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Airtran fails to fly

Coming back to school from breaks can be emotionally difficult for some students, but it may soon become physically harder to do as well.

AirTran Airways announced in August that it would cease operations in four airports across the country, including Williamsburg’s very own Patrick Henry Field. The company, which recently became a subsidiary of Southwest Airlines, cited the troubled economy and high fuel prices as reasons for the service cuts.

“I really do regret that AirTran is pulling out of the nearest commercial airport to the College of William and Mary,” College President Taylor Reveley said. “This is not good for us, whether students, faculty or staff. This is almost bound to mean fewer flights to [New York City], in particular, and higher fares for the flights that are left.”

Services to Williamsburg will continue through March 9, 2012. The airline will directly contact any ticketholders who have made travel plans beyond the cutoff date.

“I’ve used AirTran since freshman year,” New York native Stephanie Monohan ’12 said. “It’s definitely inconvenient because it’s a 20 minute drive to [Newport News/Williamsburg International] and a 50 minute flight to New York.”

Monohan was surprised by the news of the cancellation.

“I think they got a lot of business from students, so I’m kind of surprised they would cancel service,” she said. “It’s kind of unfortunate — I used the airline enough that I thought they would have sent me an email or something.”

With AirTran gone from the Williamsburg airport, students will have few other inexpensive options for flying north. Delta and U.S. Airways will remain.

“Competition is vital to holding fares down. And, of course, the more flights to places that lots of us need to go, the more convenient,” Reveley said. “Unfortunately, the Richmond airport, also reasonably close to the College, has also lost airlines, resulting in fewer flights and higher prices.”

Allegiant Airlines, a subsidiary of Allegiant Travel Company, is new to Patrick Henry Field and hopes to fill the gap left by AirTran but will offer fewer destinations than the bargain flight giant.

“Our business model is different from most airlines,” Allegiant media representative Kristine Shattuck-Cooper said. “We do fly from small communities to what we consider world-class leisure destinations. We’re not totally replacing AirTran; we’re just filling a different market.”

The Las Vegas-based company, which specializes in vacation packages, currently only offers flights to Sanford International Airport in Orlando, Fla.

Shattuck-Cooper said that Allegiant considers the local market when deciding on possible destinations.
“I will tell you that we look at population — we do interact with customers in the area to get a feel of travel habits,” she said.

In addition to the cancellation in Williamsburg, AirTran is terminating services for Asheville Regional in North Carolina, Atlantic City International, and Quad City International in Moline, Ill.

Creative Services loses director of two years

The Griffin is here to stay, but the woman who helped bring him to the College of William and Mary is moving on. Director Susan Evans is leaving the Office of Creative Services Friday to share her communication and technology skills with campuses across the country.

“I’ve had a wonderful, wonderful time here,” Evans said. “I’ve been really, really fortunate to be at William and Mary.”

Spending time in the Human Resources and Information Technology offices before taking the helm of the new Office of Creative Services two years ago, Evans has worked at the College for more than two decades.

She has overseen the redesign of the College website, the creation of smart phone applications and the communications strategy for the mascot search.

“She led the creation of this organization that has put William and Mary at the cutting edge of university communications,” Vice President for Strategic Initiatives Jim Golden said.

Creative Services was formed two years ago as a result of the merger between the publications office and the Information Technology web department. Golden said the Creative Services team members have had a dramatic impact on the College, citing their work making smart phone applications and December’s digital holiday greeting card. Evans, Golden said, has been indispensible.

“She has been absolutely essential,” Golden said. “She is a brilliant leader. She has formed a very creative, innovative team, and they all think the world of her.”

Evans will become the senior strategist for mStoner, a higher education marketing and communications firm based in Chicago. Although she and her husband, government professor Larry Evans, will continue to live in Williamsburg, she will travel several times a year to different universities.

When asked to reflect on what Creative Services has accomplished, even Evans seemed surprised.

“Wow, we’ve done a lot,” she said.

Evans highlighted several projects. In March, Creative Services consolidated the College’s calendars into one master online events schedule. The team created a mobile website to allow people to view the College’s web page on their smart phones; the school now ranks among the 10 percent of universities in that have mobile websites.

