The Cavalier Daily
Serving the University Community Since 1890

Matt Dickey


Fourth-year worries

Stress. For many fourth-years, this insidious word has already crept much farther into their daily lives than they could have anticipated after three years of relatively care-free living at Mr. Jefferson's University. "Job," "graduate school," and "interviews" have become dirty words while formerly harmless letters have taken on new meaning when strung together in certain dreaded sequences ("LSAT," "MCAT," and "GRE"). It's as if, suddenly, without warning, somebody flipped a giant switch in the basement of the rotunda sometime over the summer and the fourth-year class collectively came to remember that we will have lives outside of the University next year. Stress. Yes, it is hunting season again - the season of hunting for jobs (or even careers if we're lucky) and applying to graduate, law, and medical school.

Right on the money

AS THE hunt to replace President John T. Casteen III begins, the search committee should keep three priorities in mind: intellectual capital, human capital, and financial capital.

Learning the landscape

1. HOO: Tradition! Thomas Jefferson : Virginia :: Mickey Mouse : Disneyworld. Forget Cavman - TJ is our [unofficial] school mascot.

Out of state, out of mind

Last week's announced tuition hikes are only the most recent addition to a network of unjust policies affecting out-of-state students.

Minor problems

If the Commerce School is the number one undergraduate business school in the nation, as we are frequently reminded these days, why can?t they handle a providing an academic minor for College students?The answer, as it turns out, is much more nuanced than a cursory evaluation might provide.

Relevant reporting

People around the world are suffering and dying needlessly. Ills ranging from preventable diseases to heinous human rights abuses are destroying the lives of millions.So why are we spilling so much ink squabbling over comparatively petty University issues like the University Board of Election?s botched ballot for next year?s University Unity Project?

Tracing the arc of admissions

From officially admitting women in 1970 to meeting 100 percent of students? demonstrated financial needs today, the University has changed substantially during the past several decades.

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