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ALUMNI MAGAZINE
W I N T E R 2 014
PATRICK FLAHERT Y ’92 >>
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PRESIDENT’S REPORT
PREVIEW
2015 ALUMNI
MEDALLION AWARDS
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W IN T E R 2014 W& M A LUMNI MAGAZI NE
1
Winter 2014
VOLUME 80, NO. 2
FEATURES
6
P R E S I D E N T ’S R E P O RT P R E V I E W
30
From a new curriculum to high national rankings
to faculty research on an international scale, great
things happened at William & Mary this past year.
2015 ALUMNI MEDALLION AWARDS
36
Four exemplary W&M graduates receive the
Alumni Association’s highest honor.
By Kelley Freund, Ashley Murphy ’15,
Vayda Parrish ’17 and Meredith Randle ’16
B R E A K I N G E B O L A
Volunteering for service in Liberia, the CDC’s
Patrick Flaherty ’92 joined the front lines in the
battle against Ebola.
By Bara Vaida
IN EVERY ISSUE
4 Alumni Focus
10By & Large
From the ocean depths to cyberspace, W&M is exploring
new realms of knowledge. Plus: A winning coach and a
facelift for Zable Stadium.
44Tribe
Alumni find success in Hollywood and the fashion world;
the Tribe rallies for a cause. Plus: Staying Connected with
the Class of ’75.
C OV E R P H O T O : M E L I S S A G O L D E N
HAVE SOM E T H IN G TO SAY? Please share your thoughts by posting on our online com-
ment section found at the end of every magazine story. Go to wmalumnimagazine.com
C O RRE CT ION : The back cover image of the Fall 2014 issue was photographed by Stephen
Coleman Ph.D. �11
P H OTO : S K I P R OW L A N D ’ 8 3
57Class Notes
86In Memoriam
MACE ’EM
One of the College’s treasured artifacts, the College mace leads
processionals at official William & Mary events, such as Opening
Convocation, Commencement and Charter Day.
W IN T E R 2014 W& M A LUMNI MAGAZI NE
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W&M
Winter 2014
VOLUME 8 0, NUMBE R 2
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
ALUMNI FOCUS
A True
Homecoming
BY MA R I LY N WA R D MI DYET T E ’7 5
Executive Director, William & Mary Alumni Association
I
David N. Kelley ’81, President
Cynthia S. Jarboe ’77, Vice President
Kevin J. Turner ’95, Secretary
Glenn W. Crafford ’77, Treasurer
Barbara Cole Joynes ’82, Immediate Past President
Christopher P. Adkins ’95, Ph.D. ’09; Molly F. Ashby ’81;
Sandra Bowen ’63; Ted R. Dintersmith ’74; J. Thomas Flesher
’73; Kathryn Hennecy Floyd ’05; Nicole Lewis ’03; Elyce
Morris ’98; Susan Snediker Newman ’79; Lydia Pulley ’85;
Stephen S. Tang ’82; G. Wayne Woolwine ’61
William A. Armbruster ’57, Olde Guarde Council
Kristen M. Faust ’93, Chapter Presidents Council
Alyssa W. Scruggs ’10, Young Guarde Council
Shannon Hughes ’15, Student Alumni Council
ALUMNI MAGAZINE STAFF
Executive Director: Marilyn Ward Midyette ’75
Editors: Mitch Vander Vorst, Jennifer Wall
Assistant Editor: Kelley Freund
Copy Editor: Sara Piccini
Art Directors: Michael D. Bartolotta, EmDash
Senior Graphic Designer: Jessica A. Flannery
Social Media and Web Manager: Sarah Juliano
Online Editor: Del Putnam
Interns: Ashley Murphy ’15, Laurel Overby,
Vayda Parrish ’17, Meredith Randle ’16
Contributing Writers: Rich Griset, Nicholas Langhorne,
n 1971, I stepped on the brick-lined campus of William & Mary as
a wide-eyed freshman. As I look back now, I didn’t fully realize the
extent to which that moment would shape my life or define me. It was
in fact the instant that I became part of a one-of-a-kind family. This fall, I
had another of those moments, as I walked through the Alumni House door-
way as the executive director of the William & Mary Alumni Association.
Cortney Langley, David Malmquist, Will Morris ’11,
Meredith Ramey ’15, W. Taylor Reveley III, Suzanne
Seurattan, Bara Vaida, Erin Zagursky
Spot Illustrations: Tom Bachtell
Contributing Photographers: Karen Conner M.Ed. ’16,
Adam Ewing, Patrick Flaherty ’92, Christina Gandolfo,
Kieran Kesner, Macon Photography, Melissa Golden,
Cade Martin, Jeff Rotman, Skip Rowland ’83, Stacey
Busbee Summerfield ’04, Stephen Salpukas, Visual Dialects
Contributing Illustrators: Chris Philpot, Eduardo Recife
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Contact Information One Alumni Drive • P.O. Box 2100
Williamsburg, VA 23187
757.221.1842 • 757.221.1186 fax • www.wmalumni.com
Executive Director: alumni.ed@wm.edu
Alumni Communications and Magazine:
In the last four
decades, I have learned
that my William & Mary
family doesn’t only
consist of the faculty
and students that I came
to love during my four
years on campus. The
members of this family
are not bound by time,
distance or even intention. It is truly a lifelong
relationship. Whether
18 or 100 years old;
undergrad, masters or
doctoral alumni; humanities, science, education,
business or law graduates; working in the
private, public or international sectors, we are
4
all William & Mary and
William & Mary belongs
to all of us.
During my first
few months back I
noticed how so much
had changed, yet still,
so much has remained
the same. Students
walk around with iPads
instead of pencils and
graph paper, and the
curriculum that guides
their ways seeks to prepare them for the next
four decades. The same
is true for your Alumni
Association as we
continue to transform
to better represent all
alumni and more fully
W& M A LUMNI M AGA Z I N E support the College that
ties us all together.
Please let me, or
any of your Alumni
Association Board of
Directors know how we
can make your Alumni
Association even more
successful.
Go Tribe!
P.S. I hope you will
join us for Charter Day
weekend on Feb. 6-7.
Find out more at
wm.edu/charterday.
757.221.1164, alumni.magazine@wm.edu
Alumni Business: alumni.business@wm.edu
Alumni Events: alumni.events@wm.edu
Alumni Engagement: engagement@wm.edu
Alumni House Rentals: almctr@wm.edu
Alumni Gift Shop: wmgift@wm.edu
Alumni Journeys: alumni.travel@wm.edu
Alumni Records: alumni.records@wm.edu
Alumni Website: alumni.web@wm.edu
Comment: Send your comments about the magazine and redesign to
alumni.magazine@wm.edu
For information about advertising, contact Prime Consulting Services at
757.715.9676 or jcoates@primeconsultingva.com. We reserve the right to
approve or deny any advertisements.
The William & Mary Alumni Magazine is published by the Alumni Association
four times per year. Supporter Subscriptions can be made by check payable to
the William & Mary Alumni Association and sent to: Alumni Communications,
P.O. Box 2100, Williamsburg, VA 23187.
Printed by Lane Press, Burlington, Vt.
Views expressed in the William & Mary Alumni Magazine do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of the William & Mary Alumni Association, the College of
William & Mary or the editorial staff.
WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
PRESIDENT’S REPORT PREVIEW
Another Great Year
at the Alma Mater
of the Nation
BY W. TAY LO R R EV EL E Y III
President, College of William & Mary
T
hough we call ourselves a college, William & Mary has been a
university since 1779, when our law school, the first in the United
States, was created. We are now a university with undergraduate,
graduate and professional programs, centered in five schools—arts & sciences,
business, education, law and marine science. Over the past 50 years, William
& Mary has also become a research university committed to expanding the
frontiers of human understanding and helping to meet society’s challenges.
And we have become that rare research university still powerfully invested in
teaching, especially undergraduates. The result is a William & Mary of great
range and quality. There is much cause these days for
confidence in the Alma Mater of the Nation.
Let me mention a few highlights of last year.
In December 2013, the arts & sciences faculty adopted a path-breaking new framework for
William & Mary’s undergraduate “general education”
requirements, which had last been revised in 1993.
The revisions affect about 25 percent of the undergraduate curriculum. The new framework is called
the College Curriculum (COLL). Faculty members
are now preparing to launch COLL for the fall 2015
entering class. It will extend over all four years of the
6
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E undergraduate experience and provide more interdisciplinary and international work than has been the
case before, as well as renewed emphasis on written
and oral communication. There will be a significant
research component for all undergraduates from
their freshman to their senior years. In June 2014,
the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation awarded W&M a
$900,000 grant, distributed over four years, to support implementation of COLL. These types of grants
from the Mellon Foundation are highly prized, and
ours is a testimony to the potential Mellon believes
COLL has as a model for effective liberal arts education in today’s world.
In the September 2014 U.S. News & World Report
ranking of universities with a “strong commitment to
undergraduate teaching,” W&M was tied for second
among all universities, surpassed only by Princeton.
Overall in the U.S. News sweepstakes, W&M ranked
33rd among all national universities, public and private, and sixth among publics.
The undergraduate Class of 2018 was selected
from a pool of more than 14,500 applicants. This was
the 10th consecutive year W&M had a rising number of undergraduate applications. We enrolled 1,511
freshmen in August, including 22 in the St Andrews–
W&M Joint Degree Programme. Eighty-one percent
of the students who have a class rank graduated in
the top 10 percent, and 2014 freshmen had a median
SAT score of 1370 on math and critical reading. The
SAT profiles of our entering classes are consistently
among the very strongest of all public universities.
Last year, W&M had more Fulbright awards per
student than all but one other university, public or
private. This fall, W&M ranked first among public
universities in the U.S. in percentage of undergraduates studying abroad. In fact, nearly 50 percent of
our undergraduates participate in study abroad or
institutionally supported international research. The
W&M Debate Society, currently the top-ranked public
university debate team in the nation, took top honors
this fall at a tournament at Harvard, beating varsity
teams from Brown, Yale and Princeton.
In the March 2014 U.S. News rankings of graduate
programs and professional schools, William & Mary
Law School climbed nine spots to 24th in the U.S.
This is the highest rank ever given the country’s oldest law school by U.S. News. Our School of Education
also remained in the top 40, ranking 39th among the
nation’s education schools. In the Raymond A. Mason
School of Business, Bloomberg Businessweek ranked
our undergraduate program 22nd out of the teeming
horde of undergraduate business programs nationally.
The impact of research at W&M is both local and
international. For instance, our scientists in geology and
at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science are working
on the vital matter of sea level rise using sophisticated
modeling and GIS technology. W&M neuroscientists are
making progress on apnea in premature babies. Faculty
in arts & sciences and at the School of Education are
working on ways to improve the quality of STEM eduWWW.WMALUMNI .COM
cation in K-12. The impressive work at the Law School’s
Lewis B. Puller, Jr. Veterans Benefits Clinic is providing
a model for other such initiatives around the country.
W&M’s staff are unsung heroes, but they are essential to many aspects of the life of the university. Last
spring, we honored one of those campus heroes, Ernest
“Vinnie” Russell, with our annual Duke Award. W&M’s
campus is often named among the most beautiful in
the nation. Vinnie, who is in his 35th year at W&M, is
responsible for maintaining some of our most high-profile outdoor spaces such as the grounds of the Alumni
House, the Sunken Garden and the Wren Yard.
Despite a pervasive lack of salary increases for state
employees since the Great Recession hit in 2008, we
have been able to make progress on compensation for
our faculty and staff. For the second year in a row, we
were able to provide meaningful merit-based increases.
William & Mary continues to determine what areas
of our educational experience can be delivered effectively and efficiently through digital means. Several
projects with an e-learning component were announced
in June, including a planned 12-credit hybrid (online
and in-person) certificate program in college teaching at
the School of Education. This program will be the first
of its kind in Virginia. In addition, arts & sciences innovations last year included two online summer courses
and “flipped” courses in English literature, computer
science and applied science where students learn the
core material online and come to class to discuss concepts and explore their implications with their professor and classmates, without the need to devote class
time to lectures. The Mason School will begin offering
an online MBA in fall 2015.
Almost 100 varsity athletes graduated in the Class
of 2014. They won 16 Colonial Athletic Association
(CAA) championships and two Eastern College Athletic
Conferences (gymnastics) over the past four years, and
earned degrees in 22 different disciplines. Forty-two of
them earned all-conference honors during their careers,
and 29 were inducted into the national honor society for
college athletes. Forty of them earned Provost Awards
last year for achieving cumulative grade point averages
over 3.5. Swimmer Andrew Strait ’14 was named the
CAA’s top male scholar-athlete, the third Tribe man in
the last four years to receive the honor.
W&M varsity athletes have the best graduation rate
in the CAA and in Virginia. The cumulative grade point
average for all 500 of our varsity athletes consistently
averages 3.0.
This fall, the Tribe added conference championships in men’s and women’s cross country to raise the
total to 116, by far the most of any CAA school. The
women’s team won its first regional NCAA title and
went on to finish 17th in the national championships.
