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U Va finds in-person classes non-conducive to COVID-19 spread while residence halls and dining rooms are higher risk

U Va finds in-person classes non-conducive to COVID-19 spread while residence halls and dining rooms are higher risk
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University of Virginia, University of Maryland respond to rising virus cases

The University of Maryland at College Park and the University of Virginia s spike in cases has towns bracing for spread

Skip to main content Currently Reading The University of Maryland at College Park and the University of Virginia s spike in cases has towns bracing for spread Lauren Lumpkin and Nick Anderson, The Washington Post Feb. 22, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail A statue of Thomas Jefferson stands in front of the Rotunda at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville.Washington Post photo by John McDonnell. One campus, in Maryland, temporarily canceled in-person classes after coronavirus infections surged past 60 cases two days in a row. The other, in Virginia, kept classrooms open even after it logged 229 cases in a single day. The region s flagship universities - the University of Maryland at College Park and the University of Virginia - have tracked an alarming uptick in the number of viral cases on campus. And each school has taken a different approach to curbing the spread, illustrating the tensions and uncertainty of trying to operate major research universities in the pandemic and

U-Va , VMI among Virginia colleges seeing increases of coronavirus cases

UVa President Jim Ryan apologizes for COVID-19 surge during virtual town hall

UVA President Ryan apologizes for COVID-19 surge UVa President Jim Ryan apologizes for COVID-19 surge during virtual town hall By Max Marcilla | February 19, 2021 at 10:43 PM EST - Updated February 20 at 8:35 AM CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (WVIR) - A spring semester at the University of Virginia that started with the hope of health has instead brought about the hardest-hitting COVID-19 surge in the area since the pandemic began. “We began to see a troubling and unusually large rise in cases among our students,” UVA President Jim Ryan said during a virtual town hall Friday, February 19. The university saw 663 new cases of coronavirus among its student population from February 15-18. Ryan says there is not one group of students to blame, nor was it the fault of the newly found UK variant on UVA Grounds.

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