Dining hall going trayless next semester, following national trend
The dining hall is doing away with trays next semester.
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The dining hall is doing away with trays next semester.
A prolonged siren, audible from all over campus, echoed across the University of Richmond at 1:20 p.m. Monday as part of an official test of the new warning system, installed after the four-hour May 6 lockdown.
Richmonders voiced concern Tuesday night at City Hall about possible reductions and eliminations of several bus routes operated by the Greater Richmond Transit Company, including one that travels to and from the University of Richmond campus.
Chancellor E. Bruce Heilman set out to prove that you're never too old for an adventure while on his cross-country ride atop his Harley-Davidson motorcycle.
By Jimmy Young
If Garrett Graham had not run fast enough, his visa would have expired.
Is the Juice worth the squeeze?
By Jimmy Young
The University of Richmond defeated 22 other mock trial teams and won second place at the Great American Mock Trial Invitational, hosted by the University of Virginia on Nov. 1 and 2.
By Michael Gaynor
Former Virginia Gov. Mark Warner defeated incumbent Republican Sen. Jim Gilmore Tuesday 64 percent to 34 percent, contributing to the Democratic Party's 56-40 majority in the U.S. Senate.
* Photo Gallery: Election Day at the University of Richmond
More than 150 elated students in the Tyler Haynes Commons embraced, shouted and cried shortly after 11 p.m., when the polls closed on the West Coast and television networks announced that Barack Obama would be the 44th president of the United States, the first black American to win the office.
Newport News resident Lychelle Chisolm kept her four children awake past their bedtimes on Tuesday night because she wanted them to experience history.
By Duncan Phillips
12:14 a.m. -- Obama, in his acceptance speech, cast himself as a uniting president-elect. In telling the story of a 106-year-old voter, he was highlighting the endurance of the American spirit through the best of times, and the worst of times, in this country's history. At least 200 people are gathered here in the Commons watching his acceptance speech after McCain delivered a valiant speech, rallying his supporters to have faith in Obama and the American political system.
At 5:45 a.m., a line more than a block-and-a-half long snaked out of the Westhampton Baptist Church voting precinct where 2,200 voters were registered.
MANASSAS, Va. -- Once more droves of supporters poured in, chants of "Yes, we can" pervaded the night's cool autumn air, and for the last time Barack Obama took center stage on the eve of a much-anticipated presidential election, as 21 months of campaigning closed here in northern Virginia.
With one day until the 2008 election, Virginia Democratic representatives spoke in the theater at Virginia Commonwealth University's Student Commons to encourage voter turnout and endorse Democrat Mark Warner for U.S. Senate and Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama.
The racial disparity in health care today has direct roots in the historical treatment of African Americans, bioethicist Harriet Washington said Thursday.