A promising sign
By Isaac Wood | October 9, 2008THE RUMORS swirled Thursday night. By Friday morning, it was front-page news: The athletic department?s sign ban had been repealed.
THE RUMORS swirled Thursday night. By Friday morning, it was front-page news: The athletic department?s sign ban had been repealed.
CURRENTLY, the University?s financial situation seems as tenuous as ever given the state of the nation?s economy.
OMBUDSMAN. It doesn?t roll off the tongue as much as it pops out of the mouth. Not a reassuring, warm and fuzzy kind of sound.
SIMPLY as students of this University, we all have a sense of composure, class and slight arrogance that lets people of the Charlottesville community know we?re students.
IT IS AN annual tradition of fall orientation. First years, graduate students, and transfer students all pack in to rooms to learn about the University?s exalted honor system.
WHEN IT comes to trend-setting in higher education, no one can touch Harvard. Even in those years that US News and World Report ranked it behind Princeton for having the top undergraduate program, everyone still thought Harvard to be synonymous with elite academia, with students and faculty who were the cream of the crop.
LAST WEEK, I chided the University Judiciary Committee for placing too much emphasis on race by surveying its membership to determine the percentage of minorities.
AS A NON-SMOKER, it?d be logical for me to wish to see cigarette smoke as far removed from the public arena as possible, but the restrictions on smokers? rights are getting to be absurd.
AS WALL Street vacillates wildly and, in general, downwardly while awaiting a government bailout that is currently in limbo, Americans find themselves staring into the dark abyss of certain recession or perhaps even a depression.
IT IS NO secret that many of the network news programs we watch are cloaked with a bias toward a particular end of the political spectrum.
THOSE WHO watched the presidential debate last Friday between Barack Obama and John McCain may have noticed subtle changes in the format compared to previous years.
GREED! Greed! It?s all the fault of greed! The two major presidential candidates agree, and you can hear the same complaint from other corners too.Sen.
IN THE upcoming presidential election, one of the main questions asked, especially by Democrats, is whether a John McCain presidency would simply be the third term of George Bush?s; as they argue, there could hardly be a worse occurrence for the wellbeing of the country.
GENERATION Y is a sucker for instant gratification, seen in its mass acceptance of online chatting, text messaging, and Web sites like YouTube and Google.
THIS YEAR Student Council will spend or allocate over $665,000. How do I know? Not from The Cavalier Daily.
STUDENT self-governance often appears to be nothing more than the University?s marketing pitch, a promise more than a practice.
STUDENTS at the University today were accepted due to strong academic and extracurricular credentials from high school.
JOHN MCCAIN?S proposed tax policy focuses on promoting growth and providing relief to families facing nothing short of abuse by the current system.High gasoline and food prices are squeezing the budgets of millions of American families.