In recognition of an outstanding season, Natalie Hall,
the women’s head coach, was named the Southeast
Region Coach of the Year.
William & Mary has been producing leaders in all
walks of life for over 300 years. Our Chancellor, Bob
Gates ’65, L.H.D. ’98, was director of the CIA and then
W IN T E R 2014 secretary of defense for two U.S. presidents. Now in
office are our alumni and alumnae who head the FBI,
SEC and National Park Service. An alumna is chief scientist of NASA. Another alumna chaired the Council
of Economic Advisers in President Obama’s first term.
A W&M alumnus is overseeing America’s largest real
estate project ever. And yet another alumnus founded
and runs a healthcare conglomerate that delivers services to all 50 states and several countries abroad. And
in May, U.S. Soccer named a W&M alumna head coach
of the Women’s National Team.
Amid all the success that William & Mary now
enjoys, it is crucially important that we also provide a
campus environment in which people can do their best
work and enjoy their activities while both being safe and
feeling safe, especially from sexual assault or harassment.В Sexual violence on campus is an ill with which
schools across the country are struggling. At the beginning of the academic year, I created a W&M task force of
faculty, staff and students and charged it to examine our
efforts to prevent sexual assault and harassment of any
sort.В The task force is looking at the climate that now
exists on campus and recommending improvements
in how we educate students about and prevent sexual
violence, how we train faculty and staff about relevant
matters, and how we investigate and adjudicate cases
involving rape or harassment.В We have made progress
already, and our efforts continue in earnest.
In W&M’s first 319 years, the university had just one
year in which it raised $100 million. We just reached
that mark in back-to-back years, fiscal years 2013 and
2014, and we are moving toward ever greater heights
in philanthropy to ensure a future for William & Mary
worthy of its past.
William & Mary’s financial future rests on four legs,
which we are in the process of building with notable
success: (1) innovation on campus to become more efficient, cut some costs and reduce the rate of increase of
others; (2) significant earned income (tuition) from both
in-state and out-of-state students, coupled with enough
need-based aid so that W&M is affordable for students
of limited means; (3) alumni engagement and support
of the robust sort long enjoyed by our private ivy counterparts; and (4) continued if diminishing support from
the Commonwealth.
Essential to the strength and stability of this financial foundation is confidence among all members of
the William & Mary family that all other members are
doing their part: faculty and staff through productivity
gains on campus; students and their families through
tuition and fees; alumni and friends through giving for
annual support, endowment and bricks-and-mortar;
and the Commonwealth through William & Mary’s
share of public funds for higher education.
When you combine excellent faculty and staff, smart
and intellectually curious students, an administration
and Board of Visitors working together and willing to
take bold steps when necessary, and a vibrantly engaged
alumni body, good things happen. Great things are happening at William & Mary!
“...we are
moving
toward ever
greater
heights in
philanthropy
to ensure
a future for
William
& Mary
worthy of
its past.”
W& M A LUMNI MAGAZI NE
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FISCAL YEAR 2014:
FINANCIAL
PERSPECTIVE
BUILDING A CULTURE OF
FUNDRAISING
HIGHLIGHTS
2014В»
Second consecutive year
William & Mary has raised
more than $100 million in
gifts and commitments.
$63.5
31,048
total donors,
million in cash gifts,
which includes
realized bequests
including individuals,
corporations and
foundations
19,347 alumni
gave, including undergraduate
and graduate alums
OTHER HIGHLIGHTS
90%
26%
70 percent of the senior class (Class of 2014) and 90 percent of third-year law students made gifts
or pledges before graduation. 26 percent of former Tribe athletes also gave.
8
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
I N F O G R PA H I C : C H I R S P H I L P OT
70%
ENGAGEMENT & PHILANTHROPY
TOTA L
ENDOWMENT
VALUE:
B U D G E T U P DAT E
OPERATING REVENUES VS. OPERATING EXPENSES
OPERATING EXPENSES:
OPERATING REVENUE:
$377.3 million (unaudited)
$380.5 million (unaudited)
Total includes revenue and expenses for the
Virginia Institute of Marine Science.
$797.6
MILLION
Compared to
the previous
year’s total of
$697.7 million,
the endowment
increased by
approximately
$100 million, or
14.3
PERCENT
13.2%
Total of state support
in fiscal year 2014
W IN T E R 2014 2014 William & Mary PresidentКјs Report
Learn more about the Best Year Ever at
presidentsreport.wm.edu
W& M A LUMNI MAGAZI NE
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HOMARUS AMERICANUS:
A diver holds a giant 16-pound
lobster at Hodgkin’s Cove,
Gloucester, Mass.
10
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
BY&LARGE
RESEARCH IN ACTION
Shell Games
VIMS scientists seek clues
to diseases threatening Atlantic Coast
lobsters and crabs
BY RI C H GRI SE T
T
P H OTO : J E F F R OT M A N / G E T T Y I M AG E S
W IN T E R 2014 hough they don’t wear trench coats or
conduct stakeouts, calling Jeffrey Shields and
his colleagues detectives might be the easiest
way to explain their role at William & Mary’s Virginia
Institute of Marine Science (VIMS).
“A lot of it is detective work, or putting things
together and doing lab experiments to figure it out,”
explained Shields, a professor in VIMS’ Department
of Environmental and Aquatic Animal Health. Using
science, experiments and deduction skills, Shields
and his researchers work to unlock mysteries worth
millions of dollars.
Their nemesis? In the case of lobsters found in
Long Island Sound, it’s a disease that causes necrosis
of the shell, killing off scores and making the remainder unappetizing for human consumption. The animal has experienced a population drop of more than
90 percent, impacting the surrounding ecosystem
and the fisheries that harvest the animal.
W& M A LUM NI MAGAZI NE
11
BY& LARGE
“I won’t use the term catastrophic quite yet, but
it’s very close to that,” said Shields, who has spent his
career studying pathogens that infect crustaceans.
“The watermen there basically don’t fish lobsters
any more, or they’ve moved to other locations to fish
them, or they’ve switched to a different industry.”
The studies that Shields and his team at VIMS
conduct affect anyone with a love for crabs or lobsters, and as water temperatures around the world
continue to climb, the work VIMS does is only
becoming more important.
For Hamish Small, assistant research scientist at
VIMS, studying crustacean diseases has a direct connection to growing up in his native Scotland.
“Over the course of his career, my father was a commercial fisherman and diver, then latterly a science
teacher,” said Small in his melodic Scottish accent. “It’s
no surprise that I became a marine biologist.
“I really wanted to do something that had a linkage to my upbringing, where I came from. One of the
draws for working in the marine realm of biology was
that it potentially had benefits for the people who
fished these animals.”
Small had been studying a parasitic disease of the
Norway lobster in Scotland when he met Shields at
a conference in Australia. Shields was studying a
IN VITRO LIFE CYCLE OF HEMATODINIUM PEREZI FROM CALLINECTES
SAPIDUS: Filamentous trophonts (1) appear in the haemolymph of early infections and
undergo merogony to form amoeboid trophonts (2). Arachnoid trophonts attach to tissues
from the hemal sinuses and grow to form arachnoid sporonts that either develop sporoblasts
(5), which become prespores (6) and dinospores (7), or develop into a presumptive schizont (8)
that generates Gorgonlocks (9) and clump colonies (10). Dinospores are presumbably infectious to new hosts, but this remains to be determined. [After Li et al. 2011. Parasitology.]
1.Filamentous
trophonts
2.Ameboid
trophonts
7. Dinospores
0.C lump
1
colony
6. Prespores
9.Gorgonlocks
colony
5. Sporoblasts
3.Arachnoid
trophonts
4.Arachnoid
sporonts
12
W& M A LUMNI M AGA Z I N E WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
P H OTO S : C O U R T E S Y O F J E F F R E Y S H I E L D S
8. schizont
similar disease in blue crabs at the time, and the two
eventually joined forces at VIMS.
For Shields, who has spent the past 20 years
studying diseases of the Chesapeake Bay blue crab,
one of the more intriguing pathogens is a parasitic
dinoflagellate that lives in the crustacean’s blood.
“This particular pathogen lives in the blood of the
crab, eventually kills the crab and then leaves it to
find another crab, using a dinospore stage,” Shield
said. “In some cases we see fall outbreaks of 70 to
80 to 100 percent of the juvenile crabs, so it’s pretty
pathogenic.”
Shields and Small recently visited a sampling spot
on the Eastern Shore where 100 percent of the crabs
were infected with the disease.
“Those crabs are all going to die, so as you can
imagine, it’s a pretty serious pathogen, mainly
restricted to the high salinity waters of the
Chesapeake,” Shields said. “It kills crabs in 30 to 40
days typically, sometimes a little bit longer.”
Aside from impacting dinner plates across the
country, the crab die-off will cause other problems.
“They’re a key component of the ecosystem, they
predate all sorts of things,” said Small. “If you remove
the predator, what’s going to happen to these community profiles? We really don’t have a good handle
on that.”
BY& LARGE
FROM LEFT: Anna
Coffey M.S. ’11 shows
the dirty work involved
in pulling crab pots;
Blue crabs are voracious predators, and as
such are key ecological
species that structure
benthic communities in
Chesapeake Bay.
Shields and his team also recently studied an epidemic disease in North Atlantic clawed lobsters that
causes bacterial necrosis of the shell. The disease,
known as epizoological shell disease, has led to at
least a 90 percent drop in the lobster population of
Long Island Sound.
“If you’ve eaten lobsters before, you know how
difficult it can be to crack the shell on these animals. You use a nutcracker or a hammer to get at
the meat,” Shields said. “Just to give you an idea,
a lobster with epizootic shell disease, if it’s on the
carapace, the upper part, you can literally push your
fingers through the affected shell and kill the animal.
It’s that easy.”
A number of environmental factors are believed
to cause the condition, including rising water temperatures and contaminants like pesticides and oil
spill dispersants. The result is that it takes twice as
long for lobsters to harden their shells after molting, giving bacteria a longer time to infect the shell
while it’s in a weakened state. Female lobsters don’t
molt while carrying eggs, and the infection often kills
them before the eggs can hatch, because the females
cannot molt out of it.
In addition to affecting the animals and their ecosystem, the die-off has also impacted the lobster fishery. “The southern New England lobster fishery, from
W IN T E R 2014 southern Massachusetts through New York, is basically shut down by it,” said Shields. “There’s very little
recruitment of lobsters in that zone, and the fishery
has basically dropped to a tenth of its former value.”
Because of the lesions caused by the disease on
the shell of the lobsters, human consumers find the
live animals unappetizing, and they can only be sold
for canning. For those who make a living harvesting lobsters, it’s the difference between getting paid
roughly $6 per pound or less than $1 per pound for
the animals.
“For the watermen, that’s their bread and butter,
that’s their best market — the live animal trade,”
Shields said.
Shields is currently working with the Maine
Department of Marine Resources to be proactive
about identifying and deterring the disease in the
state, though efforts to stop its migration may be all
for naught. As bodies of water continue to get hotter around the globe, Shields said, the escalation and
fluctuation in temperature will probably lead to more
pathogens infecting crustaceans.
“Temperature really is a critical feature,” said
Shields. “Bacteria shows a very strong response to
temperature.
“At 16, 17, 18 degrees above centigrade, that’s
where the epizootic disease really takes off.”
W& M A LUM NI MAGAZI NE
13
BY THE BOOK
GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY
BY& LARGE
A wounded soldier turns to beekeeping and becomes an unlikely hero.
BY ASHLEY M URPHY ’15
I
n his novel Golden Chains, published in June,
David McCaskey J.D. ’77 merges his own experiences as a lawyer, Army veteran and beekeeper
to create a vivid narrative of a World War II soldier
suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder — a
condition not well understood at the time.
For the past 29 years, much of McCaskey’s work
as a lawyer has been devoted to mental health issues.
He represents Social Security disability claimants
with mental illness and has participated in the civil
HIGH RANKINGS
GE T S M ART
William & Mary is one of the smartest public colleges in the country, according to a report published by Business Insider in October.
• The business and technology news website listed the university
third among “The 100 Smartest Public Colleges in America,”
following Georgia Institute of Technology and the University of
California-Berkeley. • William & Mary is the top-ranked Virginia
school on this list, with the University of Virginia ranked fifth and
Virginia Tech 42nd. The rankings were based on average standardized test scores. 14
W& M A LUMNI M AGA Z I N E —UNIV ER SITY REL ATI ONS STAF F
commitment process, not only as a lawyer but also
as a special justice conducting the hearings. Without
these experiences, he said, it would have been impossible to write the novel.
Golden Chains chronicles the story of a North
Carolina farm boy, Raymond McCleary. McCleary
is wounded on the first day of the D-Day invasion,
and when he returns to civilian life, he discovers that
recovering from his mental wounds will be far more
difficult than grappling with his physical scars.
