The Flat Hat October 27 2020

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Vol. 110, Iss. 9 | Tuesday, October 27, 2020

The Flat Hat The Weekly Student Newspaper

of The College of William and Mary

Flathatnews.com | Follow us:

D R A O B K L CHA COMMOTION Tribe for Life chalkboard drawings create controversy LULU DAWES // FLAT HAT NEWS EDITOR

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onday night, Oct. 19, five members of Tribe for Life gathered at the chalkboard outside the Integrated Science Center to write antiabortion messages. Early the next morning, the group discovered their “Why I am Pro Life” statements had been erased and promptly posted a photo of the illegible board onto their Tribe for Life Instagram account. Only a few hours later, the post had garnered hundreds of comments and attracted the online attention of the College of William and Mary community, catapulting the chalkboard into the middle of the abortion rights debate. Tribe for Life is a student-run organization at the College that advocates against abortion. In the past, Tribe for Life has written similar messages on the chalkboard and around campus, though member of the group’s executive board Anne Whelan ’21 claims they have never received as much backlash as they did this week. Much of this was due to the chalkboard’s original anti-abortion messages, which Tribe for Life had also posted on their Instagram account. Many students felt that these messages were harmful and that students had a right to erase them. “We were disappointed to see that people chose to erase our work rather than to engage in constructive dialogue about the issue,” Whelan said in an email. “... I think that erasing our message could come down to intolerance of other views. The current political climate (by the way, we do not support any specific political candidate or party, and members of our group have a range of beliefs on other issues) is extremely polarized, and I think people get heated enough about certain issues that they want to completely delegitimize and erase the views of the other side. We believe that it is important to listen and critically evaluate views we do not agree with rather than shaming the people who hold them into silence.” The original photo depicting the erased chalkboard on the Tribe for Life Instagram account held 414 likes and 775 comments as of Oct. 24. In comparison, a photo posted on Oct. 12 of members protesting in Washington D.C. in favor of Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett has 83 likes and 26 comments. Some of the messaging on the chalkboard included statements like “Destigmatize pregnancy”, “No v. Wade”, “The preborn are the most vulnerable” and “the right to choose should not involve hurting someone else #1860”. Many of the top comments on the photo claim Tribe for Life was deleting previous, proabortion rights comments, and the commentators state this went against Tribe for Life’s caption

about wanting open dialogue on the subject. Tribe for Life maintained that they only deleted hateful comments but encouraged people to direct message them in order to have a conversation. “Recently, when we’ve written something publicly about our beliefs or publicized our events, at least part of our message is vandalized,” Whelan said. “We will not try to track down whoever erased what we wrote on the board, but we are reporting social media comments to the school that target people in our group or threaten violence.” Tribe for Life also claimed to have reserved the chalkboard from Oct. 19-26; However, many students have refuted this claim and stated that anyone is able to write or erase anything on the chalkboard at any time. Julian Allison ’23 said he had never heard of a student reserving the board before, and asked Tribe for Life via Instagram direct message to provide him with the email of the person through which they had reserved the board. Tribe for Life responded the next day with Claudia Smith’s email address, who is the College’s chemistry department’s materials and fiscal manager. “They were saying they reserved the chalkboard and that’s why it was bad that people erased their message,” Allison said. “... So, I emailed her, and she said that you can reserve it, but they only track that for big events to make sure they don’t conflict, and that anyone can use it at any time to do anything with it.” Allison, who saw the pre-erased chalkboard on the Tribe for Life Instagram account, said he found the original chalkboard’s messages very hurtful and commented on the post in support of his friends who have had abortions. “I thought some of them were very condescending, very like trying to tell people what to do,” Allison said. “Like the ‘women are better than abortions’ or ‘women don’t deserve abortions’ or whatever it was; that one was rude. The ‘no v. Wade’ one was very rude. There was one that was like ‘hashtag #1860’ and I was like, ‘that, you are going way too far.’ Like I thought a lot of the comments went way too far, past like decency. I don’t believe in pro-life at all, but there are ways to say it without being condescending and rude and making people ashamed about what they’ve done.” W&M VOX, an on-campus organization affiliated with the state and national branches of See CHALKBOARD page 8

