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The Virginia Glee Club is the oldest musical organization at the University of Virginia. Although founded in 1871, its goals remain the same as they have been for fifteen decades: to foster lifelong friendships in a spirit of brotherhood, and to share the beauty and perfection of choral music through concerts that meet the highest standards of excellence. We perform about 8 times a year, with our main events including our Annual Christmas Concert, Finals Concert, and our Tour (domestic or international). The Virginia Glee Club is a democratic organization. We have a constitution: the Virginia Glee Club Bylaws. There are two decision-making bodies of the Virginia Glee Club: the Executive Council and the Board. The members of both bodies, with the exception of the director, who sits on the Executive Council, are elected by the club members.
Since 1979, the VLR has worked to empower writers and artists through publication opportunities. The Review accepts poetry, prose, and art submissions from Virginia university students through the first three quarters of each semester.Our Editorial Board typically consists of 10-15 students with passions for writing, art, or publishing. We accept hardworking individuals from all schools and majors at UVA.
Players
We are UVA's flagship choral ensemble, heard by thousands each season in performances of a cappella and accompanied choral repertoire including major works with orchestra.Websites: usingers.virginia.edu | music.virginia.edu/chamber-singersYouTube channel and University Singers promo video: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtn_bCQageMfNH4ylxmqYvwFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/UvaUniversitySingers/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/uvauniversitysingers/?hl=enTwitter: https://twitter.com/uvausingers?lang=en
The Virginia Women’s Chorus is committed to excellence in the performance of classical, contemporary and diverse music from the challenging choral literature for women’s voices. The Chorus seeks to inspire and enrich others through the choral art form.The Chorus is unique in that it is a student-run organization with a hired professional conductor. It is comprised of undergraduate and graduate students from numerous degree programs. Several singers from the Charlottesville community have participated in the Chorus as well.The Chorus meets for rehearsal twice a week, on Mondays and Wednesdays. Our programming includes the Candlelight Concert series in the fall semester, an annual spring concert, and the Women Against Violence benefit concert, as well as performance gigs around the university and wider Charlottesville. Auditions are held at the beginning of each semester and consist of a voice quality and range check, singing scales a cappella, singing back pitches, and a few short sight-reading passages. Sight-reading is not a determining factor.VWC is affiliated with the University of Virginia Department of Music. Although this organization has members who are University of Virginia students and may have University employees associated or engaged in its activities and affairs, the organization is not a part of or an agency of the University. It is a separate and independent organization which is responsible for and manages its own activities and affairs. The University does not direct, supervise or control the organization and is not responsible for the organization’s contracts, acts or omissions.VWC does not restrict its membership, programs, or activities on the basis of age, color, disability, gender identity, marital status, military status (which includes active-duty members, reserve service members and dependents), national or ethnic origin, political affiliation, race, religion, sex, sexual orientation, veteran status, and family or genetic information absent an approved petition restrict.
V Magazine is a student publication that focuses on fashion, art, and culture at the University of Virginia, featuring students and organizations, as well as other events and topics of interest at and outside of UVA. V Mag provides students opportunities to work with writing, photography, layout and business.
WUVA, Inc. was created in 1947 to educate University of Virginia students in the art of commercial radio broadcasting. From 1947 to 1978, WUVA Radio operated as a commercial carrier-current (or closed circuit) station at UVA. In 1978, WUVA obtained an FCC license to operate WUVA(FM) on 92.7mHz, and WUVA’s mission necessarily expanded to serve Charlottesville, WUVA’s FCC-designated city of license. Later with the growth of the internet WUVA’s mission expanded to train students in digital media as well. Our platform for that purpose is WUVA News, wuvanews.com. In 2017 WUVA Inc. made the next generational step with its sale of the 92.7 FCC license to build WUVA News into a 21st century fully functional digital media company. Today, following its historical radio roots, WUVA Inc. seeks to train students in the most cutting edge media skills demanded by the job market.WUVA Inc’s mission is to serve the needs of the University of Virginia community in Charlottesville, nationally, and worldwide. Specifically, WUVA’s audience includes:University of Virginia studentsUniversity of Virginia faculty, staff, and administrationUVA alumni locally, nationally, and world-wideOur audience generally in Charlottesville and surrounding countiesWUVA also works closely with the Media Studies Department in the University of Virginia’s College of Arts & Sciences, and is a co-founder of the Center for Media and Citizenship at the University of Virginia (http://www.mediaandcitizenship.org/ ).
WXTJ 1001.FM is UVA's freeform, student-run radio station based in Charlottesville, VA.
X-TASEE Dance Crew was founded in 2005 and paved the way for hip-hop groups at UVA by being the first-ever hip-hop competing dance crew here. We are grateful to say that we are inclusive to all UVA students as well as residents of Charlottesville, making it so that anyone in the area has a chance to be selected for this team.
The zine club is an organization that creates a space for students to express themselves through the art of zine making and reading zines."A zine is a small-circulation self-published work of original or appropriated texts and images, usually reproduced via a copy machine. Zines are the product of either a single person or of a very small group, and are popularly photocopied into physical prints for circulation."Students will be encouraged to create zines about things they are passionate about or vehemently hate and anywhere in-between.
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