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Hazed by housing

The College of William and Mary has decided to create new fraternity housing on Ukrop Way. It is our opinion that even though the fraternities are an important part of campus, the details of the plan are surprising and potentially unwise in their current form.

Financially, the administration’s decision seems imprudent. The plans will create 11 new houses with 17 beds in each house for a total of 187 beds. The total cost is $26 million, or $137,000 per bed added. With an already extremely tight budget, why spend $26 million to house fraternities that technically already have housing? The Jamestown Residences, which house a substantially larger number of students, cost per bed about half of what the new fraternity houses will cost. By the numbers, it appears the future occupants of the fraternity houses will benefit from more money for housing than the average student. We understand that fraternities are dissatisfied with the Units, but we are not certain that the new complex is the most financially responsible solution.

New housing for the fraternities will also change campus culture, whether for better or worse. These plans show a renewed support for fraternities by the administration — support that has been building in recent years. In creating 11 new houses, the College is elevating the status of the campus fraternities. After fall 2013, new campus will be dominated by fraternity housing both physically and visually with houses surrounding Yates Hall and engulfing Yates Field. The administration has also stated that the purpose of the new housing is to sustain the fraternity social environment, and commemorate the College’s status as the birthplace of American university fraternities. Students come to the College with the idea that fraternities represent only a fraction of the campus, and the social scene is not one dependent on fraternities, but the new fraternity housing has the potential to make Greek life much more noticeable on campus.

The viewpoint of fraternity members must also be taken into account. Most seem pleased with the new housing, but a drawback is that there are 18 fraternities on campus and only 11 houses, making it competitive for the fraternities to get one of the houses.

The on-campus housing crunch will be affected by this plan as well. The new fraternity housing will add 187 beds to campus, and over the next four years, the College will increase enrollment by 220 students, some of whom will be able to live in the newly vacant units.

The decision to create new fraternity housing is questionable, and we are concerned about the short-term effects it will have on campus. Spending $26 million on housing designed to serve a specific group of students comprising less than one sixth of the student body is a poor move by the College administration. We understand the fraternities are important to the campus, but it is unfair for a select group of students to receive privileges over all others. The College has cultivated a particular image that may be permanently altered with the promotion of the fraternities by this new plan.

Ellie Kaufman recused herself from this editorial due to a conflict of interest.

Students work for greater sustainabilty practices

Sustainability is a buzz word in the City of Williamsburg.

On March 29, students at the Mason School of Business sent out a survey on sustainability to businesses in Williamsburg in order to see how environmental factors contriute to business practices.

The team of student consultants is working with the city to create a strategy for increasing sustainability in local businesses. The survey defined sustainability as any practices or procedures that meet present economic needs without sacrificing the environmental needs of future generations.

“The survey is a tool for deciding how to go about increasing sustainability for the businesses of Williamsburg,” Michele Dewitt, the economic development director for the city of Williamsburg, said. “The students are researching and have chosen Williamsburg’s EDA as their client, and will present a plan for how to go about increasing sustainability.”

The survey was sent by students in a nEnvironmental Consulting class as part of a project to determine the status of businesses in Williamsburg.

“We sent out the sustainability survey as part of our research for our semester project for our Environmental Consulting class,” Clayton Perry ’12, a student who is working with the survey results, said. “Our client is the City of Williamsburg’s Economic Development authority and our goal was to figure out ways to both encourage sustainability amongst preexisting businesses in the Williamsburg area as well as trying to attract green businesses to establish themselves in the city.”

The results of the survey, which businesses turned in to the students on April 1, showed that many businesses were already taking steps toward improving their sustainability, and were open to learning more about sustainability initiatives. Most businesses expressed a need for resources in order to become more sustainable.

“Businesses are willing to learn more about sustainability if the information is provided to them, and they want to receive information via email or web,” Liza McDevitt ’12 said. “We are going to recommend the city streamline and make more accessible information for businesses on sustainable projects for improving operations, possibly creating an eco-listserv.”

