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Washington and Lee University Admissions Viewbook 2014-2015
Citation preview
Washington and Lee University is one of
our nation’s most esteemed liberal arts
institutions. A center of lively debate, a
laboratory for training future leaders, and
a community where mutual trust informs
relationships, W&L looks ever forward
while building on a storied legacy.
In these pages, the people of W&L speak for themselves. Their observations offer a glimpse into who we are, what we care about, and what it means to be part of our world. Their perspec-tives reveal the richness of a culture that can only be described with many voices.
BEGINNINGS 1
HONOR 4
FACULTY 6
PERSPECTIVES 10
PURSUITS 12
SETTING 14
LEADERSHIP 18
DISCOURSE 20
DESTINATIONS 22
THEDETAILS 25
ALUMNIANDSTUDENTS
Ligia Abreu Dominican Republic
Kirk Adamson Richmond, Va.
Grace Andrews Dyersburg, Tenn.
George Arie Petersham, Mass.
Hayes Ashcraft Charlotte, N.C.
Drew Assapimonwait Prospect, Ky.
Dane Boston Dunedin, Fla.
Carson Bruno Pittsburgh, Pa.
Nelson Bunn Raleigh, N.C.
Jordan Campbell Dallas, Texas
William Chamberlin Princeton Junction, N.J.
John Christopher Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Micaela Coffey San Antonio, Texas
Stacy Doornbos Roswell, Ga.
Shreya Durvasula Princeton Junction, N.J.
Lindsay Erickson Silver Spring, Md.
Melissa Ginder Jacksonville, Fla.
Isaiah Goodman Richfield, Minn.
Cale Grove Rehoboth Beach, Del.
Kenneth Hopkins Little Rock, Ark.
Audrey Horn Tenafly, N.J.
Katelyn Huffman Poca, W.Va.
Femi Kusimo Cross Lanes, W.Va.
William Larson Wilmington, Del.
Wesley Little Austin, Texas
Jennifer Lysenko Voorheesville, N.Y.
Quiana McKenzie Chicago, Ill.
Lauren Morea Cold Spring
Harbor, N.Y.
Sara Mueller Paradise Valley, Ariz.
Jon Philipson Lakeland, Fla.
Trent Pickle Potomac, Md.
Rohan Poojara Pune, Maharashtra, India
Christina Pratt Baltimore, Md.
Rhodes Proctor Raleigh, N.C.
Amy Robertson Nacogdoches, Texas
Whitney Rothstein Miami, Fla.
Jennifer Sanow Leesburg, Va.
Richard Saum Pawleys Island, S.C.
Neil Sheaffer Plantation, Fla.
Graham Sheridan Greensboro, N.C.
Alice Shih Austin, Texas
Katie Simpson Scottsdale, Ariz.
Aparajita Singh Patna, Bihar, India
Wheeler Sparks Dallas, Texas
Lauren Travis Pulaski, Va.
Alex White Baltimore, Md.
Shane Wilson Chesapeake, W.Va.
Hila Yashar Modiin, Israel
FACULTYANDADMINISTRATION
Lisa Alty Professor of Chemistry;
Chair of Pre-Med Advisory Committee
Harlan Beckley Director, Shepherd
Program
George Bent Professor of Art History
Dennis Cross Vice President for
University Advancement
Hank Dobin Professor of English
Timothy Gaylard Professor of Music
Bill Hartog Vice President of
Admissions and Financial Aid
Janet Ikeda Associate Professor of East Asian Languages and Literature
Elizabeth Knapp ’96 Senior Assistant to the President
Dave Leonard Dean of Student Life
Holt Merchant ’61 Professor of History, Emeritus
Rob Mish ’76 Director of the Lenfest
Center for the Arts
Eric Owsley ’01 Manager of
Web Development
Larry Peppers Dean of the Williams
School; Professor of Economics
Brian Richardson ’73 Professor of Journalism
and Mass Communications
Amy Richwine International Student
Adviser
Ken Ruscio ’76 President
Lad Sessions Professor of Philosophy,
Emeritus
Rob Straughan Associate Dean,
Williams School; Professor of Business Administration
Bob Strong Professor of Politics
Jonathan Webster Associate Dean
of Admissions
Jessica Willett ’95 Director of Web
Communication
Tom Williams Former Provost;
Professor of Physics, Emeritus
We thank these Washington and Lee community members who generously contributed their stories, thoughts and observations to this book.
“�During�Orientation�week,�new�stu-
dents�get�a�T-shirt�that�says�‘Speak.’�
The�idea�is�to�instill—from�the�very�
beginning—a�tradition�here.�Whenever�
a�person�encounters�another,�even�in�
passing,�he�or�she�greets�that�person.”
“�The�funny�part�is�when�
you’re�away�from�W&L—�
like�when�you’re�in�New�York�
City—and�you�say�hello�to�
someone,�people�look�at�you�
like�you�have�three�heads.”
Beginnings
1
“�During�Pre-Orientation,�
you�get�thrown�into�a�
situation�way�outside�
your�comfort�zone�with�
10�other�people�who�
are�all�in�the�same�
boat,�so�you�just�auto-
matically�bond.�I’m�still�
friends�with�the�people�
who�were�on�my�trip.”
2
RELATIONSHIPBUILDINGat W&L
begins before many students set foot
on campus—through Appalachian
Adventure wilderness trips and
Volunteer Venture service initiatives,
popular Pre-Orientation programs.
2
�“�I�think�Orientation�acts�as�a�springboard�
to�leadership,�as�well.�I�was�in�Roanoke�
for�a�week�my�first�year.�Of�the�25�stu-
dents�in�my�group,�I�would�say�half�of�us�
became�Volunteer�Venture�leaders�the�
next�year.”
“�I�think�students�are�so�happy�
here�because�they�make�
bonds,�they�make�friendships.”
“�I’m�from�Bombay.�We�have�a�one-week�Orientation�for�interna-
tional�students,�and�then�First-Year�Orientation.�We�get�to�know�
one�another�and�make�friends�and,�after�that,�we�kind�of�inte-
grate�into�the�W&L�community.�I�think�that’s�pretty�cool.”
