University of Virginia President Jim Ryan is running again. Ryan is competing for the 11th consecutive year in the 126th annual Boston Marathon on April 18 and this year is raising money and awareness for veterans.
(Commentary by A.D. Carson, assistant professor of hip-hop and the Global South) A year after winning his first Grammy for “King Disease,” rapper Nas delivered his first solo Grammy performance, a career-spanning medley including songs that ranged from his 1994 debut album to his latest, “King’s Disease II,” which scored a nomination for best rap album this year. It might seem odd that one of rap’s most celebrated lyricists is achieving these firsts now, almost three decades into his career.
The University of Virginia campus has become the showground for an array of creative structures built from natural materials. The Biomaterial Building Exposition (Bio-Build Expo for short) was organized by the University’s architecture school and showcases the possibilities of organic, bio-based materials including salvaged lumber and fungal structures.
He’s known as the “Jackie Robinson of Golf” in his home country of Zimbabwe, and now the University of Virginia men’s golf team is honoring his memory with the 2022 Lewis Chitengwa Memorial Golf Tournament. The UVA golf alumnus was a two-time All-American and earned all ACC honors in the 90s. After UVA, he had a successful career on the Canadian golf tour until he passed away at the age of 26 from meningitis.
According to researchers from the University of Virginia School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, and Flo Health, women older than forty who give birth to twins have the highest risk. “The size of this study, in over 1 million new mothers, make the findings highly significant and definitive. Most studies on postpartum depression are small and confined to a small region. This study answers questions about risk factors for postpartum depression from a worldwide sample,” said Jennifer L. Payne, MD, the study’s senior author and director of the Reproductive Psychiatry Research Program at the ...
The future of oyster reefs is not all doom and gloom. UVA researchers, in partnership with The Nature Conservancy, have published the results of a 15-year study in which they assess the possibility of restoring reefs to their former functional glory. Their findings, published in Conservation Letters, demonstrate that restored reefs can match natural reef oyster populations in about six years and continue to hold strong thereafter.
Off-the-shelf, publicly available indices can also drive value. For instance, the University of Virginia’s hedonometer, which measures overall societal happiness driven by textual analysis of tweets, has been shown as a key predictor of overall engagement with media.
Projections from the University of Virginia predict cases in Virginia will rise for at least the next 2½ months, based on its current course. But mitigating effects — such as higher vaccination rates — could cause cases to subside after a mild bump.
Members of the University of Virginia Police Department recently underwent active threat training.
Virghinia Gov. Glenn Youngkin recognized the University of Virginia as one of the winners of the 2022 Governor’s Environmental Excellence Awards. UVA’s waste minimalization efforts helped with developing a strategy transition to reusable and compostable materials.
The University of Virginia is considering a plan that would phase out the school’s usage of fossil fuels by the year 2050 and make the college carbon neutral by 2030.
With effort from a University of Virginia School of Law clinic and bipartisan support from the General Assembly, a bill improving prevention services for at-risk youth will soon become law.
On a brisk, sunny Saturday morning at the Memorial to Enslaved Laborers at the University of Virginia, descendants of people who were enslaved by the university celebrated their ancestors and themselves. It was the first Descendants Day in-person reunion for Descendants of Enslaved Communities at UVA, which last year held virtual with more than 300 participants. Being together on UVA’s Grounds was a powerful feeling.
For UVA basketball forward Kadin Shedrick and guard Reece Beekman, the off-season is the beginning of a different kind of work. “Not everything we do is just about basketball. We want to do stuff that’s outside the core of that,” said Shedrick. For these two players, it’s a time to give back to the community that supports them and to organizations like the Boys and Girls Club that helped shape them.
A near-death experience expert who has been studying the mysterious phenomena for the last 50 years has revealed what he believes happens to us when we die. Dr. Bruce Greyson, a UVA professor of psychiatry, began investigating near-death experiences in the mid-1970s after a “frightening” exchange he shared with one of his patients.
Some panelists expressed doubts that a new vaccine series could be created. “The challenges and unknowns outweigh our current ability to accurately predict a new cycle for a selection of new strains for a COVID-19 vaccine,” Dr. Michael Nelson, chief of the Division of Asthma, Allergy, and Clinical Immunology at the UVA School of Medicine said.
Many parents of young children continue to wonder when their child will be eligible for a COVID-19 vaccine. Vaccines are currently recommended for everyone who is at least 5 years of age, but they are not available for younger age groups. Dr. Steven Zeichner, a pediatrician at UVA Health, says we could be expecting an announcement within the next few weeks regarding the approval of vaccines for children under the age of 5.
As part of the “Converations in Black Freedom Studies” series held at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, assistant history professor Justene Hill Edwards is interviewed alongside Daniel Immerwahr, professor of history at Northwestern University.
Jackson’s presence could make a difference in the perspective she brings and how she expresses herself in her opinions, said Payvand Ahdout, a University of Virginia law professor. Jackson, who was raised in Miami, may see the high court’s cases about race “from the lens of being a Black woman who grew up in the South. She has an opportunity early on to show how representation matters,” Ahdout said.
The no-holds-barred battle over her confirmation underscored the new reality that for now, filling a Supreme Court vacancy has become dependent on a party controlling both the White House and the Senate. That could mean even more strategic decisions about when a justice retires, said Barbara Perry, a presidential and Supreme Court historian at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center.