Editor’s note: Virginia Magazine published this story ahead of the Board of Visitors’ nearly unanimous March 1 vote to rename Alderman Library for former UVA President Edgar Shannon. See our Spring ...
A noose placed on UVA's Homer statue in early September sparked a hate crime investigation that drew the help of the FBI. Sanjay Suchak Police have arrested and charged an Albemarle County man in the ...
Running back Wali Lundy (Col ’06) burst into the end zone, adding to the Virginia onslaught and further souring the mood of thousands of West Virginia fans on hand in Charlotte, North Carolina, for ...
UVA has always been known for its traditions, many of them dating back decades or more. But every once in a while, it’s good to start a new one—connected to the old. I write this in January, a week ...
As the COVID-19 pandemic grips the world—having largely shut down life at UVA—here’s a look back at how alumni experienced some other national and international events when they were on Grounds.
Spring semester at the University of Virginia ended not with a bang but the virus. The pomp of Final Exercises went virtual. Walking the Lawn will be an altogether different circumstance. It’s ...
Concern about liberal bias in the media is widespread in the United States. But soon-to-be published research reveals that while most journalists lean liberal, their ideology does not affect how they ...
For Josh Hadley-Goggin (Arch ’16, ’20), proximity is crucial to his training as an architect. “We are in one big room together for long amounts of time” in the Architecture School, he says. “Someone ...
I was only weeks into my position when Charlottesville erupted in the ugly and deadly violence of August 2017. In the months and years that followed, I saw firsthand our collective character as Wahoos ...
Even as the threat of a global pandemic brought an abrupt halt to all but essential activities at UVA, researchers here immediately turned their attention and expertise to helping to combat the virus.
Sustainability work began at UVA in the 1980s as a grassroots, student-led recycling effort. Now the entire University is involved and has set its boldest green challenge yet: to become carbon neutral ...
In north-central France, Harriet Kiers (Col ’19) lives in a one-bedroom cottage with little pink shutters, surrounded by everything the area is renowned for—stone buildings with terra-cotta shingles, ...
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