Mark Peters, an executive vice president at Battelle Memorial Institute in Charlottesville, has been named the next president and CEO of Mitre, succeeding Jason Providakes effective Sept. 3.
Founded in 1958 with a focus on national security and operating from dual headquarters in McLean as well as Bedford, Massachusetts, Mitre is a not-for-profit research and development company that manages federally funded R&D centers. It has more than 60 sites worldwide, employing 10,000 workers. Mitre’s 200-plus labs develop innovations in applied science and technologies in sectors ranging from artificial intelligence, cybersecurity and quantum computing to maritime and aviation safety.
Mitre is a member of the Coalition for Health AI and participated in the creation of the Blueprint for Trustworthy AI Implementation Guidance and Assurance for Healthcare. It’s also involved in developing tools to identify and mitigate supply chain threats.
Providakes, who joined Mitre more than three decades ago and became its CEO in 2017, plans to retire, according to Thursday’s announcement.
Peters, who will be based in McLean, is currently executive vice president of laboratory management and operations at Battelle, which helps operate eight federally funded research and development centers for the U.S. Departments of Energy and Homeland Security. Prior to joining Battelle, Peters was director of Idaho National Laboratory and president of Battelle Energy Alliance, the Idaho-based multipurpose laboratory focused on nuclear energy, national and homeland security, and energy and environmental science and technology.
Peters also was employed at Argonne National Laboratory and Los Alamos National Laboratory, and served two terms as chair of the National Laboratory Directors’ Council, representing 17 DOE national labs. In addition, he was awarded the 2023 Henry DeWolf Smyth Nuclear Statesman Award last year, which recognizes individual service in developing and guiding the peaceful uses of nuclear energy. He earned his doctorate in geophysical science from the University of Chicago, and a bachelor’s degree in geology from Auburn University.
An industrial warehouse and about 11.6 adjoining acres in Chesterfield County were sold for $9.85 million, Cushman & Wakefield | Thalhimer announced earlier in June.
According to county property records, 2001 Bellwood Road LLC purchased an 85,549-square-foot warehouse at 2001 and 1911 Bellwood Road and an additional 11.6 acres at 8331 and 8411 Fort Darling Road and 1906 and 1930 Cross St. from Fort Darling Partners LLC, an entity connected to Barefoot Spas, on June 5. The properties are just off Interstate 95 near the Richmond Marine Terminal. The buyer’s entity is linked to the address of CD Hall Construction, located at 1330 Bellwood Road.
The warehouse is the former Symbol Mattress headquarters. Chrissy Chappell and Graham Stoneburner of Thalhimer handled the sale on behalf of the seller.
Honeywell, a multinational conglomerate based in Charlotte, North Carolina, announced Thursday it plans to buy Arlington-based aerospace and defense technology company CAES for $1.9 billion in cash from private equity firm Advent International.
Formerly known as Cobham Advanced Electronic Solutions, CAES was founded in 1934 and was acquired by Advent in 2020. According to Honeywell’s announcement, the acquisition will enhance Honeywell’s defense tech portfolio, including new electromagnetic defense tools for end-to-end radio frequency signal management. “The combined company will grow Honeywell’s established production and upgrade positions on critical platforms that include F-35, EA-18G, AMRAAM and GMLRS, while also introducing offerings on new platforms like Navy Radar and UAS and C-UAS technologies,” the statement said.
The Wall Street Journal reported the deal Thursday morning, noting that it comes when military spending has ramped up amid long-standing conflicts including Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the Israel-Hamas conflict in Gaza.
The purchase is set to close in the second half of 2024 and will add approximately 2,200 employees, the news release said. According to Honeywell, $1.9 billion represents approximately 14 times CAES’ estimated EBITDA in 2024.
“As a trusted supplier and mission partner to our customers across advanced [radio frequency] capabilities, I couldn’t be more excited to see CAES join the Honeywell team and work together to build on the outstanding expertise of both companies,” Mike Kahn, CAES’ president and CEO, said in a statement. “Our extraordinary talent, RF breadth and world-class manufacturing facilities will offer new opportunities and further drive innovation for our industry.”
