Alan Taylor, the author of “American Republics: A Continental History of the United States, 1783-1850,” has been named the winner of the New-York Historical Society’s 2022 Barbara and David Zalaznick Book Prize, awarded each year for the best work of American history or biography.
The station’s sports director, Jermaine Ferrell, caught up with University of Virginia Athletic Director Carla Williams.
UVA Health officials say the number of COVID cases in the University’s medical facilities continue to drop as the post-holiday surge created by the omicron variant continues to abate.
A discovery at the University of Virginia Cancer Center could lead to new treatment for small-cell lung cancer. The discovery came as researchers were investigating the role of the EP300 gene in the development of small-cell lung cancer in lab mice.
People from 39 states and 11 countries took part in a webinar Thursday from the University of Virginia discussing the life of Booker T. Washington.
(Press release) Culture of Respect is excited to announce the participants of Cohort 6 in the Culture of Respect Collective, an ambitious two-year program that brings together institutions of higher education dedicated to ending campus sexual violence and guides them through a rigorous process of self-assessment and targeted organizational change. This sixth cohort is comprised of 23 diverse institutions from across North America, including the University of Virginia.
(Commentary by UVA Alumnus Mike Kerrigan; subscription required) Fortune smiled on me in that Heathrow bookstore. Prominently displayed was a translation of Marcus Aurelius ’ “Meditations” by Gregory Hays. It seemed apt to reread because Mr. Hays taught at the University of Virginia, where I studied classics. On a long flight and a delayed layover, I tried to be a Stoic.
More than 20 million Americans will fight an eating disorder at some point in their life. “Raising awareness is the primary goal, along with improving care, so the more people that are on the lookout for eating disorders and the quicker people get care, the better outcomes we have,” said Dr. Julia Taylor, an assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Virginia School of Medicine.
In a “hothouse of ambitious people,” Jackson’s colleague, Richard C. Schragger, said, she “stood out for her consideration of others … and her kind words to lots of people. She was clearly someone who could talk to anybody and definitely not an ideologue or someone who was pushing a particular agenda,” said Schragger, who teaches at the UVA School of Law. Fellow Harvard Law Review editor Kimberly Jenkins Robinson, also now UVA law professor, said Jackson’s election to an editing post was proof that she “had a brilliant legal mind, but she is also someone who is humble and easy to work with.”
(Commentary) You may have read about legislation moving through the Virginia General Assembly regarding the future of Catawba Hospital. The bill would fund a study about reimagining that 112-year-old institution, and adding substance abuse treatment to the services it offers. It’s a bipartisan effort, sponsored by Dels. Sam Rasoul, D-Roanoke, and Joe McNamara, R-Roanoke County. On Feb. 11, the measure got 99 votes in the House. It’s now being considered in the Senate. When and if that study happens, one of the items under consideration should be a way to appropriately recognize [UVA School of ...
Bestselling author David Baldacci and his wife, Michelle, have given $1 million to the Library of Virginia, the library announced this week. David Baldacci, who grew up in Henrico County, is a 1978 graduate of Henrico High who went to earn a bachelor’s degree from Virginia Commonwealth University and a law degree from the University of Virginia School of Law.
(Podcast) Retired Lt. Gen. Charles Luckey, a UVA alumnus and former chief of Army Reserve and commanding general of the U.S. Army Reserve Command, joined Aileen Black on “Leaders and Legends” to discuss leadership and the importance of empowering your team to do its best.
Erin McClelland, an alumna of the Saint Louis University field hockey team and the current University of Virginia field hockey team manager said, “Sports have taught me to be confident in my own strength and ability, and how important it is to uplift and support those around you whenever you can.”
Catherine Ward, a law school student at the University of Virginia who has studied the state constitution, says before the 1971 revisions to the state constitution, there hadn’t ever been language requiring staggered terms for education board appointments. “They had this emphasis – really, for the first time – on terms being staggered,” Ward said. “Most of the debate previously was really focused on who would be appointed, how many members there would be and what their tenure would be.”
Positive Health Solutions — Dr. Mala Cunningham's online courses on Neuroscience, Yoga & Mindfulness. Price: $2,500. Length: 200 hours. Cunningham is an assistant professor at the University of Virginia's nursing school and has partnered with Yogaville for the Teacher Training component of her Neuroscience and Yoga course, which is currently taught online. "She combines traditional teachings with adaptations for people rehabilitating from chronic illness and includes a significant psychology and mental health component integrating the latest research on brain science," says Chellaram. "Dr....
(Essay) Fortune smiled on me in that Heathrow bookstore. Prominently displayed was a translation of Marcus Aurelius ’ “Meditations” by Gregory Hays. It seemed apt to reread because Mr. Hays taught at the University of Virginia, where I studied classics.
(Audio and transcript) Joining us now to help explain what the Democratic incumbents’ exodus from Congress could mean for midterm elections in November is Kyle Kondik. He is an elections analyst and director of communications at the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics.
Biden can’t be seen as taking a premature victory lap on the economy or COVID despite progress, according to Barbara Perry, an expert on the presidency at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center. “He has to acknowledge that people are in pain and they’re fearful,” said Perry. “They have fears over COVID, obviously and inflation, and not so much unemployment, but underemployment, and rising crime.”
(Commentary) This is what pediatrician Ann Kellams would call “creative problem solving.” Kellams is the president of the Board of the Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine and a professor of pediatrics at the University of Virginia. “You take the information you have, and then you figure out what will work best, and minimize the risk as much as possible for you to get to the place you feel comfortable.”
“What we’ve seen are patterns of lost learning persisting,” said Jim Soland, an assistant professor of quantitative methods at the University of Virginia who was among panelists attending an online briefing hosted by SciLine, a nonprofit based at the American Association for the Advancement of Science.