Although immunotherapy and targeted agents are revolutionizing the treatment paradigm in metastatic non-small cell lung cancer, chemotherapy retains a vital role for the majority of patients, according to Dr. Ryan D. Gentzler, assistant professor of hematology and oncology at the UVA Health System.
UVA is preparing to welcome nearly 4,000 new students to Charlottesville this weekend. Students begin moving into dorms Friday, which means if you live or work near Grounds, you can expect traffic delays.
Former U.S. Attorney Tim Heaphy will return to his alma mater as special counsel for the University of Virginia. Heaphy led the independent review of Charlottesville's handling of last year's Unite the Right rally.
A former federal prosecutor who led a critical report of the University of Virginia and the city of Charlottesville’s responses to violent clashes in August 2017 will now be the university’s top lawyer. Former U.S. Attorney Timothy J. Heaphy will replace Roscoe Roberts, who is retiring at the end of the month, as university counsel.
In the 1760s, George Washington predicted that hemp could be a more profitable crop than tobacco and grew it across his farm, Mount Vernon. This summer, horticulturists there partnered with UVA to plant hemp once again.
(Podcast) The radio show asked experts including Leora Friedberg, a professor of economics and public policy at UVA’s Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy, to explain how governments dug themselves into such a deep hole – and whether they can ever get out.
Siva Vaidhyanathan, director of UVA’s Center for Media and Citizenship, agreed on the virtues of forcing Facebook to separate Instagram and WhatsApp. “It’s really important that user behavior data from Instagram and WhatsApp don’t get mixed up with Facebook user data,” he said. “No company should have that kind of predictive and targeting power over billions of people.”
"If you believe that the Republicans are behind in the race for the House, as many do, then they probably need some sort of positive development between now and the midterm," said Kyle Kondik, the managing editor of the Sabato’s Crystal Ball election forecast at the University of Virginia. The Cohen plea and the Manafort conviction “was not that," he said. "The numbers are already bad."
It’s not as bad as it sounds. Researchers with UVA’s Youth Violence Project, which is directed by Dewey Cornell and exists to prevent violence among young people, surveyed nearly 70,000 students and 15,000 teachers and staff at high schools across the nation in 2016. Here’s what they found.
UVA women’s basketball alumna Dawn Staley, who was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2013, will present 2018 inductee Katie Smith, currently the head coach of the WNBA’s New York Liberty, during this year’s enshrinement ceremony in September. Virginia’s new head coach, Tina Thompson, will also be among this year’s inductees, presented by Cheryl Miller.
The University of Virginia opened a health clinic Friday at UVA’s College at Wise to provide students, faculty and staff with access to health care on campus and through telemedicine links to the University’s physicians and specialists.
Women in their late 20s are no longer the group bearing the most children. These days, it’s women in their early 30s. Shonel Sen at UVA’s Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service says these numbers reflect a national shift. “The same trend is also reflected in Virginia, but the numbers are slightly more intense,” she said.
The Cohen and Manafort cases were unlikely to erode Trump’s support from his political base or the Republican Party establishment, said Larry Sabato, a political analyst and director of the University of Virginia Center for Politics.
Monitor manufacturers tout the devices as a way to help new parents catch up on their sleep while still keeping an eye on their baby. Instead, the devices could provide a false sense of security, said Dr. Rachel Moon, head of pediatrics for the University of Virginia School of Medicine and chair of the American of Pediatrics’ Task Force on SIDS. "My main concern is people become complacent. They decide that since the baby's monitored it's OK for them to not practice safe sleep."
A lawsuit from former CIA Director John Brennan challenging President Trump's revocation of his security clearance would likely be doomed, legal experts tell The Hill.“This is such an absolute discretionary, executive power and it is a power that is beyond the control of the Congress,” said Robert Turner, a professor who co-founded the Center for National Security Law at the University of Virginia School of Law.
Larry Sabato, a political analyst and director of UVA’s Center for Politics said the Cohen and Manafort cases were unlikely to erode Trump’s support from his political base or the Republican Party establishment. “I don’t think there is any change at all,” said Sabato. “That’s the amazing part of it. The Trump base and virtually the entire Republican Party could care less. The polls will bear me out.”
The economic impact of forestry in Virginia was $21 billion, according to the latest research of UVA’s Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service. The total impact of Forestry and Agriculture was $91 billion. The two industries together employ 444,200 employees or about 9 percent of total employment of the state.
After searching for more than a year, the management board for the Charlottesville-UVA-Albemarle County Emergency Communications Center has found a new executive director.
After three separate searches over the past year, the Charlottesville-University of Virginia-Albemarle County Emergency Communications Center will have a new executive director. Barry C. Neulen, currently the director of field operating activity for the U.S. Department of Defense in Arlington, will take over the center. He will start Oct. 1, one year to the day after the retirement of center’s prior executive director, Tom Hanson.
(Commentary co-written by David Leblang, Ambassador Henry J. Taylor Professor of Politics and Professor of Public Policy and senior fellow at the Miller Center) The Trump administration’s deportation policies and rhetoric have been controversial. Yet the practice of deporting migrants, particularly those convicted of crimes, has long been a key component of U.S. immigration policy.