McCaskey began writing the book about 10 years
ago, after a friend described his grandfather’s experience as a maintenance worker at Western State
Hospital in Staunton, Va. His friend said that one of
the patients was permitted to keep honeybees, which
piqued McCaskey’s interest since he is a beekeeper
himself. However, when he contacted the hospital in
order to request information about the patient, privacy laws prevented officials from providing details
about the patient’s history.
McCaskey decided to invent the man’s story in a
“personal project subject to no editor’s expectations,”
which allowed the endeavor to be a pleasure rather
than a challenge. He wrote on a Palm Pilot, five or
10 minutes at a time, whenever he was waiting for a
case to be called.
In the novel, McCleary undergoes rehabilitation
at Woodrow Wilson Hospital in Fishersville, Va., but
realizes that his wounded leg makes it too difficult
for him to resume work on his family’s farm in North
Carolina. Neighbors and friends are happy that he
made it home from the war, but neither they nor
McCleary comprehend the full extent of his illness.
He returns to Virginia, and after attempting work
and a relationship with some success, his condition
deteriorates into catatonia and he is admitted to a
state mental hospital. When other patients become
at risk of being swarmed by bees, McCleary becomes
an unlikely hero.
As an author, McCaskey uses the analogy of
beekeeping as a way to better understand human
behavior. “Beekeeping is an attempt to get an independent-minded bunch of insects to cooperate with
your goal of honey production,” he said. “Gaining
[their] cooperation is challenging and rewarding. In
my experience, those same skills are useful in dealing
with people in general.”
WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
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W IN T E R 2014 W& M A LUM NI MAGAZI NE
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BY& LARGE
PAYING IT FORWARD
TEN FOR THE TRIBE
Student-athletes give back
BY NI C HOL AS L AN GHORNE
L
16
W& M A LUMNI M AGA Z I N E teams during the initiative, which resulted in gifts
from 529 student-athletes — 99 percent of the total
population of 535.
“I was not surprised by the awesome support, but
never in a million years had I thought we would reach
99 percent participation,” said Buckheit. “It is absolutely incredible.”
The extraordinarily high participation rate for
the September initiative was not surprising to Tribe
baseball player Willie Shaw ’14, because of William
& Mary’s “One Tribe, One Family” culture.
“It’s not just a marketing slogan or a hashtag,” he
said.
Buckheit is a representative on the Tribe Club
Executive Board. The Tribe Club, which was established in 1948, is a group of alumni and friends who
work to provide support for William & Mary’s stuWWW.WMALUMNI .COM
I L LU S T R AT I O N : J E S S I C A A . F L A N N E RY
indsey Buckheit ’15 knows firsthand just
how important philanthropy is for the student-athletes who represent the Tribe in athletic
competition. Without private support, Buckheit and
other students might not have been able to attend
William & Mary and participate in a Division I athletics program.
“An athletic scholarship provided me with an
opportunity of a lifetime to learn at an incredible
institution, all while having a second family by my
side every day at Busch Field,” she said.
Buckheit, a Tribe field hockey player, created Ten
for the Tribe, an initiative intended to foster engagement and philanthropy among William & Mary’s student-athletes before they graduate.
Student-athletes from the university’s 23 varsity
programs were asked to give $10 to support their
BY& LARGE
W IN T E R 2014 W& M A LUM NI MAGAZI NE
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BY& LARGE
dent-athletes. Since the W&M Athletics Department
receives no financial support from the state, it
depends upon the generosity of alumni, parents and
friends who give through the Tribe Club to provide
funding for scholarships, equipment, travel and other
necessary expenses.
With the Tribe Club Executive Board’s blessing,
Buckheit teamed up with Tribe swimmer Ryan Natal
’16 — who also is a student-athlete representative on
the board — and Carey Goodman and Nick Georges,
assistant directors of athletic development for the
Tribe Club, to implement Ten for the Tribe.
“It is so important student-athletes understand
that we are not funded by the state, and without
TRIBE PRIDE
WE’RE NUMBER ONE
There’s no debating it: William & Mary has one of the top debate
teams in the country. • Aaron Murphy ’15 and Jerusalem Demsas ’17
took first place at the Harvard debate tournament in October, beating varsity teams from 43 universities across the country, including
Brown, Yale, Princeton and Columbia. The victory made William
& Mary the top-ranked public university for parliamentary debate
in the nation. • The W&M Debate Society has approximately 70
members and competes at about 20 regular season tournaments
throughout the year with the American Parliamentary Debate
Association. The Harvard event is the largest and most prestigious
of the tournaments, and approximately 150 teams competed in it
this year. In addition to Murphy and Demsas winning the Harvard
Cup, Gerry Jamison ’16 and Keegan Paugh ’18 also won awards at
the tournament. 18
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E — ERI N
ZAGU RSKY
private support, Tribe Athletics wouldn’t exist,”
Buckheit said.
Goodman and Georges met with each team to
inform them of the initiative. During those team
meetings, many Tribe coaches made gifts to encourage student-athletes to support Ten for the Tribe.
The initiative included a social media campaign featuring a logo and brief videos to show the impact of
private philanthropy on each sport.
“The Ten for the Tribe program made our athletes realize we must all share responsibility for our
department’s existence,” said Tribe volleyball head
coach Melissa Aldrich Shelton ’91.
Student-athletes gave more than $5,500 in support of Ten for the Tribe. Donations from some Tribe
Club members provided for a 2-to-1 match for gifts to
teams that achieved 100 percent participation from
players. Every women’s varsity team posted a 100
percent participation rate. Including matching funds,
the initiative raised a total of $16,565.
“This initiative was a tremendous success,” said
Bobby Dwyer M.Ed. ’94, the executive director of
the Tribe Club. “Lindsey’s idea was brought to life
and executed with a lot of hard work by Carey,
Nick and Ryan.В The participation numbers reflect
what a truly special place William & Mary is to be a
student-athlete.”
Tribe men’s soccer head coach Chris Norris ’95
said Ten for the Tribe was an opportunity “to have
a dialogue with our student-athletes about what a
great privilege it is to play an intercollegiate sport at
William & Mary. Without overburdening them with
details, we are able to get our student-athletes to recognize the importance of private funding to our athletic program,” Norris said. “Hopefully, we are also
getting them in the habit of giving back financially, in
addition to all they give during their four years here.”
Alumni support is vital for collegiate athletic
programs, said Tribe lacrosse head coach Hillary
Fratzke.
“The Ten for the Tribe campaign was a great way
to encourage the habit of giving back before student-athletes graduate. It also encouraged them to
recognize the importance of the support required to
make a program possible,” she said.
Zachary Fetters ’15, a William & Mary football
player, said being a part of the Tribe Athletics family
is an amazing opportunity. “We only want to make
the experience even better for those to come after
us,” he said.
Buckheit believes current student-athletes will
continue to support their programs in any way possible as alumni.
“Ten for the Tribe demonstrated how $10 can
quickly turn into $16,000 when everyone participates. We hope that in showing how every little bit
counts, current student-athletes will continue this
habit and give back in whatever amount possible. You
don’t have to donate thousands of dollars to make a
difference,” she said.
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TEAM SPIRIT
Winning Ways
BY& LARGE
Peel Hawthorne ’80 embodies the
best of Tribe Athletics, on and off the field.
W
hen you think of field hockey at William & Mary, you can’t help but think of
Peel Hawthorne ’80.
One of the most successful coaches in the history of Division I field hockey, Hawthorne ranks
high among active and all-time coaches in victories, games coached and tenure. Including her
four years as a player from 1976 through 1979,
Hawthorne has participated in nearly 80 percent
of W&M field hockey’s winning games since the
program’s inception in 1973.
Now the Tribe’s associate athletics director for
student services and senior woman administrator,
Hawthorne serves as a role model for all of the
College’s student-athletes.
“To me, Peel is Tribe Athletics,” said field hockey
player Cate Johnson ’15. “Dedication, hard work,
genuine character with aВ commitmentВ to excellence: she is the embodiment of what the athletes
here strive to be.”
“The mentally strenuous public
Hawthorne likes to say
that as a student at the
ivy education the College offers,
College, her favorite sport
combined with the physically
to play was whatever was in
season. A lacrosse and field
challenging collegiate athletic
hockey player, Hawthorne
helped the College’s field
experience, is one of the toughhockey program make two
est crucibles out there.”
trips to the AIAW Nationals.
After graduating from
William & Mary, Hawthorne
went on to coach at Connecticut College for four
seasons before returning to the College in 1987,
where she led William & Mary to the NCAA
Tournament in 2000 and 2002.
Voted CAA Coach of the Year in 1995 and
2001, Hawthorne won the award for a third time
in 2004 while also earning her first state coach
of the year honor after leading the Tribe to a 7-0
CAA record. It was the first time in school history
that W&M had gone undefeated in conference play.
Hawthorne’s 275 victories at the College rank her
as the winningest coach in school history, and her
20
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E 306 career victories make her the 13th coach in
Division I to surpass 300 wins.
While the victories may be sweet, Hawthorne’s
role as mentor has been the best part of her career.
Over the years, she has helped guide 36 players
to a total of 54 all-region honors and has coached
seven All-Americans.
For Cate Johnson, Hawthorne is the reason she
came to William & Mary. “Peel took a chance with
me,” she said. “I was very late to the recruiting
game, and my skills were not really up to D1 level.
She must have seen something that no one else did,
and for some reason she offered me a spot on the
team as a walk-on, and has been one of my biggest
champions since. Peel made my experience here
possible, and I would not be the person I am today
without her guidance and mentorship.”
Johnson’s favorite memories are of team bonding at Hawthorne’s river house and on the bus to
and from games. Hawthorne even organized an
Easter egg hunt for the team every spring. “I honestly think of her as the best coach I ever had,”
Johnson said. “When she transferred to administration, selfishly I was sad to lose out on another
season of playing for her, but happy that her talents could now affect a wider circle of athletes.”
In her administrative role, Hawthorne works
with student-athletes and coaches to ensure a
quality experience at the College. Among other
things, she manages compliance and educational
support, enforcing policy and offering guidance
and resources to student-athletes to help them
excel in W&M’s tough classes.
She operates on a different kind of team now,
but her coaching experience translates well into
her new work. “Having that experience is critical
to this position because you need empathy and an
understanding of what a particular student or coach
is going through,” said Hawthorne. “The job switch
is just applying an old skill set to new problems.”
In her role as senior woman administrator,
Hawthorne is helping to highlight the significance
of women in sports. She plays a major role in organizing the College’s annual Celebration of Women in
WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
P H OTO : S K I P R OW L A N D ’ 8 3
BY M EREDI TH RANDLE ’16
BY& LARGE
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BY& LARGE
Athletics (CWA), held during Charter Day Weekend.
Now in its sixth year, the event brings together
female athletes and coaches to celebrate shared
successes on and off the field, and to honor women
whose experience in intercollegiate athletics has
shaped their personal, professional and civic lives.
The 2015 CWA event will include a networking
session for alumnae, current female student-athletes and Tribe supporters. “The mentally strenuous public ivy education the College offers,
combined with the often physically challenging
collegiate athletic experience, is one of the tough-
est crucibles out there,” Hawthorne said. Through
shared interest and common experience in sports,
W&M female student-athletes can build a powerful community of support for women in the Tribe
family, she explained.
Hawthorne’s many skills extend far beyond athletics and administration. She has a pilot’s license, and
also plays guitar and sings in a local band. She once
taught Cate Johnson to Travis-pick on the guitar on
an away trip. “I feel like she’s done everything, but
you’d never know because she’s so humble,” Johnson
said. “She’s full of hidden talents.”
HISTORIC PRESERVATION
V I MS TO H EL P P ROT EC T KE Y
N AT I V E A MERI C A N SI T E
A $199,000 grant from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation will
allow researchers at William & Mary’s Virginia Institute of Marine Science
(VIMS) to help protect Werowocomoco — one of the most important Native
American sites in the eastern U.S. — from shoreline erosion and sea-level rise.
• Werowocomoco was the seat of power for Algonquian Chief Powhatan when
English colonists arrived at Jamestowne in 1607. The site — where Captain
John Smith was purportedly saved by Powhatan’s daughter Pocahontas —
occupies an eroding headland on the north side of Virginia’s York River about
halfway between Yorktown and West Point. • The main feature of the restoration project will be two or more sills — long piles of rock placed just offshore
and parallel to the low, sandy cliff that forms the existing shoreline. Between
sill and shore, sand and marsh grasses will be added for additional habitat and
protection. The project will create about 15,000 square feet of marsh while
keeping more than 900,000 pounds of sediment and nearly 500 pounds of
phosphorus and nitrogen out of the York River each year. • VIMS’ role in the
project is to create the conceptual plan for managing the shoreline — figuring
out where to place the sills, how long and high they should be, and the distance
between them. That requires careful analysis of a host of site-specific factors,
including tidal range, water depth, prevailing wave direction and height, frequency of storm surge, prevalence of boat wakes, geometry and orientation
of the shoreline, height and composition of the bank, and any existing shoreline-defense structures.
