Security and solidarity
By Jacob Kohn | January 20, 2011Today, an Egyptian student sent me an urgent message on Facebook. I had just returned from a semester abroad at the American University in Cairo, and had taught English on the side.
Today, an Egyptian student sent me an urgent message on Facebook. I had just returned from a semester abroad at the American University in Cairo, and had taught English on the side.
The Virginia Foundation for the Humanities was awarded a $660,000 grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to be used for work on an electronically-based collection of sources related to the lives of early Americans. The project, entitled People of the Founding Era, combines a biographical dictionary and "prosopography" - a type of biography used in social history to examine relationships and connections between people and locations - to preserve those figures largely unknown to history who lived during the early 18th and 19th centuries, said Mark Saunders, manager of the Electronic Imprint of the University of Virginia Press. With this system, "one could look up where leading attorneys in 1820s Virginia came from, and if there is a correlation between place of origin and success," said Holly Shulman, founding director of the Documents Compass group, part of the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities. The effort will collect information about individuals in such fields as gender, slave status and place of birth, and seeks to provide a broader view of historical figures that makes it attractive to scholars who study more obscure groups that usually are not included in other databases, Saunders said. "We may know that a craftsman worked on the University of Virginia because he is referenced in Jefferson's papers ... We may know where he lived or how old he was ... but little else," Saunders said.
[caption id="attachment_34332" align="alignleft" width="300" caption="Terrace crossing construction will close one lane from 7 a.m.
The recession may be easing in areas across the country, but unemployment figures in the Charlottesville metropolitan area from December 2009 to January 2010 showed a significant increase in the number of area residents looking for work. According to statistics obtained from the Virginia Employment Commission, unemployment rose from 5.4 percent in December 2009 to 6.6 percent in January 2010 in the metropolitan area.