The Flat Hat January 23, 2018

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The Flat Hat

Vol. 107, Iss. 26 | Tuesday, January 23, 2018 | The Weekly Student Newspaper of The College of William and Mary

Students joined members of the Williamsburg community for a second annual women’s march on Duke of Gloucester Street Jan. 20, 2018 . page 3 SYDNEY MCCOURT / THE FLAT HAT

ACADEMICS

Northam to take the stage Recently inaugurated Virginia Governor Ralph Northam will serve as Charter Day’s keynote speaker SARAH SMITH // FLAT HAT NEWS EDITOR

J

ust a few weeks after his inauguration, Virginia Governor Ralph Northam will speak at the College of William and Mary’s Charter Day ceremony, marking the university’s 325th birthday. Every year, this event marks the anniversary of when the College received its royal charter. This year, Northam will speak at the ceremony in Kaplan Arena, which is scheduled for Feb. 9. Over the years, it has become a Charter Day tradition to have the state’s newly elected governor serve as the keynote speaker and receive an honorary degree. Northam, along with Trudier Harris, the College’s first tenured African-American faculty member, and two alumni, Frances McGlothlin ’66 and Hunter Smith ’51, will receive honorary degrees. Last year, Canadian football star Michael Clemons ’89 served as the keynote speaker and was also presented with an honorary degree. Additionally, following another Charter Day tradition, College Chancellor and former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates ’65 will attend the ceremony and offer his remarks. “This 325th milestone is a testament to William & Mary’s indomitable spirit over the centuries,” College President Taylor Reveley said in a press statement. “This school year we also commemorate the 50th anniversary of the first African-American students in residence at William & Mary. Ralph Northam has been a longtime friend of higher

education in general and William & Mary in particular.” Previously, Northam served as the state’s lieutenant governor under Terry McAuliffe. In November 2017, he became the 73rd governor of the state. Northam attended the Virginia Military Institute, then Eastern Virginia Medical School. He later held residences at Walter Reed Army Medical Center and Johns Hopkins Hospital, and also served in the U.S. Army, where he treated soldiers wounded in Operation Desert Storm. His career in politics began in 2008, when he was first elected as a Virginia state senator, a position he held until 2013 when he was elected as lieutenant governor. During his tenure in that position, he focused on economic development, early childhood education, mental health reform, women’s health care access and protecting environmental resources. Harris, another recipient of an honorary degree, was the first tenured AfricanAmerican faculty member at the College. Harris joined the English department in 1973. She then went on to teach at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill an Emory University. Now, she is a research professor at the University of Alabama and is considered one of the nation’s leading scholars in African-American and Southern literature and cultural theory.

Additionally, Harris has written and edited books including “The Concise Oxford Companion to African American Literature” and “Summer Snow: Reflections from a Black Daughter of the South.” She founded the George Moses Horton Society for the Student of African American Poetry in 1996 as well. She most recently returned to the College last year as the English department’s Sara and Jess Cloud Distinguished Lecturer, when she received an award to honor her historic role. McGlothlin and Smith are two alumni being honored for their philanthropic contributions. McGlothlin and her husband, James McGlothlin, contributed to the renovation of Zable Stadium, are honorary co-chairs of the “For the Bold” campaign, the College’s current fundraising effort and have endowed scholarships at the Raymond A. School of Business and the Marshall-Wythe School of Law. Smith, the other alumna recognized this Charter Day, has also maintained ties to the College since graduating in 1951. She has endowed scholarships for freshman seminars, financially supported the renovations of the Alumni House and Zable Stadium and is also an honorary co-chair of the “For the Bold” campaign. While a student at the College, Smith was a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority and was a philosophy major.

FORMER GOVERNMENT PROFESSOR FILES LAWSUIT AGAINST THE COLLEGE David Dessler, a former government professor whose 32 years of employment at the College of William and Mary ended with a series of cryptic emails and four charges of harassment by computer, filed a lawsuit against the College Dec. 27. In the complaint, Dessler alleges that the College violated his First Amendment right to free speech, declined to grant due process protections associated with termination and failed to provide reasonable accommodation for a disclosed mental disability. Dessler further claims that the College’s actions — from placing him on medical leave to barring him from campus and spurring his eventual resignation “to avoid continued arrest and harassment by the College” — stem from his September 2015 announcement of a joint student-faculty mental health initiative. According to the complaint, Dessler, who had previously been diagnosed with depression, decided to launch the initiative after the College experienced multiple student suicides in one academic year. The afternoon of Oct. 21, 2015, the complaint states, he emailed his government students with a description of “a professor suffering from mental illness, intending to discuss the email in class that day as part of a class on implicit assumptions.” However, upon arriving on campus, Dessler found himself barred from the classroom by William and Mary Police. Soon after the Oct. 21 incident, Dessler was placed on medical leave and banned from contacting College employees and students. Between February 2016 and January 2017, he was arrested five times — on four charges of harassment by computer and one failure to appear in court — after allegedly sending emails containing “vulgar and obscene language” to College officials. Four of the five charges were later dropped, and the deposition for one harassment charge was deferred until May 2019. In a statement provided to the Williamsburg-Yorktown Daily, College spokesperson Suzanne Seurattan said the school had not had a chance to thoroughly review the complaint. “[The Equal Opportunity of Employment Commission] found no evidence of discrimination or retaliation on the part of the university,” Seurattan said, citing a claim Dessler filed with the EOC in 2017. “We expect the same outcome from this proceeding.” — Flat Hat Chief Staff Writer Meilan Solly

ACADEMICS

College’s Washington Center to host class co-taught by James Comey ’82 Comey, Drew Stelljes will teach class focusing on ethical leadership for three consecutive semesters beginning fall 2018 SARAH SMITH FLAT HAT NEWS EDITOR

For the last 11 years, Comey has maintained a relationship with the Washington Center, and for three years, has hosted students at the FBI headquarters in Washington, D.C. Starting Former FBI Director James Comey ’82 will begin teaching this fall, he will co-teach with Assistant Vice President for a three-credit course on ethical leadership at the College of Student Leadership Drew Stelljes and will teach during the fall William and Mary beginning in the fall 2018 semester. Classes 2018, spring 2019 and summer 2019 semesters. will be held at the College’s Washington Center. “Jim Comey is among William & Mary’s most distinguished alumni,” College President Taylor Reveley said in a press statement. “Over the years, he has been deeply committed to his alma mater. He understands to the core of his being that our leaders must have an abiding commitment to ethical behavior and sacrificial service if we are to have good government. Our students will benefit significantly from his experience and wisdom.” According to Executive Director of the William and Mary Washington Center Adam Anthony ’87, the idea for the course came from Comey’s consistent involvement with students at the Washington Center. He said that Comey has always been a popular guest lecturer. “We have been doing these [programs in D.C.] since 2006, and Comey has been coming since then,” Anthony said. “I have lost count of how many times he has spoken to our students. When he became FBI director, he hosted our classes three different summers. Then, he came last winter and spoke to our winter class and spoke in March to our spring break class. The students absolutely adored him, and after he spoke, they were hanging out with him and talking to him — it looked like they were ready to hoist him on their shoulders. … It started us here thinking that maybe someday we could think about having COURTESY PHOTO / WM.EDU Comey spoke at the College’s Convocation ceremony in August of 2009. him teach a class.”

Today’s Weather

Index Profile News Opinions Variety Sports

Stormy, High 72, Low 38

See COMEY page 4

Inside Sports

Inside Opinions

Spotlight on student resources: The Peer Scholarship Office

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Anthony said that ethical leadership, the focus of the class, is a topic that Comey has previously discussed with students at the Washington Center. Additionally, Anthony said that Comey touches on leadership in his forthcoming book “A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies, and Leadership,” which is set to be released in May. “I am thrilled to have the chance to engage with William & Mary students about a vital topic — ethical leadership,” Comey said in a press statement. “Ethical leaders lead by seeing above the short term, above the urgent or the partisan, and with a higher loyalty to lasting values, most importantly the truth. Building and maintaining that kind of leadership, in both the private sector and government, is the challenge of our time. There is no better place to teach and learn about it than the W&M Washington Program.” Comey and Stelljes will administer online discussion and research paper components for the course. Stelljes will also prepare lectures and provide background information on Comey’s classes for students. While the curriculum for the course is not yet set, Stelljes said in a press statement that students will be using historical texts and contemporary critical theory to map leadership paradigms and analyze relationships between leadership education and democratic engagement. The course’s sessions will be held at the Washington Center, with the exception of one session which will be held at the School of Education in Williamsburg. According to Anthony, hosting one session in Williamsburg will help students based at the College by easing the burden of traveling for the class.

Brittany Acors ’ 18, employee at the Peer Scholarship Office encourages students to seek resources for the new semester. page 6

Tribe tops Elon on the road

Senior guard Connor Burchfield led the College to a road win after two straight losses. page 10


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The Flat Hat January 23, 2018 by The Flat Hat - Issuu