“I’m really proud of the launch of the Griffin as the new mascot of William and Mary,” Evans said. “I’m really proud of the Dress-The-Griffin app we developed a year ago.”

Evans said future Creative Services projects will include updating the website and moving the course catalogue online. She and Golden expressed confidence in the continued excellence of the office.

“They will continue to do the great things they’ve been doing under my leadership,” Evans said. “One person doesn’t make a whole team. There have been a lot of people doing a lot of great work for a long time, and I think that will continue.”

Associate Director of Creative Services Tina Coleman has been named interim director while the College conducts a search for Evans’ replacement.

“I am excited for this opportunity,” Coleman said in an email. “Susan has done so many great things for the Creative Services team and for William & Mary and I hope to continue the momentum we’ve created.”

College joins presidential interfaith service group

Service has always been a defining characteristic of the College of William and Mary, and now the College has been given the opportunity to join with other universities in a national service challenge.

In August, the College was selected to participate in the President’s Interfaith and Community Service Campus Challenge, a program initiated by the White House to promote understanding between different communities through service.

“We’re challenging students, administrators, and citizens to work together on year-long service projects that strengthen their communities, and unite people across religious and cultural lines,” President Barack Obama said in a press release.

The College will be implementing two service projects as part of this challenge. Students will partner with the non-profit organization Pathways in Petersburg and two Williamsburg-James City County schools.

At the local schools, College students will serve as mentors to students in grades K-12, talking with them about the importance of service and helping them plan and coordinate their own service activities.

“The goal is to take the value of service and community engagement that we celebrate at William and Mary and share that with the next generation coming behind our students,” Vernon Hurte, director of the Center for Student Diversity, said.

Because one of the goals of the challenge is to promote interfaith cooperation, Campus Ministries United and I-Faith will facilitate discussions between participants to give them the opportunity to talk about service.

Just as diverse communities will be brought together on campus, the challenge brought diverse institutions together on a national level. At a White House kick-off for the challenge, Hurte, who represented the College with Drew Stelljes, director of community engagement, took note of the variety of institutions involved.

“I really enjoy thinking about the energy that was in the room, and the diversity of the different types of institutions: public, private, religiously affiliated and historically black institutions,” Hurte said. “It was really great to hear some of the projects and initiatives that are going on at other schools, and to just feel that energy was a great opportunity.”

What this challenge can do for the campus community and the nation seemed to resonate with Stelljes.

“This initiative is about accepting challenges and challenging assumptions,” Stelljes said. “It’s speaking with a voice louder than you ever knew you had — by writing, collaborating joining peers in a mighty effort for a cause greater than you’ve ever imaged and going more, everyday. [It’s] reaching the end of a journey that signals the start of a new, longer, more complicated but more noble life that has purpose and character, meaning and depth and reason and where time is of the essence.”

AT&T stalls installation of tower for second year

Countless phone calls have been dropped and text messages missed for AT&T users at the College of William and Mary. While construction work on the long-promised AT&T antenna systems built to improve wireless service on campus is complete, the company has delayed attaching its service to the equipment.

In Oct. 2010, AT&T said its coverage was expected to improve on campus by the end of that year. However, construction was postponed multiple times, first to Feb. 2011, then to March, and now, according to the company, it will begin “soon.”

“We are committed to providing a high quality experience for all of our customers and have been working closely with [Crown Castle] to attach our mobile broadband service to their equipment as quickly as possible,” AT&T representative Gayle Kansagor said in an email. “At this point, it isn’t possible to give you an estimated time of completion, but please know this is a priority and we are working on it.”

The College has worked with Crown Castle International, a communications company that builds cell phone towers and antenna systems in the United States and Australia, over the past year to install antennas at Zable Stadium and the Marshall-Wythe School of Law. The construction was approved by the Williamsburg Planning Commission in Sept. 2009, and contracts with wireless carriers such as AT&T, Verizon and Sprint have been deliberated over the past two years.

Distributed antenna systems are the only means of providing cell phone coverage in the area since the City of Williamsburg has prohibited cell phone carriers and third-party companies from building large cell phone towers in order to maintain the historic look of the community.

