UVA plans to lift some of its indoor masking requirements, with exceptions, effective March 21. Exceptions include classrooms where students and faculty are in close proximity for extended periods of time, UVA Health facilities, and University Transit.
University of Virginia students, faculty, staff and visitors can bare their faces everywhere but in class as of March 21 as school officials plan to lift masking mandates that have been in place since the beginning of fall semester.
If you want to be an emergency or patient care technician, but don’t want to foot the bill, then UVA may have a program for you. “We are so excited for the Earn While You Learn program,” UVA Health CEO Dr. Wendy Horton said. The program gives people the opportunity to start working in the health field without paying for classes.
(Video) A just-released Harris Poll revealed that 52% of women would still prefer to work from home versus 41% of men. The report also showed that 52% of Black workers and 50% of women see it as being better when it comes to career advancement. Dr. Laura Morgan Roberts, professor of practice at UVA’s Darden School of Business, discusses the report.
The University of Virginia received nearly 51,000 applications from high school seniors this year, breaking a school record for the second straight year. Down Interstate 81, Virginia Tech set a record, too, with 45,000 applicants. But while the state’s most prestigious public colleges are flourishing, others are struggling to find students.
Alumni Will Gemma, Justin Black and Dietrich Teschner met as students at UVA. Their documentary, “Headwaters Down,” navigates the James River’s health, history and importance, and was named winner of the 2022 Virginia Environmental Film Contest.
(Commentary) According to research conducted by UVA professor Rob Cross, “What seems to distinguish the top 20% of performers across a wide range of organizations is not so much a big network. What distinguishes them is how they make connections.”
UVA’s Miller Center is one of the sources for CNN’s new four-part series “LBJ: Triumph and Tragedy” that reveals dramatic firsthand accounts, never-before-broadcast archival material and secretly recorded audiotapes.
As an undergraduate at the University of Virginia School of Architecture in 2019, Tarin Jones reimagined Monument Avenue for a class assignment. Now he works as programs and exhibitions manager at the Branch Museum of Architecture and Design, which sits along the historic thoroughfare, and regards Monument Avenue from a more knowledgeable perspective. “I look back on that project and would change so many things,” Jones says.
Right after completing an ordinary bullpen session at the Cincinnati Reds minor league spring training, reliever Nick Howard smiles as he says, “Obviously, my history is a little complex and complicated.” It’s been eight years since the Reds drafted Howard in the first round of the MLB Draft out of the University of Virginia.
Pilot Carole Hopson flies a Boeing 737 for a living as a United Airlines first officer. But she often gets mistaken for someone else. “I get confused with a flight attendant, or anybody — cabin crew, even a gate agent — anything but a pilot,” The UVA alumna says.
"Incumbency still matters but it doesn’t have the importance that it once did," said Kyle Kondik, a lead analyst at the University of Virginia Center for Politics. "A warchest can help deter challengers in both primaries and general elections."
(Commentary) Larry Sabato, head of the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics, said Youngkin “could be positioning himself for a presidential run in 2024. If so, he needs to talk to Doug Wilder, who called his mid-term presidential run in 1991 the biggest mistake he made. Youngkin would have to run full-time beginning late this year or early next year. He just got elected to his first political office. Not a wise move.” He could run for vice president in 2024 but, while that would be less risky, “Virginia voters probably still won’t like it, and a GOP ticket in this state is still an und...
At simply 43, DeSantis is already thought-about a potential successor to Trump as chief of the Republican Party. Trump and DeSantis’ keynote addresses at CPAC come amid studies of a rift between the pair, with DeSantis conspicuously refraining from promising to face apart if the previous president runs once more in 2024. Professor Larry Sabato, director of UVA’s Center for Politics, stated the convention provided potential Republican candidates a possibility to faucet into Trump’s base. “What normally happens at CPAC is other candidates, like DeSantis, will say ‘isn’t Donald Trump the greatest...
Barbara Perry, the director of presidential studies at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center said it is true that modern polarization, particularly on the political right, has sharply diminished chances of achieving a consistent view of the economy today. This, together with structural flaws - such as partisan gerrymandering, the high costs of campaigning to gain traction and social media silos - has dramatically worsened the division in Washington. This almost uniquely makes it more difficult for Biden to tout any of his economic achievements to win voters in 2022 and possibly 2024. ...
“I just don’t think that Trump’s endorsement is, you know, is the be-all and end-all of the race,” said Kyle Kondik, a political analyst at the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics. “It’s still a suburban kind of scene there. I’m sure that Trump is well-liked among the Republican electorate there, but there’s probably Trumpier primary electorates around the country.”
Kyle Kondik, managing editor of Sabato’s Crystal Ball, a political handicapper at the University of Virginia, cited “a collision of important circumstances” creating fierce headwinds for Democrats, not least the redistricting process that, like a game of musical chairs, has left some lawmakers without their old districts — and pushed them into retirement. “There are a lot of signs that this is not going to be a good year for Democrats,” Kondik said.
“Individual candidates and the races they run do matter, but history tells us the political environment is the most meaningful contributor to the midterm outcome,” said Kyle Kondik, an analyst at the nonpartisan Center for Politics at the University of Virginia.
University of Virginia's Michael Holt agrees – "He may have been the most handsome man ever to serve in the White House" – and adds that Pierce had a great personality. "He was probably the most amiable president we've ever had. Even historians who were hostile to him remark about how pleasant and friendly he was."
William Ferraro, a senior associate editor with the University of Virginia’s Washington Papers project said the fake letters were not particularly unusual for their time. Many politicians and writers schemed against each other, and pamphlets were a common format to use when making attacks on opponents. Rumors and innuendo ran rampant.