From bad to worse
By Sam Leven | January 23, 2013It was with a great deal of interest that I received an e-mail from the University recently about a proposed reform to the honor system.
It was with a great deal of interest that I received an e-mail from the University recently about a proposed reform to the honor system.
NEXT WEEK students are going to have the opportunity to vote to make a major change to the way our honor system operates.
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.
YOU WOULD think that people supposedly dedicated to honor and integrity would be more allergic to chronic deception.
THIS WEEK, students at the University will get the opportunity to make their first substantive vote on sanction reform in five years.
AS WE RETURNED from our Thanksgiving break, the pro-single sanction camp has given us yet another frightening look at their world, this time in the form of a column by Josh Hess ("Don't surrender the single sanction," Nov.
IN THE wake of last month's open trial of Stephanie Garrison, it seems like the honor debate is unfortunately spiraling into the realm of the extremes.
IT IS A funny thing to see the retreat of the pro-single sanction camp. First, the single sanction was a grand deterrent that stopped lying, cheating and stealing dead in its tracks.
WHEN SETTLING in to your new home at the University of Virginia, much of what surrounds you will likely be overwhelming.
AS THE summer has gotten underway, the American political landscape is, as has become normal of late, red hot.