In the workplace, we all start somewhere. And most of us would like to advance to a more prominent, higher-paying position. To achieve your career goals—whether your goal is recognition, a leadership position, more responsibility, and/or more money—you must begin by influencing those around you. You need other people in your workplace to view you as responsible, motivated, reliable, and skilled. In this article, UVA alumnus Paul Saunders, the CEO of James River Capital Corp., shares his top seven tips for influencing others at work.
The Medal of Honor is often given for one act of valor, but service members can also earn it for many acts over time. One of the more prominent names to have done that was World War II Marine Corps Gen. Alexander Vandegrift, whose command during the Guadalcanal campaign in the South Pacific led to a critical U.S. victory. … Vandegrift was born March 13, 1887, in Charlottesville, Virginia. He went to the University of Virginia before being commissioned into the Marine Corps as a second lieutenant in 1909.
To help decipher these events, I spoke with three U.S.-based British Jews—two organizers and a journalist—who have been observing the events across the pond and have been in close contact with progressive Jewish organizers on the ground, including Natasha Roth-Rowland, a contributing editor at +972 Magazine and a UVA doctoral student researching the Jewish far right.
A climate strike organized by University of Virginia students saw dozens of activists gathered in downtown Charlottesville to demand climate action on Friday. Protestors marched from the Rotunda to the Downtown Mall.
(Audio) Barbara Perry, Gerald L. Baliles Professor and Director of Presidential Studies at the University of Virginia Miller Center, participates as a panelist discussing the history and future of third-party candidates in the American political system.
Republicans’ comparative lack of variation in media diet has the potential to give the party an edge next year. One of the biggest, if not somewhat invisible, advantages is consistency in party messaging, which aids Republicans in shaping public opinion, said Kyle Kondik, managing editor of Sabato’s Crystal Ball at the University of Virginia Center for Politics.
Officials in a growing number of localities, mostly rural, have pledged not to enforce new gun controls should they become law. “More than anything, this is symbolic,” said Larry J. Sabato, director of the University of Virginia Center for Politics. “This is an opportunity for sheriffs and other local officials out in rural areas to show their constituents that they’re tough and that they’ll protect their guns. This shows the extent to which fear has crept into our politics.”
A recent Sabato’s Crystal Ball analysis of the congressional districts by the University of Virginia Center of Politics agreed with the consensus view that the shift in congressional races would likely yield a two-seat pick up for Democrats but noted that any changes beyond that are unlikely given the way the districts were drawn. Although a two-seat change is likely, “few districts are poised to be genuinely competitive,” Crystal Ball Associate Editor J. Miles Coleman wrote.
Polls show Democrats want an electable candidate who can go toe to toe against the current president. “Democrats have a burning desire to defeat Trump,” Larry Sabato, director of the Center for Politics at University of Virginia, told AFP. “Most Democrats think Biden has the best chance of doing that — although it’s not a slam dunk.”
Paul Halliday is a law professor at the University of Virginia and an expert in British law of that era. Halliday said Norfolk’s anti-pauper language is likely rooted in a series of English laws passed in the late 1500s and 1600s. Those laws, trying to look out for those who can’t look out for themselves, said local church parishes — and later governments — had to care for poor people through things like group homes.
Darryl Brown, the O.M. Vicars Professor of Law at the UVA School of Law, said he doesn’t believe many appeals from the city’s already-completed circuit court cases are likely or possible in the wake of this. He said there are two main reasons he doubts there will be many appeals.
Within months of the initial release of the results — and thanks, in part, to some pretty scary headlines — hormone thereapy use had dropped dramatically all over the world; guidelines were revised, doctors appeared less inclined to prescribe them and many women suffered needlessly as a result. “After the [Women’s Health Institute report], there wasn’t a lot of research and a lot of attention paid to menopause,” says Dr. JoAnn Pinkerton, executive director emeritus of the North American Menopause Society and professor of obstetrics and gynecology and director of Midlife Health at the UVA Healt...
Another problem is that Trump’s deregulatory agenda doesn’t make sense from an economic perspective because it’s focused exclusively on reducing regulatory costs while ignoring or downplaying the benefits of regulation, said Michael Livermore, law professor at the University of Virginia School of Law. “There’s nothing accurate about it because it doesn’t look at the benefits that are foregone,” he said.
On Dec. 10, 2015, Larycia Hawkins, a political science professor at elite, evangelical Wheaton College, posted photos of herself on Facebook in a hijab, the headscarf worn by many Muslim women. Days after Islamic terrorists killed 22 and wounded 14 in San Bernardino, California, Hawkins’ Facebook photos included a statement of support for Muslims who felt threatened by the waves of anti-Muslin fervor that followed the attack. “I stand in religious solidarity with Muslims because they, like me, a Christian, are people of the book,” Hawkins wrote. “As Pope Francis said last week, we worship the ...
According to Ryan Wright of the University of Virginia, there is only a small possibility that the Internet can be down forever. First, internet providers have built redundant connections to make it nearly impossible to shut it down universally. Second, companies have rerouting equipment if a sudden unexpected thing happened that may affect their services.
The bill also faces stiff opposition on the right. The Heritage Foundation and the Alliance Defending Freedom, two conservative groups concerned about religious liberty, are also opposed. These groups reject the creation of special classes for sexual orientation and gender identity. Douglas Laycock, a law professor at the University of Virginia who was an early adviser on the draft, said he hoped people on the far right and left won't have the final say. "Introducing it in this Congress is about introducing the idea and attracting additional supporters," said Douglas Laycock, "Maybe in the nex...
(Commentary by Mehr Afshan Farooqi, associate professor in the Department of Middle Eastern and South Asian Languages and Cultures) If Muhammad Hasan Askari were alive, he would have completed 100 years in this world. His greatest contribution to Urdu letters was the formulation of an ‘Eastern’ response to the Western style of literary criticism that gripped literature in the Indian languages in the wake of colonialism. To commemorate his birth centenary, I humbly propose to revisit some of his path-breaking essays, notably, the essays in the collection Insaan Aur Aadmi [Humans and Men], with ...
(Letter from Deborah Lawrence, professor of environmental science) Thank you to University of Virginia President Jim Ryan and the Board of Visitors for committing to achieve carbon neutrality by 2030. I have worked at UVa for 20 years. For the first time, I feel I truly belong.
Barr appreciates power, and he knows how to wield it. In fact, Barr could hardly have been more explicit in indicating what he believed and what he would do when the president sent him to the Justice Department. “I think it started picking up after Watergate,” Barr said in a 2001 interview for a University of Virginia oral-history project on the first Bush administration, “the idea that the Department of Justice has to be ‘independent.’”
The doctors and nurses of the institution now known as the Central Virginia Training Center had a philanthropic goal: to care for those who had no place else to go. But as more patients were admitted in the 1920s to the Virginia State Colony for Epileptics and the Feebleminded, the institution found itself at the center of the now-discredited eugenics movement, defined as the science of improving the human race by controlling who can have children. … In 1912, one year after the colony began accepting patients, superintendent Dr. Albert Priddy lobbied the General Assembly for an expansion to se...