“�One�of�the�most�rewarding�aspects�of�my�four�years�
at�W&L�was�going�from�being�a�first-year�student�to�
being�someone�who’s�bringing�new�students�in�and�
helping�make�them�comfortable�that�first�week.”
�“�Those�people�I�was�with�my�first�year,�a�lot�of�them��
I�see�around�campus�every�day.�Even�though�we’ve�
gone�on�our�divergent�paths—all�kinds�of�majors,�
all�kinds�of�clubs—we�still�have�that�connection�
from�our�first�year.”
3
ONEOFTHEMOSTANTICIPATED
parts of Orientation is the
Campus Activities Fair
(left), during which represen-
tatives from some of W&L’s
130+ student organizations
compete for the attention
of incoming students.
4
“�In�front�of�the�dining�hall,�you’ll�just�see�a�
huge�pile�of�purses�and�backpacks�right�at�
the�bottom�of�the�staircase.�People�just�pile�
them�on�there.�And�when�they’re�finished,�
they�find�their�own�and�grab�it.”
Honor
4
“��Generations�of�students�have�kept�the�
promise�to�trust�each�other,�to�respect�
each�other,�to�treat�each�other�with��
civility.�That�makes�the�Honor�System�
work�here�in�ways�that�don’t�necessarily�
work�in�other�places.”
“�You’d�rather�fail�an�exam�here�than�
fail�in�integrity.”
“��I�heard�a�story�about�a�retired�federal�judge�who�
has�an�extensive�library.�If�you�borrow�a�book�from�
him,�you�have�to�sign�out�what�you�are�taking—
unless�you�are�a�W&L�graduate.�Then,�you�just�
take�whatever�you�want�and�you�bring�it�back.�It’s�
all�part�of�the�Honor�System.”
“�Our�exams�are�unproctored.�We�schedule�our�own�
finals.�Or,�if�you�have�a�take-home,�you�can�take�it�
whenever�you�please.�If�you�get�a�friend�to�proof-
read�your�paper,�you�just�write�her�name�into�the�
pledge.�We�get�so�much�more�flexibility�and�free-
dom�because�of�the�Honor�System.”
“�The�Honor�System�is�
one�of�the�rocks�of�
W&L.”
“�Even�outside�the�W&L�environment,��
I�find�I�can’t�tell�little�white�lies—I’m��
not�joking!”
5
ONEOFTHEDEFININGASPECTS of Washington and Lee’s Honor System is that the University’s Board of Trustees has granted students the privilege of overseeing this central feature of the community’s life. Each entering class assembles in Lee Chapel during Orientation to hear a presentation about the Honor System from members of the student Executive Committee. During this session, all students pledge to abide by the Honor System throughout their W&L careers. The Honor System creates a feeling of freedom and trust on campus that allows students to focus on what is most important— learning. Students reaffirm their commit-ment to the Honor System on every test and paper they turn in.
6
“�Teaching�ought�to�be�student-centered.�
Student�needs�and�talents�and�interests�
are�paramount,�and�that�should�be�the�
case�anywhere.�It’s�not�always.�But�it’s�
certainly�true�here.”
Faculty
6
“�There�are�times�when�I’m�supposed�to�be�the�font��
of�wisdom,�but�I�find�I’m�at�my�best�when�I’m�help-
ing�a�student�find�her�own�way,�and�maybe�encour-
aging�her�to�think�a�little�more�critically�than�she�
has�before.”
“�We’re�going�to�challenge�you.�We’re�
going�to�make�you�think�about�things�
that�you’ve�never�thought�about�before.”
“�Our�department�takes�
students�to�American�
Chemical�Society�meet-
ings.�We�have�them�
present�their�research.�
I�feel�like�that’s�one�of�
the�most�important�
things�we�do�in�educat-
ing�them.”
“�The�professors�here�
want�to�get�to�know�
you.�They�care�about�
you.�They�treat�you��
like�an�adult.”
“�In�my�experience,�professors�do�open�their�
doors�to�students—all�the�time.�You�know,�
there’s�always�a�way�to�get�in�touch�with�a�
professor�if�you�have�a�question.�Even�if�
they’re�not�physically�available,�professors�
will�respond�to�an�e-mail,�so�you�never�feel�
like�you’re�on�your�own�with�your�work.”
8
W&L’SIQCENTER (iq.wlu.edu) features the latest imaging equipment and
technology, including a full-color 3-D printer and collaborative spaces
like the stereoscopic 3-D visualization lab (above).
“�I�walked�into�one�class�and�found�out�that�
my�professor�had�graduated�from�Chicago�
undergrad�and�had�a�doctorate�from�
Chicago�as�well,�and�had�residency�at�
Edinburgh,�Yale,�Harvard.�Unbelievable.”
“�Ours�is�a�model�where�research�is�
brought�into�teaching�and�teaching�to�
research.�Not�just�because�students�are�
doing�research,�but�because�one�informs�
the�other,�is�catalytic,�synergistic,�and�the�
whole�is�more�than�the�sum�of�the�parts.”
“�Here�you�don’t�have�to�get�past�three�or�four�postdocs�and�five�
or�six�research�students�to�get�on�instruments�in�the�various�
science�departments.�We�serve�undergraduates,�and�they�are�
the�people�who�have�access�to�everything�that�we�own.”
“�My�professors�are�great.�I�go�to�their�houses�for�
lunch,�for�barbeques,�for�cast�parties.�I�baby-sit�
for�them.�I�dog-sit�for�them.�I�house-sit�for�them��
if�they�ask�me.”
9
12
Perspectives“�The�university�setting�is�definitely�
about�learning�about�other�cultures,�
about�other�people,�and�really�testing�
your�intellect,�your�beliefs.�When�you�
have�to�argue�a�belief,�you�realize�
how�strongly�you�believe�it.”
10
“�International�students�bring�a�dynamic�
to�campus�that�is�unique.�They�get�really�
involved�in�bringing�their�heritage�to�
campus,�and�they�open�it�up�to�the��
students�here.”
