Women's Center gives Cornell president Distinguished Alumna Award
The Maxine Platzer Lynn Women’s Center has selected Cornell President Elizabeth Garrett to receive the University’s Distinguished Alumna Award for 2016.
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The Maxine Platzer Lynn Women’s Center has selected Cornell President Elizabeth Garrett to receive the University’s Distinguished Alumna Award for 2016.
More than 70 students and other members of the University community gathered Wednesday evening to hear Gary Flowers speak in celebration of Martin Luther King Jr.
Beginning next semester, students can purchase a meal plan that provides food from restaurants on the Corner.
Registration for January Term classes began Thursday for third and fourth years and will be open for first and second years on Friday.
Student Council released a survey Wednesday to assess the student body’s interest in creating a centrally located nap room on Grounds.
A new advising center is coming to the second floor of Clemons Library to provide students more convenient access to personal, career and academic advising resources.
Common Good, the University of Virginia Library and WikiDC are working together to host a Wikipedia Edit-A-Thon focused on Black Stories at the University.
Corks and Curls, the University yearbook founded in 1888, released its 2014-15 edition Friday.
Three judges from the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals have appointed Dr. Bernard Grofman, an economics and political science professor at the University of California, Irvine, to assist in redistricting Virginia’s 3rd Congressional District boundaries.
Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe announced a new $6 million plan to improve the safety of schools across the state Wednesday.
Two Virginia lawmakers called for a hearing on Wednesday to investigate why Gov. Terry McAuliffe and his administration will not release the report on Martese Johnson’s arrest that has led to the reinstatement of the three Alcoholic Beverage Control agents involved.
Jesse Matthew Trial
The University hosted Denise Spellberg, Middle Eastern Studies and History associate prof. at the University of Texas at Austin and author of “Thomas Jefferson’s Qur’an: The Founders and Islam.” Spellberg discussed Jefferson’s interactions and relationships with Islam.
The College Council announced decisions regarding funding for certain student organizations on Grounds this week. The Council provides full or partial funding for student research, faculty-student interaction projects and organizations on Grounds.
Doctoral candidate Joanna Adadevoh was recently spotlighted by the University for her research into purification of contaminated groundwater through bacterial microbes. Adadevoh presented her research last fall at the ninth International Symposium on Subsurface Microbiology in California.
College Ranker ranked Charlottesville 40th on a list of the “50 Best College Towns to Live in Forever.” The site provides resources on various aspects of collegiate life.
Exchange students from the People’s Republic of China arrived at the University and met with the Charlottesville Regional Chamber of Commerce Tuesday. The economics and business visiting undergraduate students will engage in discussions at both institutions and will be in Charlottesville for two weeks.
The University delivered its first round of Class of 2019 admission letters on Jan. 23. Of the 16,092 students who took advantage of the early admission program — which allows prospective students to submit their applications before Nov. 1 and hear from the University by Jan. 31 — 4,857 applicants were offered early admission. The program is non-binding, meaning students who are accepted are not committed to attending.
Last week, 10 University education scholars were named to the RHSU Edu-Scholars Public Influence Rankings, which honors 200 academics across the country who contribute most to discourse on education.
At the beginning of semester, the University launched its chapter of the national sexual assault initiative Not On Our Grounds to raise awareness of the issue and spark prevention efforts.