“I got more energy than the day I was born!”—a line in McAuliffe’s stump speech that is bolstered by his behavior. The former governor has the hyperactive demeanor of a human Labrador retriever, bopping in place to whatever rally tune moves him as everyone nearby pretends that his dancing isn’t happening. He’s happy to take selfies with chatty strangers and wide-eyed small children who’d rather be on a playground. “It seems like his whole life is just to be governor every other year,” says J. Miles Coleman, an assistant editor of Sabato’s Crystal Ball at the University of Virginia’s Center for...
Republicans are trying to reclaim the governor seat for the first time since 2009. However, the UVA Center for Politics says Virginia is enough of a Democratic state, it just depends on the turnout. “We’re probably moving out of persuasion part of the campaign into a, ‘okay, we need to get our votes out,’” said J. Miles Coleman, with the UVA Center for Politics. “I don’t really have any doubts that the Democrats in this state have the votes that they need; they just need to mobilize them.”
The quote, not always presented in perfect context, has become a staple of GOP messaging. “I’m sure McAuliffe would take back his statement about ‘parents shouldn’t tell teachers what to teach’ if he could, or at least qualify it – just as Youngkin would probably like to take back his declaration that Donald Trump was why he was running for governor,” says Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia Center for Politics. “But once you say it, you’re stuck with it.”
(Transcript) We begin tonight with the president`s campaign for his legislative agenda and his campaign to hold on to the governorship of the state of Virginia for Democrats, and leading off our discussion tonight is Larry Sabato, director of the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia.
(Podcast) In this episode of BioScience Talks, we’re joined by previous guest Paolo D’Odorico, professor of hydrology and the chair of the Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management at the University of California, Berkeley. We’re also joined by Willis Jenkins, Hollingsworth Professor of Ethics at the University of Virginia, where he is also chair of the Department of Religious Studies. Our guests discuss their recent article in BioScience on water security and the ways that our values play into its management, with implications for Indigenous rights, ecosystem health, economi...
Congress might well choose to press an “originalist” argument that the Constitution, as understood in 1787, did not provide for any executive privilege to withhold information from Congress. That argument has been raised, for example, by the University of Virginia law professor Saikrishna Prakash, one of the foremost promoters of an originalist interpretation of Article II of the Constitution. Prakash, most often a staunch defender of presidential authority in domestic affairs, has urged Congress to “openly declare that executive privilege does not apply to matters of congressional oversight.”...
Youngkin’s appeal to parents relies much more on emotion and not on a detailed policy platform, said Robert Pianta, the dean of the University of Virginia’s school of education. In his view, the call from Youngkin and his allies to support parents really refers to a particular group of parents unhappy with what they see as the liberal political agenda of northern Virginia school officials, not parents in general. “They’re asking for influence around a particular set of policies,” Pianta said of parents in Virginia protesting local school board actions related to curriculum and other matters. “...
If SEL is optional, it will feel like an add-on to educators, said Catherine Pilcher Bradshaw, an education professor and associate dean at the University of Virginia. Set the expectation that SEL will be part of the core curriculum — not a filler — and dedicate time and training so it happens. Teachers must be willing to use the material, and be provided incentives to do so, as necessary. “SEL is most impactful when it’s sustained and implemented consistently,” Bradshaw said.
The pandemic forced people to think about “how we can transform health care to be much more community-based than it is right now,” said Dr. Taison Bell, an intensivist and assistant professor of medicine at UVA Health. To reach those people typically neglected by health care requires unconventional approaches that may be more costly, labor-intensive or slow, like at-home vaccinations, Bell said. “It’s not as efficient as a mass vaccination center, but that doesn’t mean it’s any less important,” he said.
A member of the University of Virginia Health System was on the U.S. Food and Drug Administration panel that recommended the Pfizer vaccine for younger kids. Dr. Michael Nelson said the panel reviewed Pfizer’s data for several days. On Tuesday, members discussed it amongst each other for eight hours. They specifically talked about concerns over myocarditis with this vaccine in a younger age group and found that there was zero signal of the disease in the data provided to them.
A doctor with the University of Virginia was part of the FDA panel that voted Tuesday to recommend Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine for children ages 5 to 11. Dr. Michael Nelson says it has been exciting to be part of history during such a critical time.
Dr. Michael Nelson, a University of Virginia immunologist who also serves on the FDA’s advisory panel, agreed that “providing a choice to a fully informed public is a pretty good path forward.” He stressed that the panel’s support for authorizing the vaccine “is not a mandate” to inoculate all kids between ages 5 and 11.
Dr. Michael Nelson, a University of Virginia immunologist who also serves on the FDA’s advisory panel, agreed that “providing a choice to a fully informed public is a pretty good path forward.” He stressed that the panel’s support for authorizing the vaccine “is not a mandate” to inoculate all kids between ages 5 and 11.
(Book review by Kwame Edwin Otu of the Carter G. Woodson Institute for African-American and African Studies) I enter “Kenyan, Christian, Queer” first, as a self-identified queer Ghanaian man who continues to wrestle with Christianity, the religion into which I was socialized. And, second, as a scholar invested in the emerging field of critical queer African studies, to which Adriaan van Klinken’s book makes a vital contribution. The book’s emphasis on the vexatious intersections between Africanness, religion and queemess couldn’t be timelier.
The Virginia Film Festival kicks off its 34th annual season Wednesday night with a completely sold-out house. The 2021 Virginia Film Festival will present films at the Paramount Theater, Violet Crown, and Culbreth Theater as well as drive-in movies at Morven Farm. The festival runs through Sunday and will feature more than 50 screenings, special events, tributes, and discussions.
In “The Machinery of Dreams,” young Lily shows plenty of strength and courage as she enters a fantasy world on a quest to secure healing for her beloved mother. Audience members can see actress Cora Metzfield in action as Lily during the Virginia Film Festival this weekend. “The Machinery of Dreams” will be screened at 11 a.m. Saturday at Culbreth Theatre on Culbreth Road at the University of Virginia.
The Blue Ridge Health District will receive 6,300 doses for the first three weeks of vaccinations. UVA Health will receive 6,600 over that same time period. In the Blue Ridge Health District, there are an estimated 15,000 children between 5-11.
This certainly isn’t the first time the DoD has applied additive manufacturing to hypersonics research, as the Pentagon recently awarded 18 university-led hypersonic projects a total of $25.5 million. One of the projects, led by the University of Virginia, seeks to 3D print high-temperature parts made of previously unused niobium alloys. The hopes are that these proposed 3D printing capabilities will eventually be applied to hypersonic scramjets.
The University of Virginia’s Center for Politics released an analysis of midterm elections going back to 1946 this past summer. The report showed that the party of the president in office, on average, loses more than 26 House seats during the midterms. The biggest loss has been 64 seats, while the most sizable gain has been just eight seats.
Three-quarters of rural Americans live more than an hour from the nearest site testing new treatments for COVID-19, according to a new study of the University of Virginia School of Medicine.