“�I�teach�classes�on�the�art�of�Europe.�My�colleagues�
teach�the�art�of�India�and�China�and�Japan.�These�
days,�we’re�teaching�about�the�Middle�East�and�
Asia.�We’re�reading�literature�from�Africa,�from�
Europe,�from�South�America.�We�have�interdisciplin-
ary�programs�that�call�students�to�travel,�to�see�the�
world.�That’s�what�the�modern�curriculum�is.”
“�I�went�to�China�last�Spring�Term.�It’s�nice�
to�have�that�option�to�go�abroad�but�not�
for�a�full�semester.�Chinese�is�not�my�
main�focus,�but�China�has�such�a�grow-
ing�economy.”
“�The�other�night�we�had�a�Passover�seder,�and�rather�than�it�only�
being�Jewish�students,�we�wanted�to�invite�everybody�at�W&L,�
so�some�of�my�fraternity�brothers�came.�They�wanted�to�know�
what�Passover�was�really�like.”
“�Our�respect�for�diver-
sity�comes�out�of�the�
Honor�System—civility�
and�respect�for�every-
body�on�this�campus.”
“�To�have�an�open��
mind�and�to�be�
exposed�to�other��
people’s�viewpoints��
is�how�you�learn.”
“�Studying�abroad�proved�to�be�an�even�
more�valuable�experience�than�I�could�
have�dreamed.�Being�able�to�see�and�
learn�so�much�not�only�changed�my�per-
spective�of�the�world,�but�of�myself�and�
my�place�in�it.”
“�Two�of�my�best�friends�are�best�friends,�too.�One�is�from�Swazi-
land�and�the�other�is�from�Tennessee.�It’s�just�amazing,�when�
you�get�here�and�you�interact�with�different�kinds�of�people,��
the�kind�of�lasting�relationships�you�end�up�having.”
“�We’re�a�small�enough�school�that�you�can’t�just��
isolate�yourself�with�people�who�are�similar�to�you.�
You�have�to�reach�out.�Otherwise�you�end�up�with��
a�really�small�group�of�friends.”
11
W&L’SJAPANESETEAROOM provides a beautiful space in which to learn about
and experience the art of tea, or chanoyu.
“�Part�of�improvising�for�jazz�is�building�up�
a�language�in�your�mind,�kind�of�like�
having�different�colors�to�paint�with�and�
being�able�to�apply�those�over�various�
harmonies�and�various�chord�types,�and�
so�this�course�outlined�that�and�helped�
you�start�to�compile�your�paints�and�your�
colors�and�know�when�to�use�red�and�
when�to�use�blue.”
“�One�thing�at�W&L�is�that�we’re�
completely�student-run,�student-�
organized�and�student-funded.��
There’s�no�administration�overseeing�
what�we�do�as�student�organizations.�
What�we�want�to�be�involved�in,�we�
can�do.”
“�It’s�scary�to�work�as�hard�as�you�can,�because��
if�you�fail�there�are�no�excuses.�When�you�have��
a�team�that�gives�everything�it’s�got�and�it��
succeeds,�you�have�one�of�those�stories�you��
can�tell�your�grandkids�years�later.”
12
Pursuits
12
“�In�the�W&L�Student�Consult-
ing�Group,�we�do�all�sorts�of�
consulting�work�for�local�
organizations�and�compa-
nies�and�then�also�national�
ones—writing�marketing�
plans,�figuring�out�new�mar-
kets.�It’s�completely�student�
run,�pro�bono.”
“�There’s�a�volunteer�
database�that�we�have�
that�is�growing�every�
year.�I�think�right�now�
we�probably�have�500�
or�600�students�in�it.�
They�matched�up�with�
about�60�to�70�commu-
nity�agencies�that�we�
have�contact�with.”
“�There�is�a�reason�we�have�over�a�hun-
dred�student�organizations,�because�
there�are�niches�for�everyone.�So�you�
have�college�liberals�and�you�have��
College�Republicans,�and�you�have�
Students�for�Choice,�but�there�is�also��
a�Students�for�Life�organization.”
“�The�Commons�theater�is�amazing!�The�
10�p.m.�movie�is�packed�on�weekends—
they’re�current�movies�we�want�to�see.�
It’s�a�nice�way�to�end�the�week.”
“�On�a�campus�like�this,�there�are�so�many�things�happening,�
you�could�literally�spend�every�afternoon�and�evening�of�
every�single�day�and�weekend�at�some�kind�of�event.�There�
is�just�no�way�that�you�could�do�it�all.”
“�Most�all�of�our�parties�are�
open.�They’re�not�exclusive.�
Everyone�goes.”
13
AWORLD-CLASSFACILITY and home to
W&L’s departments of theater, dance
and film, music, art and art history,
the Lenfest Center for the Arts brings
the world’s premiere visual and
performing artists—in theater, opera,
choral and band music, dance and
performance art—to the Lexington
community. The center offers more
than 200 performances and art
exhibitions each year.
14
Setting
“�The�brick�buildings�with�the�white�columns�
and�the�Colonnade.�The�chapel�with�the�bell�
on�top�that�rings�every�hour.�You�get�the�
sense�that�you’re�at�a�place�that’s�greater�
than�yourself,�that�has�such�a�deep�and�rich�
history�and�a�heritage�that�people�are�very�
proud�of.”
14
“�Lexington�is�that�small��
town�you’re�always�hearing�
about,�that�your�parents��
are�always�talking�about,�
‘Oh,�back�in�the�day.’�You�
have�the�brick-paved�side-
walks,�but�it’s�up�to�date.”
“�Roanoke�is�an�hour�away.�D.C.’s�only�
three�hours.�Charlottesville’s�about�an�
hour�north.�You�can�get�places�if�you�
need�to.�When�you�have�to�go�see�a�
movie�at�midnight,�you�can�drive��
down�to�Roanoke�to�do�it.”
“�I�was�skeptical�at�
first,�but�I�like�the�
small-town�feel,�and�
the�community�really�
understands�the�
Honor�System,�which�
does�extend�beyond�
our�campus.”