22
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E — DAVI D M A LM Q U I ST
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THE VIRTUAL
PROFESSOR:
Deborah Hewitt at
the Mason School of
Business developing an
online MBA course
DIGITAL FUTURE
THE NEW REVOLUTIONARIES
With its Online MBA, W&M’s Mason School
takes a Jeffersonian approach to business education.
BY C OR TNEY L AN GLEY
W
24
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E “The key themes of the program are those that
have defined the William & Mary educational experience for over three centuries,” Mooradian said.
“We’re emphasizing breadth of knowledge, communications, critical thinking and creative problem-solving: the Renaissance toolbox.”
“The Mason School’s all-digital MBA is an
important initiative for William & Mary,” President
Taylor Reveley said. “It will teach us a lot about how
to educate students in an all-digital environment and
it will show us how to enlist students interested in
getting a W&M education over the Internet.
“In my judgment, digital teaching — on campus and
off — will play an increasing role in higher education,
and do so much sooner than most of us expect,” Reveley
added. “At academically elite universities, however,
digital instruction will succeed only to the extent it
provides learning of a quality at least as great as that
WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
P H OTO : S T E P H E N S A L P U K A S
hen Todd Mooradian spent the summer of ’76 learning to program a computer with IBM punch cards, it seemed
like a mandatory skill for a college student to master. But just four years later, Mooradian said, you
couldn’t find a card reader on campus.
That kind of obsolescence is exactly what faculty members at the Raymond A. Mason School of
Business want students in the school’s new Online
MBA program to avoid.
“The specific tools that a lot of programs emphasize are ephemeral,” said Mooradian, Mason’s associate
dean for faculty and administration. “They don’t last.”
In contrast, Mason’s Online MBA, with its theme
of “Renaissance Thinker, Revolutionary Leader,”
is offering an all-new, groundbreaking curriculum
designed to endure. The first cohort of 25 students
will log on in August 2015.
W IN T E R 2014 W& M A LUM NI MAGAZI NE
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BY& LARGE
COLLEGE
NAMES NEW
POLICE CHIEF
S E U R AT TA N
26
provided in our traditional classrooms.В Congratulations
to the Mason School for leading the way in this regard.”
While the basic MBA competencies (accounting,
finance, marketing and organizational behavior)
remain important, they represent “table stakes” that
every student receives and hence give neither the students nor their organizations an advantage, said Jim
Olver, associate professor of business administration,
who led the effort to design the new online program.
“In a world where yesterday doesn’t predict
tomorrow, that’s not good enough,” Olver said.
“Increasingly the concern in all of these organizations is that they don’t know what the right answer
is,” he said. “Their industries are being completely
disrupted, between globalization and technological
change. Dealing with disruption requires a tolerance
for ambiguity and intelligent risk-taking.В You need a
mindset that accepts the possibility of failure as an
BREAKOUT: In May 2013, a group of faculty members spent
two days brainstorming the new curriculum and participating
in breakout sessions to develop their concepts.
opportunity to learn, not something to be avoided by
not accepting the challenge.”
So when students in Mason’s Online MBA program begin their coursework, they won’t begin with
Accounting or Operations. Instead, they’ll start
with Olver’s “Renaissance Thinker, Revolutionary
Leader” class, introducing them to the nature of
problems, modes of thinking and inquiry and innovative problem solving.
Olver’s class centers on what he calls “wicked
problems,” or problems with an unknowable set of
possible solutions, no necessary agreement on the
nature of the problem and no way to know whether
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E the chosen solution is the best. He plans to begin with
a case study of the financial collapse of 2008.
“That’s the kind of world I think we’re increasingly
entering,” he said. “A lot of people have concluded
that the wicked problems are getting wickeder.”
Students will identify their own wicked problem,
pulled from their professional or organizational
lives, to grapple with while they are in the program.
Each subsequent functional course, such as Finance,
Integrated Technology and Economics, will have
touch points that tie thematically to solving each
student’s wicked problem.
In the first year the Mason School plans to start
three cohorts of 25 students each, with the goal of
adding more in subsequent years. Students will take
two four-credit courses per semester, each lasting
about eight weeks.
Olver said students will also be able to pick from
a number of weekend events that will provide them
contact with the larger W&M community, alums,
other cohorts, and Mason School students and faculty for a required residency.
A final “Revolutionary Leader Practicum” ends
the program, with students demonstrating their ability to integrate material from the previous 11 courses
to frame a complex problem, develop a systematic
approach to solving it, generate an innovative solution and persuade others of its value.
“You gain practice in this and gain confidence,
and you actually learn to love it,” Olver said. “You
become the person who is the go-to problem solver
when things are really messy. That’s the kind of person we want to develop. They are going to be a huge
value-add to their organizations, because they have
a mindset that’s different from the typical, �Just tell
me what to do and I’ll execute on it.’ And that’s what
companies are screaming for.”
Making the program a reality has been a collaborative effort. Staff from units across campus —
University Registrar, Information Technology and
the Provost’s Office, to name a few — have partnered
with the Mason School to make sure offices and systems are ready for the unique aspects of an online
program, including the departure from the traditional
semester calendar.
“My colleagues and I are excited about this new
stage in William & Mary’s evolution as a worldclass university,” said University Registrar Sara L.
Marchello. “Not surprisingly, processes that work
well in a face-to-face environment don’t translate
directly to a virtual environment. We’ve worked
WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
P H OTO : K A R E N C O N N E R M . E D . ’ 16
Deborah “Deb”
Cheesebro was
named the first
female police chief
in William & Mary’s
321-year history in
September.
Cheesebro came
to the College
from the University
of North Carolina
School of the Arts
(UNCSA) in Winston-Salem, N.C.,
where she served
as senior director of
police, public safety
and emergency
management. She
led UNCSA’s efforts
related to police
services, security,
parking, emergency
preparedness and
response, and
oversaw the school’s
Business Continuity
Plan. —   S UZ A N N E
“You become the person who is the go-to problem solver when things are
really messy. That’s the kind of person we want to develop.”
ALUMNI AUCTION
MARCH 13, 2015
RIVERPARK RESTAURANT
450 E 29th ST., NEW YORK, NY
WMALUMNIAUCTION.COM
W IN T E R 2014 W& M A LUM NI MAGAZI NE
27
BY& LARGE
hard to test different strategies and understand the
challenges that we are likely to face. We’re now prepared for the new online relationship with students
in ways we would not have imagined at the start of
this process.”
The online MBA market has become far more
crowded and competitive than when Pam Suzadail,
W&M deputy director of eLearning initiatives and
Online MBA director, began in distance education
in 2000. For a long time, schools merely converted
their on-campus programs to a digital platform,
sometimes roughly, and threw them online, relying
on convenience to sell their programs.
“This isn’t enough anymore,” Suzadail said, crediting Mason School faculty for taking the time and
effort to develop a uniquely W&M Online MBA.
In May 2013, a group of faculty members spent
two days brainstorming the new curriculum in the
Jim and Bobbie Ukrop Design & Innovation Studio in
Alan B. Miller Hall. On the second day, they split into
two teams meeting in separate corners of the room
to develop their concepts. Olver said he was “astonished” when they reunited and had independently
developed the idea of an entirely fresh curriculum
centered on the Jeffersonian themes of Renaissance
thinking and revolutionary leadership.
“Thomas Jefferson isn’t just an interesting historical fact of the College,” Mooradian said. “He’s
prototypical of the person we wanted to produce in
the 18th century and that we still want to produce
in the 21st century: well-rounded, adept at solving
problems with the paradigms and ways of knowing
gleaned from every discipline of human knowledge.”
Central to that Jeffersonian approach is preserving the student-faculty relationship essential to the
William & Mary experience.
“At its core, what really is that special relationship? It is responsiveness and concern for students,”
Olver said. “We believe we can create this relationship just as well in an online environment.”
“Our faculty have responded to a real and growing
need in business education: preparing the next generation of business leadersВ toВ manage the increasing
complexity of a global workplace,” said Mason School
Dean Lawrence B. Pulley ’74. “The Mason Online
MBA program will be a best-of-breed program weaving the strengths of a William & Mary education and
the real-time needs of the marketplace.”
CAMPUS FACELIFT
FO RWA RD P RO G RESS
William & Mary has raised $22 million in private funds to renovate Walter J. Zable Stadium.
Two $6 million gifts, one from Hunter J. Smith ’51 and the other from Frances G. ’66 and
James W. McGlothlin ’62, J.D. ’64, LL.D. ’00, will enable the university to move forward
with the project to enhance the 79-year-old football facility.• The renovation project, which
is expected to cost a total of $27 million, also benefited from an initial $10 million gift in
2012 from the estate of the late Walter J. Zable ’37, LL.D. ’78. • “Zable Stadium, though elegant and venerable, has seen
better days,” said President Taylor Reveley. “It desperately needs rejuvenation. The gifts of these extraordinarily generous
members of the William & Mary family will go a long way toward ensuring that many more generations of Tribe faithful
will get to enjoy a stadium worthy of its glorious past and of the exceptional athletes and students who compete within
its precincts.”• Renderings of the design to renovate and enhance Zable Stadium show a new upper deck, suites and a
press box on the west side of the stadium. The overall design features Flemish bond brickwork, slate roofs and gables
creating aesthetic continuity with the west and north ends of campus. • The renovated stadium will have improved safety
and accessibility features — including wider aisles, updated restroom facilities, enhanced egress lighting, additional hand
rails, an upgraded sound system, additional concession and retail locations, and a new entrance and ticketing location.
The renovation, scheduled to begin early next year, is expected to be complete in time for the 2016 football season. •
Fundraising for the stadium continues. For more information, go to zable.wm.edu. 28
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E — TRI BE AT H LET I CS
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В®
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“You can’t do
anything if you
just focus on
yourself — it’s
not that kind of
world. You get
achievement
when everyone
works together.”
30
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
2015
ALUMNI MEDALLION AWARD
RECIPIENTS
The highest and most prestigious award given by the
William & Mary Alumni Association, the Alumni Medallion is presented
to those who truly embody what the College has stood for during its revered
history. Through their leadership, professional accomplishments
and commitment to alma mater, the 2015 recipients are perfect examples
of what it means to be William & Mary alumni.
Elizabeth Anderson
P H OTO : C A D E M A R T I N
W IN T E R 2014 Elizabeth “Betty” Anderson ’62 is a science
person. More specifically, she’s an organic chemistry, toxicology and pharmacology person. When she
graduated from William & Mary, she never imagined
the accomplishments and accolades that would stem
from her time at the College.
Anderson earned her master’s degree from
the University of Virginia and her doctorate from
American University, but she remains a Tribe member at heart. “William & Mary totally changed my
life,” she said. “I have always loved that it has such
a strong learning setting woven together with its
unique social community. I might have been buried
in my laboratories if I’d gone to some huge university.
“The Sunken Garden is one of my favorite spots
on campus because for me it’s the College’s quaint
crossroads of its social and academic aspects,” she
continued. “William & Mary is such a wonderful setting for that combination.”
Anderson’s postgraduate professional endeavors
have established her as one of the College’s most successful alumni in the sciences. Since 2006, she has
served as principal scientist and group vice president for Exponent, an international engineering and
scientific consulting firm. Prior to that, she worked
for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and
was president and CEO of Sciences International,
a health and environmental consulting firm she
founded in 1993.
Dedicated to giving back to the William & Mary
community, Anderson serves as a member of both
the Virginia Institute of Marine Science’s Council
and its Foundation Board of Directors. She chaired
the Class of 1962’s 45th Reunion Committee and was
a member of the 50th Reunion Gift Committee.
Anderson is honored to be receiving an Alumni
Medallion from the school that so positively shaped
her successes. “Being a member of the Tribe really
taught me that reaching goals and solving problems
are done best as collaborative efforts,” she said.
“You can’t do anything if you just focus on yourself — it’s not that kind of world. You get achievement when everyone works together.” — VAYDA PA R R I S H ’ 17
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“I’ve been
committed to
concluding my
career just as
I began — as a
faculty member.
It’s the best
role ever.”
P H OTO : A DA M E W I N G
32
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
2015
Virginia McLaughlin
No one in Virginia McLaughlin’s ’71 high
school had ever gotten into William & Mary — so of
course that’s where she wanted to go.
When McLaughlin arrived on campus, she was
certain she was not going into education. “I think
I was determined not to do what was expected for
women at that time,” she said. But during her last
two years, she took some electives and became interested in special education. “My father wondered why
he was paying tuition for me to take those classes.
I explained that, while students on other campuses
were protesting through marches and sit-ins, William
& Mary was studying the issues.”
McLaughlin feels that education is work that
matters for our society as a whole. “The challenges
are huge, complex and ever-changing. The current
threats to our public education system are very real,
and we need well-informed advocates.”
McLaughlin went on to earn her master’s and
Ed.D. in special education and teach in South
Carolina public schools. After teaching on the faculty
at Clemson University and Old Dominion University,
McLaughlin returned to her alma mater, where she
served as former President Timothy Sullivan’s ’66
chief of staff and associate dean of the School of
Education, eventually attaining the deanship.
