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The Flat Hat, September 11, 2024

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T HE F LAT H AT

Vol. 114, Iss. 8 | Wednesday, September 11, 2024

The Weekly Student Newspaper

of The College of William and Mary

flathatnews.com | @theflathat

BOARD OF VISITORS

Board of visitors to consider new bylaws Student Assembly president to lose automatic board rep. appointment PEERAWUT RUANGSAWASDI FLAT HAT NEWS EDITOR

Wednesday, Sept. 25 to Friday, Sept. 27, the College of William and Mary’s board of visitors is set to meet and discuss matters concerning the College. According to the College’s website, the board will consider new changes to the bylaws, including allowing the rector — who serves as chair of the board — to appoint a student other than the president of Student Assembly as the board’s student representative. Appointed in 2019 by former Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam D.P.S.’18, Charles E. Poston J.D. ’74, P ’02, ’06 serves as rector of the College. Previously, the SA president was guaranteed an appointment by the rector. Under the proposed bylaws, the representative would be nominated by the president of the College and the SA president, then officially appointed by the rector. “The proposed change related to appointing a student representative to the Board represents an alignment of that process with the process of appointing a faculty representative,” the College’s Director of Media Relations Suzanne Clavet wrote in an email to The Flat Hat. According to Clavet, the board periodically conducts these reviews. Clavet described it as a healthy practice for governing bodies. The last review was conducted in 2020. The proposed bylaws primarily reflect changes in statutory language and the organizational structure of the College, Clavet wrote. SA President Terra Sloane ’25 said while she was not consulted in the decision, she believes the new precedent would likely still result in the SA president being appointed to the position, depending on their goals within the role. “I think that the Bylaw switch allows Student Assembly leadership the opportunity to nominate another impactful student leader to the position, which I think opens up a lot of possibilities that were previously thought impossible!” Sloane wrote in an email to The Flat Hat. I n a d d i t i o n t o s e r v i n g a s t h i s y e a r ’s s t u d e n t b o a rd re p re s e n t a t i v e, S l o a n e a l s o s e r v e s a s t h e s t u d e n t re p re s e n t a t i v e o n t h e Fi n a n c e C o m m i t t e e. S l o a n e, a s S A p re s i d e n t , m a d e a l l s t u d e n t re p re s e n t a t i v e n o m i n a t i o n s t o t h e re c t o r. “When it comes to serving on Finance Committee, I am excited to see the ways that we see the effect of the tuition increase and the recent news regarding the Batten School (along with our approved School of Computer Science going through early stages). I want to be as transparent as possible about the Finance Decisions being made through the Board, and I therefore believe that Finance is the best Committee for our Student Representative to sit on,” Sloane added.

College sees lower acceptance rates but higher undergrad enrollment LILA REIDY // FLAT HAT CHIEF STAFF WRITER

See BOARD OF VISITORS page 4

This academic year, the College of William and Mar y is continuing a trend of shrinking acceptance rates. Approximately 5,800 students were offered admission to the College, out of nearly 18,000 applications, representing an acceptance rate of 33%. Since 2020, the College has reported a 25% increase in total applications. According to Axios, the College accepted 39.3% of its 7,156 in-state applicants versus 46.9% during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Other institutions such as Virginia Tech and the University of Virginia received increased applications as well. James Madison University recorded over a 104% increase in applications just last year. Due to this increase in applications, the acceptance rates for many of Virginia’s state universities have significantly decreased. Moreover, Stateline reported that colleges and universities across the country admit more out-of-state students, partly because of higher tuition rates. The College’s board of visitors increased tuition rates for all students last year. At a full board meeting in April, the board voted 15-1 to raise the College’s in-state tuition by 2.5% and out-of-state tuition by 3.3% for fiscal years 2025 and 2026. For the 2023-2024 application year, the College admitted 28% of out-of-state applicants, with a general acceptance rate of 33%. Just under 270,000 first-time applicants

applied to Virginia’s 15 public fouryear institutions, over 100,000 more applications than the schools received a decade ago. The College received significantly fewer applicants than other schools in the Commonwealth, but still reported an increase. Since 2020, the undergraduate enrollment at the College has increased consistently: 6,236 in 2020; 6,543 in 2021; 6,797 in 2022; and 6,963 in 2023. Graduate enrollment has been increasing as well, with the population growing from 1,509 in 2014 to 2,270 in 2023. Max Strackbein ’27 commented on the increase in undergraduate enrollment. “I think in reality it would be fine for it to go up to 8,000 undergraduates, but only if we had the infrastructure to allow that because we don’t,” Strackbein told The Flat Hat. “Currently, juniors and seniors are not guaranteed housing, but also don’t have spaces to park when coming from their off-campus apartments. So, we can’t accommodate more people without changing our parking and dorms.” The College’s Housing and Dining Comprehensive Facilities Plan does not anticipate more beds added at the end of its ten-year period. Moreover, the College has also been granting generally more STEM-H degrees, or Science, Technology, Engineering, Math and Health Sciences, with 778 degrees awarded in 2023. The College awarded 498 STEM-H

degrees in 2013. Associate Provost for Enrollment and Dean of Admission Tim Wolfe ’95, M.Ed. ’01 did not a comment to The Flat Hat by the time of publication. In a W&M News article, Wolfe described his thoughts on the freshman class. “There is much to be impressed by from this group of admitted students when you consider all that they’ve accomplished in and out of the classroom,” Wolfe told W&M News. “However, what really stood out to our team went beyond that. Their voices, their stories and their experiences illustrated why they will be an outstanding fit for the William & Mary community and immerse themselves in all this university has to offer. We can’t wait to welcome them to campus soon.” According to SCHEV, enrollment among White and Asian or Pacific Islander, NonHispanic students has also been increasing at the College, while other demographics have remained mostly constant. More detailed statistics regarding admissions at the College are expected in November. UVA released its data first among Virginia universities, reporting the decrease of Black first-year students by about 1% while its Latino population saw an approximately 2% increase. The enrollment data from UVA comes after the Supreme Court struck down raceconscious admissions programs last year in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard.

FOOTBALL

TRIBE CRUSHES VMI IN FIRST FOOTBALL GAME OF THE YEAR

RYAN GOODMAN / THE FLAT HAT

INDEX Profile News Opinions Variety Sports

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

See FOOTBALL page 10

Inside Opinions

Inside Variety

Inside Sports

Adam Jutt '25 provides some advice to incoming freshmen about time management skills page 4

A look at Camp Kesem, an organization on campus which hosts annual summer camp for children whose parents are diagnosed with cancer page 7

Early offensive production and stellar defense propels Tribe to second win of 2024 page 9

Adam's Apple #6: Managing time

Making Camp Magic

Green and Gold kick off home season with 2-0 win against Longwood


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