UVA announced on Tuesday night a litany of health and safety restrictions after reporting its highest single-day spike of new cases of COVID-19. The measures went into effect at 7 p.m. Tuesday and will remain in place until Feb. 26, at which point University leaders will assess lifting them.
UVA implemented new restrictions after a “troubling rise” in coronavirus cases, including the arrival of a more contagious variant, officials said Tuesday night.
UVA student Spencer Buddington was home on winter break in Abingdon when he and his friends intervened to give CPR to a man who had a heart attack inside Abingdon General Store.
(Commentary by Rita Felski, John Stewart Bryan Professor of English) What exactly would be lost if we lost the humanities? Perhaps this question can serve as a thought experiment for clarifying why the humanities matter. It puts things in a fresh perspective by inviting us to imagine an experience of loss and to anticipate the reactions triggered by this loss.
One of the first things that UVA Health did when the pandemic began this year was get tablets out to nursing homes, according to David Cattell-Gordon, director of its nationally recognized telemedicine program. “When there were outbreaks of COVID, we were able to see patients quickly using a peripheral device where you can hear chest sounds, and a pulmonologist could make a quick determination that that patient needed to come in and be tested or stay at home and be monitored.”
(Transcript) At UVA, a new memorial to the thousands of enslaved people who helped build the school and then worked there – craftsmen, construction workers, cooks, domestic servants. Some of their names are known. Most, more than 3,000, remain anonymous, honored by so-called memory marks in the stone.
A Lebanon County native is on the move again after being traded for the second time in his Major League Baseball career. Cedar Crest High School andf UVA graduate Derek Fisher, 27, has been traded from the Toronto Blue Jays to the Milwaukee Brewers the teams announced.
Excited and relieved. Those were the first two words [UVA alumnus] Alec Bettinger used to describe his reaction when the Milwaukee Brewers added him to its 40-man roster Nov. 20.
With a growing number of successful women of color occupying various positions in government, entertainment, and business, young girls of color have more and more inspiration and representation in real life than ever. Children’s book author Tanya Terry is sending a message to Black girls. The first time author published her children’s book, “You Are Loved” to inspire young Black girls to love themselves fully and unconditionally.
Since the pandemic began, the Abbey Theater of Dublin’s artistic director Joe Bishara has thrown himself into producing solo shows for streaming as part of the Virtual Theatre Project with a wide-ranging group of talents. Next in line, “#Charlottesville” is simultaneously a premiere and a reunion. I talked to Bishara and playwright and star Priyanka Shetty, who earned her M.F.A. from UVA, by Zoom.
The first executive director of the Oak Ridge Institute, a groundbreaking research partnership between the University of Tennessee and Oak Ridge National Laboratory, has been announced. Joan Bienvenue will serve as the executive director. Bienvenue is currently the senior executive director of the Applied Research Institute at the University of Virginia. She helped launch the institute there and has been the senior executive director since June 2013.
As a matter of policy, the Confederate military promised not to treat captured Black prisoners as soldiers and threatened to re-enslave them or execute them, said William B. Kurtz, managing director of UVA’s John L. Nau III Center for Civil War History. Confederate leaders made the same threat against the white officers leading Black troops, Kurtz noted.
Many MBA applicants feel that they are purchasing a brand when they choose a business school. However, the educational experience you will have is what is crucial to your future, and no one will affect your education more than your professors. Today, we focus on Gregory B. Fairchild from UVA’s Darden School of Business.
Sidney Milkis is part of UVA’s Miller Center of Public Affairs. He and others at the Miller Center are specialists on U.S. political history. Milkis says that, when it was created in the late 1700s, the U.S. presidency was unlike any other position in world history. “For thousands of years before the American Constitution people thought a strong executive power and a democracy – what Jefferson called self-government – were incompatible. Because how could a sovereign people delegate tremendous responsibility to one individual and still consider themself a democracy, even a representative democr...
Overall, people have become more cautious amid the pandemic, said sociologist W. Bradford Wilcox, director of the National Marriage Project at the University of Virginia. “This caution is making them less likely to get divorced, less likely to get married, less likely to have a child,” he said.
These presidents were using the word in a way that stems from its centuries-old legal definition, said Barbara A. Perry, a professor and director of presidential studies at UVA’s Miller Center. “As a concept of fairness of the law, equity is meant as a remedy: If someone hurts you the person can be punished and assessed compensatory damage to make you whole again,” she said. That legal sensibility shows up in usages by many former-lawyer presidents, from William Taft to Franklin Delano Roosevelt to Lyndon B. Johnson (a law school dropout), who at times came close to using the word as Biden has...
“China’s market is now central to any major release,” said Aynne Kokas, a UVA professor of media studies. “Diminishing market share presents a worrying picture for Hollywood studios” that may have been relying on China to recoup blockbusters’ budgets, she said.
Surveys show most Republicans still embrace Trump. “In fact, 70% of Republicans believe that Joe Biden was illegally elected president,” said Barbara Perry, an analyst at the University of Virginia. That’s something Republican leaders admit is false. But the analyst said Trump supporters got the policies they wanted. “They got lower taxes, fewer regulations, conservatives on the federal bench, conservatives on the Supreme Court,” she said. They also got an aggressive foreign policy and a hard line on border issues.
Larry Sabato, director of UVA’s Center for Politics, said Trump’s legal team mounted a defense that played to that political divide. “They basically turned this into an ultra-partisan event, knowing that they just had to minimize the number of Republican defections,” Sabato said. “All they had to do was beat Democrats to a pulp and basically say to Republicans, who have all fought Democrats to win office and fight them every single day, ‘Do you want to side with your enemies? Or are you going to stick with your team?’”
(By Kimberly A. Whittier, assistant professor at the Darden School of Business) The pandemic caused a rapid shift in business practices toward more virtual and digital consumer experiences. To better understand these insights, I turned to Jason Rose, chief marketing officer of Pure Storage. Below are his thoughts on four virtual/digital trends that better companies are leveraging for advantage.