The city is doing its part to increase sustainability, including being involved with the Virginia Green Initiative and the Williamsburg Green Challenge, two community programs which encourage sustainable activities.

“The city feels sustainability is very important for the future, the environment and the society of Williamsburg,” Dewitt said. “We are looking forward to what the students’ plan is; we are always looking forward to ways of improvement.”

The group of students presented the results of the project to the Williamsburg Economic Authority April 13.

“We hope to provide an easy way for businesses to find more resources and increase the visibility of the city’s green business initiatives with our project in order to accomplish our goals of improved business sustainability in Williamsburg,” Perry said.

Japan vigil observes one month anniversary of disaster

Students here at the College of William and Mary are doing their part to help the victims of the 8.9 magnitude earthquake that hit Japan March 11 and resulted in hundreds of deaths and immeasurable destruction.

To raise awareness about the situation, the Japan Relief Initiative held a candlelight vigil on Monday in coordination with the Japanese Cultural Association and the Japanese Language House.

“The vigil [took] place on the one month anniversary,” former JCA co-president Isshin Teshima ’11 said. “It is a time to reflect, see what [the College] has done and where we’re going.”

Students and faculty gathered in the Wren Yard at 8 p.m.with candles in hand. After a slideshow depicting the effects of the disaster and showcasing the College’s support, light was passed from candle to candle until dozens of small lights filled the yard.

“I feel solemn but hopeful,” Marquis Stokes ’12 said after the ceremony. “We are making a difference, no matter how small.”

The ceremony concluded with words from Hiroshi Kitamura, co-director o East Aian Studies, and Steven Pau ’14, who discussed the ways in which the situation in Japan has personally affected them and urged attendees to remember Japan as time goes on. They expressed their worry that people are beginning to forget about Japan and that people are under the impression that Japan is a nation capable of handling this situation on its own.

“The moment anything else big happens, that event gets forgotten,” Stokes said. “We have to remind people that this is a situation that isn’t going to be solved in a month, two months or even a year.”

The JRI, which is a group of undergraduates, graduates, staff and faculty that formed the week after the earthquake in Japan, led the vigil. The goal of the group is to raise awareness and facilitate recovery and relief efforts for those affected by the disaster, mainly acting as an information resource.

“This might be the second biggest disaster since the second World War,” Kitamura said. “We have to continue to seek ways to support people in northern Japan.”

Moral depravity: The little-known legacy of Jefferson at the College

This past Wednesday marked Thomas Jefferson’s 268th birthday. At the College of William and Mary, we revere our famous alumnus and rightly credit him with being a major influence on our institution. Many of the legacies and traditions at the College originated with Jefferson, and as a result, he deserves our respect and admiration. There is, however, a darker side to this story. Jefferson’s legacy at the College is not all good. It is, in large part, due to Jefferson that the fortunes of the College began to decline following the American Revolution and that the institution eventually came within an inch of its life during the Civil War. This is the untold story.

Jefferson’s affiliation with the College stems from his father who, as a surveyor, worked closely with mathematics professor Joshua Fry. This prompted the elder Jefferson to secure for his son a liberal arts education at the College. One 18th century historian of the College gives a pleasant account of the youth’s time here, beginning with his relationship with his mentor William Small. Jefferson names Small as the person who inspired Small with inspiring his “first views of the expansion of science, and of the system of things in which we are placed.” Small also introduced the boy to his other mentors: George Wythe, from whom he learned the art of law, and Virginia Governor Fauquier, who sat on the Board of Visitors. Jefferson credits these men, and especially Small, for fixing “the destinies of [his] life.”

This happy picture is by no means a complete account of Jefferson’s experience at the College. In a 1995 journal article, architectural historian Mark Werner portrays the climate of the College in the late colonial period less sympathetically. The College was rife with political, religious and cultural frictions which often erupted into violence.

The state of town-gown affairs may have been at an all-time low. In 1763, William Thomson was expelled from the school for “an act of no small Violence and Outrage in the Town.” This was just one of the many skirmishes in the ongoing war between the haughty students and unwashed townies which raged during Jefferson’s time here.

The elders of the College provided no better example: in the 1700’s, there was constant bickering between the professors and the Board of Visitors. The original charter did not adequately delineate the authorities of each group, and both fought for power. It did not help that the College was the fulcrum of the political and spiritual authority. The professors at the College were mostly Anglican clergy imported from England and who exercised ecclesiastical authority. The Visitors, by contrast, were predominantly laypeople and Virginian politicians. Any disagreements immediately took political, religious and colonial dimensions. The BOV routinely sought to cement its authority over the faculty and the faculty tried to go over the BOV memebers’ heads by appealing back to England for support. In one instance, the BOV fired several professors and had to forcibly evict them before changing all of the College’s locks.

The moral climate at the College was also unstable. The tenure of Jacob Rowe — ironically the professor of moral philosophy — is illustrative. Rowe, a noted alcoholic, was known for his offensive outbursts; once he expressed the wish that certain Burgesses should be hanged. After being reprimanded, he responded by leading a mob of armed students in a raid on Williamsburg townsfolk. After a vicious fight in which he drew a pistol on Peyton Randolph, a Williamsburg Burgess and one of the College visitors, he personally flogged two of the captured townspeople. He then “grossly insulted” the College president and the governor when they approached him about his activities. Then, and only then was he shipped back to England.

It was in this environment that Jefferson pursued his studies. The experience would shape him as much as his beloved mentors. He learned from the College all that could go wrong in education. When in a position of power, he would attempt to reform the school and, when that failed, to supplant it.

Letter to the Editor: Empty promises

When the earthquake and subsequent tsunami wracked Japan, many of us here at the College William and Mary were alarmed for our Japanese friends. As a student at the Marshall-Wythe School of Law, I had become friends with a student from Japan who had studied at the College last year and then returned. I was heartened by the declaration by all major United States cell phone carriers (including my own) that subscribers who texted and phoned to and from Japan would not incur any additional fees. I took advantage of this situation by calling and texting my friend in order to make sure that she was okay, which she was. I was less heartened to see a sizable item on my cell phone bill, asking for a significant surcharge for the privilege of having called and texted Japan. In my case, it took two phone calls to my carrier, Sprint, before the matter was cleared up. Other of my friends who have different carriers have yet to get their charges removed. As students, we have access to a world that is, now more than ever, truly interconnected. But what good is this if we cannot rely on the stated policy of our largest telecommunications corporations? It seems to me entirely unjust that a person who relies on the promise of a Fortune 500 company to provide free calls and texts to and from Japan, would have to expend great effort in wading through that company’s customer service in order to enforce that promise. The public, especially those who have family and friends in Japan, deserve much better.

Foster town-gown communication

Just one year ago, campus was covered in signs, rallies and fundraisers supporting Scott Foster ’10 for Williamsburg City Council. After a well run-campaign, Foster was elected in a landslide victory and became the first College of William and Mary student to be elected to city council. Many students are no doubt disappointed that Foster did not immediately rip the infamous three-person rule to shreds, and that students living off campus are still being punished for noise violations. It is easy to say that not much has changed. However, Foster’s election was a major milestone for students at the College, and we should remember to take advantage of the bridge his election has provided.

The Student Assembly should try to partner with Foster in order to link the city council to the College. Every year, the SA is allotted funds in order to provide students with events and activities. The SA needs to realize that some of these funds can be a bargaining tool if they want to sponsor events with the City of Williamsburg. By investing funds in events planned by the city, such as public concerts and homecoming events, the SA can ensure that students will be given a voice in their planning. Students frequently complain that Williamsburg residents resent us, but we have no right to complain unless we are willing to bring something constructive to the table.

Zoning policies ad development projects in Williamsburg are examples of areas in which it would be helpful to have more student interest. The successful construction of Tribe Square shows how cooperation between students and the city cam tremendously benefit students. Students should voice their concerns that more student-friendly housing needs to be built, like housing specifically focused on students which would allow students to live in apartment communities with their peers. Because fellow students are likely to have similar social expectations, a student-geared apartment complex not affiliated with the College would reduce noise complaints and generational clashes. Furthermore, students would be able to avoid living in derelict properties managed by slumlords just because it is a cheaper housing option. Without adequate communication and vested student engagement in Williamsburg government, such a complex is unlikely to be constructed.

Another and more immediate way SA interaction with the city council could benefit students is in the form of events. While the past month has seen a plethora of great performers at the College, I would still like to see more big name shows at the College. Because the College is not as large as other schools, it is harder to book more popular acts without raising ticket prices. This is where Foster’s unique position could best serve the College. If the College, the city and other community partners were able to come together, they could combine funds to book entertainment that would appeal to both citizens of Williamsburg and students. These joint events and festivals would create a tighter sense of community between the two groups, and although it would certainly not solve problems such as noise complaints, it would show that students are willing to work constructively with the city.

There is absolutely no doubt that the three-person rule and strict noise ordinances are still dark clouds hanging over town-gown relationships. We have the opportunity to be more productive players in decisions that are made in Williamsburg, which can significantly affect the future of student life. Students at the College played a major role in getting Foster elected, now we need to utilize the bridge he provides in connecting students to the city council. More constructive interaction between students and residents is the only way town-gown relations will ever be improved. With enough open communication, we can at least optimistically hope that one day students will not be plagued by the same problems about which we have been complaining for many years.

War! forgotten in Williamsburg

In a place like Williamsburg, it is easy to forget that the Civil War happened. With such a heavy concentration on Virginia’s colonial history, the city of Williamsburg and the College of William and Mary spend less time telling the story of this area during the Civil War.

Tuesday marked the 150th anniversary of the opening shots of the Civil War were fired at Fort Sumter, South Carolina. Very soon afterward, the students at the College asked the College administration for permission to raise a secessionist flag over the Sir Christopher Wren Building. They were rebuffed by President Benjamin S. Ewell.

“He was a unionist right up to the time Virginia seceded,” English Professor Terry Meyers said of Ewell. Meyers has done considerable research on the history of the College in the 19th century.

The students were allowed to raise the flag in the Wren Yard instead — a tactical decision on Ewell’s part. This decision demonstrated the generation gap at the College, as students and younger members of the faculty agitated for succession while those of the older generation, such as Ewell, resisted.

“Sentiment at the time among the younger [generation] was that the older generation had failed them,” Sean Heuvel ’02, M.Ed. ’05 said. Heuvel wrote his masters thesis on the College during the Civil War while studying at the University of Richmond and now teaches at Christopher Newport University.

The men of the younger generation wanted to restore Virginia to the position of leadership it held in the past and believed they could revive the state through secession.

Within one month following the outbreak of war at Fort Sumter, the College closed. All but one student of the College enlisted. The overwhelming majority joined with the Confederacy, but a lone Pennsylvanian returned home to fight for the Union Army. Every member of the faculty, including Ewell, enlisted in the Confederate Army, except for one, who worked in the Treasury of the Confederacy.

Since the relocation of the state capital to Richmond in 1780 and the establishment of the University of Virginia in 1819, the College had struggled to stay afloat. By the time of the Civil War, the College was just barely getting by. The war challenged the College’s finances even further.

“It devastated us, we were wiped out,” Meyers said.

The College invested its meager funds in Confederate War bonds, which were worthless after the war. The Wren Building burned down. According to one member of the first class to graduate after the war, the only lights Duke of Gloucester street came from the bars.

“According to the charter, the bell in the Wren building [had to] be rung at the beginning of each academic year,” Hevuel said.