During her tenure as dean, McLaughlin guided
the School of Education to many successes and was
instrumental in the construction of a new state-ofthe-art facility for the school.
“A public university, especially its school of
education, has a mission to serve the community,”
McLaughlin said. Her freshman roommate, Virginia
Carey ’71, M.Ed. ’79, Ed.S. ’93, Ed.D. ’97, emphasized
that McLaughlin had done just that. “She spent her
professional life building (literally and figuratively!) a
pillar of the William & Mary community,” Carey wrote
in nominating McLaughlin for the Alumni Medallion.
McLaughlin held the deanship for almost two
decades, stepping down in 2013 and returning to teaching at the College. “I’ve been committed to concluding
my career just as I began — as a faculty member,” she
said. “It’s the best role ever.” —M ER E D ITH R A ND LE ’16
W IN T E R 2014 A LU M N I
M E DA L L ION
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R E C I PI E N TS
Russ Brown
To Russ Brown ’74, there were no strangers.
According to his wife, Dottie ’74, upon first meeting him you were either going to hear a great Russ
Brown story or become a part of one. “He quickly
became a friend you’d never forget,” said Dottie.
Last August, Brown passed away after a 27-month
battle with acute myeloid leukemia, leaving behind
not only his family, but also those friends who will
never forget him. “The list of acquaintances who call
him a best friend is staggering,” Dottie said. “These
friends would often call him simply to get a dose of
Russ Brown optimism.”
After graduating from the College in 1974, Brown
spent two years in the NFL playing for the Washington
Redskins and the New York Giants. When an injury
ended his football career, he went into real estate. In
1993, Brown formed RBC Enterprises, a real estate
“As many have told me, Russ made
them better people,” Dottie said.
“His goal was to make a positive
difference in people’s lives. And to
that end, he was truly successful.”
development, sales marketing and property management company.
According to Dottie, Brown mentored countless
people to success in the real estate industry. And
these lessons carried over to their private lives as
well. “As many have told me, Russ made them better
people,” Dottie said. “His goal was to make a positive
difference in people’s lives. And to that end, he was
truly successful.”
With his success, Brown didn’t forget the school
that started it. He served on the boards of the
Alumni Association and the William & Mary Athletic
Foundation, and served on the College of William &
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Mary Foundation’s Board of Trustees. Proud of his
alma mater and grateful for the football scholarship
he received, Brown felt it was only natural to repay
that debt, and he created endowments to honor
his mother, father and brother-in-law. “Whether it
was a round of golf, a business deal or his good fortune, for Russ everything was better when shared,”
Dottie said. “So sharing his financial success with the
College was an easy decision.”
Throughout his battle with leukemia, Brown was
an inspiration to those around him, maintaining his
optimism. During his chemo treatments when he
had to stay in the hospital, he would convince the
nurses to unhook him from his IV so he could work
out in the hospital gym, earning him the nickname
Superman.
“He never once asked, �Why me?’” Dottie said. “He
simply accepted that this was one of those tests life
sends your way and resolved to fight it with every fiber
of his being. And that he did. He taught me so much
about grace, compassion and bravery.”
— KEL L EY F REU ND
This year Martin “Art” Walsh ’66, J.D. ’73
nominated a friend to receive the Alumni Medallion
Award, so when he got a phone call from the president of the Alumni Association informing him that
he was one of this year’s recipients, he was adamant
that it was a mistake. Walsh insisted that he wasn’t a
candidate, but unbeknownst to him, his twin brother,
Patrick, had nominated him to receive the award.
In addition to serving on the Alumni Association
Board for six years and being a generous contributor
to many causes at William & Mary, including the development of a concentration in real estate at the Mason
School of Business, Walsh has received special recognition for his work in the realm of land use law.
“He represents many of the most prominent developers and corporations in the world,” said Patrick.
“He has mastered the art of compromise in ensuring
that the projects that are approved are a win-win for
the communities and developers. This is the secret
to his tremendous success.”
Of his many accomplishments, Walsh is most proud
of the success of his law firm, which he began with four
34
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E friends in 1983. While many thought it was too risky,
Walsh said a combination of hard work, good fortune
and wonderful clients ensured the firm’s success.
“I enjoy the fact that every case is different and
every client is different,” he said. “Every day produces a new array of challenges and opportunities.
The education I received gave me a unique opportunity to pursue ambitions and dreams that I would
never have been able to pursue otherwise.”
In 1997 Walsh and his firm started an annual
golf outing to raise money for the Juvenile Diabetes
Research Foundation. His younger brother, John,
and the younger sister of a former classmate both
died due to complications from the disease. To date,
the outing has raised over $1 million.
Walsh, whose generosity and accomplishments have
inspired many other alumni, said that his own inspiration came from his parents. “My parents inspired me
and my brothers and sisters to have faith, work hard
and be humble,” he said. “It is that legacy that we all try
to honor on a daily basis.”
— ASHL EY MU RPHY ’15
P H OTO : C A D E M A R T I N
Martin Walsh
WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
“Every day
produces a
new array of
challenges and
opportunities.
The education I
received gave me
a unique opportunity to pursue
ambitions and
dreams that I
would never have
been able to pursue otherwise.”
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P H O T O B36
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BRE AKING
E BOL A
A RE ASON FOR HOPE
Traveling to Liberia this fall, public health advocate
Patrick Flaherty ’92 marshalled his expertise and training
to take on a deadly adversary — the Ebola virus.
B Y B A R A VA I D A
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On Sept. 8, 2014, Patrick Flaherty ’92 was on the
twice-weekly Brussels Airlines flight to Monrovia, the
capital of Liberia. As he looked around, he found
himself virtually alone. The plane was eerily empty.
By then, few wanted to fly into Liberia. It was the
epicenter of the raging and deadly Ebola outbreak,
crippling West Africa. Just weeks before, journalists reported frightening post-apocalyptic scenes of
bodies lying in the streets and empty grocery shelves.
Schools were closed, and Liberians were told to
stay home and off the streets at night. The virus had
infected more than 3,000 people in Guinea, Sierra
Leone, Liberia and Nigeria, and had killed more than
1,500, according to the World Health Organization
(WHO). Estimates were that more than 10,000 people a week could be infected with Ebola unless more
was done to stop the outbreak.
Flaherty wasn’t afraid. As an employee of the
United States’ public health agency, the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), he had readily volunteered to help fight the epidemic.
“I felt like this is what I’d trained my entire career
to do,” said the low-key, 5-foot, 10-inch Gainesville,
Va., native. “I wanted to step forward and contribute.”
Flaherty is based in Bangkok, Thailand, where he
works full time as deputy director of a human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and sexually transmitted
disease prevention research program. To fill positions
in West Africa, the CDC asked its staff all over the
world to temporarily fill jobs in Liberia, Sierra Leone
and Guinea. He went to Liberia for a five-week stay,
serving as a public health advisor. “It was a unique
challenge and opportunity,” he said.
In his position, Flaherty coordinated local and international efforts to help Liberians end the epidemic. He
worked with the Liberian government, local community
and health leaders, U.S. government agencies and international nonprofit organizations to help the country’s
Ebola victims get treatment. He also kept track of all the
activity to target aid where it was needed and bolstered
ongoing education and Ebola prevention strategies by
enhancing communication between groups.
“I was glad I went, but I wish I could have left
after the epidemic had ended,” said Flaherty, who
departed from Liberia on Oct. 13. In mid-December
there were more than 7,700 cases of Ebola in Liberia
according to the World Health Organization (WHO),
38
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E but the number of new cases had decreased and at the
national level the country had the capacity to isolate
and treat all reported cases.
FLAHERTY’S ROUTE TO LIBERIA began on the campus of
William & Mary even before he was a college student.
Flaherty grew up in the suburbs of Washington,
D.C., where politics and policy were just part of the
landscape. He and his younger sister, Erin ’93, could
jump on the Metro, visit a Smithsonian museum and
see the White House for an afternoon. Everyone in
their neighborhood got a copy of the Washington
Post at their doorstep. Often his family would
drive down to Williamsburg for the day. Flaherty’s
mother, a second-grade teacher, loved to immerse
her children in history.
During high school, Flaherty developed an interest in international politics and decided to join Model
United Nations, an academic competition that promotes diplomacy and international relations. For
three consecutive years, he attended a weekend-long
Model UN forum on William & Mary’s campus. He
learned about global politics and policy, and got a
taste of student life. He liked that W&M’s small size
encouraged a sense of community and that the school
had a rigorous international relations program, then
symbolized by the ongoing construction of the Reves
Center for International Studies. He decided to apply
early admission and was accepted in December 1987.
“I didn’t want to go anywhere else,” he said.
Flaherty’s advisor and mentor freshman year
was former Hispanic studies chairman and professor Howard Fraser. Fraser, who passed away in
1998, taught Portuguese and Spanish and oversaw
the interdisciplinary curriculum, then called Latin
American studies. The program drew from anthropology, economics, government, history, international relations and modern languages. Fraser’s
energetic and good-natured teaching style encouraged Flaherty to consider Latin American studies,
in addition to economics as a major.
Sophomore year, Flaherty was a resident advisor in Yates Hall. He became good friends with a
WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
P H OTO : PAT R I C K F L A H E R T Y ’ 9 2
student who had recently returned from a public
health project in Ecuador through Amigos de las
Americas. The Houston-based nonprofit sponsors
leadership projects in nine Latin American countries and teaches young people about how to be
catalysts for social change.
Flaherty was intrigued. He decided to apply to
Amigos and was sent to Brazil the summer between
his sophomore and junior year. He lived with a family
in rural Brazil and worked on public health projects,
like building latrines and educating the local community on the importance of hand washing and proper
hygiene. He loved the experience so much, he spent
the following summer in Ecuador. Then he spent
another summer in Brazil and after college, a summer in Mexico — all through Amigos de las Americas.
“The thing about public health is that it’s rooted
in social justice,” he said. “All people should have the
same opportunity to be healthy, and public health
reduces inequality. I liked that [Amigos] gave me an
opportunity to do meaningful work.”
William & Mary prepared Flaherty for his future
by providing “lots of opportunities for volunteering
and community service, and if you have that in your
nature, there are lots of angles to fit in,” said his sister
Erin, now an Army obstetrician and gynecologist at
Fort Stewart in Georgia. She added that the “expecW IN T E R 2014 tation of excellence from peers and professors” also LEG ROOM : Patrick
helps William & Mary students to become leaders. Flaherty ’92 found his plane
empty as he flew to
“I always thought Patrick would go into poli- almost
Liberia in September to serve
tics or business economics because he was good at as a public health advisor
numbers, but I think it was those summers he spent during the Ebola outbreak.
volunteering in Latin America that swayed him into
public health,” she said.
Flaherty pursued a master’s
in public policy with an emphasis on health at the
University of Michigan. He then worked as a senior
policy analyst on HIV prevention for the Washington,
D.C.-based Association of State and Territorial
Health Officials, a group that represents state health
officials throughout the U.S. There he coordinated
projects between the CDC and state health officials
and learned about the CDC’s mission. The agency
protects the U.S. from domestic and foreign health,
safety and security threats, and fit with Flaherty’s
interest in public health.
In 1998, he got a job at the CDC and his first
overseas assignment as a health prevention specialist. He went to rural India as part of a team of
international health providers working to eradicate
polio through vaccinations. As he went from one
small village to the next talking about vaccination,
he experienced two of the most common obstacles
AFTER GRADUATION,
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THEN, IN EARLY SEPTEMBER 2014 , Flaherty opened
an unexpected email. The note, from a senior CDC
official at the agency’s Center for Global Health, said
the CDC was marshalling its forces to deploy as many
people as it could to fight the Ebola outbreak. Would
he be available?
Flaherty didn’t hesitate to answer yes. “I’ve
worked in public health for 18 years, 16 of them at the
CDC, and this [Ebola outbreak] was unprecedented,”
he said. “I wanted to step forward.”
He called his parents and sister to tell them the
news he was going to Liberia. All were supportive.
“I thought, well, you know, that’s Patrick,” said
Erin Flaherty. “He’s a go-with-the-flow kind of guy
and takes on a project where he is needed. He is
pretty selfless and has a passion for whatever project he is working on to make sure it is done right.”
40
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E In less than a week, Flaherty was on the empty
plane to Liberia.
When he arrived and walked down the steps of the
plane, Flaherty was immediately asked to wash his
hands. At the entry to the airport, there was a barrel
with a protruding spout. Water mixed with a heavy
concentration of Ebola-killing chlorine poured over
his hands. Chlorinated water barrels were at the entry
of every public building in the Liberian capital.
“Everyone washes their hands now before they
enter any building, whether it is a hotel, the Ministry
of Health or the U.S. Embassy,” he said. “It makes
your hands pretty leathery.”
On the way to his hotel, the Mamba Point, Flaherty
talked with his driver, a Liberian who worked for the
U.S. Embassy. “We talked about the Ebola awareness
campaign that was running on the radio and about
how people were anxious but starting to understand
the situation,” he recalled.