A representative from Crown Castle said it was the responsibility of individual carriers to install their service to the antennae in order to deploy the system. Kansagor said the wireless carrier is working to attach its services to the antenna system but could not give an estimate for its completion.

“Williamsburg is definitely a priority for AT&T, and we are working as quickly as possible with our partners to improve service on your campus,” Kansagor said in an email. “Unfortunately, it can sometimes take longer than expected to make these types of network improvements.”

Kansagor declined to elaborate on the cause of the delay.

“Because multiple players are involved, I’m not at liberty to share any more detailed information,” Kansagor said in an email.

Courtney Carpenter, chief information officer for Information Technology at the College, said the construction on the antenna system — implemented by the College and Crown Castle — had been completed, but that AT&T still needed to finish installing its equipment onto the systems.

“They’re working on it as we speak,” Carpenter said. “I’ve been told that it’s supposed to be completed within the next month, but that could easily change.”

AT&T user Laura Caligiuri ’12 has refrained from switching to another wireless carrier because the reception with AT&T is very good in her hometown, but said the poor cell phone service on campus has been frustrating throughout her four years at the College.

“It’s something I have gotten used to,” Caligiuri said. “But there have been moments missing calls and texts that have been annoying. Nonetheless, I do think it’s something the College should address in case of some sort of emergency.”

Chancellor announced

The College of William and Mary will soon add another famous alumnus to its list of figureheads: former U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates ’65 will serve as the 24th Chancellor of the College of William and Mary, College President Taylor Reveley announced Tuesday.

Gates will take over as chancellor from retired U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Sandra Day O’Connor at the Charter Day ceremony in 2012. O’Connor has held the position since 2005.

“I congratulate Robert Gates on his selection as the twenty-fourth Chancellor of the College of William & Mary,” President Barack Obama said in a press release. “In Bob, one of our nation’s oldest colleges has found one of our nation’s finest public servants. I’m confident that Bob will bring to this new role the same sense of duty and personal integrity that I and other Presidents valued during his distinguished career in government.“

Gates graduated from the College in 1965 with a Bachelor’s Degree in history and was a member of the Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity. He received the Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award, which is granted based on characteristics of heart, mind and helpfulness to others.

“William & Mary is known around the world as an exceptional school which produces up-and-coming national and world leaders,” Gates said in a press release. “In addition to an outstanding education, William & Mary instills in its students a sense of duty to community and country. I look forward to doing all that I can to continue and build on these traditions.”

After leaving the College, Gates went on to become president of Texas A&M University, Deputy Director of the CIA and Secretary of Defense.

“[It] seems to me that having as our 24th Chancellor an alumnus of Bob Gates’ distinction in national and international affairs, as well as his commitment to public service, will make the W&M community as a whole — certainly including students — very happy,” Reveley said. “It’s a real plus for the College to have an alumnus who has done what Gates has done in national and international affairs and who has been as committed to public service as Bob has been.”

The honorary position of chancellor has been a tradition at the College, dating back to its 1693 founding. The chancellor initially was an English subject and served as the College’s advocate to the crown. Now, the chancellor is primarily a figurehead, participating in major ceremonies and campus events and meeting periodically with students and other members of the campus community. Gates will be the first College alumnus in the modern era to serve as chancellor.

“We are thrilled to welcome back former-Secretary Robert Gates in this new role,” Brian Whitson, Director of University Relations, said. “This is great news for William and Mary. Bob Gates serves as a shining example of someone who has devoted their life to public service. As an alumnus, he has remained very engaged with the College since he graduated.”

Students and administrators reacted to President Obama’s endorsement of Gates’ appointment with pride.

“I think [President Obama’s statement] speaks to the level of respect our nation’s leaders have for the former secretary,” Whitson said. “As the release states, he is the first Secretary of Defense in U.S. history to serve under presidents of both political parties. We are very fortunate that our students and members of the campus community will have access to someone with his experience and knowledge. So far, response both on and off campus has been overwhelmingly positive.”

How the College has changed since Sept. 11

Most students at the College of William and Mary were sitting in their elementary school classrooms 10 years ago when word spread that terrorists had attacked New York City and the Pentagon. The events of Sept. 11, 2001 shaped not only the formative years of an entire generation, but by stirring in them curiosity about foreign policy and the Middle East, also influenced their higher education.