Bill Freehling, Fredericksburg’s director of economic development and tourism, will leave his position Friday, he wrote in a farewell blog post on the economic development department’s website this week. A former Free Lance-Star reporter and editor, Freehling served eight years as the city’s economic development director and two years as assistant director.
In an email Thursday, Freehling said he plans “to take a little time off and then jump into my next thing,” and that there is a process underway to hire his successor. In his blog post, Freehling wrote that there has been close to $1 billion in construction activity in Fredericksburg during his 10 years with the city, including the $40 million baseball stadium for the Fredericksburg Nationals Single-A minor league team and the renovation of the former Free Lance-Star property into a mixed-use development.
“I am looking forward to the next chapter of my life, but I will miss many aspects of working for the City of Fredericksburg, where I have spent the last 10 years,” Freehling wrote. “It has been my great honor to work alongside such a talented and dedicated group of civil servants.”
Old Dominion University announced Tuesday it has hired Jeffrey Fergus to be the next dean of the Batten College of Engineering and Technology, starting Aug. 10.
Fergus is currently the associate dean for undergraduate studies and program assessment in the Samuel Ginn College of Engineering at Auburn University in Alabama, where he’s worked as a faculty member since 1992. He will succeed Kenneth Fridley, who was named ODU’s vice president for research in January.
A graduate of the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Fergus has been principal investigator and co-principal investigator on studies involving materials for gas turbine engines, batteries, fuel cells and chemical sensors, and has served on boards for The Electrochemical Society and The Minerals, Metals & Materials Society, as well as chairing an engineering accreditation commission at the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology.
“It was a great experience leading the Batten College of Engineering and College, and I am excited to see the college continue to thrive under Dr. Fergus’ leadership,” Fridley said in a statement. “I am confident that his experience in growing academic programs and supporting research will promote the college’s success in serving its students, faculty and staff.”
A joint venture led by a Lynchburg-based BWX Technologies subsidiary has been awarded a potential $30 billion Department of Energy contract to operate a nuclear weapons plant in Texas, the company announced Friday.
The DOE’s National Nuclear Security Administration awarded the contract to PanTeXas Deterrence (PXD), a joint venture led by BWXT’s Technical Services Group that also includes Arlington County-based Fluor Federal Services, Chantilly-based SOC and the Texas A&M University system. The group will manage and operate the Pantex plant, a facility near Amarillo, Texas, that is responsible for maintaining the safety, security and effectiveness of the United States’ nuclear weapons stockpile, according to BWXT.
The contract includes an initial term of five years, and afterwards, NNSA can award three more five-year option periods. If all options are exercised, the contract will span 20 years at approximately $30 billion. The joint venture will assume operations at Pantex after a four-month transition period expected to begin in mid-July, according to the NNSA. The estimated value of the contract is $1.5 billion a year.
A Tennessee-based joint venture, Consolidated Nuclear Security — led by Bechtel National, a subsidiary of Reston-based Bechtel Corp., and including Reston-based Leidos as a minority member — currently holds the contract for Pantex and the Y-12 National Security Complex in Tennessee. CNS’ Pantex contract portion expires Sept. 30, according to the NNSA.
The work at Pantex includes nuclear weapons surveillance, assembly and dismantlement, as well as support of the weapons’ life extension programs, according to BWXT. Other tasks involve development and fabrication of high explosive components and storage and surveillance of plutonium pits.
“This is an important contract win for us and leverages our unique core competencies and capabilities in nuclear operations,” said Heatherly H. Dukes, president of BWXT’s Technical Services Group. “The PanTeXas Deterrence team was purpose-built to bring the very best of industry experience together to meet crucial global security imperatives. We look forward to getting started with a strong emphasis on safe and secure operations in full support of NNSA’s integrated Nuclear Security Enterprise.”
In February, the Pantex plant was in the news as a fast-moving wildfire in the Texas Panhandle threatened the facility. According to the Associated Press, Pantex is one of six production facilities in the NNSA’s Nuclear Security Enterprise, and has been the main U.S. site for assembling and disassembling atomic bombs since 1975. The last time Pantex produced a new bomb was in 1991.
Virginia Commonwealth University’s College of Health Professions will have a new dean effective Aug. 15, the university announced Wednesday. Amy R. Darragh comes from Ohio State University, where she is director and vice dean of the School of Health and Rehabilitation Services.
