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| VCU News Newsletter for 2025-10-31 ( 4 items ) |
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Feeling overwhelmed? Resiliency program teaches skills to VCU students (10)
RICHMOND, Virginia, Oct. 30 -- Virginia Commonwealth University issued the following news:
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Feeling overwhelmed? Resiliency program teaches skills to VCU students
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By Sian Wilkerson
Nick Echard was foundering. As a transfer student coming to Virginia Commonwealth University midway through freshman year, he was in a new area, surrounded by new people - and the pressures began to pile up.
As he juggled a job and his college coursework, Echard, now a third-year mass communications ma more PR
The hidden dangers of vapes: VCU study reveals chemicals, risks and teen use (10)
RICHMOND, Virginia, Oct. 30 -- Virginia Commonwealth University issued the following news:
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The hidden dangers of vapes: VCU study reveals chemicals, risks and teen use
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By Sian Wilkerson
Recent testing by a Virginia Commonwealth University forensic toxicology research lab is uncovering the hidden dangers of vapes and cannabis products used by more than a million school-age children across the country each year. The study also highlights the rise of vaping in schools, where unregula more PR
The perks of being a VCUCard holder (10)
RICHMOND, Virginia, Oct. 30 -- Virginia Commonwealth University issued the following news:
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The perks of being a VCUCard holder
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By Elinor Frisa
You swipe it at Market 810. You tap it to enter your residence hall or use the printers at Cabell Library. Whether it's in your wallet or your pocket, your VCUCard is with you nearly every step of the way during your Virginia Commonwealth University experience. But what else can your card do for you on and off campus?
Your college ID is yo more PR
VCU researchers find explosive rise in tick-linked meat allergy across the U.S. (10)
RICHMOND, Virginia, Oct. 30 [Category: Medical] -- VCU Health, an academic medical center on the forefront of health care, providing patients with treatments and medical technology available, issued the following news release:
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VCU researchers find explosive rise in tick-linked meat allergy across the U.S.
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By A.J. Hostetler
A once-rare allergy that can cause severe reactions hours after eating red meat is dramatically rising across the United States, according to preliminary finding more PR
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