“�Lexington�is�a�really�quaint�and�cute�
little�town.�I�don’t�think�anyone�could�
describe�it�as�being�anything�else.�
There’s�red�brick�everywhere,�and�the�
fact�that�it’s�tiny�and�safe�makes�for�a�
really�great�college�living�environment.�
There�are�places�to�go�eat�or�have�a�cup�
of�coffee�or�hang�out�with�your�friends�
two�blocks�away�from�campus.�You�can�
walk�anywhere�in�under�10�minutes.”
QUIETANDCHARMING,yet
cosmopolitan, Lexington offers
the comfort and pleasure of
small-town life with just
enough bustle for those look-
ing to spend an afternoon or
evening away from campus.
16
“�Every�single�classroom�in�Wilson�Hall�is�
‘smart’—we’ve�got�electronic�synthesizers,�
we’ve�got�computer�labs�for�studio�arts.”
“�I�love�the�mountains.�The�Blue�Ridge�
Parkway.�Hiking�on�House�Mountain.�
Running�on�the�Chessie�Trail.�This�
morning�I�went�for�a�run�behind�
campus�on�the�Woods�Creek�Trail.”
“�One�of�the�ways�that�I�pacify�either�the�stress�of�school�or�having�a�lot�of�work�is�to�go�on�a�run�somewhere�out�by�our�house.�Virginia�is�God’s�country.�I�mean,�it’s�such�a�beautiful�area�around�here,�with�the�rolling�hills�and�the�cow�pastures,�especially�in�the�spring,�when�things�start�turning�green�and�coming�alive.”
“�There�are�tons�of�trails�around�here.��
A�bunch�of�my�friends�love�mountain�
biking.�I�enjoy�hiking�and�tubing�on��
the�rivers.”
“�In�the�field�geology�class�you’re�actually�going�out�
to�places�and�seeing�different�rock�formations.�We�
went�caving�and�to�a�lot�of�different�places�along�
the�Blue�Ridge�Parkway.�It’s�cool�that�the�area�gets�
incorporated�into�your�academics.”
“�I�went�to�D.C.�for�the�Power�Shift��
climate�conference�to�lobby�for�the�
environment.�There�are�a�lot�of�trips�
like�that.�And�W&L�students�get�a�lot��
of�internships�there.”�
“�A�lot�of�students�take�advantage�of�the�setting.�
I’ll�drive�to�Goshen�just�because�it’s�so�nice.”
“�Not�many�students�bike�across�
campus�because�it’s�so�easy�to�
walk�from�place�to�place.”
17
1818
“�This�school�does�turn�out�amazing�
leaders.�It’s�not�something�that�
people�are�actively�seeking,�I�don’t�
think,�but�just�the�way�the�school�
trains�you�and�prepares�you.”
18
Leadership
“�Service�has�been�a�large�part�of�my�four�
years�at�W&L.�One�thing�W&L�teaches��
us,�in�our�motto,�is�to�be�‘not�unmindful��
of�the�future.’�We�know�that�after�our��
four�years,�we’ll�be�called�upon�for�more�
than�our�personal�financial�betterment.�
It’s�about�betterment�of�mankind�
through�service.”
“�In�this�environment,�everybody�is�some�sort�of�leader.��
They�are�coming�to�W&L�because�of�their�leadership.��
They�had�to�have�done�something�in�high�school�that�got��
them�here.�So�wherever�you�are�here,�you’re�with�other��
leaders,�other�people�who�can�better�this�community.”
“�W&L�is�leading,�too.�President�Ruscio�signed�the�
Presidents�Climate�Commitment,�as�well�as�an�inter-
national�treaty�to�become�carbon�neutral�over�the�
next�20�years.�They’ve�really�taken�a�lot�of�big�strides�
to�reduce�our�carbon�footprint.”
“�I’m�in�the�Williams�Investment�Society.�In�the�years�
since�it�started,�we’ve�turned�the�million�dollars�of�
endowment�the�school�gave�us�into�about�1.6�mil-
lion,�I�think.�We’ve�beaten�the�S&P�five�years�run-
ning.�We�don’t�just�make�bets.�We’re�actually�doing�
the�kind�of�stuff�business�analysts�do.�It’s�a�really�
good�experience.”
ONANDOFFCAMPUS,W&L students are
leaders—and often win accolades at the
same time. In total, W&L students have
won five Ethics Bowls sponsored by the
Virginia Foundation for Independent Col-
leges: in 2001 debating Ethics and Tech-
nology, 2002 for Ethics and Civil Liberties
and National Security, 2004 for Ethics and
War, 2005 for Ethics and Politics, and
2009 for Ethics in Journalism (above). The
W&L team was runner-up in 2013.
MANYLENDTHEIRENERGIES to W&L’s
myriad community outreach initiatives,
including Campus Kitchen (above, left), in
which unused food from the dining halls
and local restaurants is prepared and
delivered to populations in need.
MORETHAN95PERCENTof the student body
participates in W&L’s quadrennial Mock
Convention (left).
“�You�have�to�expand�your�definition�of�leadership.�There’s�a�lot�
of�service�leadership�on�campus.�Everyone,�it�seems,�volun-
teers.�And�that�is�leadership�in�a�sense,�leading�in�a�different�
capacity.”
19
20
“�The�professors�will�ask,�‘Why�do�you�
feel�this?�How�do�you�believe�in�
this?�Why?’�So�you’re�going�to�have�
to�question�yourself—you’re�going�
to�really�have�to�know�why�you�
believe�something—you�really�have�
to�have�something�to�back�it�up.�”
Discourse
20
21
“�When�you�walk�through�the�Colonnade�
today,�at�any�hour,�you’re�going�to�see�
students�arguing�with�each�other�about�
the�hot-button�issues�of�the�day.�They’re�
going�to�be�writing�about�them.”
“��This�is�a�comfortable�environ-
ment.�People�aren’t�afraid�to�
express�different�opinions�
and,�more�importantly,�listen�
to�different�opinions.”
“�I�don’t�know,�in�our�frater-
nity,�we�get�into�some�pretty�
good�fights.�We�have�20�lib-
erals�and�20�conservatives.”
