Anonymous Gift Shines Disharoon Park Spotlight on 麻豆破解版 Student Veterans

May 3, 2023 By William Cocke, wtc4q@virginia.edu William Cocke, wtc4q@virginia.edu

Student veterans at the University of Virginia don鈥檛 ask for a lot of fanfare. That鈥檚 by design; no longer in uniform or on active duty, they鈥檝e served their country and are quietly pursuing their studies at one of the premier public universities in the nation.

Still, it鈥檚 nice to be recognized for the sacrifices many of them have made to get to UVA, complete their education and walk the Lawn during Final Exercises. Thanks to support from an anonymous donor, 10 home baseball games this spring now include a brief on-field ceremony to recognize a student veteran at UVA. As their photo flashes on the video screen, with name, rank, branch of service and UVA school affiliation, they receive a plaque, a gift certificate and a standing ovation. The recognitions will continue in future seasons.

Copey 鈥淢arquis鈥 Rice, the first student veteran to be honored, woke up to a text early one morning in February. A rising third-year student in the McIntire School of Commerce, he was asked to report to Disharoon Park later that day for 麻豆破解版 baseball game with Columbia University. 鈥淚 tossed on my blue blazer, white shirt and khakis,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 wanted to look good.鈥

Rice, who spent eight years in the U.S. Army as a culinary specialist at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, and was deployed to Afghanistan as a performer with the U.S. Army Soldier Show, made sure to wear his Student Veterans of America lapel pin. As chair of the veteran service committee for the UVA chapter of Student Veterans of America, Rice is also a first-generation college student and a Posse Veterans Scholar.

As he walked onto the field, he was unprepared for the flood of emotions. 鈥淚 had this happy, tumultuous feeling,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淚t was amazing to see everyone standing and applauding and I鈥檓 so grateful that they recognized my service. It was a priceless experience.鈥

Since then, other student veterans have had their own meaningful experiences, including a former high school baseball player who brought his entire family to the game. After the first Marine veteran was honored, baseball fans who were former Marines gathered around him to offer congratulations.

鈥淲e are honored that the Virginia baseball program can help pay tribute to student veterans at UVA,鈥 head coach Brian O鈥機onnor said. 鈥淭he service and sacrifice of these students allows us the many freedoms we enjoy every day in the United States. I am proud that Virginia baseball can play a small role in recognizing these students, their sacrifices and all the ways that they enrich our great University of Virginia community.鈥

Bridging the GI Bill Gap

In any given year, anywhere from 60 to 80 undergraduate student veterans walk the Grounds. About 5% of graduate students are veterans, with representation in the Darden School of Business and the schools of Law, Medicine, Nursing, and Continuing and Professional Studies.

Undergraduate and graduate veterans tend to be slightly older than the overall student population. Many are first-generation students or come from underrepresented groups, and many are married with children, or single parents. Some have served in war zones and held military leadership positions. Most are attending UVA with funding and benefits through the GI Bill. But sometimes that lifeline comes up short.

Accordingly, a second feature of the anonymous gift will continue to support veterans after this year鈥檚 baseball season concludes. The donors worked with the Office of Student Affairs and leaders within the Student Veterans of America chapter at UVA to identify one of the most pressing issues facing student veterans 鈥 the need for gap funding.

Recognition being given to Mason Fox on baseball field

UVA student veteran Mason Fox, left, is recognized at the March 25 baseball game at Disharoon Park, as Tomas De Oliveira looks on. (Contributed photo)

鈥淵ou have these non-traditional students who are, for the most part, supporting themselves through school,鈥 said Jeffrey Lovelace, assistant professor of commerce at the McIntire School, faculty adviser to Student Veterans of America at UVA and an Army veteran who served two tours of duty in Iraq. 鈥淭he way military benefits are structured can lead students to experience lulls in their coverage. For example, if you finish a semester in mid-December, you don鈥檛 pick up the next semester until late January. That means the academic benefits that you鈥檝e earned are not supporting you during those gap times.鈥

Tim Brown, a third-year McIntire student and former Navy corpsman, is past president of the UVA Student Veterans of America chapter. He was instrumental in working with the donors and the University to iron out the details of the gift.

Brown knew that the quirks of the academic year could pose challenges for student veterans.

鈥淭he way the GI Bill works is that the Veterans Administration pays the school tuition directly,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he VA also pays recipients a housing stipend, which comes once a month, and that goes away when you鈥檙e on these breaks. So functionally, this gap funding would be used for paying rent or maybe food for the kid, because that鈥檚 what the housing stipend is for. It鈥檚 your living allowance.鈥

He added that many in the veteran community find it difficult to ask for help when facing financial issues, and as a result, experience high rates of burnout. 鈥淲e tough it out,鈥 he said.

