Every year thousands of babies are born prematurely in the Commonwealth. Many are forced to spend their first days, weeks, and even months inside of the intensive care unit at the University of Virginia Medical Center. The Cuddler Program works to ensure each infant receives the tender loving care that they need.
The organ that went bad inside Trey Ward’s body has, when you think about it, an ironic name — the liver. As in: You can’t live without it. ... April is National Organ Donation Month, and thus a good time to contemplate one of the true transplant success stories. Ward, a Lynchburg resident who is director of food services at Chatham Hall, received his new liver in a 2½-hour operation at the University of Virginia Medical Center on March 23.
Common sense has a special place in modern politics. Politicians constantly appeal to it in their arguments, and they do so because democracy itself is founded on a faith in common sense. ... The truth is, as usual, more complicated. As Sophia Rosenfeld, a historian at the University of Virginia, shows in Common Sense: A Political History, common sense was invented by scientists, philosophers, and politicians. ... Common sense is, as she puts it, a "slippery" idea -- the kind of idea that covers its own tracks.
The Jefferson Foundation at the University of Virginia celebrated three individuals for excellence in the fields of study that Jefferson valued most. The honorees were Maya Lin for her work in architecture, Virginia Supreme Court Chief Justice Cynthia Kinser for law, and Peter Peterson for citizen leadership.
The woman who designed the Vietnam Veterans Memorial has shared her passion for architecture and the environment. Maya Lin is this year's winner of the Thomas Jefferson Foundation Medal in Architecture.
The University of Virginia community came together Wednesday in an interfaith celebration to honor its new president, Teresa Sullivan, as she continues the tradition set by Thomas Jefferson. The University Singers participated in the event. The inauguration is only just beginning. An all-day academic symposium is scheduled for Thursday. Friday is the inauguration ceremony itself. Saturday, Sullivan will join UVa. students in service projects throughout the area, and Sunday will be the inaugural 10K walk around Charlottesville.
The University of Virginia is set to formally install its eighth president. Inauguration ceremonies for Teresa A. Sullivan are scheduled for Friday afternoon on the historic Lawn in Charlottesville. The 3 p.m. ceremony will be moved indoors in case of rain. Sullivan is the first woman to lead U.Va., which didn't become fully coeducational until 1970.
The University of Virginia recently named Nathan Moore, a veteran of noncommercial radio, as the new general manager of WTJU 91.1 FM, the university’s eclectic community radio station. ... Moore took over as the station’s GM on April 5. The Daily Progress interviewed Moore for a Q&A about his perspective on community radio and goals for the station.
Maya Lin, designer of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, hopes she can get viewers of her art and architecture to think about the natural world in a way they hadn’t before. Speaking Wednesday at the University of Virginia to mark Founder’s Day, she was one of three notables to win Thomas Jefferson Foundation Medals, a joint honor presented by UVa and the Thomas Jefferson Foundation. Also honored were Cynthia D. Kinser, chief justice of the Virginia Supreme Court, and Peter G. Peterson, philanthropist and founder of his namesake foundation. The medals are the highest external honor conf...
During a recent visit to this newspaper, Leonard Sandridge offered valuable insight into the contributions of past presidents at the University of Virginia. The university’s outgoing chief operating officer, Mr. Sandridge has worked directly with five of the presidents and clearly has studied the tenures of the others. UVa has had only eight presidents in its illustrious and lengthy history. ... Tomorrow afternoon, UVa will formally inaugurate Teresa A. Sullivan as its eighth, and first woman, president.
Andrea C. Dvorak
A law school alumna
Women's cycling prize money is for the birds
Dvorak was profiled as a "Cyclist You Should Know" in a side bar to this article
ESPN | April 12
Michael Huppe
A graduate of the College of Arts & Sciences
New at the top
The Washington Post | April 12
David Swanson
He earned a master's degree in philosophy and is the author of "War is A Lie."
Why Am I A Peace Activist? Why Aren't You?
Scoop Media in New Zealand | April 1
Haley Stephens
A nursing student and regular contributor to the Wall Street Journal's Hire Education bog
Mary Hill Cole
Earned both a master’s degree and Ph.D. in history at U.Va. and is an expert on Queen Elizabeth I of England
MBC professor elected honorary member of Phi Beta Kappa
Augusta Free Press | April 12
John Monahan
A law professor
Va. returning prisoners to jail at lower-than-average rate, study shows
Washington Post | April 13
Larry J. Sabato
Director of the Center for Politics
Obama's Reelection Campaign: The Perils and The Perks
Fox News | April 12
and
Obama's photo op with Colorado students, on tape
USA Today | April 12
and
New DNC Pick Puts J Street In Spotlight
Th...
The Choral Union will be performing Randall Thompson’s Testament of Freedom based on the words of U.S. President Thomas Jefferson. The Testament of Freedom was written during Thompson’s tenure at the University of Virginia and is dedicated to Jefferson, “in the memory of the Father of the University.”
He drafted the Declaration of Independence, was Governor of Virginia and founded the University of Virginia. As the 3rd U.S. President, he approved the Louisiana Purchase and had Lewis and Clark explore it. He sent the Marines to stop the Muslim Barbary Pirates of Tripoli. His name was Thomas Jefferson, born APRIL 13, 1743.
Several major universities have integrative medicine departments that advocate research in TCM. Harvard School of Medicine, University of Virginia, and UC-SF are but a few.
The Thomas Jefferson Center for the Protection of Free Expression announced the recipients of its 20th Jefferson Muzzle awards today, including a local high school, the state prison system, the Smithsonian Institution and the Transportation Security Administration.
This is the 268th anniversary of Thomas Jefferson's birth. City Hall and the County Office Building will be closed. Those who manage Monticello and the University of Virginia will recognize the Commonwealth's second Governor and America's third President.
Studio art professor Bill Bennett's work, exhibited in the Chroma Projects Art Laboratory's exhibit “Small Breaches in the Firmament,” uses light, motion and imagery to confront the theme of our relationship to the universe and how we feel about it.
An interdisciplinary team of University of Virginia researchers — Dr. John Herr, Brent French and Kimberly Kelly — has been awarded a shot at a $25 million prize to develop a nonsurgical method for sterilizing cats and dogs.