“�For�Washington�Term,�you�have�about�16�students�
who�are�living�in�apartments�in�D.C.�together�and�
working�all�over�D.C.�So�frequently�at�night,�a�group�
of�us�would�be�hanging�out�in�an�apartment�and�
talking�about�something�that�was�going�on�in�D.C.�
or�something�that�happened�at�the�office.�The�pro-
fessor�tries�to�make�it�about�half�and�half,�Demo-
crats�and�Republicans.”
“�I�have�friends�in�the�Williams�School�and�the�Journalism�Depart-
ment�and�others�who�are�pre-med.�I�think�that�when�your�friends�
are�interested�in�big�and�different�academic�fields,�you�can�casu-
ally�talk�about�what�you’re�interested�in,�and�it�doesn’t�seem�like�
you’re�having�an�intellectual�discussion.�But�really,�you�have�dif-
ferent�opinions�and�different�strengths,�so�it’s�under-the-radar�
intellectual�discussion.”
“�You�know,�people�talk�about�student�
apathy.�But�there�were�3,000�members�
of�the�W&L�community�sitting�in�the�gym�
listening�to�Jesse�Jackson�speak.”
21
Destinations
“�Listen,�learning�doesn’t�stop�when�
you�graduate�from�college;�college�is�
where�you�begin�to�learn.�They�call�it�
commencement�for�a�reason.�We’re�
trying�to�teach�people�how�to�prepare�
themselves�for�lives�of�learning.”
22
“�A�young�person�living�in�this�culture�on�a�daily�
basis,�being�direct�with�people.�I�can’t�help�but�
believe�that�affects�how�they�leave�here,�in�terms��
of�their�self-confidence.”
“�If�you’re�in�policy�economics�and�politics,�go�for�a�Truman.�We�
won�one�of�those�last�year.�If�you’re�interested�in�the�sciences,�
try�for�a�Goldwater�Fellowship.�We�got�a�Goldwater�last�year.��
If�you’re�interested�in�classics�or�literature�or�history,�apply�for��
a�Beinecke�scholarship—that’s�$30,000�for�graduate�school.��
We�won�one�of�those�two�weeks�ago.”
“�I�got�into�the�New�York�Intern�Program�for�Spring�Term.�It’s�
mainly�for�businesspeople,�but�anybody�can�apply.�You�go��
up�to�New�York,�still�going�to�classes�and�lectures�and�stuff��
and�writing�papers,�but�you�are�also�working�for�weeks�before�
most�people�would�get�there�to�start�a�summer�job.�It’s�a�huge�
advantage�for�W&L�students.”
“�I�got�an�internship�by�sending�an�e-mail��
to�a�W&L�grad.�He�wrote�back,�‘We�don’t��
have�interns,�but�send�me�your�résumé�
and�I’ll�see�what�I�can�do.’�A�week�later,��
I�had�an�internship.”
“�The�alums�come�back�here�to�recruit�because�they�know�
what�kind�of�students�W&L�produces.”
“�Leaving�our�school,�looking�back�on�it,��
I�think�we’re�going�to�be�a�lot�more�loyal�
because�we’ve�had�so�many�opportuni-
ties�to�get�involved�and�make�an�impact�
on�campus.”
“�There�is�something�about�this�place�that�is�deep.�
Never�mind�the�kinds�of�slogans�and�branding�that�
everyone�is�striving�for,�there�are�some�fundamen-
tal�core�values�here�that�just�shine�through�in�every�
endeavor.�It’s�not�perfect,�but�it’s�consistent.”
23
If the voices, ideas, opinions and perspectives of the people who make up our community resonate with you, Washington and Lee is worth a closer look. The pages that follow tell the rest of our story: the figures and the facts, the details and the dates.
The Details
VISION 26
DISTINCTIONS 27
STUDENTS 28
FACULTY 29
DIVISIONS 30
PROGRAMS 32OFSTUDY
OPPORTUNITIES 33
STUDENTLIFE 34
RESIDENCELIFE 36
SETTING 37
AFTERW&L 38
BEFOREW&L 39
W&LFACTS 41
25
26
HONORING THE PAST
Named to honor two of the most influential figures in American history, Washington and Lee University is deeply indebted to the values and ideals that defined George Washington and Robert E. Lee as leaders of the highest order.
It was Washington’s $20,000 gift of James River Canal stock in 1796 that allowed the strug-gling Liberty Hall Academy (an early name for W&L) to survive financial hardship. But it is his embodiment of the principles of great leadership that still resonates in today’s classrooms.
It was a sense of responsibility for educating the citizenry that led Robert E. Lee to assume the presidency of Washington College, turning down more lucrative offers. Lee’s insistence that students behave with honor and civility inspired W&L’s renowned Honor System, and his progressive views on education brought journalism, business, engineering, science and law curricula to a liberal arts institution.
THRIVING IN THE PRESENT
Building on the foundation provided by its early leaders, W&L is a modern, vibrant liberal arts university known for academic excellence, close student-faculty relationships, and a rich, broad curriculum. W&L is distinguished by a tradition of integrity, mutual respect and honor cherished throughout the community and known across the nation. Perhaps most remarkable is that the institution’s core values are upheld by a self-governing student body—respectfully aware of their responsibility as tomorrow’s leaders.
LOOKING TO THE FUTURE
W&L is committed to its quintessential tradition of preparing students for lives of consequence, motivated by a desire to serve others. Mindful of the challenges presented to today’s students by technologi-cal changes, globalization and shifting political and cultural realities, the University has committed unprecedented resources to faculty salaries, ensuring that students have access to the best possible teachers, scholars and lead-ers in their fields. Further, an alumnus’ gift of $100 million
enabled the launch of the ambitious Johnson Program for Leadership and Integrity, an initiative that supports 44 full scholarships in each class, enabling W&L to attract the most promising students to its classrooms. The program also provides summer grants for student experiences in the U.S. and abroad. It also spon-sors a lecture series promoting conversations about leadership in today’s society.
W&L asks its students to take on the most challenging contemporary questions and problems, supporting their efforts by continually develop-ing the University’s interdisci-plinary programs in areas such as the environment, poverty and women’s studies and by continuing to enhance and support a variety of programs in international study, travel and research.
