The fourth annual Virginia Green Travel Conference is taking place at UVA’s Darden School of Business, including the Fourth Green Tourism Business Expo. The goal is to educate partners on the environmental impact of businesses, but not without an incentive.
About 60 students from the Eastern Shore of Virginia attend UVA each year. UVA is an appealing choice for students from the Shore because of the Bayly-Tiffany scholarship, awarded to any UVA student living on the Eastern Shore of Virginia.
Matthew McLendon is the newest director and chief curator for UVA’s art museum. McLendon began as director of The Fralin Museum of Art in January.
The University of Virginia has installed solar arrays on the roofs of two of its buildings. The university says the solar panel systems, one atop Ruffner Hall and the other at the University Bookstore, will produce 364 kilowatts of electricity at peak output, enough to power about 91 homes.
Nancy Jean Martin-Perdue died Feb. 14 in Stanardsville. Nancy, who was 82, was a scholar-in-residence at UVA’s Anthropology Department, where she worked with her husband, Chuck, during his 36 years on the faculty there.
The scholarship is one of the most prestigious in the world, and it funds two to three years of study at the University of Oxford for its recipients. Lauren Jackson, a UVA senior, plans to earn two master’s degrees. She does extensive research in what she calls “the nexus of journalism, public opinion and foreign policy,” studying the effects of media coverage on opinion and policy.
From the White House's perspective, Flynn's conversation with the ambassador remains a relatively small matter requiring "scandal management," said Saikrishna Prakash, an expert on the presidency at the UVA Law School and a senior fellow at its Miller Center.
Donald Trump would once have been thought an unlikely champion of religious freedom. But he staked out his claim at this year’s National Prayer Breakfast, vowing to liberate churches to use their voices in political campaigns. It could turn churches into the equivalent of super PACs – and encourage super PACs to turn themselves into ostensibly charitable groups. The issue, as UVA law professor Douglas Laycock told us, is preserving “a level playing field for the tax and regulatory treatment of political spending.”
Sens. Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota and Claire McCaskill of Missouri are the most vulnerable Democrats heading into the 2018 mid-term elections, according to a new forecast. “We see Donnelly, Heitkamp, and McCaskill as being on shakier ground,” Kyle Kondik, of UVA’s Center for Politics, said in a new breakdown of the races.
This week it became clear that the vice president is not in President Trump's inner circle. "No question, Pence has to be embarrassed by this turn of events. But his major mistake so far has been getting entirely too close to Trump and parroting some of the silly things Trump and his inner circle have been saying," said Larry Sabato, director of UVA’s Center for Politics.
UVA’s School of Continuing and Professional Studies will guarantee admission to its adult degree program for qualified in-state community college graduates.
The University of Virginia athletic scholarship program began to take form on this day in 1937. When the scholarship guidelines were established, education came first. “If he breaks a leg the first year or fails to make the team, so long as he fulfills the other qualifications, we will live up to our contract to see that he gets his degree.”
The Jefferson Scholars Foundation, a private foundation that supports the University of Virginia through undergraduate, graduate and faculty programs, has filled its first endowed professorship. The Paul T. Jones Jefferson Scholars Foundation Professorship will be held by Professor J.C. Cang, a renowned neurobiology professor.
“The speed of change is so rapid now that the kind of work that people do will be continuously reinvented,” said Steven Laymon, UVA’s interim dean of continuing and professional studies. “Digital technology, the ubiquity of data and the globalization of work will be these evolutionary drivers that change people’s jobs on an ongoing basis.”
“The speed of change is so rapid now that the kind of work that people do will be continuously reinvented,” said Steven Laymon, UVA’s interim dean of continuing and professional studies. “Digital technology, the ubiquity of data and the globalization of work will be these evolutionary drivers that change people’s jobs on an ongoing basis.”
Whoever replaces University of Virginia President Teresa A. Sullivan will have to perform a difficult balancing act.
For all the exhausting finishes and unrivaled depth that have marked ACC basketball this season, there have been more than a few eyesores. But there has been an exception. One ACC team has been positioned late to win each of its games. Virginia.
Longtime White House watcher Larry Sabato, the director of UVA’s Center for Politics, said the wave of leaks since the beginning of the Trump presidency is unlike anything he’s seen. “If the Trump administration were a ship with this many leaks, it would have sunk by now,” he said. “Yes, this is a record in my memory.”
A federal judge’s decision Monday night may have dealt the strongest blow yet to President Donald Trump’s attempt to keep residents of seven majority-Muslim countries from entering the U.S., even though the decision applies only to Virginia. “What’s really remarkable here is that the president and the government lawyers are saying, ‘This is a national security order,’ and ‘How dare you rule on this,’” UVA law professor Brandon Garrett said. “But the government could offer no evidence that there was a national security basis.”
Judge Leonie M. Brinkema’s opinion could have much broader implications for the fight against President Trump’s travel ban. “Judge Brinkema spells out a lot more; she really fleshes out one of the possible claims, and that’s the religious discrimination claim,” said David Martin, a UVA professor who, for many years, helped shape immigration policy inside the government.