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Downsides of Title IX
Greek Diversity at the College
Fraternities and sororities with a minority focus can be a home for students of all backgrounds
A look into how Title IX led to the College cutting Division I wrestling in 1995
The Flat Hat
Vol. 104, Iss. 34 | Friday, March 20, 2015
student assembly
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of The College of William and Mary
Introducing the Candidates Claire & Marcell
Yohance & Catie
CAROLINE NUTTER / THE FLAT HAT Senator Yohance Whitaker ’16 (right) is running for President of SA with Catie Pinkerton ’16 (left). The election will take place March 26.
Yohance Whitaker ’16 and Catie Pinkerton ’16 announced their campaign for Student Assembly president and vice president Monday. The planning began months ago. After three years of serving as a senator for the class of 2016, Whitaker said he felt he had a firm grasp of what SA was, how it worked and how it could be improved. Pinkerton said that SA’s ability to turn ideas into reality was what motivated her to run. “Yohance and I met, and he told me that the Student Assembly is one of the only organizations on campus that has a connection to the administration, to the students, [and] to the greater Williamsburg community and has the leadership ability and the ideas with the money to back it,” Pinkerton said. “And so that was what sold me … just the promise and idea of knowing that my ideas would definitely be heard and definitely have the support and the money.” While Pinkerton does not have previous experience with SA, she holds leadership roles in
Camp Kesem and Kappa Alpha Theta. Whitaker chairs a finance committee within SA and serves as a resident assistant in Gooch Hall. “We have the leadership experience, but we also have the ideas behind it so we are able to communicate our platform, and they are all very attainable goals because we have the right advocates in place,” Whitaker said. The pair is running on a platform of three words: connect, engage and inspire. Whitaker and Pinkerton have planned initiatives related to each word for the SA should they win the election. “Connect” is based round the SA’s responsibility to the students to See WHITAKER page 3
CAROLINE NUTTER / THE FLAT HAT Claire Etheridge ’16 runs for SA president with Marcell Crawford ’16 as her running mate, though they have never been a part of SA.
Three years ago, Claire Etheridge ’16 and Marcell Crawford ’16 were elected to the Botetourt Complex’s Hall Council. Next year, they hope to continue their partnership by becoming the College of William & Mary’s next Student Assembly president and vice president. While neither Etheridge nor Crawford has previous Student Assembly experience, both have held leadership positions. In addition to serving on multiple hall councils, Etheridge is secretary of Amnesty International, while Crawford is treasurer of the Residence Hall Association and vice president of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. The pair said that they are running not only to
STUDENT LIFE
enact meaningful and real change in the Student Assembly, but also to add transparency to a student government body they feel has become too shielded from the student community. “Last year, I followed the SA elections,” Etheridge said. “The really big thing that I noticed was there was a lack of specifics. They had these big themes for their campaigns, but there weren’t any concrete details, and I thought, ‘What does SA do that is concrete, that is really working for the students?’ I thought, I could do that, I could come up with concrete plans.” Crawford also discussed the lack of visibility in the SA, something he hopes to change if elected. “I realized [that] I really didn’t know what the SA does,” Crawford said. “I started following their website … and trying to figure out what they do. We look at things that SA does, and it’s very vague. They don’t release an agenda beforehand [and] all of their proposals are in super vague language. I See ETHERIDGE page 3
STUDENT LIFE
Chick-fil-A returns as Marketplace option Students respond Grill station to serve Chick-fil-A chicken sandwiches for lunch 2 days a week to brutality at UVa. Eleanor lamb FLAT HAT assoc. news editor
Last fall, the Chick-fil-A option, one of Marketplace’s most popular offerings, was removed. However, starting Thursday, students will be able to return to some of
the fare that was so in demand last year, as Dining Services will be reintroducing Chickfil-A sandwiches to Marketplace. Dining Services announced in a March 17 press release that they are working with the Chick-fil-A located on Monticello Avenue to provide sandwiches to Marketplace on
COURTESY PHOTO / CHICK-FIL-A.COM Chick-Fil-A will return to Marketplace on Tuesdays and Thursdays after leaving the campus this past summer.
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College students reacts to Wednesday’s arrest
See CHICK-FIL-A page 4
See POLICE page 3
TUCKER HIGGINS flat hat EXECUTIVE editor
African American and black student organizations on campus communicated their support of black students at the University of Virginia in an open letter sent Thursday. The letter came as the university, located in Charlottesville, reels from the March 18 arrest of third-year U Va. student Martese Johnson. College of William and Mary President Taylor Reveley also spoke about the incident, saying in a statement that the incident challenges the College to come together. Johnson was arrested by Alcoholic Beverage Control agents after midnight Wednesday and charged with resisting arrest, obstructing justice without threats of force and profane swearing or intoxication in public. A video of Johnson’s arrest, which shows him bleeding from the face, received national attention and led to protests at the university. The Virginia State Police launched a criminal investigation into the officers’ use of force Thursday. According to Ebony Lambert ’16, who is secretary of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority and drafted the letter, the arrest in Charlottesville is indicative of a greater context of oppression directed at black bodies. “Just because [Johnson] was removed from Williamsburg and wasn’t one of our students … doesn’t mean the wound wasn’t felt by all of us,” Lambert said. “The assault was characteristic of historical tensions and things that we are used to. It’s more of
Inside Variety
Inside Opinions
A final farewell
Rainy High 52, Low 38
Tuesdays and Thursdays. The restaurant will deliver pre-made chicken sandwiches to Marketplace, and the sandwiches will be served at the grill station until supplies run out. These sandwiches may be purchased through Dining Dollars or Express Dollars. Resident District Manager Jeff McClure stated that Dining Services will listen to student feedback and gauge the success of the sandwiches to determine whether they should increase the number provided each Tuesday and Thursday. “I think it’s cool to do it twice a week because it becomes a novelty,” McClure said. “I don’t want to get too haywire.” This year, Dining Services has added new vendors in Marketplace, including Qdoba and a sandwich station, which took the places of Chick-fil-A, Capiche, and Zoca. The sushi station remains. In past years, Chick-fil-A was a staple at Marketplace and attracted many visitors for lunch and dinner. Joseph Roth ’15 said he was pleasantly surprised by the reinstatement of the restaurant. “I wasn’t expecting [this]. I really like Chick-fil-A”, Roth said. “Freshman and sophomore year, [Marketplace] seemed
Former Flat Hat editor-in-chief Meredith Ramey, along with her fellow senior staff members, bids the paper goodbye and welcomes a new staff. page 5
Veganism at Sadler
Chef Areem Chambers introduces students to the benefits of veganism page 6