In an essay inspired by history professor Claudrena Harold’s Finals Weekend keynote address, Sam Patten, the parent of a Class of 2022 graduate, reflects on education and social change.
While it’s still early in election season, J. Miles Coleman, a political analyst at UVA’s Center for Politics, said it’s pretty clear that Republicans are less likely to fail with Trump’s blessing. “If I’m a Republican running for office, I would rather have Trump’s endorsement than not,” Coleman said, adding that Trump’s support is “maybe not as powerful as it was in 2018.”
[UVA alumnus] Bill Walker has become convinced that his second cousin intentionally crashed due to profound depression over his fading racing career. While Walker struggles to accept that Kreis would take another life while taking his own, he nevertheless has devoted 50 years to examining what happened that Friday morning at The Brickyard.
UVA professor Dewey Cornell said, “We’re spending far too much on security measures and not enough on school counselors, approaches that create a softer, more welcoming environment in our schools, not a harder one. And the research bears it out – that the schools with the target hardening measures are not statistically safer and the students and teachers don’t feel safer either.”
Thomas Jefferson’s concept for the University of Virginia evolved over decades, beginning with a bill to the Virginia General Assembly in 1778. By 1805, his ideas began to emerge for the campus, and by 1810 he wrote emphatically about his concept that “all the schools … arranged around an open square of grass and trees would make it, what it should be in fact, an academical village.”
UVA Health has been recognized as one of the best maternity hospitals in the country, according to Newsweek.
The U.S. just passed a heart-breaking milestone, with more than 1 million deaths reported from COVID-19. With a resurging virus, things continue to change for the Charlottesville area – and the rest of the country. Our local expert and UVA immunologist, Dr. William A. Petri, answers your questions in this confusing time.
“Impulse purchasing represents a much, much larger component of consumer behavior than people realize,” said James Burroughs, who studies consumer patterns at the University of Virginia’s McIntire School of Commerce. “The front of the store is prime real estate to put impulse items.”
(Commentary by Angel Adams Parham, sociology professor and senior fellow at UVA’s Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture; subscription may be required) Excellence and diversity can coexist with an education in the classics. The classics should be elevated and broadened, diversified through context and accumulated knowledge. And they have much to teach us, with a proven record of lifting the performance of students, especially the disadvantaged.
The song begins with a phone ringing and a recorded voice. It’s the title track from a new album called “1-800-Mix-Tape,” 15 original songs composed and performed by students at UVA’s Rap Lab. “You have reached the voice mail box of 1-800-Mix-Tape. You have reached the voice mail box of … You have reached the voice mail box of…” The course was taught by rapper and professor A.D. Carson, whose doctoral dissertation was also a mix tape.
(Commentary by Stanley Stepanic, assistant professor of Slavic languages and literatures) If you’re an active social media user, perhaps you’ve noticed a surge in posts recently about paprika, reflective shaving glasses and castle hospitality in Transylvania. One hundred twenty-five years after its initial publication, Bram Stoker’s “Dracula” is having a resurgence.
Here’s a glimpse at 11 of the female athletes who have shaped UVA’s 2021-22 season, plus a Notre Dame transfer who’s thrilled she’s “coming home.”
The No. 7 University of Virginia men’s tennis team (28-5) defeated No. 8 Kentucky (26-9) by a 4-0 score in the final of the 2022 NCAA Men’s Tennis Team Championship on Sunday at the Khan Outdoor Tennis Center in Champaign, Illinois. This is the fifth NCAA championship for the program and the 31st overall team title for the Virginia athletics department.
Credited with discovering and reporting the flaw on March 12 is Tamjid Al Rahat, a fourth-year Ph.D. student of computer science at the University of Virginia, who has been awarded $5,000 as part of Google's bug bounty program.
Getting out into nature, into green spaces and bodies of water, improves human well-being. The Biophilic Cities Project at the University of Virginia created a nature pyramid including at least some daily interaction with nature to “de-stress, find focus, and lighten mental fatigue.”
(Subscription may be required) The University of Virginia will celebrate the Class of 2022 during a weekend of festivities. The centerpiece of the celebration – Final Exercises – will be held on the Lawn for the first time since 2019.
During the 1910s and early 1920s, “news coverage was pretty uniformly hostile to the motorist,” says University of Virginia historian Peter Norton, whose book “Fighting Traffic” examines the automobile’s arrival in urban America. Citing the many letters to the editor that criticized urban cars, Norton says that “the newspapers were reflecting the popular perception that the car is inherently hazardous in cities.”
The U.S. Supreme Court will hear a case that could have major implications for defendants who challenge their convictions for crimes that are no longer considered crimes. This lawsuit was filed by the UVA School of Law’s Supreme Court Litigation Clinic.
(Commentary by Peter Norton, associate professor of history in the Department of Engineering and Society) Autonomy is supposed to make rides in Tesla’s planned robotaxis affordable and safe. Don’t bet on it.
The embattled Montpelier Foundation Board of Directors on Monday took a step toward structural parity in electing 11 new members from a list of 20 nominees submitted last month by the Montpelier Descendants Committee. Among the new Montpelier board members overseeing the plantation of President James Madison are Nicole Thorne Jenkins, the John A. Griffin Dean of the McIntire School of Commerce, and Ian H. Solomon, dean of the Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy.