VARIETY // The Flat Hat staff explores the ghosts of Tucker Hall, pgs. 4-5
Vol. 103, Iss. 18 | Friday, November 1, 2013
The Flat Hat The Twice-Weekly Student Newspaper
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of The College of William and Mary
VIRGINIA
THE FINAL COUNTDOWN
Student political groups host gubernatorial debate BY SANG HYUN PARK THE FLAT HAT
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_he College Republicans and Young Democrats rolled up their sleeves to debate the upcoming gubernatorial election. Wednesday night saw the two organizations discuss the policy differences of Ken Cuccinelli and Terry McAuliffe and vie for voter support for each. Chancellor Professor of government Clay Clemens moderated the debate, which took place in the Tucker Hall auditorium. Each party made speeches and exchanged rebuttals before taking questions from the audience. The party representatives discussed economic issues in the first half of the debate and social issues in the second half. The College Republicans opened the debate by citing the record of economic growth under the leadership of Gov. Bob McDonnell. “Improving the economy is an issue that Republicans have successfully dealt with and continue to want to improve,” Chandler Crenshaw ’14, chairman of the College Republicans, said. “By keeping Republicans in control of the executive branch, we’ll continue to see economic growth in the Commonwealth.” Michaela Pickus ’14 of the Young Democrats responded by criticizing the economic approach of the Republican platform. See DEBATE page 3
The College of William and Mary gears up for the most contested gubernatorial election in the nation. In the last couple days before voters cast their ballots for Democrat Terry McAuliffe, Republican Ken Cuccinelli or Libertarian Robert Sarvis, students weigh in on the elections. WHERE DO YOU VOTE? Most students can vote in the Williamsburg Methodist Church on Jamestown Road, across from the Jamestown Dorms. Students who live in Brown Hall, Sorority Court, Tribe Square or One Tribe Place vote in the Williamsburg Community Building located at 401 North Boundary St.
Groups continue campus campaigning efforts
BY ARIEL COHEN FLAT HAT ASSOC. NEWS EDITOR
D
uring last year’s election cycle, the media dubbed Virginia “the swingiest” of swing states. The political divide continues in the upcoming gubernatorial election. Virginians will head to the polls Tuesday, Nov. 5 to cast their votes for the state’s next governor. Voting forecast polls project a close race, but candidates Terry McAuliffe and Ken Cuccinelli present two very different agendas for Virginia. Both candidates have also received a fair amount of criticism. “I lament the fact that we don’t have better people to vote for,” Adjunct Professor of government and public policy Colonel Lawrence B. Wilkerson said. McAuliffe, the Democratic candidate originally from New York, is making his second run for the Virginia gubernatorial seat after an unsuccessful campaign in 2009. In the most recent polls, he has edged out Cuccinelli by about four percentage points. Cuccinelli, the Republican candidate, has served as the attorney general of Virginia for the past four years. Before that, he was a member of the Senate of Virginia, representing Fairfax County. McAuliffe supports the Affordable Care Act and the expansion See ELECTION page 2
ts College a r c o Re p u b em D g n licans u Yo KATIE KELLENBERGER / THE FLAT HAT
ALUMNI
STUDENT ASSEMBLY
Reunion classes Students wrongly charged for STI tests smashes record Health center to resume subsidies, Reveley urges senators to pursue politics
$17 million raised in cash, pledges
BY CLAIRE GILLESPIE FLAT HAT ASSOC. NEWS EDITOR
BY ZACH HARDY FLAT HAT CHIEF STAFF WRITER
College of William and Mary President Taylor Reveley surprised senators and class presidents at the Student Assembly senate meeting Tuesday. Before attending the remainder of the meeting, Reveley encouraged SA members to pursue political careers. “Politics is a very noble and crucial calling to go into,” Reveley said. “I would love to see another governor of Virginia or — even better — president of the United States coming out of William and Mary.” During the meeting, Secretary of Health and Safety Alicia Moore ’14 provided a health center report informing the senate that, due to a miscommunication, the Student Health Center has been charging students the full price for STI testing, rather than the subsidized cost. “[Student Health Center employers] haven’t been billing us for the test; they’ve been charging [students] at the full price,” Moore
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The College of William and Mary’s 2013 Homecoming weekend resulted in over $17 million in cash and pledged donations from class reunion gifts. Ten different classes, from the class of 1963 celebrating their 50th reunion to the class of 2008 celebrating their fifth, participated in the giving. All classes exceeded their monetary goals. According to Assistant Vice President for Lifetime Philanthropic Engagement and Annual Giving Dan Frezza, four records were also set for total dollars raised: 2008 set the record for dollars raised at a 5th reunion, 2003 for a 10th, 1983 for a 30th and 1978 for a 35th. “Our focus is still participation and not monetary amounts, even though individual classes set monetary goals,” Frezza said. The $17.25 million raised includes both cash and pledged gifts. Frezza said that while older alumni are more inclined to give larger amounts, gifts and participation from younger classes has grown in recent years. Planning for this year’s reunion class gift effort began in Sept. 2012, when gift committee members began contacting alumni about giving to the College. The class gift committees work separately from the planners that organize class reunion dinners See DONATIONS page 3
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said. “That has since changed as of this week, the last week of October. They now will start billing at the subsidy price.” Last week, Sen. Caleb Stone J.D. ’15 and Sen. Patrick Johnson Ph.D. ’18 introduced the Student Development Act, which sought to amend the portion of the SA code outlining the makeup of the Executive Appropriations Committee by increasing the ratio of graduate to undergraduate students who sit on the committee. Stone and Johnson revised the
students from each class and two standing undergraduates to match the ratio of undergraduates to graduates,” Johnson said. As it currently stands, the EAC is composed of one undergraduate student from each class, two graduate students and one member-at-large. The Secretary of Finance serves as the Chair of the EAC and is a non-voting member. “We’re required by [the SA] code to make the EAC look like the See SA page 3
CLAIRE GILLESPIE / THE FLAT HAT
College President Taylor Reveley urged senators to pursue a career in politics, calling it “noble and crucial.”
Inside OPINIONS
Inside SPORTS
Governor’s race 2013
Rain High 73, Low 61
bill after its committee discussions last weekend, during which senators suggested that Stone and Johnson, the sponsors of the bill, withdraw it and send a revised version through committee discussion this weekend. “The current revision is to have a representative from each graduate program that doesn’t get all of their money returned by the school — that would be arts and science, law, business and education — to have a guaranteed voice along with undergrad[uate]
Opinions writers make cases for (and against) the three candidates running in the Virginia gubernatorial election. page 6
Liberian Dream
Senior center-back Will Smith’s summer internship with the State Department in Liberia led him to an introduction with a soccer legend. page 7