Skip to main content

Judge lets U.Va. med student’s free-speech lawsuit move ahead

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) — A federal judge is letting a University of Virginia medical student move ahead with his free-speech lawsuit against school officials who suspended him after he asked pointed questions at a panel about microaggressions.

School officials had asked the judge to dismiss the lawsuit brought by student Kieran Bhattacharya. They said the questions he asked during a 2018 faculty-led panel were offensive and unworthy of free-speech protections.

But a judge sided with Bhattacharya, ruling that the questions the student asked during the panel were pointed but academic in nature.

A faculty member issued a “professionalism concern card” against Bhattacharya after his questioning. The citation led to a requirement that Bhattacharya be evaluated by a counselor and eventually a suspension.

The art of preserving photos and film at the Library of Congress

What is it like to store and care for old photos and reels of film from more than a century ago? “We avoid having them for long periods of time in harsh light exposure," said Meghan Holly, an archives technician at the Library of Congress Packard Campus in Culpeper, Virginia. "They live in our climate-controlled vaults."
Read Next Story