“It definitely played a large part in shaping my childhood and academic interests,” Caroline Raschbaum ’14 said. “After Sept. 11, I feel as though I became much more politically aware. Even though I was only in fourth grade, I watched the news every day with my parents and talked a lot about the government and its actions.”

Enrollment in religious studies, international relations and non-Western language classes has soared over the past decade as more and more students become interested in studying the Arab world. Research conducted by students at American University in Washington shows that current college students are more likely to pursue careers in international relations, study languages, watch the news and be politically active due to the impact of Sept. 11.

At the College, the new multidisciplinary Asian and Middle Eastern studies department will offer a concentration and four minors for the first time this year. Religious studies professor Tamara Sonn correlated the growing desire among College students to learn about the Middle East with their exposure to the 2001 terrorist attacks.

“At the College of William and Mary, students have reacted to the fear and confusion caused by 9/11 through study and community engagement,” she said in an email. “They continue to fill classes on Islam to overflowing, and have led the way to greater integration of Muslim students on campus.”

The religious studies department offers three classes focused on Islam: Introduction to Islam, Islam in the Modern World and Women in Islam. Dozens of students are turned away from these classes each semester due to their widespread popularity.

“The classes focused on Islam are by far the most in-demand courses in the religion department,” Religious Department Chair John Morreal said. “There is so much prejudice about Islam, so when students find out the good stuff, their interest is piqued.”

In recent years, there has also been a high demand for Arabic language classes. Many international relations and government majors have chosen to add Arabic minors to their degrees in order to appeal to future employers.

“The amazing thing that I have found through conversations is that students feel that they have been fooled by the media because of the language barrier,” language professor Chadia Mansour said. “The students want to take Arabic as a tool to know the truth about the Arabic world.”

In addition to studying foreign affairs inside the classroom, some students at the College have chosen to pursue military service careers. Eighteen graduates of the College Reserve Officers’ Training Corps from the classes of 2006 to 2009 have served in either Iraq or Afghanistan; one alumnus, Todd Weaver ’08, died in military combat in Afghanistan last September. Twelve ROTC alumni from the classes of 2010 and 2011 are planning to serve in foreign conflicts.

The College has 50 students enrolled in ROTC this year. According Brian Randall, office manager of the department of military sciences, the majority of them are pursuing international relations or government majors.

“The kids that come into the program in the post 9/11 years are extremely dedicated and patriotic and want to make a difference,” Randall said. “We talk a lot about serving the greater good.”

Confusion Corner: Secret world of recruitment

During my first week of freshman year, I decided that I had too much free time. To solve this problem, I determined that I would try my hand at Club Tennis. That same weekend, after a grueling Saturday morning match, I remembered that losing was not something I enjoyed. I then tried to be a Flat Hat writer, but it turns out that writing was “talent”-related. By my first Friday morning class, I learned that only half of the students considered mandatory attendance, um, mandatory. With no lectures and no activities to attend, my college experience was not mirroring the endless smiling faces of past students in the Office of Undergraduate Admissions.

And then, just hours before I was seriously considering the Quidditch club, my OA gave me some advice. She told me of a world of sundresses, formals, gifts, clue weeks and never-ending sunshine (at least that’s what it seemed like). I found myself signing up for recruitment that very same night.

What she didn’t explain was that before you could receive any presents, you had to survive two grueling weekends of endless small talk, get a crash course in name tag decoration, and achieve a comprehensive knowledge of the Greek alphabet. By the beginning of the second weekend, I was enthusiastic … at best. Mostly, I stayed because I had now paid the non-refundable $25 fee — an investment I was planning to capitalize on in the form of the endless supply of pretzels and cookies available between rounds.

By the time the second weekend was coming to a close, I did walk away with a few insights. Food was a topic all girls loved and agreed on — bonus points if you mention anything covered in chocolate. Also, standing in a circle with 900 sorority women humming at you can be normal, depending on the circumstances.

When I received my bid that Sunday morning, I realized the best part: it didn’t matter if I didn’t have talent, a semester payment could guarantee me at least 90 new friends (not that the chocolate cookie attached had any influence).

