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(04/13/20 6:45pm)
Gov. Ralph Northam, D-Va., signed a bill Saturday allowing individual localities to remove, relocate or contextualize Confederate statues and monuments within their communities. Localities can begin using these powers starting July 1.
(04/03/20 2:59am)
Students still living on Grounds in Bond House, Bice House and the Language Houses will be relocated to provide temporary housing for U.Va. healthcare workers, according to an email sent Thursday to students living in the affected housing complexes. These students will be reassigned to housing in Copeley or Lambeth Apartments, where approximately 20 students have remained living.
(04/01/20 8:37pm)
New and ongoing cases of alleged Honor violations will not move beyond the accusation stage of the trial process while students are away from Grounds, according to Lillie Lyon, Honor Committee chair and fourth-year College student. The University also plans to confer degrees to graduating students who are involved in ongoing Honor cases.
(03/20/20 1:34am)
A University student has tested positive for COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, according to the University’s tally of confirmed cases within the University community. This is the first U.Va. student reported to test positive.
(03/13/20 1:54am)
University Provost Liz Magill sent an email to students Thursday night providing additional details on how University operations and activities will be affected due to the spread of COVID-19. The email comes one day after the University extended spring break through March 19 and cancelled in-person classes until at least April 5 amid coronavirus concerns.
(03/08/20 2:49am)
Editor's note: The Tom Tom Foundation announced Friday that it will postpone the festival to September 21-27 due to coronavirus concerns.
(03/03/20 8:55pm)
The Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy hosted a panel on Super Tuesday and the 2020 Democratic Presidential Primaries at large Monday night, as part of Batten’s “Democracy in Perilous Times: Unprecedented Challenges and Controversies” program, which is organized by the Center for Politics and Batten. This event is also part of a Center for Politics series celebrating the centennial of Women's Suffrage.
(03/02/20 9:06pm)
The University Board of Elections announced 2020 student election results Friday evening.
(02/19/20 6:31am)
The University’s Democracy Initiative sponsored Nikole Hannah-Jones — a New York Times writer and creator of the 1619 Project — Monday at the Rotunda for a discussion with University President Jim Ryan. The event at the Rotunda quickly sold out, prompting event organizers to hold another discussion later that evening at The Haven — a homeless shelter and event space in Downtown Charlottesville — moderated by Jamelle Bouie, a columnist for The New York Times.
(02/06/20 3:50pm)
The University is celebrating the grand opening of four centers Thursday in Newcomb Hall. The Multicultural Student Center and the LGBTQ Center were relocated, while the Latinx Student Center and Interfaith Center are new additions.
(01/22/20 3:42am)
Despite concerns that a pro-gun rally in Richmond on Jan. 20 might turn violent, demonstrators — some openly armed — remained nonviolent while protesting gun control laws expected to be passed by the newly-elected Democratic legislature.
(01/17/20 8:12pm)
University President Jim Ryan and Kevin G. McDonald, vice president for diversity, equity and inclusion, announced Thursday that the University will be adopting an Inclusive Excellence framework pursuant to the 2030 Plan, which was approved by the Board of Visitors Aug. 2019.
(01/15/20 7:42pm)
According to separate rankings by U.S. News and World Report and the CollegeNet Social Mobility Index, the University falls in the bottom 15 percent of institutions in terms of social mobility for its students. Social mobility can be a difficult term to define, but broadly speaking, social mobility is the ability of an individual to move from one class to another, whether that is upwards or downwards.
(12/12/19 7:05pm)
The University has announced its intention to construct the Contemplative Commons building adjacent to Dell Pond. The Commons will work to further the efforts of the University’s Contemplative Sciences Center by being a building that encourages collaboration between students and faculty from different schools.
(11/26/19 5:10pm)
At an open house event in Jefferson Hall Friday, “Reflections: Oral History at U.Va.” officially celebrated the launch of its website by inviting the public to visit the website and engage with members of the student team running the project. The “Reflections” project works to collect oral interviews from members of the University and Charlottesville community to uncover and preserve a more personal history of the University.
(11/15/19 6:14pm)
On Tuesday, the Virginia Court of Appeals denied the appeals of Jacob Goodwin and Alex Ramos over charges related to the beating of DeAndre Harris, who was a counterprotester against the white supremacist Unite the Right rallies of August 2017.
(11/13/19 2:32am)
As part of the University Advancement’s Office of Engagement's Lifetime Learning initiative, Architect for the University Alice Raucher updated attendees on ongoing projects that the Office of the Architect is overseeing on-Grounds at an event held in Newcomb Theatre Saturday.
(10/24/19 8:54pm)
The University announced the creation of the President’s Council on Community-U.Va. relations Monday. The council acts as a more permanent iteration of the U.Va.-Community Working Group, which was announced October 2018.
(10/23/19 3:47am)
The 2019 Association of American Universities Campus Climate Survey recently published findings on attitudes and experiences toward sexual assault and misconduct of more than 181,000 students from 33 colleges who contributed to the nationwide survey, of which the University was one participating institution. The survey found more students believed that the University would conduct a fair investigation and take reports of misconduct and assault seriously in 2019 than in 2015.
(10/09/19 4:26pm)
The University will launch its “Honor the Future” capital campaign Oct. 12 and 13. The weekend will feature numerous events that are open to the public, including a public address by University President Jim Ryan, which will begin the campaign’s public phase, and a concert on the steps of the Rotunda from 19-time Grammy award winning artist Tony Bennett.