Darragh succeeds interim dean Paula Song, the college’s Richard M. Bracken Chair and professor of health administration, who stepped in after the departure of Susan Parish in July 2023. Parish, who served as dean beginning in 2019, was named president of Mercy College in New York last year.
As dean, Darragh will be in charge of nine departments and one center, as well as 84 full-time faculty members and nearly 1,250 students at four campuses in Richmond, Roanoke, Abingdon and Alexandria. Darragh, who has been with Ohio State since 2008, earned a Ph.D. in environmental health epidemiology from Colorado State University, where she also received a master’s degree in occupational therapy. At Barnard College, she graduated with a bachelor’s degree in psychology and arts.
Her current research includes testing pediatric and adult medical treatments that work well for patients while also protecting caregivers’ health, and at Ohio State, she focused on expanding radiologic sciences and therapy programs to meet workforce demand. She is also a licensed occupational therapist.
“I am thrilled and honored to serve as dean of a college that prepares students who will work in some of the most in-demand health care roles, and who will ultimately impact the patient experience throughout our communities,” Darragh said in a statement. “I look forward to advancing the college’s efforts to inspire the most outstanding health professionals, researchers and leaders.”
The College of Health Professions offers bachelor’s, master’s and doctorate degrees in various health-related fields, including physical therapy, health administration, gerontology, nurse anesthesia and rehabilitation counseling.
“Dr. Darragh’s distinguished leadership, commitment to innovation and strong collaborative vision make her uniquely positioned to lead the VCU College of Health Professions,” said Dr. Marlon Levy, interim senior vice president of VCU Health Sciences and interim CEO of the VCU Health System. “I am confident that her extraordinary track record of academic and leadership success will help continue to build on the college’s stellar reputation.”
Louise “Lou” Fincher, Emory & Henry University’s senior vice president, has been named interim president of the Washington County-based private college beginning Aug. 1, as President John W. Wells steps down and becomes the school’s first chancellor in late July.
Fincher is also the inaugural dean of the E&H School of Health Sciences, a position she accepted in 2014, and became senior vice president in 2020, according to Emory & Henry’s announcement Monday. Fincher helped launch the health sciences school in Marion, and has led the development of the Southwest Virginia Healthcare Excellence Academy Laboratory School (SWVA-HEALS), which targets the health care worker shortage in Southwest Virginia.
Before coming to Emory & Henry, Fincher served as professor and chair of the kinesiology department in the College of Education and Health Professions at the University of Texas at Arlington, and she was president and CEO of the Joe W. King Orthopedic Institute at the Texas Orthopedic Hospital.
Wells became Emory & Henry’s 22nd president in 2019, and during his tenure, he launched a business school, a nursing school and the van Vlissingen Career Center. In 2017, he joined the school as provost and dean of faculty, after having served as associate general secretary for the General Board of Higher Education and Ministry of the worldwide United Methodist Church, and was chief academic officer at Mars Hill University in North Carolina.
Fincher holds a doctor of education degree with a focus on human performance studies from the University of Alabama, a master’s degree in education with a focus on athletic training from Indiana State University, and a bachelor’s degree from Stephen F. Austin State University. She will remain interim president until Wells’ successor is named by the university’s board of trustees.
On April 30, the night police raided Columbia University’s campus, arresting more than 100 protesters and keeping about 50 students and faculty members cooped up for several hours in Pulitzer Hall, where the annual journalism prizes are announced, it was pretty quiet at the University of Virginia.
According to a Cavalier Daily student reporter’s tweets April 30, about 70 people gathered near U.Va.’s chapel with signs expressing support for Palestinian freedom and opposing Israel’s military attacks on Gaza. U.Va. Police Chief Timothy Longo stopped by and told the group that as long as no one erected tents, he didn’t have a problem with the gathering.
On the afternoon of May 4, though, police from at least three agencies arrived on U.Va.’s campus in riot gear and sprayed a few dozen protesters with chemical irritants to make them disperse, while other people watched and filmed the clash, uploading videos to social media. In the background, people chanted, “Shame on you!” Some online commenters wondered why the police didn’t show up in riot gear when white supremacists marched on campus in 2017.
