The Cavaliers had a sweet performance against the Sooners. From the near perfect rotations on defense to the smoothly executed pick-and-rolls, one coming when the shot clock was in single digits, Virginia was a smooth sailing ship against Oklahoma.
After the University of Virginia's slow start against Gardner-Webb University Friday in the NCAA Tournament, UVA alum and NFL defensive end has taken to Twitter to express his frustrations in a joking way.
As the 2020 Democratic presidential field grows, the fight over “authenticity” is becoming difficult to ignore — and a clear gender divide is forming. “We have seen many, many men run over time who have different personalities,” Jen Lawless, a UVA political scientist with an expertise in women in politics, said. “We are accustomed to different presentations of men that we see as authentic.”
LGBTQ+ individuals in Charlottesville and Albemarle County are getting the help they need to make their legal documents match the gender with which they identify. On Sunday, UVA law students teamed with the Virginia Equality Bar Association to host a Trans and Gender Expansive Legal Clinic.
Matt Villiott has held a lot of roles at radio station WTJU during his four years as a UVA student: sound engineer, sound technician and late-night DJ. On Saturday, however, he and 81 other audiophiles added new titles to their radio resumes: Guinness World Record challengers.
The University of Virginia ROTC is holding its annual blood drive. All donated blood will go directly to military personnel.
At the height of the Civil War, Confederate President Jefferson Davis became a very paranoid man. He suspected a mole somewhere in his government, leaking information. He was right – and wrong. There was, indeed, a mole. But it was a servant at the Confederate White House – a freed slave with a photographic memory who slipped the North valuable secrets from Davis' desk. "This is a humdinger of a tale," said UVA historian Elizabeth Varon, who detailed Mary Bowser's life and spy capers in her 2003 book, "Southern Lady, Yankee Spy."
The technology, a century ago, had disadvantages. Though it’s possible that there might have been some experiments with electric scooters, most ran on gas with noisy engines. “It was a really different experience riding an Autoped [one brand] compared to, say, a Bird dockless scooter,” says Peter Norton, a UVA historian of engineering and society.
The first event of its kind at UVA, the three-day Presidential Ideas Festival: Democracy in Dialogue will feature a swath of political figures, scholars and journalists speaking on a variety of aspects involving the American presidency.
Taped on the wall above Kyle Guy’s bed is a reminder of defeat. In the photo, snapped last March, Guy is deflated, hunched and with tears welling in his eyes. In the background, UMBC’s players are joyous. They are hugging and screaming. Two players are preparing to chest bump, meeting for mid-air ecstasy, after the Retrievers became the first No. 16 seed in men’s NCAA Tournament history to knock off a No. 1 seed.The photo captures the magic of the NCAA Tournament in a frame. The underdog knocking off the top dog. The unrealistic made real. For Virginia, however, the photo came to define failur...
Gardner-Webb is a No. 16 seed in this season’s NCAA tournament, and the Runnin’ Bulldogs’ first-round opponent is Virginia. It’s easy for Gardner-Webb to be loose, to be in constant attack mode, to drink in the atmosphere and soak up the experience. They have nothing to lose and everything to gain. Can the Virginia Cavaliers, a No. 1 seed, do the same? The Cavaliers became the first team to lose to a No. 16 seed in the NCAA tournament a year ago, falling to the University of Maryland Baltimore County.
Virginia not only has the experience advantage over Gardner-Webb in Friday’s opening-round game of the NCAA Tournament, but the Cavaliers also are familiar with the venue.
On the campus of Mr. Jefferson’s university, it is said that ghost dogs stalk the old football field. This is a cheap way to point out that the University of Virginia’s basketball team enters this year’s NCAA tournament also haunted by dark visions of dogs it has encountered—specifically, the Retrievers of the University of Maryland-Baltimore County who, a year ago, made the Cavaliers the first and only No. 1 seed to lose to a No. 16 seed. The Cavaliers get their first chance to lay the ghost on Friday, against Gardner-Webb, a school whose only previous impact in this tournament was that Artis...
“Historically, Catholic hospitals were always more likely to provide uncompensated services and care for vulnerable, stigmatized populations that for-profit hospitals wouldn’t touch,” said Kenneth White of the University of Virginia, who wasn’t involved in the study. “When patients see mergers in their small communities, they often don’t realize what that means or how services may be affected,” he said in a phone interview. “Information about ownership, mission, vision and values should be upfront in any hospital, regardless of affiliation, displayed both online and in the hospital.”
Lois Shepherd, professor of public health sciences and co-director of studies in reproductive ethics and justice at the University of Virginia, discusses misrepresentations and other flaws in Georgia's fetal heartbeat bill.
Two UVA researchers want to know what's preventing faculty members, including some who have used the services of UVA's Center for Teaching Excellence, from actually changing the way they teach. What they've found is helping them shape future research and design more-effective support systems.
Kathleen Flake, a professor of Mormon Studies at the University of Virginia, said the opening of the temple has “enormous cultural significance” for Mormons.
The University of Virginia is almost ready to begin building a conference center, while Charlottesville and Albemarle County also are thinking about a larger convention center.
"I'm proud that when her time comes, my kid will get admitted the old fashioned-way: by choosing parents wealthy enough to afford a house in a good school district and an SAT prep course." Siva Vaidhyanathan, a professor of media studies and director of the Center for Media and Citizenship at the University of Virginia, reacting in a tweet to the college-admissions scandal.