Ever committed to its Honor System, principles of student self-governance and education in moral and ethical reasoning, W&L provides its students the grounding, perspective and integrity they will need to take their place as citizens and lead-ers of the new century.
VisionSeldom does a Latin motto have as much contemporary relevance as Washington and Lee’s. Non incautus futuri, “not unmindful of the future,” serves as a constant reminder that a celebrated legacy of excellence pales in comparison to a University’s responsibility to educate its students for the future. W&L responds to an ever-changing world and has remained true to its bedrock principles of honor and integrity, while boldly rethinking the liberal arts education for the 21st century.
• GEORGE WASHINGTON’S $20,000
gift began a long tradition of
giving to W&L by those who bene-
fitted from its legacy and believe
in its mission. Recently, two of
the largest gifts ever to institu-
tions of higher education have
been given to W&L by alumni.
A STATUE OF A TOGA-CLAD
GEORGE WASHINGTON (known
affectionately as “Old
George”) was carved by Lex-
ington craftsman Matthew
Kahle in 1844 from a log found
floating in the nearby Maury
River. It stood atop Washing-
ton Hall until 1990, when it
was replaced with a replica for
preservation purposes. Visi-
tors can view the original in
W&L’s Leyburn Library.
“�We’re�so�rooted�in�tradition�and��history,�but�really�our�tradition��is�to�look�to�the�future.”
ONE RULE
It was Robert E. Lee, then president of the University, who articulated the “one rule— that every student must be a gentleman.” Lee’s ideal formed the foundation for the W&L Honor System, an all-encom-passing system of trust. Since a central implication is that students will not lie, cheat or steal, members of the W&L community take one another’s words and actions at face value inside the classroom and out.
Although other colleges and universities maintain honor codes, W&L students insist that theirs is unique among institu-tions of higher learning. The system is entirely self-regulated by the student body, with no faculty or board oversight. Those found guilty of violating the community’s trust are asked to leave the University.
In the classroom, there is never doubt about the authenticity of student work. Professors confi-dently offer unproctored or self-scheduled exams, students don’t worry about leaving their personal belongings unat-tended, and campus buildings are accessible 24 hours a day.
SPEAK
The most visible expression of community trust and warmth at W&L is the Speaking Tradition, a time-honored practice of greeting others when passing on campus. Whether a spoken “hello” or a nod of recognition, the gesture of greeting is but the outward expression of the openness and acceptance present in interactions throughout life in this community. From casual conversations among friends in the Commons to heated intellectual debates between students and professors, an air of civility underscores all discourse at W&L.
12-12-4
Students complete two 12-week terms followed by the four-week Spring Term, a calendar that presents a number of uncommon opportunities. Faculty and students alike use the Spring Term to explore new areas of interest and extend themselves intellectually. By taking only one class during the four-week term, students can focus in great depth on the subject at hand. Courses frequently include field trips, internships and research expe-riences. The Spring Term also enables students to pursue intensive international experi-ences alongside their classmates and professors. Twelve to 16 study-abroad classes are led by faculty each year to a diverse lineup of destinations.
DistinctionsA confident peer to the nation’s most outstanding institutions of research and higher learning, Washington and Lee is distinguished by a handful of ideals—honor, civility and integrity among them—from which its singular culture unfolds. Honor pervades every aspect of life, deepening relationships and allowing uncommon intellectual freedoms. Civility and integrity create the conditions for mutual trust, resulting in an open community and a rich, frank exchange of ideas.
27
“�We�are�interested�in�character�education,�even�
though�it’s�not�fashionable.�Outside�folks�come�
here�and�say,�‘You�mean�students�are�talking�about�
questions�of�honor�outside�the�class?’”
• THE SPEAKING TRADITION is second
nature to W&L students, but it has
often come as a pleasant
surprise to visitors. In 1913,
New Yorkers Robert and Jessie
Doremus visited campus and
were approached by a student
who offered to give them a tour.
Impressed by the student’s friend-
liness and generosity, the couple
decided to return the favor—to
the tune of a $1.5 million gift to
W&L—in spite of having no prior
connection to the University.
Today, Doremus Gymnasium,
the main gym, bears their name.
• THE W&L HONOR SYSTEM is not
a codified set of rules, but a
discretion-based set of responsi-
bilities interpreted by each
generation of students, who are
asked to reflect upon and define
for themselves what constitutes
honorable behavior. Such contem-
plation and the autonomy created
by the student-run Honor System
are part of what makes a Washing-
ton and Lee education unique.
• LIVING THE W&L HONOR SYSTEM
FOR FOUR YEARS pays dividends
to students in their lives after
college. Employers who know
the University count integrity
and character among the most
important résumé items on an
application from a W&L grad.
NOT AFRAID to get their hands
dirty, several W&L students
spend their Spring Term each
year participating in
archaeological excavations,
hands-on explorations of the
past run by the Department of
Sociology and Anthropology.
PROFILE
W&L’s 1,855 undergraduates have a lot in common. They are smart and aspiring, almost all at or near the top of their high school classes. They are diligent and determined, as evidenced by their commitments to pursuing full lives outside the classroom. They are editors of newspapers, captains of athlet-ics teams, stars of the stage, heads of service initiatives, first-chair musicians, travelers of the world, authors of origi-nal research, and achievers at high levels of whatever they do. In short, they are leaders, interested in having their say in shaping the world—the kinds of people who make a college campus pulse with activity.
Perhaps more interesting, however, and more important to the character of the W&L community, is what its students do not share. There are as many points of view here as there are people—from the staunchly conservative to the stridently liberal to the patently apoliti-cal. Equally varied are students’ places of origin. They come from 46 states and D.C. and hold citizenships in 58 coun-tries (87 percent of students are from outside Virginia). Nearly 10 percent are the first in their families to attend college, and 12 percent are students of color. There is also a tremendous breadth of intellectual diver-sity. Though difficult to quan-tify, the variety of perspectives is obvious in our seminars and also on our playing fields and at our dinner tables.
The wide array of backgrounds and opinions feeds a culture of discourse and debate—tempered by an air of civility that truly distinguishes the culture of communication here. Students speak their minds, argue their perspectives, and occasionally even admit to a change of viewpoint.