Ewell traveled from his plantation west of town — near where the Prime Outlets are today — to Williamsburg, accompanied by an African-American tenant farmer to aid him in ringing the Wren bell. The ringing signified the start of an academic year with no students or faculty.

“In a certain way, the College ceased to exist in 1861,” Lemon Project Consultant Dr. Robert Engs said.

The College creates a history

In the 1880s, the Commonwealth of Virginia bought the College and turned it into a school for teachers, saving it from certain demise. The biggest boost to the College came from the restoration of Colonial Williamsburg in the 1920s, a project funded by the Rockefeller family.

As the town shifted toward remembrance of its colonial heritage, the College was swept up.

“Once they restored the Wren building and the President’s house and the Brafferton, that sort of sealed our fate,” history professor Jim Whittenburg said.

With the restoration of Colonial Williamsburg, the College was able to reinvent itself as a symbol of the colonial period.

The glory days of the College, the days of Thomas Jefferson and James Monroe, were during this pre-Revolutionary era. Meyers said he saw the role of Williamsburg before the American Revolution as more important to the story of the nation than its role during the Civil War. In this way, association of the College with the colonial period makes sense.

“The College had such an important role in the formation of the nation that we tend to focus on it,” Dr. Bea Hardy, interim dean of university libraries said. Hardy recently curated an exhibit on the Civil War in the Special Collection in Earl Gregg Swem Library — “From Fights to Rights: The Long Road to a More Perfect Union.”

With the emphasis on the Colonial era, Williamsburg become a town defined by its colonial history, not the Civil War.

“I don’t think it’s a question of avoidance,” Whittenburg said. “I think it’s where we identify ourselves … I think there was a lot more Civil War memory at the College before the restoration.”

The War comes to Williamsburg

The Battle of Williamsburg was fought just outside town May 5, 1862. The battle was part of Union General George McClellan’s Peninsula Campaign, during which he intended to come up the peninsula, seize Richmond and end the war swiftly and with as few casualties or changes to Southern life as possible.

Despite the lack of attention today, the Battle of Williamsburg was a major battle at the beginning of the Civil War. For the first time during the Civil War, two armies of considerable skill and strength faced one another.

“If all the things that happened in Colonial Williamsburg hadn’t happened, and only the Battle of Williamsburg [had], we would remember it much more,” Meyers said.

The battle ended when the Union army took over Williamsburg. The College was transformed as the Wren building became a hospital for the many men injured during the battle.

Randolph Abbott Shotwell, a Confederate officer, wrote of the horrific battle.

“[There were] wounded, dying and dead – here, there, everywhere — halls, recitations rooms, dormitories — all were crowded with bloody bodies!” Shotwell wrote.

Williamsburg remained under Union control for the rest of the war, which encouraged a considerable amount of espionage.

“Where the Sadler Center is today, that was kind of a no man’s land between Union and Confederate territory,” Heuvel said. “William and Mary was sort of literally on the border.”

A complicated past

Despite a rich Civil War history in Williamsburg, it is rarely discussed by the city of Williamsburg, the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation or the College. This differs from the rest of Virginia, where the Civil War is often the primary history discussed.

When teaching history, educators are charged with the difficulty of recreating and explaining complex historical issues, often falling back on a simplistic presentation of history. Colonial Williamsburg faces a similar problem. After dedicating so much time to a specific period of time, adding the Civil War into the fray presents serious issues.

“They’ve got a problem with pushing history — what can the average visitor absorb?” Meyers said. “To talk about the Civil War is to complicate that history.”

This difficulty with presenting a dual history expands when dealing with the changes brought about by the Civil War. After the war, the Southern way of life, which hinged on slavery, was destroyed.

A forgotten story

“I think its hard for the people who presume to have the right to preserve memory to deal with the Civil War,” Engs said.

For African Americans this meant a freedom unlike anything available to them in the South before the war. African American communities began to seize their rights to determining the direction of the nation.

“The freed people decided they had an agenda of their own,” Engs said.

