Tears and revenge are not the only things that may come from a bad romance; teens in intense relationships may find themselves battling high blood pressure as adults. Data from an ongoing study of 184 Buford Middle School students that began in 1998 shows a direct, self-reported correlation between intense teen romantic relationships and high blood pressure as adults.
Former U.S. National Team soccer player and Olympic gold medalist Angela Hucles Mangano [a UVA alumna] has been hired as Vice President of Player Development and Management at Angel City FC.
From now on, June 14 will be known as Janae Profit Day in the city of Dunwoody, Georgia. During a June 14 City Council meeting, Mayor Lynn Deutsch recognized Profit, a recent graduate of Dunwoody High School, for her outstanding achievements in athletics. Profit will continue her studies and athletic career at the University of Virginia.
Denise Meyer, who teaches in the University of Virginia Hospital Program, which serves students from both Albemarle County and Charlottesville City, is a Golden Apple recipient.
“It seems to me like the ACA has petered out as a major animating issue,” said Kyle Kondik, managing editor of Sabato’s Crystal Ball, an elections forecaster and newsletter at the University of Virginia. “Health care itself is always going to be an important issue, but it may be that future political battles are more about things other than the ACA.”
University of Virginia political expert Larry Sabato told Secrets, “McAuliffe has agreed to participate in five debates. No word from Youngkin yet. If Blanding were included in debates, that might increase her name identification. But it’ll be a surprise if the sponsors invite her. Normally, you have to demonstrate substantial public support to get a debate offer, and she hasn’t done that."
If Disney is forced to pick a side, the conservative agenda is likely to lose out, says Shilpa Davé, UVA assistant professor of media studies. This is not purely a matter of principle. “It’s self-interest, too,” she says. “What has happened is that they realise that they have to appeal to a changing demographic, so the bottom line for them is: how are they going to get more customers? And how are they going to appeal to new generations?”
According to Dr. Matthew Crawford, a senior fellow at UVA’s Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture, a mismatch has been created “between science as an activity of the solitary mind, and the institutional reality of it. Big science is fundamentally social in its practice, and with this comes certain entailments.”
Dairy Market in Charlottesville is honoring its merchants and farmers behind the businesses throughout the week of June 14 to 18. Coinciding with Virginia’s Agriculture Week, Gov. Ralph Northam stopped by the market Wednesday morning to get in on the celebration. “They’re really the backbone of our economy, to see all of these businesses,” Northam said. “It’s just a beautiful venue.” Northam, Virginia Secretary of Agriculture and Forestry Bettina Ring, and University of Virginia President Jim Ryan toured the market, stopping to speak with vendors like Ken Smith, owner of Moo Thru.
We the undersigned are deeply concerned about the changing role of the Federal Reserve. The Fed is among the nation’s most important institutions. Its monetary and regulatory mandates are essential for economic stability. However, based on recent activity, the Fed is in danger of exceeding these mandates. Unless it changes course, the Fed will impede its own effectiveness. (Among the signatories is Edwin T. Burton, professor of economics.)
Virginia’s colleges and universities [including UVA and UVA’s College at Wise] are urging Gov. Ralph Northam to allow student athletes to profit off of their name, image and likeness, something the NCAA currently bans. More than a dozen institutions signed a letter asking Northam to make the change through an executive order as a temporary fix.
Virginia’s colleges and universities [including UVA and UVA’s College at Wise] are urging Gov. Ralph Northam to allow student athletes to profit off of their name, image and likeness, something the NCAA currently bans. More than a dozen institutions signed a letter asking Northam to make the change through an executive order as a temporary fix.
The reality is that our nation is still racially segregated. And it’s segregated in ways that limit our opportunities to learn about each other’s life experiences, even if our laws do not formally segregate our nation as they once did. This means that some live in a world in which they rarely encounter the conditions that bring harm to others everyday; others can’t escape those very conditions. You can see this segregation in great detail by exploring the University of Virginia’s Racial Dot Map, which takes data from the 2010 U.S. Census and plots where people are living across the country.
Scientists from the National University of Science and Technology “MISiS,” as part of an international group of researchers, have created nanomaterials for the treatment of groundwater for use as a supply of drinking water. Specialists from the Institute of General and Inorganic Chemistry (Belarus), the University of Virginia (USA), Istanbul University (Turkey), the University of Limerick (Ireland), and the Royal Institute of Technology (Sweden) also took part in the research.
In research to be published in the Journal of Applied Social Psychology, UCLA Anderson’s Sanford DeVoe and University of Virginia’s Jieun Pai provide evidence that, for higher-wage workers paid by the hour, giving up time to volunteer might be less enjoyable than for similarly paid workers on a salary or for hourly workers with low pay.
Having courage in the workplace may not seem like the most needed skill, but it is an asset and should be cultivated, according to UVA professor Jim Detert. “The benefits at the organizational level: [Staff are] just flat-out solving problems more quickly,” said Detert, the John L. Colley Professor of Business Administration. “They’re pursuing opportunities before they’re lost or a competitor takes them. There is also high employee engagement and commitment. That ranges from people making fewer mistakes, people working harder, people being more creative, to people engaging in organizational ci...
A new tracker will provide information on staff members of the Biden administration. UVA’s Miller Center has launched a database to track leadership positions in the administration.
UVA’s Darden School of Business plans to expand its presence in the Washington, D.C., area with its first part-time MBA offering. The new program, which will enroll 65 students in August of 2022, will be based in the school’s Rosslyn campus. Candidates can begin to apply for that first class as early as this coming August.
Prospective students and their families can once again get a look at the University of Virginia in person. This is the first time in 15 months that in-person college tours have been allowed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The University of Virginia has updated its COVID-19 vaccination guidance for faculty and staff members in the Academic Division. According to a release, they will need to either provide proof of vaccination or agree to weekly prevalence testing requirements for the fall semester.