SELF-GOVERNANCE
Washington and Lee students are entrusted with an uncom-mon degree of self-governance. The student-elected Executive Committee (EC) is the student governance body of W&L. It is responsible for recognizing and funding student organiza-tions and allocating a sizable student activities budget. Its other important work is overseeing and upholding the Honor System. The EC hears honor cases (rare but occasion-ally necessary) and votes on whether or not an infraction has occurred, without faculty oversight or input. These are but a few examples of the tremendous trust placed in students by the faculty and administration.
JOHNSON SCHOLARS
To ensure that a W&L education is available to the best possible students regard-less of financial background, the University launched the Johnson Scholarship Program. Supported by an unprecedented $100 million gift from a W&L graduate, the program offers full financial support to 44 students in each class who display exceptional academic and personal promise. Recipients have their tuition, room, and board paid for and graduate from W&L free of debt. The scholarship—which is awarded to approximately 10 percent of each class—allows the University freedom in build-ing a community of thinking, talented, open-minded citizens capable of making great contri-butions to the campus and the world beyond.
StudentsIn spite of their eclectic backgrounds, interests and points of view, the students of Washington and Lee have in common a desire to contribute. They tend to see their college education as an opportunity to add depth and perspective to their developing sense of engagement with the world.
STUDENTS CHOOSE A COLLEGE
for many reasons, not the least
of which is the company they
keep outside the classroom.
Our students say a significant
portion of their W&L education
comes from their relationships
with fellow students.
• EXPECTED ACCOLADES ASIDE,
W&L’s most recent enrolling class
includes students who were publi-
cation editors (64), Eagle Scouts
or Gold Award recipients (18),
class or student body presidents
or vice presidents (65), and varsity
captains (241). Thirty-one are first-
generation college attendees. The
class also includes a few pilots,
black belts, entrepreneurs, Con-
gressional pages, musicians, and
debate champions.
• IN 1804, then Washington College
student George William Crump
became the world’s first recorded
streaker. Crump went on to distin-
guish himself by serving in the U.S.
Senate and as America’s ambassa-
dor to Chile.
“�Students�do�have�to�work�hard�here.�You’d�better��be�ready�when�you�walk�into�a�class,�knowing�you’re�responsible�for�the�material�and�will��probably�have�to�speak.�You�can’t�get�away�with��sitting�in�a�corner,�not�doing�anything.”
28
PROFILE
The members of Washington and Lee’s faculty constitute an impressive body of dedicated teachers, committed scholars and 24-hour-a-day members of the University community. They are scientists, philoso-phers, journalists, economists and mathematicians; they are thinkers, authors, artists and experts; they are mentors and advisors; they are parents and community members; they are professional educators who made the deliberate choice to teach and pursue their scholar-ship at a liberal arts university.
These multiple roles inform one another to the benefit of students. Classrooms are energized by faculty who are actively researching the very subjects they are teaching. Conversely, faculty scholar-ship is enriched by substantial student involvement through-out the academic year and during the summer.
The Summer Research Scholars Program provides funding for students to work alongside faculty members on collab-orative summer research in disciplines across the curricu-lum—an experience that often leads to student presentations at national conferences or co- authorship on published articles. Faculty also mentor student independent study or student-initiated scholarly work.
Ninety-eight percent of W&L professors hold the Ph.D. or terminal degree in their field. They enjoy the luxury of teach-ing in close, familiar settings: 92 percent of classes have fewer than 25 students, 73 percent have fewer than 20, the average class size is 15, and the student-teacher ratio is 8 to 1.
EVER BETTER
As W&L looks toward the future, it strives to continue attracting the best possible teachers and scholars to lead students in study and research of the most pressing issues of the 21st century.
A portion of the $100 million gift that funds the Johnson Scholarship Program created and supports two faculty posi-tions, both of which focus on the issues surrounding leader-ship, and for a lecture series to bring leading thinkers on these topics to campus.
Another recent gift of $33 million, which was doubled through matching funds and is earmarked specifically to support faculty salaries, will help W&L to recruit and retain the best professors for years to come.
29
FacultyWashington and Lee’s professors choose to make their professional homes here for various reasons. Many value being in a place where teaching is balanced with their research interests. Others are drawn to the freedoms offered by an academic community based on integrity. Some are inspired by the rich intellectual possibil-ities of interweaving law, journalism, business and the traditional liberal arts and sciences. Others cite the beauty of the Shenandoah Valley or the warmth of the Lexington community.
• W&L FACULTY SCIENTISTS conduct
research at the forefront of their
disciplines, often with the assis-
tance of undergraduates. Current
focuses include object recognition
in natural images, stochastic mod-
eling of muscle contraction and
molecular motors, genetic sequenc-
ing of black widow spiders, high-
speed optical square waves, and
aero-optical density fluctuation.
• ACROSS THE CURRICULUM, W&L
professors have earned honors
and funding from many sources,
including the Fulbright Program,
the National Science Foundation,
the National Endowment for the
Humanities, the Howard Hughes
Medical Institute, the Mellon Foun-
dation, the Council on Foreign
Relations and the Folger Shake-
speare Library, among others.
• BECAUSE THEY KNOW their stu-
dents so well, W&L professors are
better able to teach them and are
well equipped to write informed
letters of recommendation for
graduate school applications.
“�I�can�hardly�wait�to�get�to�work.�It’s�not�work.�It’s�a�
labor�of�love.�I�get�to�sit�around�tables�and�talk�to�
interesting�people�every�day�or�stand�up�in�front�
and�talk�to�some�really�fine�students.”
W&L PROFESSORS share an
interest in breaking down
the boundaries between
students and themselves.
Classrooms are interactive,
office doors are open, and
foyers are fair game for
impromptu conversation.
29
THE COLLEGE
All W&L students explore the rich spectrum of disciplines offered by the College, choos-ing among courses in the arts, humanities, social sciences, journalism, the natural and physical sciences, computer science and mathematics. By completing the cross-curricular —but flexible—Foundation and Distribution Require-ments, students train their minds to think broadly and deeply while discovering where their passions lie.
