The University of Virginia's Miller Center, a nonpartisan center for presidential scholarship, points out that Roosevelt was hard to pin down on the political spectrum. “Upon entering the Oval Office, FDR was neither a die-hard liberal nor a conservative, and the policies he enacted during his first term sometimes reflected contradictory ideological sources,” they wrote.
A series of educational videos sent via text might help encourage new mothers to ensure their infants are sleeping properly,a ccording to research done jointly by the UVA schools of Medicine and Nursing, Yale University School of Medicine and Boston University School of Medicine.
UVA’s Center for Politics will release a new documentary, “This is the House That Jack Built,” on the life of John F. Kennedy this fall. The film will explore the life, political ascendancy and death of the 35th president, focusing on “new and little-known” stories that surfaced while the center was researching an earlier project, titled “The Kennedy Half Century.”
True or false: A candidate who raises more money is more likely to win. You might assume that’s true, but a new analysis from the Virginia Public Access Project looked at candidates who spent the most money in 20 open-seat primaries and found that they were more likely to lose. Geoff Skelley at UVA’s Center for Politics says that’s true, but it’s a phenomenon limited to open-seat primaries.
When Hillary Murray was an undergraduate at Penn State University, she and her friends had a unique way of parting company. “Love U Mean It,” they would say. So when Murray went on to attend business school at the University of Virginia and started her own organic juice business, what else could she call it but Lumi – Love U Mean It?
In August, people in portions of the continental U.S. will experience total darkness before the sun goes down. “Here in Charlottesville, the moon will cover about 86 percent of the sun. You’ll need special solar glasses to see that happening. The problem is for most people, if you don’t have the glasses, you won’t notice anything unusual going on,” UVA astronomy professor Edward Murphy said.
UVA economist Jennifer Doleac, who studies crime and discrimination, thinks the problem with ban-the-box policies is that they are a quick fix to a complex problem. She believes taking away information from employers is exactly the wrong idea. Rather, policies intended to help the formerly incarcerated find jobs should offer employers more information about why a person with a criminal record is worth hiring.
Democratic leaders traveled to rural Virginia to tell working-class Americans President Trump doesn’t have their back – but they do. “It’s hard to see how Republicans lose the Senate,” said Larry Sabato, director of UVA’s Center for Politics. But a health care disaster or failures to pass priorities like tax reform could limit or eliminate their gains. “At one time, Republicans thought they might get to 60 or close to it. Now, that seems like a pipe dream.”
“Diana, Our Mother” is at its most effective as it explores how Diana used her position to bring light to controversial social issues, from homelessness to the AIDS crisis to the campaign to end landmines. Everyone who worked with her in that capacity singles out her empathy. “Most people want to get away from pain … they can’t be fully present in the presence of pain,” says UVA professor Jerry White, a landmine activist who accompanied Diana to Bosnia just weeks before her death. “And the Princess of Wales could be there.”
(By W. Bradford Wilcox, professor of sociology) The ABC report by Julia Baird and Hayley Gleeson on religion and domestic violence has come under heavy fire, and for good reason. It is illogical, unfair and quite possibly inaccurate.
The UVA Medical Center is launching a new educational group care program for pregnant women. During the group classes and checkups, women will be able to receive both prenatal care and educational resources.
Whether people are aware of it or not, America is in the middle of an opioid crisis. The numbers are on the rise, but where does the country stand in the fight? Richard Bonnie (director of UVA’s Institute of Law, Psychiatry and Public Policy) discusses how these numbers are impacting the economy.
The University of Virginia was not the first campus in the commonwealth to go solar, betting on the sun for much of the power it needs. UVA had already committed to buy the power produced by a 160-acre site in Hollyfield, and this month it added another 120 acres in Puller, northeast of Richmond.  
A community health fair will happen Saturday as a part of the 28th annual Chihambra African American Cultural Arts Festival. UVA’s Dr. Marcus Martin says the event at Washington Park will include many health screenings. 
Vox
Richard Bonnie, a UVA professor of health and law who headed the analysis, said that delaying when people start smoking is crucial because older people – perhaps more aware of their mortality and the health effects of tobacco – are less likely to initiate smoking. 
(Commnetary by Chris Lu, senior fellow at UVA’s Miller Center) It’s been eight years since the federal minimum wage was last raised. Since then, the economy has rebounded with the longest streak of job growth in history. Yet millions of people continue to work for the federal minimum of $7.25 an hour, without a pay raise in sight.
Virginia senior Morgan Rosts earned a gold medal at the 2017 World Rowing Under-23 Championships on Sunday at the Plovdiv Regatta Venue in Plovdiv, Bulgaria.
An ABC report that Australian churches are not only “failing to sufficiently address domestic violence, it is both enabling and concealing it” has generated an outpouring of responses. These findings are drawn from a 2007 paper that cited five supporting empirical studies. The most recent of these studies, from 2004, uses data collected between 1992 and 1994. UVA sociologist W. Bradford Wilcox reported that men who infrequently attended conservative Protestant churches were more likely to perpetrate violence, compared to men unaffiliated with religion and those who attended frequently. However...
The committee said restriction on lawful access to prescription painkillers could have negative effects, leading people to illicit markets instead. “People who are using the [prescription] drugs who then become addicted to the drugs and can’t get the amount that they need based on the normal prescribing might go to the illicit market,” said Richard J. Bonnie, Harrison Foundation Professor of Medicine and Law. “Or they might be cut off, remain dependent and then go to the illicit market.” Bonnie, who is also the director of the Institute of Law, Psychiatry, and Public Policy at the University o...
(By Dominic Starsia, former coach of the UVA men’s lacrosse team) I hardly say “always" or "never” to my athletes, but it's close to the truth that every unfortunate incident on a college campus begins with the irresponsible use of alcohol.The data also confirms that it is worse in men’s lacrosse than most sports. If I'm an administrator considering adding men’s lacrosse to my institutional community, I'm thinking long and hard about that boorish reputation.