UVA graduate Jeremy Kemp was trying to think of ways to shave his cost of living while saving up to hike the Pacific Coast Trail in 2018, so he stopped paying rent. Instead, he bought a cargo van for $5,000 and spent two weeks insulating it, building a bed and tacking patterned fabric to the ceiling.
Virginia garnered bowl eligibility on Nov. 4 after defeating Georgia Tech. It was the only win since Oct. 14 for the Cavaliers. UVA’s last bowl game was Dec. 31, 2011, when it lost 43-24 to Auburn in the Chick-Fil-A Bowl. The last time Virginia won a bowl game was in 2005, when it defeated Minnesota, 34-31 in the Music City Bowl.
The aftermath of Aug. 12 in Charlottesville prompted many responses, including a report that was released on Friday citing multiple problems with the police response to the white supremacists that rallied over the summer. But there have also been calls for more regulation of weapons and private militias in the city. While not about weapons specifically, there is now a state lawsuit against private militias. Philip Zelikow, attorney and White Burkett Miller Professor of History at the University of Virginia, recalled a case that can provide a precedent for Charlottesville.
A group of scientists from the University of Virginia is seeking to improve the lack of stability in the crystal structure of hybrid organic-inorganic perovskites (HOIPs), in order to extend the durability of their performance; an achievement that may be particularly interesting for the development of more efficient solar cells.
Forty-three U.S. students were awarded the 2018 Marshall Scholarship, the largest class of scholars since 2007, according to the British Embassy. Among the recipients are John Chellman, University of Virginia, Royal Holloway, University of London; Attiya Latif, University of Virginia, University of Oxford; and Porter Nenon, University of Virginia, University of Manchester.
Yolanda King and Attallah Shabazz, daughters of slain civil rights leaders Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X, spoke at the University of Virginia on this day in 1986.
A group of UVA students went for runs on Saturday to help keep Heather Heyer's memory alive. Together We Run is a series of run-a-thons that take place all across the country, with proceeds benefiting local charities.
AI also has a disconcertingly human habit of amplifying stereotypes. Ph.D. students at UVA and University of Washington examined a public dataset of photos and found that the images of people cooking were 33 percent more likely to picture women than men. When they ran the images through an AI model, the algorithms said women were 68 percent more likely to appear in the cooking photos.
An industrial hemp research program kicked in 2015 in Virginia. About 80 acres have been planted on farms in 12 counties so several universities, such as the University of Virginia and Virginia Tech, can study best cultivation practices and marketability for the crop, a process that’s ongoing.
A new organization called ‘The Solar Energy Work Group,’ is offering help to homeowners and business owners to install solar energy on their property. It has come up with a roadmap for a solar-based economy in Southwestern Virginia that includes workforce training in the region and the promise of jobs to go with it. The Solar Workgroup is an effort of the University of Virginia’s College at Wise and the environmental advocacy group Appalachian Voices.
Virginia appears a likely choice for the Military Bowl in Annapolis, Md., on Dec. 28.
Kate Orff was awarded the prestigious “Genius” Grant from the MacArthur Foundation in recognition of her work. Orff’s New York practice, SCAPE, develops broad-based coalitions that can advocate for the firm’s projects. “I went to college at the University of Virginia and studied in this program that was called political and social thought, and I put together a major called eco-feminism,” she said.
Robert O’Neil, a former UVA president, said honorary degrees are supposed to honor professional achievement but often have other motivations. “In many cases, it’s just to recognize a wealthy donor,” O’Neil told the AP. “I think the eclectic or haphazard process at some institutions risks creating a very bad precedent.”
Kyle Kondik, a political analyst with UVA’s Center for Politics, said the DeWine-Husted announcement fits a pattern. “There’s a long history of the Ohio Republican Party being a kind of ‘wait your turn’ organization,” said Kondik. “Apparently Husted decided it was better to defer to DeWine and get on board.” Kondik said Democrats are “more than capable” of winning the general election, but will need to focus on fundraising.
Charlottesville’s individual insurance markets are being covered this year by Optima, a relative newcomer to the area. Optima’s parent company, Sentara, also owns Martha Jefferson Hospital. “The big unknown is how Optima is coming up with their premiums,” said Carolyn Engelhard, an associate professor and director of UVA’s Health Policy Program.
First approved by the FDA in 2004 as a treatment for uterine fibroids, focused ultrasound has gained an increasing variety of potential uses, generating excitement among many doctors. “There are 18 ways, or mechanisms of action, by which focused ultrasound affects tissue. That fact creates the opportunity to treat a whole variety of medical disorders,” says Dr. Neal Kassell, UVA’s former co-chair of neurosurgery and founder and chair of the Focused Ultrasound Foundation, which seeks to speed the development and adoption of the technology.
A new study provides insights on the mechanisms that allow an individual's immune system to accept, rather than reject, a donor kidney. The findings, which appear in an upcoming issue of the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, point to markers that could be monitored to asses and track the health of organs following transplantation. A team led by Dr. Lorenzo Gallon (Northwestern University) and Valeria Mas (University of Virginia) studied patients in whom tolerance was induced by creating at state of persistent donor “chimerism.”
The host businesses and organization were selected by The Presidential Precinct, a non-profit collaboration between the University of Virginia and the College of William & Mary, William Short’s Morven and three Virginia presidential estates (of Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and James Monroe) whose mission is to “empower young leaders around the world through education, collaboration and networking.” Samanta Lacayo Trujillo was placed with JABA because of the nonprofit’s excellent reputation, and because its mission aligned with what she was trying to accomplish in Nicaragua.