The Flat Hat October 20, 2015

Page 1

SPORTS>> PAGE 10

PROFILES >> PAGE 2

Prewitt, Tarpey help College up asecond 78-62 nationally-ranked win in front of a packed Kaplan Arena. No. 17/16 William and Mary pick defeats opponent in two weeks.

Michael D’Orso ’75 discusses streaking, skiing and getting into trouble at the College.

Back-to-back upsets

Streaking to success

The Flat Hat

Vol. 105, Iss. 8 | Tuesday, October 20, 2015

The Weekly Student Newspaper

Flathatnews.com | Follow us:

of The College of William and Mary

Homecoming through the years Swem nets ALUMNI

’99

donation

l na g o i r t di sbu a tr am HO he illi C t E in W AL NI lk ith O a L O w w / C rs O de e T a O d r PH lea Pa Y r ES T ee ing R h U CO e C om s. r ib ec e Tr om gst H un yo

Biggest single gift EMILY MARTELL THE FLAT HAT

ed ac pl at O CH rs th LE be oat IA ON em fl OL m at” / C ty H O i OT or he PH or n t de. SY a s t i ra TE eg Ca a UR m a“ ep CO i O ed th Ch eat t in cr firs in

’75

’10

GRAPHIC BY MADELINE BIELSKI

6 -1 17 the a ng O e uri CH t E L ra d IA eb ens ON l L O ce H /C O s lue T t O n B PH de he e. Y S u TE st r t gam UR e O e C g ov ing e ll ry m Co cto eco vi om H

The College of William and Mary’s Earl Gregg Swem Library received its largest private contribution of nearly $2 million from long-time volunteer Frances Lightfoot Robb ’48. The contribution established two endowments. The larger portion, called the Robert Gilchrist Robb, Jr. Endowment after the donor’s brother, will support staffing and salaries for Swem employees, and the smaller endowment, named the Frances Randolph Howard Endowment after her mother, will fund the acquisition, processing and preservation of documents in the library’s Special Collections Research Center. According to Swem Library’s Director of Development Kimberly Separ ’91, Robb had a specific vision for the donation, which she detailed in her will. “She was very clear that she wanted the money to help benefit both the people and the collections of Swem in her estate plans,” Separ said. Robb, who passed away in 2013, had a long history with the College and the Williamsburg community. Part of a family with a history in the Tidewater region dating back to the 18th century, Robb’s father was a chemistry professor at the College and mended books in the library for Earl Gregg Swem. After working in the national office of the Phi Beta Kappa Society for several years, Robb returned to Williamsburg and became an active supporter of the College and Swem Library. “Frances was a popular person and just a wonderful personality — kind and intelligent, just one of these people that was easy to talk to and always knew what was going on,” Manuscripts and Rare Books Librarian Susan Riggs said. Robb was the first president of the Williamsburg Historic Records Association, which helps Swem Library collect Williamsburg historical documents. As a volunteer in Special Collections, Robb helped organize the records of Bruton Parish Church, digitize letters from See DONATION page 3

ADMISSIONS

ADMINISTRATION

Coalition announces new SA plans to launch promised website application procedure Whitaker hopes functional webpage will be up by November College strays from past Common App MIGUEL LOCSIN THE FLAT HAT

The Coalition for Access, Affordability and Success, made up of more than 80 American universities, including the College of William and Mary, is developing new tools and a new admissions process aimed at optimizing and providing more access for potentially all high school students across America. The Coalition’s members include several Virginia universities, such as the University of Virginia, Virginia Tech, James Madison University and the College. When the application is released, it will be the first time these four Virginia universities will be represented on one application. The application currently being developed will be designed as

See APPLICATION page 4

Today’s Weather

Index Profile News Opinions Variety Sports

an alternative to the Common Application that is widely used by high school and transfer students all across the United States. Moreover, the Coalition is developing new tools and activities designed to help high school students, starting as early as ninth grade, get familiar with and start preparing for the college admissions process. “It is designed to be a place where high school students can start putting information about themselves … almost like a ‘locker’ where they can keep track of information throughout their high school career,” Dean of Admissions Tim Wolfe ’95 M.Ed. ’01 said. Students will be able to collect activities, writing samples and personal information and store it in an online portfolio that allows

KATIE KOONTZ THE FLAT HAT

The Student Assembly has not had a consistently working website for several years, despite campaign promises by several presidential hopefuls every year.

Current SA President Yohance Whitaker ’16 and his team are working to change that pattern this fall. The lack of a functioning website is not a new problem for the SA. For several years, creating a website has been a continuous endeavor. Previous SA presidents have

COURTESY PHOTO/ WMSTUDENTASSEMBLY.COM

Links to the SA website posted on WM.edu and the SA’s Twitter and Facebook leads to this error page.

Van Black ’75 discusses his enthusiasm for the College and his decision to return and give back. page 6 Sunny, High 70, Low 46

See WEBSITE page 4

Inside Variety

Inside Opinions

Connecting to the College through service

2 3-4 5-6 7-8 9-10

promised to create a working site without delivering results. According to Whitaker, the problem in the past was that teams tried to make elaborate, showy sites; however, they could never get the job done. “Each year a new team promises a whiz-bang website with more bells and whistles than the last website,” Whitaker said in an email. “Quite simply, that is not an effective use of time.” The SA is constantly working on many projects at once; therefore, efficiency is key. Whitaker’s new approach is to create a comprehensive, stable page on the College of William and Mary website that does not have to be reconstructed each year. This will allow the SA to maintain the site despite changes in leadership over the years. “The Student Assembly has not yet succeeded in transitioning websites from one team to another team,” Whitaker said. “Therefore, my team and I are working to

Rallying Tribe Pride for Homecoming

Get a look at the spirit behind the College’s pep band, cheer team and the Tribal Dancers. page 7


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.