According to media reports, 27 people were arrested at U.Va. on May 4. In a letter to the university later that day, President Jim Ryan wrote that the decision to bring in outside police agencies came after Longo had issued a final warning to protesters.
Among university administrators’ stated concerns was that people had erected tents without a permit — an exemption for recreational tents was removed the morning of May 4, U.Va. officials acknowledged — and that “individuals unaffiliated with the university” had joined protesters, which Ryan called a security risk.
“When [university police’s] attempts to resolve the situation were met with physical confrontation and attempted assault,” Ryan wrote, “it became necessary to rely on assistance from the Virginia State Police.”
In the days following the confrontation on the Lawn, faculty and staff in the English, history, medical and religious studies departments wrote letters critical of Ryan’s decision to involve state police, and they have been joined by multiple student organizations.
Oludamini Ogunnaike, an associate professor of African religious thought and democracy, resigned from U.Va.’s Religion, Diversity and Belonging Task Force on May 5.
“The administration had other choices but made one of the worst choices available to them: They chose violence, chaos and disorder,” Ogunnaike wrote in a letter he made public. Ryan’s statement, he added, was “misleading at best and mendacious at worst. As anyone who was actually present at the protest site could attest, the only safety concerns that day came from the police, not the protesters; there were no ‘outside agitators,’ only community members, faculty and staff who showed up out of concern for the students’ well-being.”
The May 4 arrests and police confrontation showed that U.Va. is not immune to a trend of protests this spring at college campuses across the nation, where more than 2,300 people have been arrested in connection with protests over the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza, which has claimed the lives of more than 34,000 Palestinians, mostly civilians, including nearly 7,800 children, according to the United Nations. Israel’s military action was sparked by Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israeli civilians that resulted in the killings of 1,139 people, with more than 240 others taken hostage.
Student protests have also become a hot button issue on Capitol Hill and in this year’s presidential election, with legislators on both sides of the aisle and President Joe Biden decrying rising antisemitism.
“On college campuses, Jewish students [have been] blocked, harassed, attacked, while walking to class,” Biden said in a May 7 speech. “Antisemitism, antisemitic posters, slogans calling for the annihilation of Israel, the world’s only Jewish state. Too many people denying, downplaying, rationalizing, ignoring the horrors of the Holocaust and Oct. 7. … It is absolutely despicable, and it must stop.”
Some politicians — including Biden and U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine — also have emphasized that people have the right to protest so long as they are peaceful and follow local and federal laws.
Despite the May 4 arrests, U.Va. has experienced much less disruption and strife than at other universities — even in Virginia. At Virginia Tech, Virginia Commonwealth University and the University of Mary Washington, 107 people, including 68 students, were arrested at protests in late April.
And yet, there’s been so much rhetoric and prose about “wokeness” at the state’s flagship institution that a casual observer would get the impression that Mr. Jefferson’s University was a hotbed of radicalism and antisemitism.
That’s simply not the case, U.Va. students, faculty members and administrators say. And some go further, arguing that The Jefferson Council — an organization founded by conservative university alumni — and a group of university parents are working to chill free speech by those they disagree with about the Israeli war.
In late March, the underlying dispute over pro-Palestinian protests reached a new level of intensity at U.Va. as a digital billboard truck on campus ran messages calling for Rector Robert Hardie to resign, charging that he “won’t confront antisemitism” and is “unfit to lead U.Va.” It’s not clear who hired the truck, and a university spokesperson described the messages as false and offensive in a statement.
Also unclear is whether the debate over antisemitism at U.Va. is due to pro-Palestinian protests on campus or outsiders playing up allegations for their own political purposes. Either way, it’s become a major public issue for U.Va.’s administration and board.
And for a few U.Va. faculty members and one undergraduate student who were publicly named in a document accusing them of being antisemites, it has become deeply personal.
Meanwhile, the political bent of the university’s governing board of visitors is a big question on the minds of some U.Va. community members, as Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s appointees are poised to make up two-thirds of U.Va.’s board in July.
A letter to the rector
This spring, the parent of a Jewish U.Va. student, writing on behalf of a few other Jewish university parents, sent a letter to Hardie criticizing the university’s approach to pro-Palestinian protests, as well as U.Va.’s statement that it was investigating the origins of the digital billboard truck.