Allowing student veterans to focus on their studies rather than worrying about paying the bills is important on several levels. 鈥淚 look at it this way: How do you remove the obstacles that make it difficult for these veterans to focus on their academic experience and to excel during their time here?鈥 Lovelace said. 鈥淎nd if you know you鈥檝e got some backup and an emergency valve that you can go to, then it puts your mind at ease. That鈥檚 just huge.鈥

The Thanos Snap

Tomas De Oliveira is the current UVA Student Veterans of America chapter president. A third-year mechanical engineering major, he鈥檚 a former U.S. Marine sergeant who served active duty for seven years followed by 2陆 years of reserve time. He served in Afghanistan working in aviation mechanics as a flight equipment technician and as an embassy detachment commander for three years in Saudi Arabia, Moscow and Tokyo.

Based upon his life experience and current leadership role, he鈥檚 keenly aware that many student veterans face challenges when it comes to higher education. 鈥淚 think you鈥檒l find that very few traditional students at UVA have families, children, day care needs, transportation needs,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not all moving their entire lives, abandoning a job, a career, in order to try to come to school. We are a population that has unique needs.鈥

One of De Oliveira鈥檚 goals is to connect as many on-Grounds student veterans with the Student Veterans of America as possible, including those transferring from institutions such as Piedmont Virginia Community College. He knows that the learning curve for entering veterans can be a steep one. He graduated from high school in 2003 and went into his first year of community college in 2017. 鈥淚 started using my GI Bill after I transferred to UVA and then have had some ups and downs trying to navigate the educational system,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his was brand new.鈥

De Oliveira likens the feeling of disconnection that can come with being a student veteran to the comic book character Thanos, from the Marvel Universe. 鈥淭here鈥檚 Thanos, who snaps his fingers and half of the population disappears,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd then, a few movies later, he undoes the snap and brings everybody back. As a veteran, that鈥檚 kind of what it feels like. It feels like you were snapped out of society for a few years. Time has moved on, we live full lives and then we come back to school to rejoin the same high-school peers we left all those years ago.鈥

Added Support, Broader Acceptance

In 2018, a Cornerstone Project report conducted by the University outlined the challenges undergraduate military veterans face at UVA and proposed solutions to resolve them, bringing the school more in line with peer institutions that have robust veterans鈥 programs, such as Florida State University and the University of North Carolina.

Of the report鈥檚 two primary recommendations 鈥 that the University create a director of veterans鈥 services position and open a veterans鈥 center颅 鈥 the second one has been fulfilled. In September 2021, the University opened the Veteran Student Center in the lower level of Newcomb Hall. The center is a joint project of the Student Veterans of America at UVA, the Office of the Dean of Students and the UVA Alumni Association鈥檚 Jefferson Trust. The Eli Banana Fund also provided support.

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UVA President Jim Ryan was among those who delivered remarks at the center鈥檚 opening ceremony. Ryan told the veterans in attendance that the center was a place for them to build a community.

鈥淭his is a place that I hope will help remind you that you belong here at UVA,鈥 he said. 鈥淣o matter where you are from, or whether you are the first in your family to attend college, whether you are a graduate or undergraduate student, or what your background is, you are welcome here and you are also part of what makes us the University of Virginia. You are part of what makes us among the most vibrant university communities in the world. When you graduate, I know that you will have helped to shape this place, just as UVA will have helped to shape you.鈥

In April 2022, Ryan completed his 11th consecutive Boston Marathon. He wore a blue tank top with 鈥淩unning for Veterans鈥 written in orange and white across the chest. Ryan ran the 26.2 miles in support of the UVA Veteran Student Center. His campaign raised more than $16,000.

These gestures are not lost on veteran leaders such as Lovelace, Brown and De Oliveira. They believe that while the University is moving in the right direction, more can be done to increase recognition and support.

鈥淚 think that University is setting off on the right foot, definitely,鈥 De Oliveira said. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 a tall hill to climb. And not just for UVA, but any university trying to properly serve its veterans has quite the mission ahead of them.鈥

The anonymous gift, then, is a welcome addition on both practical and symbolic levels.

鈥淩ecognizing student veterans at baseball games does so much for our community,鈥 Lovelace said. 鈥淭o be able to see that people who have decided to serve our country, put on hold their academic aspirations and are here amongst us, to highlight them, is a great way for our community to know that these veterans are in our student population.鈥

He added that the financial relief and the recognition ceremonies work in tandem to ensure that UVA is welcoming to veterans. 鈥淚t goes to this broader sense of 鈥榳e want you here,鈥欌 he said. 鈥淲e want student veterans to be part of our community, we鈥檙e willing to support them and we see value in them. We鈥檙e going to do things to make sure you have the best experience possible here. I don鈥檛 think we can underestimate that impact.鈥

De Oliveira added: 鈥淚t鈥檚 like having an arm wrapped around the shoulders of veterans by the rest of the community.鈥

Media Contacts

Brian Coy

Associate Vice President for Communications and Chief Communications Officer University Communications