UVA researchers think they can improve outcomes for lung transplant patients. The university recently received more than $8.6 million in federal grants for a series of projects meant to take on the problem on multiple fronts.
Virginia’s population could surpass 10 million by 2040 if current trends continue.That’s the finding of a population projection report from the University of Virginia. The commonwealth contracted the university’s Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service to analyze population trends. The center is sharing that information with public agencies so they can plan for the future.
At the same time Charlottesville has faced controversy over its decision to remove a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee, the University of Virginia has approved a memorial – with nary a peep of protest – to the enslaved workers who built and maintained the school. “I don’t think it’s coincidental,” says Frank Dukes, a member of the design team, co-founder of University and Community Action for Racial Equity and past director of the Institute for Environmental Negotiation in the School of Architecture. He notes that the UVA plan has been in the works since around 2008. “It’s the same impe...
Two UVA researchers, doctoral student Hannah Li and professor of computer science David Evans, have developed a new password manager prototype that works quite differently from existing password manager clients. The research team describes their password manager – which they named Horcrux – as "a password manager for paranoids," due to its security and privacy-focused features and a unique design used for handling user passwords, both while in transit and at rest.
In August of 1818, President James Monroe, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and 18 other prominent Virginians met at the Mountain Top Inn to decide the final location for the University of Virginia.
Using a series of complex equations – based on an assumption of a maximum rate of six exams marked an hour – Manel Baucells, associate professor of business administration at UVA, and Lin Zhao, assistant professor in mathematics and systems science at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, found academics who take regular breaks from assessment will get more done than those who toil away for 10 hours straight.
“When we moved to America, my parents thought that we were going to go back,” said Tina Chai. But they were impressed by the quality of the education Chai was getting at school. Instead of having to study either science or the humanities, Chai could study both. At UVA, she’s preparing for a career in medicine by studying biochemistry as well as English, “because I like to say that English really feeds the soul.”
Standing in the $12.4 million McArthur Squash Center, in front of Virginia’s flashy center court, complete with a V-logo, the Cavaliers coach said Friday’s announcement that the school is elevating its club squash team to varsity status shouldn’t come as a major shock. Men’s and women’s squash will become U.Va.’s 26th and 27th varsity sports this year, and will be only the third program in the nation to offer scholarships, joining Drexel and George Washington, Allen said.
The second article covers various topics, from the 2016-17 sports year to the Cavaliers’ planned football support complex.
In this third and final installment of our interview, no subject engaged UVAs longest-tenured athletic director quite like Tony Bennett’s basketball program. Littlepage also addressed the Virginia Athletic Foundation’s campaign to fund increasing scholarship costs, plans to tear down University Hall, the Cavaliers’ preparation for the ACC Network, and the state of women’s basketball program under seventh-year coach Joanne Boyle.
Austin Levi Burdick, age 25, passed away suddenly on June 26 at home in Flint Hill, VA. Burdick was an entrepreneur, artist, and professional polo player. He was homeschooled by his parents, achieved a 2nd degree black belt in tae kwan do, earned his Eagle Scout with three palms, graduated from the University of Virginia, and was well respected for his strength of character, good nature, and sense of humor.
He lived in Pearl Harbor and Virginia Beach while serving five years in the Navy, then went to law school at the University of Virginia. He clerked for Judge David B. Sentelle of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. Adams clerked in 2006 and 2007 for Justice Clarence Thomas, whose son had attended VMI with Adams. From there, he worked as an associate counsel in the White House of President George W. Bush in 2007 and 2008 before moving back to Richmond near the end of the Bush administration to become an assistant U.S. attorney.
After 17 years in the Virginia General Assembly, Rep. Donald McEachin was elected in November to represent the 4th Congressional District, a sprawling turf that takes in the southern portions of Chesapeake and Suffolk but is more concentrated in the Richmond area. McEachin iis a UVA law school graduate who went back to college in his mid-40s to earn a master’s degree in divinity.
Founded by UVA graduates Josh Rogers, Derek Sieg, and Ben Pfinsgraff, Common House sits on the site of what had been Mentor Lodge, a club built in 1913. Opened on May 17 in Charlottesville, the members-based enclave is for erudite locals looking to foster a communal sense of creativity amidst a backdrop of cocktails, fine cuisine and a host of hotel-like amenities.
K McCarthy opened The Phoenix in August 1977 in Charlottesville after graduating from UVA with a degree in economics. McCarthy today owns women’s specialty clothing stores The Phoenix and Ruby, which are located in Carytown.
In softball, Williams, who also served as an assistant coach at Hylton High School, went on to play four years at the University of Virginia and was a four-year all-ACC Academic selection at Virginia. She has been awarded a Fulbright English teaching assistant grant and will spend the 2017-18 academic year in South Korea, where she will teach at Namseoul University.
Charles Davis, a UVA student and a member of the Cavalier football team, was returning from an early-morning workout when he stopped to pick up coffee for his mother. He matched all five numbers to win $100,000 in the Virginia Lottery’s Cash 5 game.
The GOP itself is deeply divided over the health-care bill, with moderates concerned about expansive cuts to Medicaid and conservatives saying the bill falls far short of repealing Obama’s Affordable Care Act. And Democrats, said Larry Sabato, director for UVA’s Center for Politics, have little incentive to enter the fray while the GOP wars with itself.
“It’s perfectly possible here to protect the rights of same-sex couples and religious dissenters, but neither (conservative nor liberal justices) seem much interested in doing that,” said Douglas Laycock, a leading religious liberty scholar and UVA law professor.
Review by Jack Hamilton, UVA assistant professor of American studies and media studies.