Exploring housing risks in Charlottesville
Housing risks can have a significant impact on the health of inhabitants, and awareness of common environmental health concerns is the first step in preventing and minimizing health risks.
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Housing risks can have a significant impact on the health of inhabitants, and awareness of common environmental health concerns is the first step in preventing and minimizing health risks.
The team behind AgroSpheres, a startup that produces engineered bio-particles for agricultural use, will attend the Thought for Food Global Summit — hosted by Thought for Food, an organization that provides resources for agriculture startups — in Amsterdam on May 26 to compete in a 12-week boot camp.
Environmental Science Prof. Howie Epstein oversaw a study that used declassified satellite spy photographs to find changes in Arctic greenery. Epstein and his graduate student at the time, Gerald Frost, identified 11 sites around the Siberian tundra and found the amount of shrubs were increasing in those areas.
University Law Prof. George Rutherglen is providing pro-bono legal services to an inmate with Hepatitis C and cirrhosis of the liver in order to secure him treatment.
The Jefferson Health District Community Health Improvement Plan was released March 8. Organized by the MAPP2Health Leadership Council through the Virginia Department of Health, the plan identifies four priority areas for improvement in the next three years — promoting healthy eating and active living, addressing mental health and substance use, improving health disparities and access to care and fostering a healthy and connected community.
The University Health System named Dr. Jose Oberholzer Director of the Charles O. Strickler Transplant Center Feb. 20. Oberholzer previously served as Chief of the Division of Transplantation and Director of the Islet and Pancreas Transplant Program at University of Illinois at Chicago.
Over 100 students, faculty and Charlottesville community members gathered Monday to protest President Donald Trump’s proposed pipeline agenda. The group started at the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library and made its way down McCormick Road, ending at the Rotunda.
The Board of Visitors will begin looking for a new president with the formation of a search committee following University President Teresa Sullivan’s announcement that she will be leaving upon her contract’s expiration in 2018.
A noDAPL teach-in panel organized by two University students Thursday provided information on and addressed opposition to the Dakota Access Pipeline.
5th Street Station, Charlottesville’s newest shopping district, opened a Wegmans grocery store Nov. 6.
More than 60 percent of undergraduate students who support a major party candidate report choosing to do so in opposition to the other candidate, according to a survey conducted by The Cavalier Daily, in partnership with a faculty advisory committee and the Center for Survey Research.
The two-day “Keep the Movement Coming On” Symposium in memory of Julian Bond, the late Corcoran Department of History professor and civil rights activist, started Thursday and will end Friday.
The Iota Beta chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha held a panel Thursday to discuss slavery and admissions at the University.
Two proposed constitutional amendments will appear on the Virginia ballot Nov. 8 dealing with the right to work and tax exemptions.
Associate Prof. Walter Francis Korte Jr., a longtime University professor charged with two counts of possession of child pornography last month, has been granted continuance by the Albemarle Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court.
The forums — a new two-year program in the College of Arts and Sciences designed to fulfill the College area requirements — hosted a welcome dinner for participants Thursday.
The Board of Visitors Finance Committee met Friday to discuss the University’s financial assets and allocation of funds.
The University will open the Multicultural Center located in lower-level Newcomb the weekend of Oct. 15.
Students are expressing shock and disbelief following news that Associate Prof. Walter Francis Korte Jr. was charged with two counts of possession of child pornography earlier this month.
The Charlottesville City Council unanimously passed a resolution to create a Blue Ribbon Commission to review the city’s Confederate monuments.