Ebola was previously a disease concentrated in
the Democratic Republic of Congo and had never
struck in West Africa before the 2014 epidemic.
Many Liberians didn’t think the virus was real and
resisted help. Some thought health care workers
were entering villages to infect people with Ebola,
or that people were getting sick from poison or
malaria. Most didn’t understand the disease spread
through bodily fluids and that bodies of the recently
deceased were the most contagious. The disease
spread because people touched family members as
they were sick and died. Then they came in contact
with others, who got sick.
The government launched a public awareness
campaign about Ebola’s danger. Signs saying “Ebola
is real” were posted in public places and the government commissioned a song with three well-known
Liberian singers to communicate ways for people to
protect themselves.
“My driver thought the song was working,” he said.
When Flaherty arrived at his hotel, he learned that
a dead body had been picked up off a street nearby that
day. “People knew by then not to touch dead bodies, so
[bodies] would remain [on the street] until a specially
trained burial team could get to them,” he said.
Despite the reports of dead bodies in the streets,
Monrovia remained surprisingly crowded. “I saw a
lot of anxiety and tension on people’s faces, but not
despair or fear,” he said. “I think that Liberians were
trying to be positive and that there were reasons for
hope, and the virus could be stopped.”
FLAHERTY THEN BEGAN A DAILY ROUTINE. At 8 a.m.
each day, he attended a meeting at the U.S. Embassy
as part of the Disaster Assistance Response Team
(DART) that had been deployed by the U.S. Agency
for International Development (USAID) in August.
Meetings included staff from USAID and the CDC.
The team assessed priorities and identified needed
resources, such as personal protective equipment
and generators.
SEPT. 3, 2014,
MONROVIA, LIBERIA:
A taxi driver brings a sick
woman to an Ebola clinic.
P H OTO : В© K I E R A N K E S N E R / R E X F E AT U R E S / Z U M A W I R E
to public health officials working to stop the spread
of disease — fear and stigma.
“Some people, especially religious minorities,
feared we were there to sterilize them,” he said.
After many conversations to educate local leaders about polio and vaccination, the medical team
Flaherty worked with was able to get people to agree
to vaccination and eradicate polio. There have been
no new reported cases since 2011.
“A key part of disease prevention is social mobilization and community engagement with local leaders so
that people can learn to care for themselves,” he said.
After India, Flaherty worked on public health in
Louisiana and then moved to the CDC’s headquarters
in Atlanta. He worked on agency budgeting, policy, and
planning and strategic financial management while also
earning his master’s in business at Emory University.
Itching to get back overseas, Flaherty jumped at
the chance to work in Beijing in 2008. He became
part of a global disease detection team just in time
to work on the swine flu pandemic. The outbreak
began in Mexico in April 2009 and quickly spread to
74 countries. By June 2009, the WHO had declared
the H1N1 flu a global pandemic. The CDC worked
with health care officials, providers and companies,
and a vaccine was developed to end the outbreak.
Ultimately, between April 2009 and April 2010, 60
million people in the U.S. contracted H1N1 and 12,469
died — most of them children, according to the CDC.
“One of the things [learned from H1N1] was
that you can’t predict these events,” he said. “The
CDC does many drills to prepare but no one had
done a drill with a pandemic flu originating in Latin
America. We work to strengthen the overall capacity of the CDC and pubic health agencies’ laboratory
testing, epidemiology and infection control resources
to apply it to multiple emergencies, but it’s hard to
predict [exactly] where it will be needed.”
In September 2012, Flaherty took his current job in
Bangkok, running HIV/STD prevention research clinics. In his spare time, Flaherty traveled throughout Asia
and relaxed with his beloved English bulldog, Porkchop.
WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
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FROM LEFT : Patrick
Flaherty ’92 records observations during a meeting with
health officials in Margibi
County, Liberia, to select a
site for an Ebola Treatment
Unit (ETU). The Armed Forces
of Liberia will lead the construction of several ETUs in
Liberia; Flaherty discusses
the Ebola outbreak with
county health officials while
visiting C.H. Rennie Hospital
in Margibi County, Liberia.
“I saw a lot
of anxiety
and tension
on people’s
faces, but not
despair or
fear. I think
that Liberians
were trying
to be positive
and that there
were reasons
for hope.”
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E he didn’t speak directly to patients, Flaherty watched
health care workers get on their moon suits and listened to them talk about what they needed. The group
then visited several locations where another treatment
center, supported by the U.S. military, was to be built.
Flaherty also made a visit to the town of Harbel,
the location of Firestone Tire and Rubber Co.’s
185-acre rubber plantation. The plantation, which
employs 80,000 people, had successfully fought the
outbreak by building its own Ebola treatment center and deploying community religious leaders and
teachers to talk with people about quarantines and
getting treatment when sick. Between August and
the end of September, there were 71 confirmed Ebola
victims and 53 deaths, but as of early October, only
three patients remained at the treatment center. No
new cases had been reported.
“What Firestone did shows you just how important the social and community aspects are to stopping
an outbreak,” Flaherty said.
WHEN HE RETURNED to the U.S. in mid-October,
Flaherty spent six weeks traveling around the country visiting friends and family, part of an already
scheduled leave that all CDC employees are authorized to take every two years when they are posted
overseas. Though he never had contact with anyone
with Ebola, Flaherty took his temperature twice a
day for 21 days after leaving Liberia. The maximum
incubation period for Ebola is 21 days and if someone
doesn’t show any signs of illness after that period,
they are considered Ebola-free.
As of mid-December, there were more than 17,900
Ebola cases worldwide and more than 6,300 people
had died. The good news is that the number of new
weekly cases in Liberia had declined, according to
the WHO. Whether or not that meant that the epidemic was slowing wasn’t clear, as case incidence
was slightly increasing or remaining stable in the
neighboring countries of Sierra Leone and Guinea.
“We can’t be complacent,” said Flaherty. “I would go
back if I were asked.”
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P H OTO S : C O U R T E S Y O F PAT R I C K F L A H E R T Y ’ 9 2
42
At 9 a.m., Flaherty rode in a car to Liberia’s
Ministry of Health and Social Welfare to discuss the
government’s social mobilization and community
response efforts to stem the outbreak. Then he would
return to his temporary office at the U.S. Embassy or
the Emergency Operations Center and review proposals from nonprofits and other organizations that
were offering help.
At 5 p.m., he’d join a conference call between the
DART team in Liberia and DART teams in Sierra Leone
and Guinea, USAID in Washington and the CDC’s Ebola
emergency response center in Atlanta. At 6:30 p.m., the
CDC’s 30-member team in Liberia would talk or meet.
Three times a week, the CDC team met with the
Liberian Incident Management System, which was
coordinating work between charity groups and the
Liberian government. Those meetings included personnel from the CDC, Doctors Without Borders,
USAID, the United Nations, the World Bank and the
WHO. Once a week, other groups joined the humanitarian discussions.
After that, he’d meet again with Liberian government officials to discuss what he’d learned. Often
discussions continued well past dinner. Flaherty ate
in his hotel most of the time he was in Liberia.
“I was a linkage between all these different groups,”
he said. “I was making sure that everyone knew about
the strategies being deployed to get people to treatment
centers and then what was being done to educate people
and prevent further outbreak.”
Flaherty monitored what each group was doing on
spreadsheets, sharpening the organizational effort
to stop the outbreak. He’d prepare written reports
for the Liberian government, USAID and the CDC
on all the simultaneous activities to make sure they
adhered to an effective strategy.
Twice, he left Monrovia for rural Liberia. He traveled with the Liberian military and U.S. military officials to visit an Ebola treatment center in the Suakoko
district, run by the Los Angeles charity International
Medical Corps, and talked with local officials about the
roads and latest developments in the outbreak. While
•
• CLASS OF
JOIN YOUR CLASS
1965 MAY 1-3, 2015
for the reunion of a lifetime
Learn more about the reunion event
50th.wm.edu
W IN T E R 2014 Contribute to the 1965 Class Project
S hare what you’ve been up to
for the 1965 class Re-Echo
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W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
CONTENTS
46 Mr. Hollywood
48Designer
Dreams
50 Being the
Match
51 �You Always
Have a Home
Here’
52 Six Degrees of
W&M
54 Tribe Tapestry
D OWNHILL
RACER S
P H OTO : S K I P R OW L A N D ’ 8 3
W IN T E R 2014 Williamsburg doesn’t always
see a lot of snow, but when
it does William & Mary students take advantage, using
everything from mattresses
to lunch trays as sleds. These
students used cardboard
boxes for some sledding fun
down a hill on Ukrop Way.
W& M A LUM NI MAGAZI NE
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46
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
“Be ready to work, be ready to be rejected, be ready to lose. But be
willing to get back up and ask for more.”
Phil Sun ’06 worked
his way up from the
mailroom to agent
status at William
Morris Endeavor.
Mr. Hollywood
Phil Sun ’06 Finds Success Out West
P H OTO : C H R I S T I N A GA N D O L F O
W IN T E R 2014 ALU M N I P ROF I L E Working with world-renowned
actors such as Adam Sandler, Denzel Washington
and Clint Eastwood is just another day at the office
for Phil Sun ’06, an agent at William Morris Endeavor
Entertainment. But like many people in Hollywood,
Sun worked his way up — starting in the mailroom.
For Sun, who graduated from the College with
an international relations degree, pursuing a career
on Capitol Hill only seemed natural. However, he
decided that what came natural wasn’t what he
wanted, and he moved to Los Angeles instead. “Even
if it didn’t work out, I could look back and say I gave
L.A. a shot,” he said.
But it did work out. Landing an opportunity to be
a production assistant on the set of a film his brother
was co-producing, Sun had the chance to meet Parker
Posey, the star of the film, and the casting director on
the project, Kerry Barden. “Kerry gave me my next
job in casting, where I was lucky enough to meet
Steven Spielberg and work with Leslee Feldman at
DreamWorks,” Sun said. He then became a director’s assistant, where he worked with director Hans
Canosa, as well as actors Aaron Eckhart and Helena
Bonham Carter.
From there, Sun decided that a career in the entertainment industry was for him, and began to interview with different agencies. That’s where William
Morris Endeavor gave Sun his big break — offering
him a job in the mailroom.
Now Sun is thriving as an agent where his main
responsibility is to create and execute the overall strategies that help his clients reach their full potential.
Being an agent to many A-list clients, however, brings
great responsibility and a hectic schedule. “Every day
is a roller coaster going a million miles per hour,” Sun
said. “WME has business around the world, so normal
hours don’t really apply. You get up early in L.A. to
make calls to Europe, then move towards New York
City then to West Coast business hours, and then end
with Australia and Asia,” Sun said.
With hard work comes great reward. Recently
Sun earned a spot on The Hollywood Reporter’s
Next Gen Class of 2013, which featured young
up-and-coming executives in the categories of agents,
managers, film, TV, digital, legal and publicity. But for
Sun, being promoted to agent at WME is his biggest
accomplishment to date. “The agency has given me
my career, that’s for sure,” Sun said. “When you work
at an agency that has so many ambitious individuals,
it only makes you push yourself harder. With all of
the departments and outlets that we have across the
world, you can take your career, and your clients, in
whichever direction you want to go,” said Sun.
Though now living on the West Coast, Sun still
has fond memories of his time at the College. “What
I liked the most about W&M is the community,” said
Sun. “The fact that when you walked around, you
were sure to know at least one or two faces going
from Old Campus to New Campus. AndВ as you get
older, and especially as you move further from home,
you really cherish those types of things. Oh, and also
the Cheese Shop. Bread ends and dip — I definitely
miss that out in L.A.”
Sun also credits his time spent at William & Mary
in helping to prepare him for his career. “The best
thing about being an international relations major
was that it allowed me to explore so many subjects
across the board, rather than focusing solely on one
discipline,” said Sun. “Our professors always challenged us to think. Even if they knew our answers
were right, they wanted us to know why our answers
were right. And if we were missing the mark, they
made us feel comfortable being wrong in a safe environment, and challenged us to get it right.” He says
that this mindset he acquired from W&M — to always
be learning, take risks and don’t be afraid to fail — is
key to working in the entertainment industry.
Sun says that he will continue to push the bar as
high as it can go, for himself and his clients. And
for anyone who’s interested in pursuing a career in
the entertainment industry, Sun has these words of
advice: “Be ready to work, be ready to be rejected,
be ready to lose. But be willing to get back up, shake
it off and ask for more. And if you can do that with
a smile on your face, you might make it through.”
— LAU R EL OV ER BY
W& M A LUM NI MAGAZI NE
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In addition to her couture, contemporary and
bridal brands, Mikasa
La’Charles ’06 also runs
the Sketching Dreams
Camp, which encourages
young girls’ interests in
fashion design.
Designer Dreams
Mikasa La’Charles ’06 Has a Passion for Fashion
48
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E La’Charles to create a broader design aesthetic, and
to have more courage to put herself out there with
her designs.