ATHLETICS

College reverses women’s sports cuts after Title IX inequity Interim Director Jeremy Martin announces continuation of Tribe women’s gymnastics, swim, volleyball as varsity programs LULU DAWES AND ZOE BEARDSLEY FLAT HAT NEWS EDITOR AND FLAT HAT SPORTS EDITOR

Nearly two months after the College of William and Mary discontinued seven varsity sports, the College announced Oct. 19 that Tribe Athletics will reinstate womens’ gymnastics, women’s volleyball and women’s swimming. This announcement comes as a result of the potential class action lawsuit filed by Bailey & Glasser LLP, which stated that cutting these three women’s sports violated Title IX. This decision comes after Interim Athletic Director Jeremy Martin P.H.D. ’12, M.B.A. ’17 was appointed Oct. 6 after previous Athletic Director Samantha Huge resigned. Since his appointment, Martin and Tribe Athletics have been working with administration, alumni and student athletes to attempt to find a solution that solves the College’s athletics budget and Title IX problems. The reinstatement of the three women’s sports serves as at least a partial fix. “So as we took a subsequent, in-depth review with the decisions that were made, we realized that we needed to take some action to make sure we hit the gender equity goals that we’ve established,” Martin said. “This regarded a moment in which we recognized that decisive action would advance our equity goals, so we took it and were able to provide greater clarity

INDEX News Insights Opinions Variety Sports News

to some of the teams.” In the initial letter announcing the discontinuation of the seven varsity sports, College President Katharine Rowe, College Provost Peggy Agouris and former Athletic Director Samantha Huge said gender equity was part of the reason the seven sports were cut in the first place. The letter said that these cuts assured Title IX compliance; however, some of the female athletes did not agree. Members of the women’s varsity gymnastics, volleyball, and swimming teams decided to pursue a lawsuit against the College after the initial discontinuation. Attorney Arthur Bryant sent the first letter detailing the potential lawsuit to Rowe Sept. 23. “Based on the information we had, we thought it was obvious that William and Mary was in violation of Title IX and that the elimination of these three women’s teams was going to make that even worse,” Bryant said. “But, William and Mary’s public announcement said these changes were going to bring it into compliance with Title IX. So, that made us wonder if there was information we did not understand. We wrote the letter both to make sure the University understood what we thought and had an opportunity to try to explain to us why we were wrong.” Bryant explained that his firm found multiple striking problems with the College’s decision and ran an analysis that showed this decision did not put the College in compliance with

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Title IX. The firm met several times with representatives from the College in order to explain their analysis that proved the College would violate federal law before they filed a lawsuit.    “So they’re publicly saying they’re in violation of a federal law and over the next five years they’re going to take some steps to get themselves less in violation of a federal law, which was just stunning,” Bryant said. “... And, to William and Mary’s great credit, when it took a hard look at things, it realized it was making a mistake, and it agreed to reinstate the three women’s teams … That is, they are going to be in compliance, they have committed, during the 2022-2023 academic year and future academic years. So that’s an extraordinary change that they deserve a lot of credit for.”   The threat of a potential lawsuit forced the College to reevaluate its Title IX compliance and rescind their decision regarding the three cut women’s teams.    “Gender equity was always the goal so the litigation risk prompted an additional, more thorough review as to what was far and fast enough,” Martin said. “That was behind the discovery that we needed to move further and faster, and that’s why we acted decisively to make sure we are pushing forward, pushing to build a foundation of equity for the department.”

Inside Variety

Separate spring break days raise health, safety concerns

Lucas Harsche ’23 says that the College’s spring 2021 calendar fails to address the potential for COVID-19 spread on campus. page 4

See WOMEN”S ATHLETICS page 8

Inside Sports

Penne for your Thoughts Matt Lowrie ‘22 showcases his four egg-stravagant strategies to avoid rushed breakfast scrambles, create delicious meals. page 5

Brady-Belichick split favors QB after move to Tampa Bay this season

When Tom Brady signed with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Patriots fans didn’t know what side to choose. Now in Week 7 of the NFL season, it’s clear that talent follows Brady rather than Belichick. page 7


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