGINE being able to get home without taking a cab to Charlottesville Regional Airport, while getting home in as little as two-thirds of the time it would normally take, without spending the money required to fly.
IT TRULY is a strange time to be alive. Our generation - the generation coming of age at the beginning of a new millennium - has witnessed all manner of stunning events take place in the last few years.
OFTEN, people make changes in the educational system because of what is referred to as modernization or changing with the times.
IN WHAT is now one of the most tumultuous and unsettling times in American history, no single citizen can escape the stinging reality of the war on terrorism.
NOV. 17 marks the beginning of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan. This is a time of self-sacrifice, restraint and renewed devotion, similar to Lent in Christianity.
FOR AT least seven months, The Cavalier Daily has been covering the complex issue of the University's ownership of Unocal stock, Unocal's activities in Burma and the conduct of Burma's government.
THE MILLIONS of loyal Americans who proudly call themselves Muslims today find themselves in an awkward position.
ACOLLEGE education is the single most important investment one can make. A college degree means prestige, economic windfall and immensely increased career options.
FOLLOWING some 51 years of existence, New Cabell Hall is on its way down. A little over a week ago, the Board of Visitors voted to completely demolish New Cabell Hall.
IMAGINE this: You have been dating someone for a short while, and not long into the relationship, this individual begins to demonstrate abusive tendencies.
THE UNIVERSITY Bookstore is considering what to do with its $50,000 surplus. The leading proposals, according to Student Council, are to donate this money to lighting and sound equipment for performing arts CIOs and a new van for the Student Escort Service.
THE FRATERNITY party, a classic college tradition and scene particularly here at the University, soon will be regulated even more tightly by the city of Charlottesville.
THE INTER-Fraternity Council decision to ban non-Greek organizations from renting out IFC houses has caused a stir in the community.
THE RECENT Inter-Fraternity Council decision to end the rental of their houses to non-Greek organizations can be seen in only two ways: either as a symbol of white privilege at the University or as a refusal to align and help fellow black students with the problems they face.
ALLEGEDLY, Americans have a hard time talking about race. Perhaps we do. What we have an even harder time talking about, however, is money - who has it, who doesn't, and why that matters.
EVERYONE agrees that censorship is bad. Six weeks after the terrorist attacks, everyone agrees that suppression of speech is getting out of hand.
AS A COLLEGE student who has taken Commerce courses, I'm happy to know that future generations won't have to share my Commerce School envy.
IN 1997, when Mark Earley ran for Attorney General, he spoke before a crowd of College Republicans at which I was present.