With my junior year in full swing and a bank account that shrinks visibly with each Wawa visit, I now have two years of recruitment under my belt. With that, I’d also like to claim that I have some comprehensive advice to offer to our new generation of sundresses. So here it is, advice from a sorority girl, and no warning attached.

Tip #1. Not all of my assumptions were right — 900 women humming at you in unison will be weird, always.

Tip #2. Aside from the two or three Greek letters that will describe your chapter, you will make no headway in the Greek alphabet. Plato will continue to look down on you in shame.

Tip #3. Contrary to popular accusations, you are not paying for friends — the girls never see a cent of the dues you pay anyway.

Tip #4. Baking cookies is not a hobby, but a mandatory skill. To succeed, just double the sugar, and make sure to have a fire extinguisher on hand. Also, learn that Bloom has a bakery — just remove the box and arrange on a plate and no one will ever know the difference.

Tip #5. You will never have to buy a single T-shirt ever again. Also, forget your favorite color, for your wardrobe will consist solely of your chapter’s two colors.

Tip #6. Recruitment means that girl crushes are not only acceptable, but mandatory. It can be weird and you may feel uncomfortable, but you will have to get over it.

Tip #7. If you have yet to watch Legally Blonde and House Bunny, I suggest you do.

Tip #8. There should be an official disclaimer for all of the nonsense that I can write because if recruitment and sororities were really that terrible, I would not be a junior member (and loving every single second of it).

Until then, rush on, my friends, and don’t forget to find some pink perfumed paper for your resumes.

__Dasha Godunova is a Confusion Corner columnist. She likes elephants, eating whipped cream out of the can, and hopes that this article will not incur the wrath of the wonderful Greek life staff.__

Alumna honored as CNN Hero

Recessions always leave their mark, and for Holly Hirshberg ’98, the 2008 recession left a scar on her family. However, it also gave her the chance to explore new paths. She used her green thumb to cultivate her own garden and eventually her own program, the Dinner Garden, which garnered her a nomination as a CNN Hero in July 2011.

In 2008, Hirshberg’s husband, Sean, lost his job in the financial market, creating concern about how they would provide for their two children with special needs.

Hirshberg had always cultivated a small garden, but with the recession causing concern she began growing a much larger garden at her home in San Antonio, Texas.

“I just thought that if I grew my own food, then I wouldn’t have to worry,” Hirshberg said.

After starting her own garden, Hirshberg began tossing around the idea of an organization that would encourage other people to garden.

She approached multiple non-profit organizatios hoping that the idea would take hold, but the economy was headed south, and non-profits’ funds were drying up.

“People need help now, and the only way they’re going to get help is if I start now,” Hirshberg said. “We started applying as a separate non-profit, and it grew quickly from there.”

In 2008, Hirshberg officially began the Dinner Garden, a program that would send seeds and information on gardening free of charge to families who were struggling financially. Hirshberg, her family and volunteers spent long evenings packing the envelopes with seeds and labeling them.

“Holly’s program is a very laborious and cost-intensive program,” said Gary Oppenheimer, founder of ampleharvest.org, who nominated Hirshberg as a CNN Hero. “It consumes your nights and weekends. At the same time, it costs money.”

Despite the exhaustive work, Hirshberg continued to expand her non-profit and has now provided over 65 thousand families with seeds to start their own gardens.

“Many people believe that gardening is expensive and only a hobby, but people were growing their own food before there were gardening stores,” Hirshberg said. “You can grow gardens in containers and boxes, basically anywhere.”

For Hirshberg, the garden helped lift her family’s spirits during the recession. Her 19-year-old son Sam and 18-year-old daughter Jacqui, along with her husband, helped tend the garden. Hirshberg hopes that gardening will have the same effect on others as it did on her family.

“The people who we donate seeds to want to make their lives better,” Hirshberg said. “They don’t just want the handout, and they really love the idea of being able to take an active role. It really has lifted people’s spirits.”

Hirshberg teamed up with Oppenheimer, whose organization helps connect farmers and gardeners with local food pantries so that any excess food can be donated rather than discarded.

“We both recognize that, in effect, what she starts, I can finish,” Oppenheimer said. “The end result is that people who are getting less-than-ideal food can get an adequate amount and even healthy food from food pantries. When you grow more food than you can use, preserve or give to friends, you can donate it to food pantries.”