This was especially true in Tidewater Virginia, which was one of the first places to see the freedom of slaves with the decision in 1862 to allow slaves of Confederates to seek shelter with the Union army as the contraband of war.

“Suddenly the old system of slavery was in abeyance because of the contraband decision,” Engs said.

As enslaved people ran to freedom behind Union lines, the people of Williamsburg felt these decisions, in their pocketbooks, but it impacted their psyches as well. Slaveholders in Williamsburg had difficulty dealing with the fact that their slaves would desert to the enemy.

As with many things in the history of Williamsburg, an important shift in race relations came with the creation of the Colonial Williamsburg foundation. The heads of the foundation refused to segregate the historic area, in violation of Virginia law. This situation, in conjunction with the pervasive military presence in the area, created a more benign racial climate than in other parts of the American south.

Today, the results of this can serve the community well, according to Engs.

“I think there’s a real opportunity for William and Mary and Williamsburg to observe the Civil War in a more rational way than perhaps anywhere else in Virginia,” Engs said.

Engs points out that the College is in a similar position to create a dialogue, especially among the students, about the meaning of the Civil War but is in danger of failing to do so.

“People who come here don’t want to deal with unpleasantness,” Engs said of the students at the College.

The Lemon Project, which investigates the history of African Americans at the College, aims to challenge the unwillingness to look into a less than pristine past.

“History is all around us, especially at a place like this,” Engs said.

Confusion Corner: Students travel abroad to find natural habitat

I believe it was Leonardo da Vinci who first said, “Where a young mind chooses to venture speaks volumes about the young heart.” Sounds pretty good, huh? Da Vinci didn’t say that. I made it up, but I’m flattered you thought one of the greatest minds of all time could have come up with it. Needless deception aside, I do believe that studying abroad is one of the most enriching and expanding opportunities a student here at the College can undertake. I also believe that where you choose to spend your study abroad experience reveals a lot about your latent desires, sublimated urges and other Freudian nonsense.

For example, I myself will be spending next semester studying philosophy and literature at the Sorbonne in Paris. This strongly suggests that I might be a douchebag, only doing so to impress girls. I will neither confirm nor deny this suggestion. You also could probably glean that I smoke American Spirit cigarettes and lean against walls, brooding. I may have some sort of cryptic nihilist tattoo on my lower back that reads “Daddy” and think you’re a conformist for driving a Prius. Essentially, you would assume I was a hipster. And if you did, I would slap you.

A friend of mine will be studying environmental science and public policy in Kenya. A large portion of what he owns is probably hemp. He likely sympathizes with the plight of the dung beetle and decries the abusive treatment given the noble doorstop.

My roommate intends to study business in Brazil. Let’s take a look at what you (fairly or unfairly) would assume about him based on this. First, he is probably a coke dealer. Secondly, he might have a tattoo on his bicep that reads “Rattlesnake.” You could assume he has a sense of danger and an entrepreneurial spirit, much like John Dillinger or Al Capone. He may come in late at night with no explanation of where he’s been, smelling of regret and transgression. Or, he could just be a total bro who wants to go to Carnivale and is totally duping the school. Hint, hint.

Less traditional destinations can say a lot, too. Antarctic research, for example, means you’re probably single and long for the loving touch of a sympathetic penguin. We’ve all been there, it’s probably fine. Equestrian studies in Greenland suggest you’re a card-carrying vegan with a horse named Peace Flower and an aversion to baths.

I’ve also seen posters around campus suggesting that a summer session in Hawaii or Los Angeles ought to be considered studying abroad as well. Now I’m not asserting that you wouldn’t learn valuable life skills in Hawaii (coconut wrangling) or Los Angeles (getting shot), but surely you could find somewhere more exotic. Heck, we have an exchange program with McGill University in Montreal. At least in Canada you have to exchange your money before you can do any number of basically American things. Okay, and you have Tim Hortons instead of Burger King — you’re not fooling anyone, Canada.

