
UVA welcomes the Class of 2024
A resilient new class of Wahoos, by the numbers.
A resilient new class of Wahoos, by the numbers.
College life returns. Sort of.
In-person classes continue amid early detection of dorm clusters.
UVA’s board votes for more diversity, less Confederacy and new context for a Jefferson statue.
University leadership addresses concerns, details data that went into decision-making.
UVA’s president gave a new racial equity action team a bold charge and a tight deadline.
Our timeline follows women’s 200-year journey for influence, an education and equality at UVA.
Women talk about what it was like in those early years of coeducation.
Before granting women full admission to the College, UVA needed a little persuading—in the form of a federal lawsuit.
From Honor chair to editor of the Cav Daily, these students are going out on top.
Plans for a different kind of fall sharpen into focus as the semester approaches.
Before the revamped Cavalier and V-sabres, there was
University releases detailed plan for fall semester.
Across six decades, alumni recall the exact moment history intersected with their time on Grounds.
UVA works to accommodate students facing hardships after pandemic shuts Grounds down.
From the spring quarantine to the fall quandary, how UVA is confronting the coronavirus.
Student athletes come to terms with all that seemed within their grasp.
Students navigate final semester toward an uncertain future.
Our interview with UVA’s president and provost—from a distance.
When it comes to walking the Lawn, some students wear their hearts on their caps.
UVA football celebrates best back-to-back seasons in more than a decade.
Electric scooters have become a major UVA phenomenon. We have the numbers to prove it.
The bus stop on McCormick Road served as a refuge for black students in decades past.
Even when a string on her instrument broke, Olivia Scheidt kept her cool in front of thousands.
The Rotunda as a planetarium? Three graduate students bring Jefferson’s original vision to life.
A resilient new class of Wahoos, by the numbers.
Alumni share some favorite comfort food recipes as this crazy year winds down.
Fire ants may limit the spread of the Lonestar tick—and the meat allergy it causes—but not without its own dangers.
Shops on the Corner do their best to keep doing business amid the challenges of Covid.