The easing of the COVID-19 pandemic’s grip has hit a new milestone, as UVA Health announced a relaxation of masking and visitation polices.
A reviewer says historian Melvyn Leffler’s new book on the Iraq War “sharpens our understanding of what led to this unnecessary conflict.”
Astronomer Edward Murphy explains the phenomenom of the northern – and southern – lights.
A columnist speculates about UVA’ chances of joining an elite club of schools with men’s and women’s NCAA basketball titles.
For years, the Ambassadors have helped students feel safer on and around Grounds. Now, they’re extending their reach.
UVA psychologist Jessica Stern helps the brokenhearted navigate the painful journey of a breakup.
A UVA Law alumnus is running for the Democratic nomination for president, and his name will likely be familiar.
UVA student Maya Koehn-Wu and her sister are seeking to raise $100,000 to build a health clinic in a remote Peruvian village.
Shaemaa Almustafa once lived in a Syrian refugee camp. Now she’ll have a full ride at UVA, beginning this fall.
A community college science course lured Skylar Gay from the stage to the lab. Now a first-year UVA student, she’s got two papers pending publication.
Amanda Frost, John A. Ewald Jr. Research Professor of Law, explains the origin and context of the United States’ birthright citizenship.
Video of a gleeful dad who learned his daughter was accepted to UVA was featured on NBC’s morning show.
Head football coach Tony Elliott spoke as the Cavalier women’s rowing team dedicated a racing shell to the memory of his slain players.
Students Dean Yost and Jenny Schilling – neither of them members of the track team – were the men’s and women’s winners of Saturday’s Charlottesville 10-Miler.
Want to complain effectively in the workplace? Choose your words carefully, says a Darden School expert.
Former UVA basketball star Malcolm Brogdon had a day off from his job with the Botn Celtics, so naturally, he addressed the UN General Assembly.
In a podcast, UVA psychologist Dan Willingham talks about how learning works, and why “learning styles” aren’t really a thing.
State attorneys general are using public nuisance laws to go after businesses that allegedly create societal harms, a UVA law professor said.
Phil Augusta Jackson went from the McIntire School of Commerce to ad agency job in New York. Now he’s running a prime-time sitcom for NBC.
Could Donald Trump run for president from a prison cell? A UVA law professor says there is precedent.