“Studying abroad definitely helped to mold my creativeness,” La’Charles said. “When I would sketch, I
would think, �Am I too ahead of the curve?’ But when
I went to Italy, I would notice that the trends there
wouldn’t reach the States until about two years later.
I learned that even though my designs might not have
been something the States would gravitate to any
time soon, I knew it was something that was stylish
enough that they would eventually.”
And she was right — her designs did catch on. So
much so that right after graduation, La’Charles landed
an internship with an internationally distributed
streetwear clothing brand called Shmack Clothing,
housed under the RP55 Group, a well-known clothing
sales and distribution company based out of Virginia
Beach, Va. After interning for a short three months,
she was offered a full-time position and stayed with
the company for three years as an executive assistant
and later as an e-commerce manager. La’Charles then
landed a position as an associate account executive in
WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
P H OTO S : V I S UA L D I A L E C T S
For Mikasa La’Charles ’06, fashion is in her blood. With both her mother and aunt
modeling professionally all over the world, it was
only natural that La’Charles developed her passion
for fashion at an early age.
She remembers that as a 5-year-old, she sat
at her kitchen table in her childhood home in
Philadelphia, doodling different shapes, piecing
them together and calling them shirts. When she
finished her sketches, La’Charles took the paper to
her mom, asking her if this is something she could
do forever. Her mom replied, “Yes, Mikasa. They’re
called fashion designers.” And at that moment,
La’Charles discovered her destiny.
“No matter how my career interest changed as I
grew up, fashion was always on my mind.” One day
she would say, “I want to be a doctor … and a fashion
designer.” And the next day she would say, “I want
to be a lawyer … and a fashion designer.”
While at William & Mary, this dream began to
become a reality when she had the opportunity to
study abroad in Europe on three different occasions. Being able to travel internationally allowed
ALU M N I P ROF I L E
“I also want my clothing to appeal to a mass audience,
because not everyone would wear what Rihanna would wear.”
New York City with a women’s contemporary fashion
brand called Laundry by Shelli Segal.
Now with her own brands, House of VII Jewels,
Mikasa La’Charles and Bridal Veil Bar, La’Charles
continues to design her own clothing collections. In
2012, those designs caught the eye of the people of
Charleston Fashion Week. La’Charles was selected
as one of the Top 20 Emerging Fashion Designers
along the East Coast.
When designing her collections, La’Charles says
she finds inspiration from the people in her personal
life and celebrities. “When I’m designing, I think,
�Would Rihanna wear this?’” La’Charles said. “But I
also want my clothing to appeal to a mass audience,
because not everyone would wear what Rihanna
would wear.” And when asked about her personal
style, she labels herself as a chameleon. “It varies
with my mood, which is what makes fashion so great.”
For La’Charles, a career in fashion was always her
main priority, until she had her now 3-year-old son,
Hunter. However, being a single mom with a thriving
business hasn’t slowed her down for even a second.
“When people found out I was expecting, they told
me they were surprised I decided to continue my
career in fashion since it takes so much of my time,”
said La’Charles. “But I have been lucky to maintain
a good balance between the both. Hunter serves as
a main motivation for me to continue pursuing my
career because I want to be an excellent mom and
provider, but also create opportunities for myself and
a career that he can reap the benefits from.”
Like any other business owner, La’Charles had
to learn a lot of lessons along the way. She credits
the skills she learned at William & Mary for helping
her get so far in the fashion industry. “The College
allowed me to develop a strong business mindset,”
she said. “It helped me to prioritize my time, and to
be able to multitask well, which has helped me handle
the pressure of meeting deadlines and the stress of
this industry. Also, because of the diverse student
body, I learned how to comfortably develop relationships with all kinds of different people.”
La’Charles’ brands continue to enjoy success and she
has big plans for her future, including working her way
into more department stores, as well as opening her
own brick-and-mortar store. “If I had a job that wasn’t
in fashion, I would be crying,” said La’Charles. “There’s
honestly nothing else I want to do.” —
LAUREL OVERBY
YOUNG GUARDE WEEKEND 2015
FEBRUARY 6-8, 2015
W IN T E R 2014 W& M A LUM NI MAGAZI NE
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Being the Match
Campus Bone Marrow Drive Helps Save Lives
During the College’s
fall drive day, donors
who are entered into
the registry have their
cheeks swabbed, and give
contact information and
other vital statistics.
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E Those who are entered into the registry simply
have their cheek swabbed and give contact information and some other vital statistics. Each registry
entry costs about $100, and the campus organization
fundraises throughout the year in order to register as
many people as possible. Some common fundraisers
are a 5K run/walk, golf tournament, silent auction
and T-shirt sales.
Co-chair Lindy Sellew ’16 said that fundraising
can be challenging. “There are so many organizations
[on campus] with causes that all deserve support,
and students have to choose which cause their limited resources go towards.” Sellew believes that the
College has been so successful in maintaining a legacy with the drive because of W&M students’ dedication to service and their giving nature.
Matthew Lambert ’99, vice president for
University Advancement, registered with the drive
as an undergraduate. In 2010, more than a decade
after he entered the registry, Lambert received a
phone call from the national organization informing
him that he could be a potential match for a young
boy with a rare type of cancer. He felt compelled to
donate because he had a young son at the time.
WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
P H OTO S : S K I P R OW LOA N D ’ 8 3
50
G I VI N G BAC K “Doesn’t it hurt really bad?” As
co-chair of the College’s Alan Bukzin Memorial Bone
Marrow Drive, Troy Thomas ’16 hears this question
often. Thomas himself has donated peripheral blood
stem cells, and explains that he was never apprehensive about the process. He even attended a Buffalo
Bills football game the day before the procedure, and
felt like normal after it was over.
William & Mary’s bone marrow drive, part of
the national organization Be the Match, began in
1991 when a professor was in need of a life-saving bone marrow transplant. The drive continued
under the direction of Jay Bukzin ’94, who was
searching for a matching donor for his brother
Alan, diagnosed with leukemia. The drive is named
in Alan’s honor.
Since the drive’s inception, more than 9,000 people have been registered with Be the Match, and
nearly 100 matches have been made. The program
has received multiple awards, including recognition
by the Virginia General Assembly and the Collegiate
Award from the National Marrow Donor Program.
For the 2013-14 school year, William & Mary was
the top fundraising campus in the nation.
“I hoped that if my son needed a transplant, someone
would do the same thing for us.”
Unlike blood-type matching, tissue-type matching for patients with blood cancers is complicated,
and 70 percent of patients do not have a donor in
their family. Donations are possible from one of two
sources: marrow collection through a surgical procedure or peripheral blood stem cell (PBSC) collection,
which is more common and less invasive.
When PBSC collection proved unsuccessful for
Lambert, he chose to move forward with surgery. “I
hoped that if I was in the same position, or that my
son needed a transplant, someone would do the same
thing for us,” he said. “I hoped that you would give
them every chance to fight for their life.”
Lambert says that he still receives updates from
classmates who registered as undergraduates and
have not been a match, but who continue to update
their information frequently in the event that they
are selected as a potential donor. Additionally, those
who are considering whether to donate ask him questions about the pain and the process. Like Thomas,
he believes that the pain is negligible compared to
the impact of potentially saving a life.
If you would like to donate to the Alan Bukzin
Memorial Bone Marrow Drive, please send checks
payable to “Bone Marrow Drive” to Office of the Vice
President for Student Affairs, College of William &
Mary, P.O. Box 8795, Williamsburg, VA 23187-8795.
Alumni and guests are also welcome to participate at
any event held on campus, including drive day or the
spring golf tournament. For more information, check
the organization’s website at http://wmbethematch.
weebly.com/. — ASHL EY MU RPHY ’15
�You Always Have
a Home Here’
The Gift of the Tribe Experience
ONE TRIBE. ONE FAMILY.
Denise Sheehan ’79
finds many reasons to
return to campus.
“I know when I was a student it never
dawned on me to work for the government.”
The middle link in a multigenerational alumni family,
Denise Sheehan ’79 came to campus in early November
for a presentation at the Cohen Career Center about
her work with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. “I
want to share knowledge with students who are about
to come out of college,” she said. Judging from her
workshop packed with inquisitive undergrads, students saw great value in her presence.
P H OTO : S TAC E Y B U S B E E S U M M E R F I E L D ’ 0 4
“When Justin was only a toddler,
I purchased an inscribed brick that
was laid at the Alumni House.”
Hailing from Altoona, Pa., Sheehan said that most students from her high school went to Penn State. But her
father, George Sheehan ’49 — a good friend of Sam
Sadler ’64, M.Ed. ’71, former vice president for student
affairs — encouraged her to attend William & Mary.
“There is no way to capture how valuable it has
been to me,” Sheehan said of her W&M education.
“It was a gift from my father.” With her son Justin
’18 now enrolled as a freshman, the gift of the Tribe
experience is coming full circle.
W IN T E R 2014 “If you want to feel grounded,
W&M is a good place to return to,
especially if you’ve had a lot
of change in your life.”
Sheehan cites many occasions when she’s come
back to W&M — from an acceptance dinner for
Northern Virginia freshmen, to a sociology department gathering, to the time she and her college
roommate from Albuquerque road-tripped to campus. “If you want to feel grounded, William & Mary
is a good place to return to, especially if you’ve had
a lot of change in your life. People get older, parents
pass away and things happen, but William & Mary
always looks and feels the same. You always have
a home here.”
Sheehan shares what most alumni know as that
intangible, nearly indescribable, feeling of belonging, purpose and camaraderie that comes only from
attending William & Mary. By offering a little time
and wisdom to current students, gathering with
other alumni, and attending a Tribe event every now
and again, she demonstrates how that feeling can
be reignited and sustained through ongoing engagement with our alma mater.
— W I LL M O R R I S ’ 1 1
W& M A LUM NI MAGAZI NE
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“William & Mary grads gave me a community in a place where I knew
absolutely no one. I think that’s something special.”
The Class of 1975 has created
the Staying Connected:
Together Serving Others
project, which has made
efforts to rally classmates to
reach out and give back to the
William & Mary community.
Six Degrees of W&M
The Staying Connected Project
52
W& M A LUMNI M AGA Z I N E WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
P H OTO : S T E P H E N S A L P U K A S
for and what kind of industry would be the best fit,
she began utilizing the resources of the Cohen Career
Center. Working with some of the center’s online networking tools, Becker met Van Black.
Black suggested that Becker come to Dallas for
an informational interview with a customer of his.
During her trip, Black introduced her to Ann ’75 and
Mark Woolley ’77. This simple introduction planted
the seeds of what has grown to be the current Tribe
Partners program at the Career Center. This program connects students at the College with alumni
throughout the country, helping them network and
providing them with coaching to explore potential
career paths and opportunities.
Becker’s informational interview resulted in a
post-graduation summer internship. More than
1,300 miles away from Williamsburg, Becker didn’t
expect to make many more Tribe connections, but
the William & Mary Alumni Association told her of
Senior-year stresses, alumni connections
other alums in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.
and post-grad friendships
“Because I wasn’t staying down there permaFour years ago, when Rachel Becker ’11 was faced with
deciding what type of company she wanted to work nently, I didn’t go out of my way to meet new peoONE TRIBE. ONE FAMILY. Since 1693, the College of
William & Mary has educated students and, by result,
produced bright and notable alumni whose memories
of Williamsburg remain in their minds and hearts for
decades. With such strong memories, it is no wonder
that many alumni decide to give back to the wider
William & Mary community through donations of
their time, talent and treasure.
But the Class of 1975 has gone beyond traditional
alumni outreach campaigns. Over a four-year period,
the Staying Connected: Together Serving Others
project — initiated by Van Black ’75 — has made special efforts to rally classmates to reach out and give
back to all six degrees of the William & Mary community. The stories below spotlight both those touched
by the Staying Connected project and particularly
philanthropic supporters of Staying Connected.
ple,” Becker said. “But I ended up hanging out with
William & Mary grads all summer. They gave me a
community in a place where I knew absolutely no
one. None of us were close friends in college, yet
we managed to spend a couple hours talking about
William & Mary. I think that’s something special.”
Philanthropic alums preserving College
history
The Woolleys like to give back to the College community — and its history — in a tangible way.
Recognizing the need to preserve William & Mary
Choir scrapbooks and materials, they started the
William & Mary Choir preservation project.
“We realized there were a lot of scrapbooks and
other materials saved, but they were aging and some
were deteriorating,” Mark said. “Through this project, we’ve been able to connect many generations
— from the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s to current students.”
The couple plans two archiving sessions each
year. The full-day sessions include archiving and
socializing, making new connections and strengthening long-term friendships.
Green-and-gold households
In many ways, the Woolleys epitomize a number of
William & Mary couples — over a quarter of alums
marry another alum.
“I honestly think that living on campus for four
years engenders a sense of family and togetherness,”
said John Farrell ’89, husband of Kerry Farrell ’89.
“It really lets you know if you’re going to be compatible. If you can get through that as a couple for
four years, you’re really setting the stage for a lasting
relationship.”
