The Flat Hat, September 23 2014

Page 1

VARIETY >> PAGE 7

SPORTS >> PAGE 6

A swelling sea of folk-rock

College overcomes deficit

Save the Arcadian performs at the latest Fridays at Five.

Steve Cluley took advantage of the zone-read option Saturday night.

Vol. 104, Iss. 9 | Tuesday, September 23, 2014

The Flat Hat The Twice-Weekly Student Newspaper

of The College of William and Mary

NATIONAL

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STUDENT LIFE

Students grow political activity Will focus on civic action ROHAN DESAI FLAT HAT NEWS EDITOR

Marching for climate change

StudentImpact, a student-founded political action committee (PAC), launched its presence on campus Sept. 22. Founded to improve College of William and Mary students’ involvement in Williamsburg politics, the PAC intends to raise general civic awareness among students, with the ultimate goal of increasing College students’ representation in Williamsburg politics. “Initially the idea was started by Benming Zhang [’16]. What Ben had in Longley mind was to get more students involved in student government,” Communications Director Henry Longley ’15 said. “As more people got involved with the project, we figured more ways people could get involved with the project.” Longley added that the group’s focus soon shifted to educating College students on general issues in the area. “I see one of the greatest missions of this PAC is raising general issues to the student body of campus. … If you have an informed campus, they’re going to make informed decisions,” Longley said. StudentImpact’s Political Director Trevor Parkes ’15 noted that the PAC’s greatest strength will come from the student body. “My main job is to try and mobilize the resources we have,” Parkes said. “The biggest resource we have is that we have so many students here. The problem is that not everyone is ready

Students represent the College of William and Mary at New York City demonstration. Read more on page 8.

See PAC page 3

TUCKER HIGGINS / THE FLAT HAT

Students from the College of William and Mary marched at the record-breaking People’s Climate March in New York City on Sunday. The march attracted over 400,000 people.

STUDENT LIFE

WILLIAMSBURG

College reaches globally

Aromas leases Williamsburg’s Triangle Building

International students discuss campus life ABBY BOYLE FLAT HAT MANAGING EDITOR

CHRIS WEBER FLAT HAT SPORTS EDITOR

Recent research suggests that the number of international students attending U.S. colleges and universities is growing — and the College of William and Mary is no exception. In 2013, the Institute of International Education released a report stating that the number of international students studying at United States colleges and universities increased by 7 percent, reaching an all-time high. Over the last ten years, the number of international students at U.S. colleges and universities has increased by 40 percent. At the moment, the College is home to 664 international students. With admissions for the Spring 2015 semester, Director of International Students, Scholars and Programs Stephen Sechrist said he expects that number to rise to about 685. According to Sechrist, the number of international students at the College has doubled over the last five years. “W&M’s relatively small size and attention to the individual student coupled with our holistic approach to liberal arts education really sets us apart from other top-ranked universities,” Sechrist said in an email. “While the Reves Center is the international ‘hub’ of the university and works to support them across campus, international students are W&M students first and foremost and so all offices on campus have a hand in educating and assisting them.” At the same time that international student populations have increased across the country, studies show that retaining those students can be problematic for some colleges and universities. A recent Shorelight Education report took into account the top 200 nationally ranked universities and the schools’ international student populations. According to the report, the average on-time graduation rate for international students at these universities was 70 percent, with “on-time” defined as within 150 percent of the average time it takes students to obtain a degree. See INTERNATIONAL page 3

Index News Insight News Opinions Sports Sports Variety Variety

Today’s Weather 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

30-day lease allows coffee shop to expand, use new building as a preparatory space

Aromas signed a 30-day lease to operate in Williamsburg’s Triangle Building, located at the corner of Prince George Street and Armistead Avenue. “This is a short lease to assist an existing business until they complete needed additional space at their current location,” City Director of Economic Development Michelle DeWitt said in an email. DeWitt added that the space will be used for food preparation and will not be open to the public. The lease marks Aromas’ third expansion since co-owners Don and Geri Pratt opened the Prince George Street location in 2000. After opening a location at Oyster Point in Newport News in June 2006, Aromas began operating at Earl Gregg Swem Library in August. “It was an immediate necessity. The day the College [of William and Mary] came back into session it became absolutely clear that we needed to make some changes,” Aromas Corporate Chef and Manager Dave Burchett said. “We literally over-doubled the production from this building. We’re running two restaurants out of one kitchen.” According to Burchett, Aromas will use the Triangle Building as a preparatory space for its Swem location. “Basically, we needed extra refrigeration

and horizontal surfaces in order to prepare for meals at the College, at the new Swem location,” Burchett said. Space in the Williamsburg Redevelopment Housing Authority-owned building became

See AROMAS page 3

COURTESY PHOTO / WM.EDU

Aromas will use Williamsburg’s Triangle Building as a preparatory space for its newly opened Swem location.

Inside SPORTS

Inside Opinions

Qdoba uncertainty

Qdoba and the College must advertise operating hours. page 4 Partly cloudy High 75, Low 59

available after the Jewish Mother entered default on its five-year lease agreement with the city Aug. 12. The city took possession

College extends win streak

The Tribe’s women’s soccer team won its fifth consecutive match this weekend, thrashing Princeton 4-1 at Martin Family Stadium. page 6


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