Fans stormed the field at the end of Virginia’s 2019 home schedule, leaving University staff to shield head coach Bronco Mendenhall and quarterback Bryce Perkins from adoring supporters. As mayhem broke out in Scott Stadium following the team’s win over Virginia Tech, Mendenhall and Perkins relished in the moment. Saturday, UVA’s football program welcomes fans back to Scott Stadium after a pandemic-altered 2020 season forced most fans to watch on TV.
With more students struggling to afford college, some schools are increasing their financial aid offerings. Here are the top public and top private colleges doling out the most free money to offset the cost, according to The Princeton Review. Top public college for aid: University of Virginia.
A UVA study centralizes data from several studies that examined animals with a human-like brain structure and showed that even temporary isolation when these animals mature impairs social memory, as well as familiar facial recognition and working memory – the type of memory that allows us to remember a recipe when we’re cooking.
If it’s time to get your COVID booster shot, doctors from UVA Health say don’t worry, you have done this all before. “You get the same side effects probably that you got with the second dose,” UVA Health infectious disease expert Dr. Bill Petri said. “No better, no worse.”
Love’s slow approach to building courses and restraint from injecting his own immense playing proclivities into his company’s designs has produced an underrated and intriguing portfolio of creatively conceived courses that have the feeling of being hand-crafted. These include, recently, Birdwood Golf Club at the University of Virginia, a complete overhaul of the existing university course.
The Athens Cultural Affairs Commission announced educator Jeff Fallis as the inaugural poet laureate of Athens on Monday, Aug. 30. Fallis, who has lived in Athens since 1995, received his Ph.D. in English from the University of Georgia and an M.F.A. in Creative Writing from the University of Virginia. He is a limited term lecturer in the English department at Georgia College & State University in Milledgeville.
(Commentary by Olivia Paschal, doctoral student in history) By week three of the school year in Marion, Ark., the district had counted 1,461 student quarantines and 27 staff quarantines. One hundred and twenty-three students and 14 staff members had tested positive for Covid-19 in the district, which is just across the Mississippi River from Memphis, Tenn. It was August 13.
There was some question as to whether the state law allowed for pardons to be issued posthumously, but University of Virginia law professor A.E. Dick Howard, who oversaw the writing of the constitution adopted by the state in 1971, said that it gives the governor that power.
Douglas Laycock, a professor at the University of Virginia School of Law, said to expect more lawsuits and more decisions such as the Illinois appellate court’s. He predicted one-unit unisex restrooms are the future, “but the transition will be long and slow. … Neither side is much interested in any sort of compromise.”
“The pandemic forced us to rethink the entire relationship individuals have with work,” says Joseph Harder, an associate professor at the University of Virginia’s Darden School of Business. “It’s not just that white collar workers are demanding flexibility … but it’s also [happening with] the entry-level positions that are essential to reopening the economy. People are not working for minimum wage the way they once were. … I don’t know what would have shifted that power without the pandemic.”
(Commentary) In “Playlist for the Apocalypse,” [UVA English professor] Rita Dove examines quite a number of serious events and subjects of our times and of hers, always with an undertone of poetic playfulness and tenderness. Usually, I don’t connect with the kind of poetry coming from a purely academic foundation and background, for I have learned that can make the soul of the poetry sterile, but in the case of Rita Dove, a Pulitzer Prize winner for her poetry and serving as a poet laureate of the United States, I enjoyed reading her poems with a lot of interest, admiration, and respect, witho...
A mini-movie premiered in Charlottesville on Monday evening, but instead of sitting in silence, the showing of the ‘Youth, Blue, and U’ project sparked much-needed and appreciated conversations. The roughly 15-minute short film showed what could and should happen when police officers pull people over in their cars. The post-premiere panel brought together the players -- including Raylaja Waller with the City of Promise; University of Virginia Police Captain Bryant Hall; and Robert Haney, a lieutenant with the Charlottesville Police Department -- first for a discussion of the film, then for a d...
Forbes ranked 1,300 companies as the best employers in their state. Here are the hospitals and health systems in each state, according to an Aug. 24 Forbes report. Forbes partnered with Statista to survey 80,000 Americans working at businesses with more than 500 employees. The respondents rated their employers on a variety of factors, such as compensation, opportunities for advancement, safety in the workplace and openness to telecommuting. [UVA Health is one of the employers listed for Virginia.]
UVA Health plans to require its nearly 2,000 unvaccinated employees to receive a COVID-19 vaccine by Nov. 1, or face possible termination. The health system announced its new vaccine mandate last week, just days after the Food and Drug Administration granted full approval for the Pfizer vaccine and local COVID transmission levels rose from “substantial” to “high.”
The University of Virginia’s Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service, a demographic research group, recently released population estimates showing upticks in most of the Roanoke area.
The University of Virginia Darden School of Business, at 41% placement in the consulting industry, is third, up from 35.5% in 2019.
(Commentary) The University of Virginia rented enslaved people from local slaveholders to save money. It was cheaper to rent the labor than to buy the people outright. Before abolition, there were between 125 and 200 enslaved people on campus at any given time. Should the university atone for that?
(Book review) Andrew Kaufman, a specialist in Slavic literature at the University of Virginia, is principally concerned with what this philosophy would mean for a woman who was not fictional. In the early years of her marriage, Anna Dostoyevskaya was called on to practice superhuman levels of selflessness and forgiveness. She lived at the mercy of the gambling addiction of her husband, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, teetering on financial ruin for years — at one point having to pawn her own underwear.
At the University of Virginia, one student organization is determined to raise awareness for the ongoing crisis in Afghanistan and help incoming refugees. The Student Veterans of America at UVA is hosting an Afghan refugee donation drive now until Sept. 10.
It soon will be a bit easier to not just start a business in Central Virginia, but to keep it going. Venture Central now has a board of directors, funding from several sources and has started to search for its first executive director. The organization is a combined effort by Charlottesville and Albemarle County, the University of Virginia and the Charlottesville Regional Chamber of Commerce.