The missive included a document listing 37 alleged incidents of on-campus antisemitism during the 2023-24 academic year — ranging from reports of anti-Jewish slurs and physical assaults on Jewish students to objections against university-sponsored speakers discussing the Israel-Palestine conflict in historical terms.
On April 4, The Jefferson Council posted an article describing the letter and linked to the 11-page document, which Executive Director James A. Bacon Jr. wrote was compiled by the parents’ group. The letter’s author, Julie Pearl, told The Daily Progress that the alleged antisemitic incidents were “observed and … [reported] by students,” but sources were not cited for some of the reports, and Bacon acknowledged to Virginia Business that he did not attempt to verify the reports before publishing.
The Jefferson Council argues that recent student demonstrations focused on the Gaza war, racial justice and LGBTQ+ rights are all part of a new wave of “wokeness,” and that this trend is quashing free speech for conservative students at U.Va.
Some of the reported incidents in the parents’ document were familiar to readers of the council’s website, which has championed the cause of Jewish U.Va. freshman Matan Goldstein, who filed a federal lawsuit on May 17 against the University of Virginia, its president and rector, and two pro-Palestinian organizations, alleging that he was “a victim of hate-based, intentional discrimination, severe harassment and abuse, and illegal retaliation” at U.Va. Goldstein was interviewed in March by The Daily Progress and CBS19 News in Charlottesville about antisemitic verbal and physical attacks he said occurred multiple times on campus, even before the Oct. 7, 2023, attack by Hamas. His attorney declined an interview request from Virginia Business on Goldstein’s behalf.
Bacon co-founded The Jefferson Council in 2020 with another U.Va. alumnus, Bert Ellis, whom Youngkin named to the U.Va. Board of Visitors in 2022. Ellis has been at the center of several ideological disputes over the past four years, starting with his attempt in September 2020 to remove a student’s sign from her Lawn room door that criticized U.Va. with a profane word. Ellis, who did not respond to requests for comment for this story, stepped down as president of The Jefferson Council when he was named to U.Va.’s board. However, his public statements as a board member and those from the council often are aligned ideologically.
Bacon was Virginia Business’ founding editor from 1986 to 2002 and in 2004 started the Virginia conservative website Bacon’s Rebellion, which takes on similar social and political controversies as The Jefferson Council.
In addition to some faculty members, one undergraduate student, Ali Jarrah, is named in the parents’ document because he emailed a few professors to promote a six-week film series focused on Israel and Palestine that was co-sponsored by U.Va.’s Jewish Studies department, Jarrah confirmed in an interview.
Two faculty members in the Jewish Studies department slated to participate at one of the six events are named in the same complaint and labeled “pro-Palestinian and antisemitic and therefore unlikely to provide a balanced view.”
Meanwhile, first-year student Goldstein alleged in a March interview with CBS19 that he has been called “a filthy Jew” and a “bloodthirsty human being” by other U.Va. students, in addition to being pushed and shoved at an October 2023 pro-Palestine protest on campus.
In April, Goldstein was investigated on U.Va. Honor Committee charges that he lied about being assaulted on campus in the CBS19 interview, according to reports by The Jefferson Council and the Foundation Against Intolerance and Racism, or FAIR, a nonprofit group started in 2020 that has opposed diversity, inclusion and antiracism initiatives.
In May, FAIR reported that the honor code probe was dropped due to lack of evidence.
An apology and correction
Also on the parents’ list was Ian Mullins, an assistant professor of sociology at U.Va. since 2019. He was listed incorrectly as having shown a video in class of the bombing of an Israeli town and voicing support for Hamas terrorists, something he did not do, Mullins says in an interview.
After contacting his department chair and others employed by the university, Mullins received an apology from the parent who compiled the list. Bacon also ran a correction about it on the Jefferson Council site, although he added that the council “disclaims any responsibility for the error.”
Despite not verifying the parents’ claims in the document or contacting the people named in it, Bacon says, “We were familiar with some of the incidents, and the incidents we were familiar with, we thought they were accurate. We just assumed that everything was accurate. That was probably, you know, a mistake on my part as the editor.”
