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(01/31/21 12:34am)
In the lead-up to what appears to be Charlottesville’s first serious winter storm of the season, the National Weather Service has issued a Winter Storm Warning for snow accumulations of four to eight inches.
(01/29/21 10:10pm)
The University announced in an update Friday that first-year applicants for undergraduate admission will not be required to submit standardized test scores in the Fall 2022 and 2023 application cycles.
(01/31/21 8:33pm)
U.Va Lifetime Learning — in partnership with Morven Farm — held the virtual panel Food and Justice in Virginia Wednesday as part of the University’s Community MLK Celebration. The five panelists discussed the influence of systemic racism on food accessibility and farm working conditions and common problems — including food security and worker safety — while urging the public to become more involved in food-related policy, especially in the Charlottesville community.
(01/29/21 2:48am)
In order to accelerate the distribution of vaccines to the community, U.Va. Health has relied on its 600-member vaccination volunteer team — made up of nurses, physicians, EMTs, nurse practitioners, faculty in the Schools of Nursing and Medicine and others who vaccinate within their scope of practice. All members of the vaccination team are paid volunteers and members of the U.Va. Hospital network, and the team has grown in size substantially since vaccinations at U.Va. Health began Dec. 15.
(02/02/21 1:48am)
Music has always been a big part of my life. Whether it has been songs from my Pakistani roots or those from growing up in America, music has served as a constant companion. When I was little, my dad would play CDs of Bollywood songs whenever we were driving somewhere. As I grew older, I began to discover American artists — the Jonas Brothers, Taylor Swift, Demi Lovato — many of whom hold a special place in my heart today. After all, once a Swiftie, always a Swiftie!
(01/30/21 1:47am)
I think anyone who writes about music describes their childhood the same way — early memories of huddling around the family record player, the crackling sound waves radiating enough fiery breeze to emanate past the mouth of the foyer and a laundry list of godmothers and godfathers on 12-inch. But as a child, music truly did not consume my life. Some of my earliest musical memories involve being convinced that the Black Eyed Peas were saying “boo-she” on the uncensored “Elephunk” CD my parents used to play in the car. Or listening to “Confessions'' while playing Madden 07 in my garage — pretending my lifeline space heater was the microphone, the blocky rendition of Giants Stadium on the pop-static screen my stage and realizing that what Usher was vibrating into my cochlea was not for the common man. The seeds had been planted, but in the soil they sat. Music didn’t start controlling my life until a road trip I took in high school.
(01/26/21 10:22pm)
As part of the University’s Community MLK Celebration, U.Va. Lifetime Learning is partnering with Morven Farm to present the online panel entitled Food and Justice in Virginia. The event aims to get listeners to become active participants in the local food system by engaging in dialogue surrounding food’s connection to racial justice.
(01/31/21 8:02pm)
1. Sticky notes
(02/08/21 1:02am)
1. The professional
(01/26/21 5:00pm)
I usually make meaningful resolutions. In previous years, I resolved to be kinder to myself, to stop apologizing — which, as a woman, tends to be especially hard — and to write in my journal more. All of these past promises were good. I stuck to some better than others, but they were all made with the intention to be more in touch with myself.
(12/16/20 8:00am)
本文不表达译者的观点或立场,具体信息请参考原文:
(12/18/20 7:43pm)
University President Jim Ryan announced Wednesday that more than $30 million will be invested towards STEM research and the Carter G. Woodson Institute for African American and African Studies.
(12/24/20 10:54pm)
Do you remember the times when we would devour books in mere hours or days? I miss the moments when we would go home after school and jump into bed with the latest book we snagged from the library, ready to read it all in one sitting. I miss those chilly October mornings spent wandering through the aisles of the Scholastic Book Fair just wishing I could take everything home. It seemed like there were never enough books to read! Authors like Mary Pope Osborne, Rick Riordan, John Green and J.K. Rowling all gave us unforgettable narratives that always left us wanting for more — more books.
(12/09/20 10:59pm)
The University’s Board of Visitors will meet electronically Thursday and Friday in both open and closed sessions to discuss various financing plans for new construction at the University — including the School of Data Science — as well as establishing four new professorships in a variety of different fields.
(12/16/20 4:57am)
Christmas lights have always brought me joy. They are one of those simple pleasures that I always underestimate. At the beginning of the semester, my roommates had hung Christmas lights up in our living room before I had moved in, which made our new apartment already feel like a home. All we needed was to add some candles before we had cultivated the perfect vibe.
(12/08/20 7:20am)
When the University reopened its doors in early September amid the ongoing pandemic, many wondered how its testing and housing capacity would fare in comparison to other colleges that were forced to quickly send students home due to growing COVID-19 cases.
(11/23/20 11:10pm)
Commerce Prof. Jeffery Leopold is facing backlash from Student Council and the Organization of African Students at U.Va. for racially insensitive comments he made during a Zoom session of his Foundations of Commerce class Oct 2.
(11/22/20 11:18pm)
Ice T is old. No disrespect intended, but there’s a reason why “old head” is commonplace terminology in pop culture discourse — and specifically in hip-hop discourse. After Soulja Boy’s “Crank That” blew up in 2007, some self-proclaimed “hip-hop purists” had something to say. Specifically, Ice T claimed Soulja Boy had “single-handedly killed hip-hop.” That’s a pretty audacious claim — no one man could have all that power. Soulja Boy responded in a now-infamous video, making a claim that reigns true to this day — “the reality of it is, the game has changed.” And that’s the truth — 13 years ago, the game had changed, and it will always continue to do so. Here, in 2020, some people assert that rap — in its modern form — is a dying art. I disagree. Exhibit A — “Sold Out Dates” by Gunna and Lil Baby, the greatest song of our generation, and of all time.
(11/02/20 5:00am)
本文不表达译者的观点或立场,具体信息请参考原文:
(11/18/20 1:46am)
I have always been the type of person to hand write my notes. Not only am I a fan of these handwritten notes, but I go the extra mile with color coordination, calligraphy and washi tape. Thus, online school proved particularly tricky for me. I found myself gradually typing them alongside lectures on my laptop instead of moving back and forth between my laptop and notebook. Since everything was online, I felt like my notes also had to be online in order to keep everything uniform — it also just felt a lot easier to do so.