Through the partnership, Hirshberg and Oppenheimer hope to encourage the cycle of giving.

“We effectively are helping people help others,” Oppenheimer said. “These are the people who asked for help today and will be part of the solution tomorrow.”

The partnership, however, was one of the few between two CNN Heroes that helped support two different organizations.

“It’s something that I think doesn’t happen enough,” Oppenheimer said. “There’s really not much of an effort out there to get non-profits collaborating together. If you were to bring them together, you would have a much more potent combination.”

After closely working with Hirshberg, Oppenheimer decided to nominate her as a CNN Hero. Oppenheimer was named a CNN Hero the previous year, and he felt that the effects of such a nomination would help Hirshberg expand the Dinner Garden.

“Regardless of who you are, the nomination adds an air of credibility to what you’re doing,” Oppenheimer said. “You’ve been approved by a global news organization. For my project, they even called up people at the Department of Agriculture to check it out.”

CNN requires an extensive background check of the individual before officially honoring him or her as a CNN Hero, in order to make sure that both the individual and the project are reliable. In July 2011, Hirshberg was honored as a CNN Hero.

“It really helped us with recognition, so now we can get more funding and more people who believe in our mission,” Hirshberg said. “Dinner Garden belonged to the American people from the start. So more people in America can get involved in our mission, and that’s what has been wonderful about the nomination.”

Hirshberg has turned her passion into a career, encouraging others through various speaking engagements to get involved in sustainable gardening through the Dinner Garden. 


Hirshberg faced struggles as a student at the College of William and Mary helped her to develop the project. Hirshberg had a learning disability that made it challenging for her to learn in the same manner as other students at the College.

“It always plagued me, but it was that learning disability that made me find this project,” Hirshberg said. “I always had to say to myself, ‘Don’t be discouraged if this is hard for you, your brain was designed to do what it needs to do.’ My brain just needed something different. I don’t think linearly and because of that, I saw a solution that no one else has seen. If it was easier for me, I wouldn’t have worked so hard.”

Working hard at the College has now translated to working hard for the Dinner Garden in San Antonio. With the CNN Hero nomination to back her up, Hirshberg hopes to continue to expand the program and to encourage more families to create their own garden.

“You have to do something every day to further your mission,” Hirshberg said. “This project is important to me. If I want to do this, I can, but I have to work.”

Rhythm of the Cities

Walking down the street in Cadiz, Spain, Sarah Klotz ’14 stops abruptly and pulls out her camera. In front of her there is a group of young Spanish boys in the middle of a soccer game. After scoring a goal, two boys embrace. The other kids continue playing, skipping and jumping as people walk by.

For the boys and the people passing by, this is just a normal moment, nothing to stop for and watch. For Klotz, this scene has just become one part of her global city symphony project, on which she is collaborating with students in study abroad programs across the world.

“The city symphony projects used all 14 summer study abroad programs, contacted all program directors, and talked with the Reves Center to get student representatives at each project,” Jes Therkelsen, teaching filmmaker-in-residence, said. “They would go out in their city and collect pieces from the city they were living in.”

Klotz and other student representatives collected footage throughout their study abroad program of both the cities in which they were living and the cities they visited. The goal of their filming was to collect footage that could be used to create a global city symphony film.

“The hope was that there would be a lot of similarities between all of these international cities,” Therkelsen said. “Tim and I are teaching the class where we are going to take that footage and edit it together to create a global city symphony.”

The global city symphony project came out of visiting assistant professor in Film Studies, American studies and English Tim Barnard’s idea for a production project in collaboration with this year’s William and Mary Global Film Festival held at the end of February.

“When we picked the theme of the city for the film festival, I was like, ‘This is a perfect project to teach students about this type of documentary history and at the same time add to that history,’” Barnard said.

The project began over the summer with collection of footage, but continues into the fall with a Global Film Festival — City Symphony Project class team taught by both Barnard and Therkelsen. The class has three parts.

“We are watching and discussing city symphonies that have been done in the past, we are making a city symphony about Williamsburg, and we are taking the footage from all of the cities in the world and creating a global city symphony,” Therkelsen said.