He adds, however, that he believes everything else on the list — apart from Mullins’ inclusion and the characterization of the two Jewish Studies faculty members as “antisemitic,” which they disputed — is correct because no one has contacted him for corrections. Nevertheless, Bacon adds, “we didn’t know if there were any other issues lurking in the list, so we just took it down.”
Like Jarrah, Mullins learned about his mention on the list from someone else contacting him about it, but Mullins says he’s familiar with The Jefferson Council because a council member, Walter Smith, previously sent him Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests for his class syllabuses and personal text messages discussing U.Va. (Bacon confirmed the FOIA requests with Virginia Business.)
A nontenure-track sociology professor who specializes in U.S. conservative politics and its history, Mullins teaches classes on racism and the “big introductory course to sociology,” often attended by more than 100 students per class.
“So, this isn’t the first time … people associated with The Jefferson Council have targeted me,” Mullins says. “I’m also not that important at U.Va. I’m an assistant professor [who] teaches classes in sociology.” Next year, he says, he is in line to receive a promotion that will hinge on approvals of his department, the College of Arts and Sciences and, ultimately, the board of visitors. Mullins hopes the changing composition of the 17 voting members of the board — which will include 13 Youngkin appointees as of July 1 — will not affect his prospects.
“I do think, given the strength of my record, to deny me promotion will be difficult,” he says. “And if they do it, the question will be, on what grounds? I can’t be denied promotion as an act of political retaliation.”
Jarrah thinks The Jefferson Council’s post and its amplification of the parents’ list of alleged antisemitic incidents chills free speech on campus, as does Mullins, who says that because the list was sent to the university’s rector and reached U.Va.’s president, it potentially threatens the jobs of named faculty members.
Some professors, he adds, “feel like we’re one [blog] post away from being on some meme account that will bring harassment, that will bring death threats. Not everyone does everything right, but I’ve worked with a lot of people who are really committed to the students we serve.”
‘Four guys and a dog’
Meanwhile, among U.Va. board members, administrators and academic leaders, there are multiple opinions on the situation. Hardie wrote in an email to Virginia Business that he is “committed to serving the university, with which I have a long and happy history, for the full duration of my term,” which is set to end in 2025.
But Tom DePasquale, who will rotate off the board at the end of June after two terms, is steamed about the rhetoric surrounding antisemitism and Gaza protests at U.Va.
“We have some people that just aren’t being intellectually honest with what’s going on. This whole controversy revolves around a handful of people either creating it or making noise about it,” says DePasquale, calling The Jefferson Council “four guys and a dog that appointed themselves to save the university. Listen, there is not a person employed at U.Va. that wants anyone to feel unsafe. There is no chronic issue. You’re going to see that we’re talking [about] a couple of families [complaining about antisemitism on campus].”
Earlier this spring, the board of visitors discussed reports of antisemitism on campus, and Ryan privately met with a group of four Jewish parents and four students, according to news reports.
Between the start of the 2023-24 academic year and mid-April, Ryan says, the university received 26 reports “potentially related to antisemitism,” which were “thoroughly investigated.” However, neither U.Va.’s Office for Equal Opportunity and Civil Rights nor university police “identified evidence that would support additional adjudication, including disciplinary actions or criminal prosecution.”
Patricia A. “Tish” Jennings, a professor of education at U.Va.’s School of Education and Human Development who was the board’s nonvoting faculty member this year, says that what she observed this year at U.Va. was “mild” compared with her experiences at San Francisco State University several years ago. That university was sued by Jewish students who claimed it had allowed antisemitism to go unchecked.
Nevertheless, she notes, “there has definitely been an uptick of student complaints about antisemitism” at U.Va., “so that is real.”
U.Va. Center for Politics Director Larry Sabato, who witnessed a mob of tiki torch-wielding white supremacists invade the Lawn in August 2017 as they chanted “Jews will not replace us,” says that he doesn’t know what everyone on Grounds has experienced or felt during the Gaza protests — mainly because U.Va. is “a huge institution.”
However, Sabato adds, “Generally speaking, people do not appreciate others coming from outside … and suggesting that they do X, Y and Z. They just don’t like that. Universities are full of independent, headstrong people.”