So for all of you out there considering studying abroad, you have my ringing endorsement. Who knows, maybe you’ll meet the Parisian girl of your dreams, make a killing in Brazilian oil or save an entire African village. Or maybe you’ll contract an exotic French strain of herpes, get kidnapped, thrown off the Cristo Redentor statue and become the leader of a military junta. So whether you’re going to China on a State Department (spy) Scholarship or flying to Amsterdam to … like … something, branch out, my friends. Venture forth, turn your face to the sun, and spread your wings! Step outside your comfort zone and try new things. Because remember, if you ever get homesick, the nearest McDonalds is never more than a block away.

__Jason Rogers is a Confusion Corner columnist and stronly belives that when he returns from France, the ladies will flock to him. Contact Jason Rogers at jerogers@email.wm.edu.__

Tastes of the town: A tour of Williamsburg cuisine

Being a student at the College of William and Mary can often be crippling for our collective palates. With many of us, like me, limited by what is within walking distance, and with quick and cheap food sources readily available, it’s quite easy to write off Williamsburg as a culinary dead zone. A new tour of New Town, Taste of Williamsburg, aims to change that perception with weekend jaunts to several local establishments for food samplings. With a fork and an empty stomach, I joined a group to see if the trip was worth residents’s and tourists’s time and expense.

Center Street Grill

After a brief introduction to New Town detailing its “history” — there is, after all, only so much to say about a place less than a decade old — the tour moves to the first restaurant, an American grill serving up large-plate appetizers. The calamari leaves a lot to be desired, with only the tiniest amount of spice to give it something resembling flavor. Things improve, however, and their “Philly roll” (think the sandwich, not the sushi) with a cheese scallion sauce is a hearty spin on the traditionalism that their décor would suggest. A basil pesto flatbread finishes out the meal, but, as is often the case with pesto, the sauce can easily overpower the dish. Choose a piece of the flatbread carefully; those heavier on the tomato and mozzarella are your best bet.

Ichiban

There is currently no food on the docket for this tour; instead, some Chinese teas are served as a cultural and gastronomic counterbalance to the rich, fried offerings from the Center Street Grill. Teas vary weekly, but during my visit, I particularly enjoyed a relaxing and soothing peach oolong. Following that was a fruity blend which, along with this stop, began to ease any concerns I had about the tour’s merits.

World of Wine

It’s a good idea to be of age while on this tour; the wine tasting here, with food pairings every other week, adds atmosphere and depth. I had a surprisingly succulent pasta to accompany the well-chosen varietals; a stand-out was the Nero d’Avola that mixed well with gnocchi. If the selection that week was any indication, there should be plenty of new ground to tread each time.

Opus 9 Steakhouse

This was, naturally, my most anticipated stop. The high-end chop house is a local favorite, and I’d never gotten around to dining here. After a bit of background on the tiny delicacies we would be devouring, a welcome feature reminiscent of haute cuisine establishments, the servers brought out the dishes were brought out. A pan-fried crab cake, resting on some red pepper aioli, was mouth-wateringly crispy and tender. The bit of brisket with sweet potato puree was smoky and savory. What should have been the piece de resistance, a cut from a perfectly-crusted New York strip, was outclassed by the peppercorn sauce beneath it. While the meat itself was good, it was not on par with some of the other prime beef I’ve had in the past. However, the quality of the food was enough for me to consider a return trip to the steakhouse, despite the hair-raising price tag.

Short Stop Deli

The ambience here couldn’t be more different from that of Opus. A sports bar, complete with boisterous regulars, open counter and “beer cave” furnish this sandwich shop, with various combinations of Boar’s Head meats and cheeses. The sliced turkey was remarkably flavorful, considering the typical blandness of deli poultry. Simple, serviceable food and a relaxed environment make for an enjoyable pit stop after the aesthetic onslaught of Opus 9.

