“In the current political environment, it looks tone deaf to have an all-white, all-male ticket,” said UVA professor Jennifer Lawless, an expert on women in politics. “There’s no question that the notion of a female V.P. is used as a strategy, and I think that’s a little bit sexist. It’s sort of like an ‘insert woman here’ kind of conversation.”
John Merchant, the first black person to be elected to the USGA’s executive committee and a former unpaid counsel to Tiger Woods, died Thursday at age 87 after a long illness, his daughter, Susan, said. Merchant was the first black graduate of the UVA School of Law, arriving on campus in 1955, one year after Brown vs. Board of Education.
Despite no confirmed cases of coronavirus in Virginia or the Charlottesville area, UVA is taking precautions in case the illness makes its way to the area. Officials at UVA Health and UVA Student Health have put clinical screening protocols in place to identify at-risk patients.
A more-than-14,000-square-foot office building on Ivy Road will be demolished ahead of redevelopment of the Ivy corridor and will pave way for a proposed hotel and conference center. The item passed the consent agenda of the Buildings and Grounds Committee during Thursday’s UVA Board of Visitors meeting.
Two women who ran for the U.S. presidency in 2016 are headlining an annual summit and festival in Charlottesville. Hillary Clinton, the Democratic presidential nominee, and former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina, who ran as a Republican candidate, will speak at the ninth annual Tom Tom Summit & Festival on April 14 at the Paramount Theater.
UVA’s Brandon Avenue upper-class residence hall project has entered the second phase of development. The schematic design of the project’s second phase received approval Thursday from the Board of Visitors’ Buildings and Grounds Committee.
Charlottesville is preparing for a potential outbreak of COVID-19, also known as coronavirus, in the commonwealth. While no cases have been confirmed in Virginia, the city says it will be meeting weekly with partners at the Virginia Department of Health's Thomas Jefferson Health District, Albemarle County, and the University of Virginia to ensure preparedness.
Staley set several records as a member of the University of Virginia Cavaliers while earning a degree in rhetoric and communication studies. During her four years with the team, UVA made four NCAA tournament appearances, three Final Four appearances, and one appearance in the national championship. She graduated in 1992 as UVA’s all-time leading scorer (2,135 points), the ACC’s all-time leader in assists (729), and the NCAA all-time leader in steals (454). A two-time National Player of the Year, she also won Most Outstanding Player of the 1991 NCAA Final Four.
For patients and families, this could mean clearer communication about advance directives and living wills before a family member loses decision-making capacity. “Advance directives can be helpful in reducing family members’ stress, anxiety and depression,” said Beth Epstein of UVA’s Center for Biomedical Ethics and Humanities, who also wasn’t part of the current study.
As a professor of politics at UVA and co-director of the Center for Effective Lawmaking, Craig Volden and his team spend a lot of time crunching numbers, trying to figure out which members of Congress take care of business in Washington.
(Subscription required) China has approved Avigan, known generically as favipiravir, for use in clinical trials. The drug speeded up the easing of flu symptoms by only six hours in one trial and 14 hours in another, according to a paper by doctors at the University of Virginia and the World Health Organization, while Tamiflu, a widely marketed flu drug, speeded recovery by more than a day in separate trials.
Donations collected for the Charlottesville-Winneba Foundation will soon be sent to our sister city in Ghana, Africa. UVA’s Medical Equipment Recovery of Clean Inventory program also donated medical supplies to the CWF this year. The program is providing things that can be reused, as well as medical equipment that was opened, but never used in the hospital.
Charlottesville Mayor Nikuyah Walker spoke at UVA Law Wednesday evening in an event sponsored by the Black Law Students Association. Throughout February, BLSA organized events to commemorate and celebrate Black History Month.
The University of Virginia’s language was a bit more direct in its campus-wide message, asking faculty and students “not to travel internationally or to areas of the U.S. affected by the coranavirus.” Additionally, UVA cancelled all of its study abroad programs over break.
The University of Virginia also has a page with coronavirus updates, and it has canceled all outbound study-abroad programs scheduled over spring break, UVA announced Tuesday. The decision was based on the CDC’s recommendation March 1 that universities reconsider travel during the break.
In canceling programs abroad, university officials throughout Virginia cited concern for students’ safety as well as how possible quarantine measures could disrupt students’ lives upon return. The University of Virginia has recalled all students studying abroad in China and Italy and has canceled all spring break travel, affecting 275 students, said Brian Coy, assistance vice president for communications.
(Commentary by A. Benjamin Spencer, Justice Thurgood Marshall Distinguished Professor of Law) On Wednesday, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral argument in June Medical Services LLC v. Russo, a case challenging a Louisiana law requiring physicians who perform abortions to have admitting privileges at a local hospital. The case is widely viewed as the first vehicle that could allow the current court to chip away at Roe v. Wade, if not overturn it.
Dr. William Petri, a UVA infectious disease specialist, said community spread is often detected after patients are hospitalized and later test positive for COVID-19. Some patients in Virginia have been hospitalized for flu or respiratory conditions, he said – a common occurrence in the middle of flu season – but none have tested positive for coronavirus.
Former Secretary of State and 2016 presidential nominee Hillary Clinton will headline this year's Tom Tom Summit & Festival in Charlottesville. The event, moderated by Melody Barnes, co-chair of UVA’s Democracy Initiative, will discuss how women have reshaped politics, policy and power in 21st-century America – and what’s next for women as voters, candidates, and party leaders.
A UVA Health advancement is now part of a bracket challenge.An artificial pancreas system developed by the University of Virginia Center for Diabetes Technology is among the nominees for 2019′s best medical research. It’s now part of what could be considered the scientific version of the NCAA Basketball Tournament.