Faculty: Limited tolerance for no tolerance

This term’s undergraduates have fled campus, and their exams are now but painful memories and piles upon professors’ desks. Yet what will happen if, in slogging through that stack, a faculty member or teaching assistant comes across what appears to be cheating? They might discuss it with a colleague, or perhaps even with the student […]

Madison House gets a new master

Who says you can’t go home again? After seven years with Habitat for Humanity (www.avenue.org/habitat) and another three with the AIDS/HIV Services Group, Kelly Eplee is returning to Madison House (www.scs.student.virginia.edu/~madison) where he worked as the assistant director from 1992 to 1996. He will fill the position of executive director and says he is “excited […]

Will UVA become a “green" LEED-er?

Part of the South Lawn project, the new Arts & Sciences building will be the first UVA building to strive for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certification—but if a proposal goes through, it won’t be the last. The building and grounds committee of the Board of Visitors (BOV) (www.virginia.edu/bov) recommended at their December […]

Goode makes complete ass of self

Brace yourself for the following letter, shared with C-VILLE by John Cruickshank, chair of the local Sierra Club chapter. Representative Virgil Goode told us, through his press secretary, “I wrote the letter. I think it speaks for itself.”

Local residents trump State cutbacks

Giant bureaucracies aren’t known for responding to the complaints of the little guys. But enough locals applied pressure, and the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) (www.virginiadot.org) yielded to concerns expressed by hundreds of residents in northwestern Albemarle County: The Free Union VDOT facility will remain open. Responsible for day-to-day maintenance like snow plow-ing and pothole […]

Tourism, T.J. style

What does every center of the universe need? A cool logo, of course. Recognizing the higher profile of our fair city on the world stage, the Charlottesville Albemarle Convention and Visitors Bureau (CACVB) (www.charlottesvilletourism.org) hired hospitality market research firm North Star Destination Strategies and Gotham Graphix of Charlottesville to spend 22 months coming up with […]

Gas leak causes evacuation

Firefighters helped cordon off the area around a gas leak in front of the Charlottesville Circuit Court on High Street. Workers installing a sprinkler system for the building inadvertently cut through a main city gas line around 9:30am on Tuesday, December 12, making the area highly flammable—responders weren’t supposed to so much as touch each […]

From Whisper Ridge to Weed puns

By Will Goldsmith, Cathy Harding and Meg McEvoy GOVERNMENT Due to the alcohol-related death of Albemarle High School student Nolan Jenkins in a car accident in May, the Albemarle School Board examined off-campus partying and schools’ alcohol policies. Meanwhile, Virginia closed a loophole that allowed parents to serve alcohol to underage guests. In a campaign […]

Cheap shots 2006

By Will Goldsmith, Cathy Harding and Meg McEvoyObjects of his affection Lawsuits breathing down his neck, scandals tailing him from South Africa and the U.K., Jeremy Harvey did what only Jeremy Harvey could do: The 62-year-old local investment banker tied the knot for the second time with 81-year-old newspaper heiress Betty Scripps in Las Vegas […]

A loose rein on reality

Oh-six was a year of contradictions and confounded assumptions. The Republican incumbent who was supposed to be unbeatable for the Senate enacted his own Chernobyl-like meltdown; “affordable housing,” the presumed cause du jour, turned into a dictionary game …