Buon Amici

The final leg in the Taste of Williamsburg, Buon Amici, is a lovely culmination to a fun and filling afternoon. Authentically Brooklyn style, this Italian eatery provides a tantalizing starter in kalamata olive bruschetta, then serves a fine house salad to cleanse the palate. With one last assault on our ballooning stomachs, a hearty penne with ragu is brought out from the kitchen. Your appetite may by now be long-forgotten, but the peppery pasta is well worth the overly swollen waistline. Although not officially part of the tour, a pizza margherita was provided for the group; light and crispy, with fresh toppings, this pie is worth obtaining to remind someone that restaurants such as Domino’s should only be tolerated for convenience’s sake.

Women’s Tennis: College scores upset over No. 31 VCU in Richmond

Senior Lauren Sabacinski hadn’t beaten Virginia Commonwealth since
2008, and despite losing her first set against VCU’s Daria Yakavleva,
Sabacinski wasn’t about to finish her collegiate career without ending
the Tribe’s drought against its main rival.

Sabacinski fought back in the second set, forcing a tiebreak against
her Rams counterpart, and then dominated the third set to provide the
clinching point in the College’s thrilling 4-3 upset of the No. 31
Rams in Richmond Wednesday.

“It’s a great, quality win,” head coach Meredith Geiger-Walton said.
“It helps that [VCU] is our rival, it makes things a little sweeter,
and especially since we lost to them last year in the CAA Finals. This
is my third year as coach, and since I took over we hadn’t beaten VCU,
so it feels really good to get that win under our belt.”

The victory moves the Tribe’s record to 12-8 overall, 1-0 in the CAA,
and with a victory tonight over Old Dominion, the College would secure
the top seed in next week’s CAA Championships.

Although the Tribe was close throughout the majority of the afternoon,
it never would have beaten VCU without Sabacinski’s rousing 3-6, 7-6,
6-2 victory in the No. 5 position.

“Lauren really stood out because she clinched the match,”
Geiger-Walton said. “She sank two match points in her second set
tiebreaker and then pulled it out to get a third-set victory, which
clinched it for us.”

The Tribe’s upset began early as the College captured the doubles
point. Although freshman Hope Johnson and sophomore Anik Cepeda fell
in a hard-fought affair to VCU’s Alex Bara and Kateryna Yerginam, 9-8,
the Tribe’s two other doubles teams defeated their VCU counterparts.
Junior Katie Kargl and sophomore Marlen Mesgarzadeh downed Ana Bara
and Josefin Hjertquist 8-5 at the No. 2 spot while freshman Jeltje
Loomans and Sabacinski defeated Yakavleva and Manuela, 8-2 to clinch
the doubles point for the Tribe.

“The girl Merlen played at No. 2 had been playing No. 1 for VCU all
season,” Geiger-Walton said. “Merlen had made a decision after our
loss to U.Va. back in March that she wasn’t going to lose another
match, and she has pretty much held up to that … She just went out
there on a mission and she was in the zone.”

While the College glided through the doubles portion with relative
ease, the singles portion was much more challenging. The results were
split between the two schools for the majority of the singles portion.
Alex Bara defeated Johnson in a close 7-5, 7-6 match at the No. 1
position, while Mesgarzadeh evened the count by defeating Yergina,
6-2, 6-3, giving the Tribe a 2-1 advantage.

Hjertquist then defeated Loomans 6-3, 6-4, at the No. 3 post, but
Cepeda prevailed at the No. 4 position, dominating Ana Bara, 6-3, 6-3.
After VCU’s Olga Terteac snuck past Kargl in a three-set 6-2, 4-6, 6-3
win, it became apparent that the match would come down to the outcome
of Sabacinski’s battle at the No. 5 post.

“I was so proud of the way the team competed,” Geiger-Walton said.
“[We had] the expectation to win, the willingness to battle and do
what it takes to stay out there, and we did it with confident
attitudes … It was very rewarding to see the results of what we did in
practice.”