It’s incorrect, many administrators and faculty members say, to assume that every Jewish student at U.Va. feels the same way about Israel’s military actions or The Jefferson Council’s views on campus protests.
In early April, the Jewish Leadership Advisory Board, a student-led group governing U.Va.’s chapter of the Hillel organization for Jewish campus life, wrote a letter to U.Va.’s board that was obtained by student newspaper The Cavalier Daily.
“We acknowledge that antisemitism is a top concern at U.Va., especially among parents, although it is not as widespread as some outside of the university community believe,” the letter says. “It saddens us to see concerted efforts to exploit Jewish students as pawns for political agendas. Such efforts threaten the safety and well-being of Jewish students.”
Asked about the students’ complaint, Bacon says, “I don’t know who’s exploiting them for political agendas … so, I’m sorry, that’s just meaningless verbiage. We have taken up the cause for Jewish students at U.Va. because it is the most prominent example of the double standards that are applied at U.Va.”
Jim Murray Jr., a former U.Va. rector and outgoing board member, says he’s observed that today’s college students are extraordinarily committed to issues they consider important, including the war in Gaza, Black Lives Matter and LGBTQ+ rights — and even going back to Vietnam War protests when he was a student.
“The same things come around and around again,” he says. “They have a different name, but the students were equally engaged. They cared deeply and strongly. They felt their lives were at stake.”
At a glance
Founded:Sometimes called Mr. Jefferson’s University or just The University, U.Va. was founded by Thomas Jefferson in 1819. Its first board of visitors included Jefferson and fellow U.S. Presidents James Madison and James Monroe.
Campus:With roughly 1,240 contiguous acres around its UNESCO World Heritage Site campus or “Grounds,” U.Va. is known for its distinctive Jefferson-designed Rotunda building located on the Lawn, the school’s 4.5-acre grass quad where graduations are held. U.Va.’s other major holding is the University ofVirginia’s College at Wise, a four-year liberal arts college in Southwest Virginia.
2023-24 enrollment
17,618 undergraduate students 8,326 graduate students 5% international undergraduates;
19% international graduate students 35% minority enrollment 67% in-state undergraduate students
Employees
Approximately 4,900 faculty, 16,000 staff and 10,300 UVA Health staff
Academic programs
Notable for its medicine, law and business schools, U.Va. offers more than 200 majors across 12 schools.
Tuition, fees, housing and dining*
Includes average room and board, education and general fees, plus books, travel and personal expenses.
A Jewish undergraduate student is suing the University of Virginia, its president and rector, and two pro-Palestinian organizations, alleging that he was “a victim of hate-based, intentional discrimination, severe harassment and abuse, and illegal retaliation” at U.Va., according to a federal lawsuit filed May 17.
Matan Goldstein, who completed his freshman year at U.Va. this month, made public allegations this spring in interviews with The Daily Progress and CBS 19 in Charlottesville that he was physically and verbally assaulted on U.Va.’s grounds over his Jewish faith and the fact that he is a dual American and Israeli citizen.
An 80-page lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Virginia on Goldstein’s behalf claims that the university, as well as U.Va. President Jim Ryan and Rector Robert D. Hardie, “thoroughly and completely failed” to “protect students from discrimination, harassment, abuse, violence and retaliation, including antisemitism.” Goldstein is represented by Keswick-based civil rights attorneys Gregory Brown and Kristi Lyn Gavalier of Brown & Gavalier.
Also named in the lawsuit are U.Va.’s Faculty for Justice in Palestine chapter and Students for Justice in Palestine chapter. Goldstein claims that “the very existence of FJP at U.Va. and membership in FJP at U.Va., along with the numerous acts of misconduct … are definitively antisemitic and are, as a matter of law, a breach of each faculty member’s legal duties.” The lawsuit describes the student organization, which has chapters at college campuses across the country, as “antisemitic, pro-Hamas,” and alleges it committed “hate-based misconduct” against Goldstein and “other members of the university community.”
Goldstein seeks a jury trial and unspecified punitive and compensatory damages, according to the complaint.
