UVA students will receive invitations [this] week to get their COVID-19 vaccinations as school officials try to get shots in the arms of students, staff and faculty before the semester’s end.
The Rotunda is the centerpiece of the University of Virginia’s idyllic campus, a building designed by Thomas Jefferson, who modeled it after the Pantheon in Rome, as he sought to build a school that embraced rigorous intellectualism and egalitarianism. But in a grotesque contradiction, enslaved laborers brought that vision to life. The Rotunda now has a brick-and-mortar counterpoint, a memorial where visitors can honor the lives of the 4,000 enslaved people whose forced labor built the stately campus.
Judithe Little is an American award-winning and best-selling author of two historical novels, “Wickwythe Hall” with “The Chanel Sisters” being her latest literary offering. She grew up in Virginia and earned a Bachelor of Arts in foreign affairs from UVA. After studying at the Institute of European Studies and the Institut Catholique in Paris, France, and interning at the U.S. State Departmen, she earned a law degree from the UVA School of Law.
Carole Hopson always dreamed of what it would be like to soar in the sky. Decades would pass, however, before Hopson fully realized her dream. She attended UVA and Columbia University, where she studied Spanish and journalism, before pursuing a career in human resources. Hopson says she loved the work she did, “but it wasn’t my heart’s desire.”
In 1964, Chris Groves was a 6-year-old in Maryland flipping through a National Geographic magazine that he received through a subscription from his grandmother. In the magazine he saw a picture of a few spelunkers waist-deep in cave water and was instantly hooked by the adventure and mystery of cave exploration. “That was about as far out as you could be and still be on the planet,” said Groves, who earned his Ph.D. at UVA and is now a hydrogeology professor at Western Kentucky University. “There was an instant attraction, because it was so wild and ‘out there.’”
In 1964, Chris Groves was a 6-year-old in Maryland flipping through a National Geographic magazine that he received through a subscription from his grandmother. In the magazine he saw a picture of a few spelunkers waist-deep in cave water and was instantly hooked by the adventure and mystery of cave exploration. “That was about as far out as you could be and still be on the planet,” said Groves, who earned his Ph.D. at UVA and is now a hydrogeology professor at Western Kentucky University. “There was an instant attraction, because it was so wild and ‘out there.’”
(Video) James Avery, a visiting professor at the University of Virginia Medical School, warns of negative effects from the drug.
Left to their own demographic devices, Sun Belt states “are on the Virginia path” toward Democratic dominance, says UVA political science professor Larry Sabato. “I think Republicans in those states are doing what Republicans didn’t do (in Virginia) – they’re trying to correct for that,” Sabato says.
J. Miles Coleman at UVA’s Center for Politics weighs in on the endorsement. “It definitely sort of reinforces McAuliffe’s lead over the rest of the field, I would say,” he said.
(Commentary) President Biden issued a list of the members of his planned Presidential Commission on the Supreme Court of the United States. This is the judicial reform commission he promised to create during the presidential campaign. this is a genuinely bipartisan and cross-ideological group. In addition to Will and Keith, there are several other conservative or libertarian members, including … Caleb Nelson (UVA).
Bonds said the health district is getting just under 8,000 doses of the Pfizer vaccine and just under 4,000 doses of the Moderna vaccine every week. UVA Health is getting its own allotment of the Pfizer vaccine and pharmacies are getting vaccine doses from the federal stockpile.
“Any new galaxy is good,” says Trinh Thuan, an astronomer at the University of Virginia who helped find the previous champion four years ago. “We’re counting the number of [very oxygen-poor galaxies] in the palm of our hand.” The new galaxy’s oxygen-to-hydrogen ratio is 83 percent that of the previous record holder, J0811+4730, which is 620 million light-years away in the constellation Lynx.
Whether we’re writing, building or cooking, human beings are driven by a powerful instinct to add rather than subtract, a new study suggests. UVA researchers asked 1,585 study participants to solve puzzles or problems where they could either add or subtract elements. In every scenario, the majority chose addition – even when subtraction made more sense. In fact, unless instructed otherwise, most people never stopped to consider whether less is more.
Traditionally, there are several events held to celebrate Founder’s Day and Thomas Jefferson’s birthday on April 13. This year, in-person celebrations have been curtailed due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. According to a release, events will be held virtually or postponed until gathering restrictions are lifted.
UVA is encouraging guests coming to its in-person graduation ceremonies in May to test negative for COVID-19 prior to arrival in Charlottesville and to get vaccinated when eligible.
On Saturday, UVA is hosting a virtual dedication of the Memorial to Enslaved Laborers. While UVA’s memorial is a welcomed addition, for some Charlottesville-area residents, it is bittersweet.
Tuition will remain the same for most UVA undergraduates next year if the school’s Board of Visitors approves a proposal from its finance committee. The board is scheduled to set tuition rates at a virtual meeting at 4 p.m. Tuesday.
Dr. James Avery said the rush to legalize ignores the ill effects that increased marijuana use will cause. An addiction expert and visiting professor at UVA, Avery said the modern varieties and growing methods make the marijuana now available far more potent and potentially addictive. “This is not your father’s marijuana,” Avery said. “This is a far more potent drug.”
Raj Venkatesan, a professor at UVA’s Darden School of Business, says that the potential for job displacement in the trucking industry is largely misunderstood. For the foreseeable future, he explains, even autonomous trucks will still have “drivers” in the cab as a safety measure, to be on hand in case of mechanical problems or even speak to police in the event of an incident on the highway. “It’s not clear at all now whether there will even be displacement,” he says.
Scientists are getting a clearer picture of what COVID-19 does to your brain. Here’s what they found
“Overall, about a third of the patients had some neurologic diagnosis, but the majority of that was pre-existing, before COVID,” UVA infectious disease professor Dr. Bill Petri said. “What remains to be seen is how much of that is due to a direct effect of the virus, versus how much of that is due to just being seriously ill and being in the hospital.” Petri and a team of UVA researchers have their own studies underway to better understand how the virus affects your central nervous system.