Not surprisingly, the children of many of these
alumni couples, raised in green-and-gold households, grow to become William & Mary graduates
themselves. The Woolleys’ daughter Jennifer, for
example, graduated in 2006. The Farrells’ son Victor
graduated in May 2014.
Reaching out to the community
Sam Pressler ’15 epitomizes William & Mary’s culture of service. During his sophomore year, Pressler
read about the challenges military veterans face
when returning from war. One article reported that
22 veterans take their own lives each day. This resonated with Pressler. Having lost a family member to
suicide, he recognized the scope of suffering felt by
the families of veterans lost to suicide.
Shortly thereafter, Pressler saw an article in
the New York Times about Ron Capps, a veteran
whose suicide attempt was interrupted by a phone
call. Capps used the GI bill to attend Johns Hopkins
W IN T E R 2014 University and obtain a master’s in creative writing.
Discovering the therapeutic nature of writing, Capps
began the Veterans Writing Project (VWP), a free
creative writing program dedicated to helping veterans tell their stories. Reading about Capps’ work,
Pressler started the Williamsburg chapter of the
VWP, housed at the Law School’s Lewis B. Puller,
Jr. Veterans Benefits Clinic.
The first VWP seminar was held in December 2013
and included 25 veterans from Williamsburg and the
surrounding area. Today, the VWP has evolved into
the Center for Veterans Engagement, which offers
a variety of arts-oriented programming including
creative writing, music and comedy to the veterans’
community of Greater Hampton Roads. With over
40 student volunteers and $15,000 in funding, the
center aims to serve more than 100 veterans in the
2014-15 academic year.
Staying Connected
While Van Black is often referred to as “the brains”
behind the Staying Connected project, he describes
Staying Connected member Barb Ramsey ’75 as a
perfect example of “the heart.”
When Ramsey moved back to Williamsburg in
2009, she attended an alumni picnic, and, finding
it warm and welcoming, she continued to attend
functions at the College. Eventually, she joined
the Williamsburg-area Alumni Chapter Board, the
Annual Giving Board and the Lord Botetourt Auction
committee, which raises funds for student-athletes.
“I started volunteering my time partially as an outlet, and also it’s good to give back because I believe in
the College and what it does,” Ramsey said.
In addition to her positions on boards and her
involvement on campus, Ramsey and her neighbors
frequently host students and alumni at their homes
for events, including the fifth annual open-invitation Homecoming brunch at Ramsey’s home this
past October.
“This year, I became close to my personal trainer
at the Rec Center, so a friend and I went to the Wren
Courtyard and watched the seniors walk through,”
Ramsey said. “While we were waiting for my trainer,
I saw a number of students I knew from the Annual
Giving Board, the Rec Center, or who were my neighbors. It made me realize how many students I knew
who had impacted my life.”
This Homecoming, the Class of 1975 completed
the fourth year of Staying Connected. And next year
they’ll celebrate their 40-year Reunion, as they continue to give back to the William & Mary community.
To learn more about Staying Connected, contact
Van Black at jvbblack@sbcglobal.net.
— MEREDI TH RAMEY ’15
W& M A LUM NI MAGAZI NE
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21
27
29
Tribe
Tapestry
20
Alumni Stay Connected
From Coast to Coast
Atlanta
alumni supported
Tribe football and
were featured on the
scoreboard during their
Homecoming game
watch. Alumni, family
and friends enjoyed
a Yule Log celebration in December at
the home of Carrie
and Dan Gallik ’88.
2 . BOS TON Boston
alumni met for pancakes and handshakes
at a networking breakfast in September.
In December, the
chapter hosted a Yule
Log celebration.
1. ATL A NTA
and all alumni ended
the year with an annual
Yule Log celebration at
the home of Karen ’72
and Lou Burnett ’73.
5. C H AR LOT T E N C
Charlotte alumni
cheered on the Tribe
to victory over New
Hampshire at their
game watch in October,
and greeted the holidays
in December with a Yule
Log celebration at the
home of David ’97 and
Rebecca Klepser ’99.
6. C H AR LOT T ESVI L L E
VA Alumni met at King
Family Vineyard in
September for a picnic
and polo matches. In
3 . BOTETOUR T
December, Dan ’62
C HA PTER Alumni in
Mathews and Gloucester and Stuart Dopp ’62
welcomed alumni to
counties celebrated
their home for a Yule
the College tradition of
Yule Log this December Log celebration.
at the Bay School with
7. C H I C AG O Alumni
family and friends.
welcomed the Class of
2014 to the Windy City
4 . C HA RLES TON SC
at a Tribe Thursday, and
In the Charleston
welcomed President
Lowcountry, alumni
Reveley at an alumni
hosted a private
reception hosted by
tour and reception
Marina and Daniel
at Drayton Hall, and
Draper ’91, David E.
a Tribe Tailgate to
McNeel ’72, and Michael
support men’s soccer.
and Patricia Nelson P ’16.
Young Alumni Third
The chapter also held
Thursdays continued
54
W& M A LUMNI M AGA Z I N E Tribe football game
watches during the
Homecoming and
Richmond games, with
Chicago alumni featured
on the Homecoming
game scoreboard.
8 . DA L L A S / F T. WO R TH
The Dallas/Ft. Worth
Alumni Chapter
officially organized in
October. They were
thrilled to host their
first event for alumni,
family and friends in
December with a Yule
Log celebration.
9 . WA S H IN GTO N D C
The fall started with a
sold-out alumni reception at the Embassy
of Ecuador, where a
$10,000 local scholarship goal for 2014 was
announced. Throughout
the summer and fall, a
team of alumni helped
by raising almost
$11,000 while training
for and running the
Marine Corps Marathon.
October ended with a
private walking tour
of haunted pubs led by
Lee Rodrigues ’10. In
November, alumni met
for bowling, bocce and
brunch, and throughout
the fall, Tribe football
game watches were
held. Alumni gathered in
December for a chance
to sit on the Griffin’s lap
for holiday photos and a
Yule Log celebration at
the National Press Club.
10 . H O U S TO N Houston
alumni kicked off the fall
with a Tribe Thursday
in October, and Barb
and Bill Benham ’70 welcomed alumni to their
home for their annual
Yule Log celebration.
11. LOWE R N O R T H E RN
N E C K VA In October,
alumni met at the
Indian Creek Yacht
and Country Club to
enjoy an oyster roast.
In December, alumni
started the holiday
season with a party
at the Steamboat Era
Museum in Irvington.
12 . LOW ER
P E N INS UL A VA
In
October, alumni in
the Lower Peninsula
traveled up to the
Alumni House for their
annual oyster roast.
13 . MA RYL A ND
The Maryland chapter
was excited to start
this fall by hosting a
Homecoming game
WWW.WMALUMNI .COM
their annual Yule Log
celebration at Oceanside
Beach in December.
2
21. SEATTLE
14
The chapter held their
organizational meeting
in October. More opportunities for Seattle-area
alumni to engage with
the College and each
other to come in 2015!
7
16
17
25
28
13
9
6
26
19
11
3
18 24 22
12
5
1
4
8
15
10
23
watch in October and
Yule Log celebration in December.
I L LU S T R AT I O N : E D UA R D O R E C I F E
14. NEW YORK C I T Y
Alumni cheered on
the Tribe at their
Homecoming game
watch and were featured on the scoreboard during the game.
Alumni then met at
the end of October
for a Downtown
Manhattan Ghost
Tour. In December,
alumni held a Yule Log
celebration at their
new home, the William
& Mary Club of New
York City, hosted by
W IN T E R 2014 Molly Ashby ’81, David
Kelley ’81, Nora and
Matthew Lentz ’96,
and Holly ’93 and
John Simmons ’92.
15. N OR T H F LOR I DA
In November, alumni
in North Florida met to
cheer on the Tribe men’s
basketball team as they
took on the Florida
Gators in Gainesville.
16. P H I L AD EL P H I A
Philly alumni cheered
on the Tribe at a
Homecoming game
watch in October and
were featured on the
game scoreboard, then
hosted an All Virginia
Schools Happy Hour
in November and held
a Yule Log celebration in December.
17. P ITT S B U RG H
Alumni in Pittsburgh
continued to gather
this fall for monthly
Tribe Thursdays.
In December, the
chapter held a Yule
Log celebration.
18 . RIC H M O N D VA
Alumni started the fall
with an Alumni Charity
Challenge against other
Virginia schools at
Hardywood Brewery,
and First Table events
were held each month.
In October, alumni
continued their tradition of participating
in the Homecoming
Parade. In November,
Young Guarde alumni
met during a reception
at Secco Wine Bar. The
year ended in style at a
grand Yule Log celebration featuring President
and Mrs. Reveley at the
Jefferson Hotel, hosted
by Marshall Acuff ’62,
the Mason School of
Business, the Richmond
Chapter and the W&M
Alumni Association.
19 . ROA N O KE VA
Judie M.B.A. ’88 and
Lucas Snipes ’73 opened
their home to host
alumni for an annual
Yule Log celebration in December.
2 0 . SA N F RA N CIS C O
BAY A RE A
Alumni cheered on
the Tribe during their
Homecoming game
watch in October, met
for a Tribe Thursday
in November, and held
2 2 . SO UTH H A MPTO N
ROA D S VA W&M
alumni defeated teams
from U.Va. during a
Trivia Night held in
September. In October,
a reception featuring
President Reveley was
hosted by Dianne P ’08,
’10 and Thomas Frantz
’70, J.D. ’73, M.L.T. ’81,
P ’08, ’10, John and
Marianne Little, and
Elizabeth McLeod
’83, M.B.A. ’91 and
Goodenow Tyler III
HON ’11. Alumni gathered to cheer on the
Tribe in football and
men’s basketball. Connie
and Ed Kellam ’70 welcomed alumni to their
home for a Yule Log celebration in December.
2 3 . SO UTH W ES T
F LO RIDA Southwest
Florida alumni joined
together at the home
of Jake and Sherry
Smith, parents of Erica
Smith ’99, for a Yule
Log celebration.
2 4 . WILLIA MS B URG
Williamsburg Tribe
Thursdays this fall
featured Cohen Career
Center Executive
Director Kathleen
Powell and School of
W& M A LUM NI MAGAZI NE
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Education Dean Spencer
Niles. In December,
alumni enjoyed a holiday wine tasting at the
Muscarelle and celebrated Yule Log festivities with the College.
’85, Jennie Reigelman
Hulette ’90, John
Fendig J.D. ’91, Derika
Wells Mercer ’91, and
Michael and Serena
Hirn J.D. ’94 hosted a
reception for alumni
in Northern Kentucky.
ACTIVE REGIONS
25. C OLUMBUS/
CENTRAL OHIO
27. P OR T L AN D OR
Alumni gathered in
Columbus for a Tribe
Thursday in October.
Many thanks to
Todd Anderson ’96,
M.B.A. ’03 for organizing this event.
26. LOUISVILLE In
November, Milton and
Sandra Reigelman ’64,
Virginia Cox Evans
Alumni met in
December to celebrate the College’s
Yule Log tradition.
28. S T. LOU I S In
October, St. Louis–
area alumni cheered
on Tribe football
at a Homecoming
game watch.
29. TOKYO W&M
alumni gathered in
Tokyo to show their
Pep Band in the parade,
the pep rally and the
game, and also particiHWA came together
pated in Bandemonium,
over Homecoming to
enjoy an alumni concert the Wind Ensemble
from Ebony Expressions Homecoming concert.
ABO current and
Gospel Choir, and then
future alumni also
participated in the
met for an annual
All-Alumni Tailgate.
meeting and preA LU M N I BA N D
game luncheon.
O RGA N IZ AT IO N
Tribe spirit, and
they look forward to
hosting future alumni
events. Check out their
new Facebook page,
William & Mary Japan
Alumni, for pictures
from the fall reception and to learn more
about future events.
H U LO N WIL L IS
A S S O CIAT IO N ( H WA )
A F F IN IT Y G RO U P S
W& M GAY A N D
L E S B IA N A LU M N I/ A E
A S S O CIATIO N ( GA L A )
( A BO )
Over Homecoming,
GALA participated
in the 2014 John
Boswell Memorial
Lecture and hosted an
alumni reception in the
Tucker Hall Foyer.
This fall, ABO alumni
raised over $3,000
to support the Wind
Ensemble’s upcoming trip to China
and the Pep Band’s
trip to the Towson
University game. Over
Homecoming, ABO
alumni played with the
O RD ER O F TH E W H ITE
JAC K ET ( OW J)
OWJ alumni kicked off
Homecoming with a
reception to honor this
year’s student scholarship recipients. In 2014,
OWJ awarded over
$60,000 in scholarships
to W&M students who
work in food service.
WILLIAM & MARY
ALUMNI
BRICK
PROGRAM
Order online at www.wmalumni.com/brick
or contact Cindy Gillman at
757.221.1168 or cbgill@wm.edu
56
W& M A LUM N I M AGA Z I N E WWW.WMALUMNI .COM