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(10/14/20 11:40pm)
All students who live in University residences — including first-year dormitories, residential colleges, language houses, upperclassmen apartments and the Lawn and Range — will be tested for COVID-19 on a regularly scheduled basis, per an email sent to Resident Staff Monday from Director of Residence Life Andy Petters.
(10/15/20 2:24pm)
Besides voting for president, a senator and a new member of the House of Representatives this November, Virginians will need to decide whether they want to support Amendment One — an amendment which purports to limit partisan gerrymandering.
(11/06/20 12:02am)
One in four American adults has a disability, according to the CDC. Given the prevalence of disability and chronic illness in the United States, the coronavirus pandemic has magnified the inequalities in accessibility that persist in U.S. society. These disparities are reflected in a higher coronavirus mortality rate for those with disabilities, but also in the everyday barriers that those with disabilities experience, such as difficulties with lip-reading because of mask-wearing and remote therapy services. While these statistics are cause for concern in and of themselves, the disabled and chronically ill also encounter a plethora of pandemic-related challenges on a daily basis.
(10/13/20 11:37pm)
I am an undergraduate student at the University of Virginia, and I was recently involved in several debates and controversy over a sign on my Lawn room door, which states “Fuck UVA. UVA Operating Costs - KKKops, Genocide, Slavery, Disability, Black and Brown Life.”
(10/15/20 2:29pm)
Yesterday afternoon first-year student Camila Cohen Suárez, whose major remains undecided, announced that her study on procrastination in relation to student writing has been delayed with no notable date in which the project would recommence. During a meeting over Zoom, which Suárez joined 10 minutes late, she indicated that originally a memo was to be sent out to her peers and study participants on the discontinuation of the study. Nevertheless, she had conveniently “forgotten” her laptop in Brown Library in the morning and had only just remembered to retrieve it around noon.
(10/01/20 4:00am)
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(10/08/20 10:58pm)
The student leaders behind an open letter to the University community — which implores the University to re-adopt the default credit/no credit/general credit grading system that was developed in the Spring 2020 semester — are hopeful that the more than 1,400 student signatures are too great for U.Va. administrators to ignore.
(09/30/20 4:00am)
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(10/06/20 8:41pm)
Dean of Students Allen Groves announced that the University has decided to extend its new COVID-19 restrictions by two weeks – until Oct. 21 – in an email to students Tuesday afternoon.
(10/15/20 3:13pm)
The federal work-study program seems like the classic American bootstraps approach to funding higher education –– pay your way through college with your own hard work. While the money partially comes from the government, it still isn’t one of the dreaded handouts complained about by so many of the older generation. However, the program itself falls short of this outdated ideal. In many instances, finding a job through work-study might become a significant challenge for incoming students struggling to pay tuition. In order for the program to be useful to all students, the University must guarantee employment to those eligible.
(10/08/20 10:01pm)
It’s hard not to act like a consumer, right? We can all be critical of a consumerist culture — one that values quantity over, say, sustainability, but we can’t critique ourselves for participating within the system when there’s no other option. In this 21st century world, we can get our tortoise-shell blue-light glasses super-deluxe-overnight shipped by robots while we watch Travis Scott’s Fortnite concert on livestream. Convenient? Of course. Dystopian? Sometimes. So yes, I’ll say it — it’s hard not to act like a consumer. But with consumerism comes an entitlement to individual benefit — an entitlement jarringly evident in the music industry.
(10/14/20 11:45pm)
I can imagine your expression right now. You look at my profile picture, then my name, then back to the picture and squint a little. Maybe if you tilt your head, you’ll be able to see it. Blink. Blink again. You think, “I mean, I guess?”
(09/24/20 4:00am)
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(10/08/20 9:51pm)
Like most kids in my hometown, I started out playing sports when I was around four years old. I began with soccer, then dance, then basketball, volleyball, tennis and my most recent addition, golf. Simply put, sports have been a constant in my life, and since the age of four, I have not gone through a single year without being on a team. Of course, that was before coronavirus.
(10/07/20 10:46pm)
Despite all of the changes to the school year as a result of COVID-19, I was really excited to move back to Charlottesville and begin my second year. As a nursing student, the start of second year meant a lot more than no longer being the new class on Grounds. Second year meant actually feeling like a nursing student — from receiving our engraved stethoscopes to wearing scrubs whilst going to clinical labs.
(09/30/20 12:55am)
With the Oct. 13 voter registration deadline approaching, Charlottesville and student groups are working to ensure that every student has the ability to vote this November. Registration efforts look different this year, as many of the previous strategies violate newly implemented COVID-19 guidelines.
(09/28/20 11:43pm)
The University’s COVID-19 Tracker reported 81 positive test results since Friday, 78 of which were students. These numbers reflect cases gathered through U.Va. Health Analytics, Student Health, Employee Health and testing vendor LetsGetChecked.
(09/28/20 7:38pm)
An attempted burglary was reported to University police at 1:41 p.m. Monday afternoon, according to a University-wide email sent by Chief of Police Timothy Longo. The incident occurred at an off-Grounds residence located on the 400 block of 15th Street NW.
(09/15/20 4:00am)
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(09/25/20 8:50pm)
Residents of the Hancock residence hall were notified Friday afternoon that the University has identified 16 cases of COVID-19 in the building, per an email from Provost Liz Magill and Chief Operating Officer J.J. Davis. According to a separate statement from the University, the cases were identified through a combination of wastewater testing, prevalence testing and testing at Student Health.