The global city symphony attempts to connect many cities in one piece, and the Williamsburg project attempts to make a local connection to the global cities.

“Doing the class, even working on the global side, I will get something more out of Williamsburg because we are trying to relate the global one to Williamsburg,” Klotz said. “Maybe I will get to see Williamsburg in a different light too.”

Both film projects will premiere at the film festival in February. While the production of both projects is an accomplishment in itself, the ability for the students to display their work in February is an added opportunity.

“We are really happy that we can create that opportunity for students, because that is the thing that is most interesting to students,” Barnard said. “An aspiring filmmaker wants an audience for their films. We can sort of give them that opportunity.”

The class consists of a group of 14 students. While the students are working to produce these two projects, Klotz is the only student who filmed abroad this summer and is now a part of the production process. For Klotz, filming for the project while studying abroad in Spain shed new light on the cities she visited.

“When you have a camera in your hand, you are supposed to be looking for these interactions, you start noticing the personality of the city better, in a slightly different light,” Klotz said. “Especially thinking about how this would go into a documentary about how this goes around the world, you notice the commonalities and differences of the city. You learn more about the community.”

Klotz has worked in photography before, but this is her first filmmaking project.

“I didn’t know what I was doing at all, but what I gathered from the feel of the project was that they are supposed to be really unique interactions,” Klotz said. “Stuff you wouldn’t find in every city, unique to that city but at the same time that had interactions that could somehow be woven into the bigger picture.”

Therkelsen believes this project connects to the College’s main goals to focus on international endeavors. The project uses study abroad experiences to create a new filmmaking product.

“It touches upon a lot of things that represent William and Mary,” Therkelsen said. “It is very international. It encourages students to go out and explore. When you have a camera, you look at things differently. It was almost like a treasure hunt.”

__The videos that have been taken around the world and in Williamsburg can be seen at vimeo.com/user7029895.__

On the Record: “Sky Full of Holes” by Fountains of Wayne

Believe it or not, Fountains of Wayne has put out two albums since 2003 when they released their one-hit wonder “Stacy’s Mom,” a peppy upbeat track voicing the struggles of a young boy lusting after his own Mrs. Robinson. Their most recent release may not have the same instant appeal, but “Sky Full of Holes” still has the clever lyrics and catchy cords that put Fountains of Wayne on the Billboard charts years ago while exposing a darker and more adult side of the band.

The album starts out strong, opening with the pop tune “The Summer Place,” guaranteed to get stuck in your head immediately. The lyrics show the band’s evolution, as they no longer tell stories of teenage angst but instead follow one of a washed out middle-aged woman reliving her past after visiting her family’s vacation home. “Richie and Ruben” comes next, another memorable, upbeat song making light of two adults just trying to get by in life without any idea of what they’re doing.

These two standout openers are followed by “Acela” and “Someone’s Gonna Break Your Heart,” both of which continue the folksy, cheerful sound. “Action Hero” takes a turn, instantly a much more tranquil and melancholy track than those before. In the song, a man is surrounded by his family at a restaurant, and as the typical chaos of any family dinner ensues around him he is hit by the realization that his life is passing before him and he is running out of time.

The strongest track on the entire album is easily “A Dip in the Ocean.” If the choppy guitar riffs don’t make you happy instantly, the thoughts of swimming in the ocean and playing on the beach, the lyrics will do the trick.

The next songs are the low point and the album begins to drag on with one soft semi-acoustic ballad after another. Not one is particularly special, and the urge to skip through all of them is hard to resist. Not until the fast-paced “Radio Bar” does the album begin to seem like the happy, catchy one it appears to be during the first few tracks.

The closing song is quick and full of drums and crooning vocals. “Cemetery Guns” combines the best elements of all the songs before it to provide a perfect blend of melancholy and pop which brings the album to an end.

Every song on “Sky Full of Holes” has its share of clever lines and jokes, all of which seem to make fun of the struggles of life as a middle-aged, middle-class American. The middle section loses its charm quickly, but the beginning and end provide enough support to make the album an overall success.

If nothing else, “Sky Full of Holes” shows that Fountains of Wayne is certainly not the group of little boys that it used to be.