John Swofford, the most transformative and longest-serving commissioner in ACC history, is retiring next June.
Aaliyah Pitts, the Virginia 6A player of the year at Woodbridge High School in 2019, is one of seven women’s basketball recruits announced by the University of Virginia on Thursday.
The University of Virginia announced its football players may return to campus for voluntary workouts beginning July 5, and released a timeline for team practices this summer.
The Oklahoma City Thunder announced that the club signed guard Luguentz Dort to a multi-year contract on Wednesday and followed it up by setting plans in motion to fill the two-way slot on their roster with UVA graduate Devon Hall. By rule, each NBA team is allowed to have 17 players under contract, 15 of whom are under “standard” NBA contracts and two players on “two-way” contracts, which essentially allow them to split time with a G League affiliate.
U.S. President Donald Trump has announced his intent to nominate Indian-American Vijay Shanker as a judge to the highest court in the nation’s capital. He earned his BA, cum laude, from Duke University and his J.D. from the UVA School of Law, where he served as a Notes Editor for the Virginia Law Review and was inducted into the Order of the Coif.
A new statue outside the US Lacrosse headquarters in Sparks pays tribute to Yeardley Love, a Notre Dame Preparatory School alumna and University of Virginia lacrosse player who was killed 10 years ago.
The third segment in the series is titled “Confederate Statues: Heritage or Hatred.” It focuses on the issues related to the removal of the Robert E. Lee statue that sparked the white supremacist Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville in August 2017 and Zyahna Bryant, a University of Virginia student whose activism and organizing efforts sparked the movement to remove the monument.
The transcript includes remarks from Ellen Yates, a fourth-year student working on a campaign to encourage students to comply with public health guidelines.
Early election results showed Black and other minority candidates putting up strong performances in several contests. “It may be that the recent focus on Black Lives Matter and racial inequities in policing opened Democratic voters’ eyes even more to Black candidates,” said Kyle Kondik, an elections analyst at the University of Virginia.
People of color whose own culture and heritage wasn’t considered when those statues were erected a century or more ago now have a voice. It’s their time to be heard – unless louder voices upstage them. It has happened before. Larry Sabato, a longtime University of Virginia political science professor and founding leader of UVA’s Center for Politics, saw lawless and extremist groups hijacked earnest protests for their own destructive ends during his youth in the 1960s. “Civil protests eventually deteriorate, only to be taken over by fringe types. I personally saw that in the Vietnam era,” he sa...
Larry Sabato, founder of the Center for Politics and a UVA political science professor, said the death total in Florida will play a key role for DeSantis’ political reputation if the spike continues. But he doubted the governor would suffer much in a Republican presidential primary in 2024. “Republican activists are skeptical of masks and distancing, cheer President Trump for not wearing one, and have made it a machismo sign of manhood and patriotism not to pay any attention to scientists and health professionals,” Sabato said. “Since DeSantis is being seen as a member of the tough guy caucus,...
The stay-at-orders that shut down or reduced business activity in states around the country have been a source of frustration, even to people who support them. And men and women whose job status is determined by voters are certainly aware of the potential effect their actions can have at the ballot box, said Kyle Kondik, managing editor of Sabato’s Crystal Ball, a nonpartisan political analysis and handicapping newsletter from the University of Virginia Center for Politics. “You’d have to be fooling yourself if you think an elected official wouldn’t take politics into account,” he said.
Trump’s campaign has taken to ridiculing Biden for remaining in the shadows, Kyle Kondik of UVA’s Center for Politics wrote in a recent newsletter. “They need to draw Biden out and hope he makes mistakes, so Trump can make himself look better by comparison.”
Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics, said the numbers show Trump “is in a polling slump and he’s in a bad position for reelection as the incumbent,” but they aren’t “even vaguely predictive.”
A study of 277 patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome showed dexamethasone led to more ventilator-free days and fewer deaths. “It seems biologically plausible that you can extend that benefit to patients who have this new cause of the same syndrome,” Dr. Taison Bell, an infectious disease and critical care physician at the University of Virginia, said.
One expert on the mighty car lobby finds it refreshing that McDonald just comes clean. “It’s sort of understood that – in the real world – in a democracy if you have more money, you have more say,” UVA historian Peter Norton said. “But the official fiction is that that’s not how it’s supposed to work. This guy [McDonald] seems be quite willing to say, ‘the more you pay, the more it should go your way.’ It was striking that the author comes right out and says, ‘Look who’s paying the freight around here.’”
If staged systems could be rolled up into one engine, the huge efficiency gains would dramatically lower the cost of getting to space. “The holy grail is a single-stage-to-orbit vehicle where you just take off from a runway, fly into space, and come back and reuse the system,” says Christopher Goyne, director of the University of Virginia’s Aerospace Research Laboratory and an expert in hypersonic flight.
(Commentary) One thing is clear: The U.S. Supreme Court will have to settle these kinds of conflicts, said Douglas Laycock of the University of Virginia Law School, who has defended both same-sex marriage and the religious-liberty rights of traditional faith groups. The court’s new ruling “will end all legislative bargaining over religious liberty in the gay-rights context,” he said. “There is no longer a deal to be had in which Congress passes a gay-rights law with religious exemptions; the religious side has nothing left to offer.”
The entire Lost Cause campaign, from its account of the war’s causes to its characterization of Black politicians, “absolutely is about white supremacy,” said Caroline Janney, director of the John L. Nau III Center for Civil War History at the University of Virginia.
Fear causes stress, which is linked to chronic illnesses, including cancers, heart diseases, strokes and miscarriage, said Dr. Ebony Jade Hilton, an associate professor of anesthesiology and critical care at the University of Virginia. The prevalence of hypertension, or high blood pressure, for Black people in America is higher than anywhere else in the world, she also said, adding Black people die at younger ages and from more severe forms of cancers.