Goldstein’s lawsuit follows several challenging months on college campuses across the nation, including U.Va., Virginia Tech, Virginia Commonwealth University and the University of Mary Washington, where more than 100 pro-Palestinian protesters were arrested in April and May, and in some cases face criminal charges. At U.Va., 27 people were arrested on May 4 when Ryan and other university officials called in state police to break up a small encampment on the university’s Lawn. Police donned riot gear and sprayed chemical irritants at protesters.
Before May 4, pro-Palestinian groups held occasional protests and events at U.Va., none of which ended in arrests. Goldstein claims in the lawsuit that he was attacked by participants during an October 2023 walkout protest on U.Va.’s campus.
According to the lawsuit, Goldstein wore a yarmulke and a Star of David, and carried an Israeli flag to an Oct. 25, 2023, protest at U.Va., during which students and faculty members walked out of class and marched to the university’s Rotunda, protesting the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza. “At the event, Matan was berated, insulted, threatened with violence, and physically assaulted,” the lawsuit claims, and a U.Va. professor with Goldstein “was forced to intervene and identify himself as a U.Va. professor in order to protect Matan and himself from imminent physical assault.”
The lawsuit also claims that “pro-Hamas faculty members have offered extra credit and boosts in grades to students who attend anti-Israeli, antisemitic rallies.” Further, the lawsuit alleges that in a private meeting between Ryan and a group of Jewish students and parents in February, the students “informed President Ryan that they felt afraid on campus” and “feared retaliation by the university. To be sure, the Jewish community feared retaliation from President Ryan.”
The lawsuit claims that the president of the Students for Justice in Palestine’s U.Va. chapter, who is not named in the complaint, filed a “bogus and false” Honor Committee charge against Goldstein, stemming from a media interview. U.Va.’s honor code prohibits lying, cheating and stealing. According to the complaint, the honor charge against Goldstein was dismissed due to lack of evidence.
Goldstein’s complaint also says that Ryan and Hardie “‘gaslighted’ the Jewish students with a series of lies, evasions and acts of retaliation.” In a media statement, Ryan said that the university had investigated 26 reports “potentially related to antisemitism” during the 2023-24 academic year through mid-April but the university’s Office for Equal Opportunity and Civil Rights and university police had not identified “evidence that would support additional adjudication, including disciplinary actions or criminal prosecution.”
The lawsuit alleges that “the U.Va. media apparatus falsely claimed that no major and, more importantly, ‘formal’ complaints had been lodged or initiated,” and that a university statement saying U.Va. investigators “have yet to return evidence to substantiate the [antisemitism] claims” is “reprehensible, irresponsible, and, most of all, false.”
A U.Va. spokesperson said Tuesday the university “will not comment on this pending litigation,” while adding the following statement: “The university opposes antisemitism and other forms of bias, and we respond swiftly to claims of harassment of members of our community. Since the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks and ensuing war in Gaza, leaders across our grounds have gone to great lengths to support students who have experienced difficulties stemming from the conflict and to investigate claims of misconduct that violates our policies or Virginia law. This has been a challenging year at U.Va. and at institutions around the country, but we are proud of the way our students, faculty and staff have risen to the challenge in a difficult moment.”
Ryan and Hardie previously received criticism from a group of Jewish parents who sent a letter to Hardie listing 37 alleged incidents of antisemitism at U.Va. The letter was later published online by conservative U.Va. alumni group The Jefferson Council, which was co-founded by U.Va. Board of Visitors member Bert Ellis.
The Jefferson Council and the group of Jewish parents have argued that Ryan and Hardie haven’t done enough to protect Jewish students from antisemitism at U.Va., although student leaders of the university chapter of the largest Jewish student group, Hillel, wrote a letter in April to the board of visitors saying that antisemitism, while “a top concern at U.Va. … is not as widespread as some outside of the university community believe.”
Meanwhile, other faculty members and student organizations have spoken out about their disappointment in Ryan’s decision to call in state police to remove protesters on May 4, an action Ryan attributed to “individuals unaffiliated with the university” joining protesters, as well as recreational tents being erected without a permit. However, some observers of the May 4 protest dispersal said they did not observe among the protesters a group of “four men dressed in black” who were cited by Ryan as one reason behind his decision to call in state troopers, according to a report by The Daily Progress.
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