Studies in the humanities, designed to hone critical and compositional language skills, include course work in English and one of eight modern languages (Chinese, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, Russian and Spanish) or ancient Greek, Latin or Sanskrit. Arts offerings include varied curricula for the study of music, art, theater, film and dance, supplemented by departmental and student-run ensembles.
Students explore history, philosophy and religion—learning to think critically about current and histori-cal perspectives, societies and belief systems. Through study of politics, economics, journalism, psychology and anthropology, students develop facility with the conceptual and theoretical underpinnings of social institutions.
At W&L, study of the sciences is rooted in lab work and research—hands-on learning- by-doing that pairs students with professors, not graduate teaching assistants. Courses for non-majors combine science and mathematics fundamen-tals with more universal topics.
Students may elect to double major, to complete one or more minors in addition to a major, or to design their own major in Independent Work under faculty guidance. A full listing of majors and minors is found on page 32.
The faculty of the College encourages and mentors independent scholarly work and offers opportunities for collaborative or independent research. The College curricu-lum also includes courses that prepare students for profes-sional and advanced training in engineering, journalism, law and medicine.
During the second year, students either select a major in the College or choose to pursue a major in accounting, business administration, economics or politics in the Williams School.
DivisionsAmong Lee’s most important—and, at the time, revolutionary—contributions to the University were his decisions to strengthen its programs in science and engineering and to incorporate pro-grams in journalism, business and law. In spite of opinions to the contrary, he believed that the study of the professions would be enhanced by consideration within the context of a rich liberal arts curriculum. More than a century later, the fruits of his wisdom are still being realized at W&L.
“�Most�liberal�arts�schools�frown�upon�the�idea�of�having�a�
business�school�or�a�law�or�a�journalism�program�because�
these�are�usually�more�technical�disciplines.�But�if�you�
think�about�it,�these�disciplines�all�depend�on�the�skills�
of�the�liberal�arts—for�instance,�in�journalism�you�are�using�
English,�you�are�using�communication�skills.�And�politics�is�
forever�bound�to�the�fields�of�philosophy�and�rhetoric—
and�other�languages�for�international�politics�students.”
WITH CURRICULA RANGING
from the history, practice and
theory of their respective art
forms, the departments of
music, art and theater and
dance also stress performance
and exhibition, offering stu-
dents the opportunity to learn
about art while making it.30
JOURNALISM AND MASS COMMUNICATIONS
Part of the College and a fixture of the W&L curriculum for more than a century, the Department of Journalism and Mass Communications is the oldest journalism program in the history of education and the only such program within a highly regarded liberal arts university. Students choose to focus on one of three sequences —journalism, business journal-ism or strategic communica-tions—and in the spirit of the program’s converged curricu-lum, learn the basic ideas and skill sets of print, broadcast and electronic media.
In addition to instilling the fundamentals of communica-tion and critical thought, the department stresses awareness of the ethical requirements of the profession. This is one of the many reasons that a jour-nalism degree from W&L is so respected, a fact that translates into ample opportunities for employment or advanced study after graduation.
Sweeping renovations to the journalism building have made W&L the first journalism program in the nation to create totally digital classrooms and laboratory systems for its students.
THE WILLIAMS SCHOOL OF COMMERCE, ECONOMICS, AND POLITICS
The Williams School offers undergraduate education in accounting, business adminis-tration, economics, and politics in the context of an outstand-ing liberal arts education, emphasizing critical thinking, decision making, problem solv-ing, and effective communica-tion. Rather than requiring specialization, the Williams School encourages students to explore a broad range of disci-plines, practices, and perspec-tives with the goal of becoming liberally educated individuals and active participants in society.
The Williams School is unique in its inclusion of politics and economics under the same umbrella as the more traditional business-related disciplines of accounting and administration. Acknowledging and exploiting the close ties between these disciplines allows W&L to educate business-savvy economists, politicians with an understanding of business fundamentals, and business leaders with a long view of the political and economic contexts of their industries.
This richness of perspective is one of the main reasons that Williams School graduates are so sought after by employ-ers and so well regarded by graduate and professional school admission commit-tees. Interviewers from lead-ing banking, investment, and consulting firms recruit directly from the Williams School, and a well-placed network of W&L alumni has proved consistently helpful in opening doors for graduating students.
Many current students are offered internships during the summers following their junior (or sometimes sophomore) year at such leading firms as J. P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Harris Williams & Co., PricewaterhouseCoopers, or Bain & Company. Many of these turn into full employ-ment after graduation.
The Williams School has a faculty of 50, all of whom hold a Ph.D., and offers approxi-mately 85 to 90 courses each year. Majors available in the Williams School are business administration, accounting
and business administration, economics, politics, or public accounting. Regardless of major, all W&L students may take courses in the Williams School, and many do.
THE SCHOOL OF LAW
Among the nation’s best-respected law programs, the Washington and Lee School of Law is also one of the smallest. Undergraduates benefit from access to visiting luminar-ies (author John Grisham and Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, among others), pre-law advising, and the occasional cross-listed course. Undergraduate seniors may take elective law courses.
“�So�much�of�what�we�do�in�the�Williams�School�is�a�
combination�of�what�we�learn�from�other�disci-
plines,�so�that�it�truly�creates�a�liberal�arts�field.”
31
• LEE’S TENURE as president was
one of rapid change: the College
absorbed the Lexington Law School
and developed programs
in the sciences. Lee inaugurated
studies in business instruction—
the roots of the Williams School—
and in journalism. The courses in
business and journalism were the
first offered in an American college.
• TEACHING FROM EXPERIENCE,
law faculty and law students coach
and mentor the undergraduate
Mock Trial team, which is one of
the strongest in the nation.
SMALL CLASSES benefit students
by providing greater interaction
not only with W&L’s accom-
plished teacher-scholars but
also with classmates. Our alumni
report that the relationships they
developed with faculty during
their undergraduate careers
remain meaningful and lasting
once they graduate.
STUDENTS GRADUATE from the
Williams School conversant in
the ideas and concerns of their
chosen major and also trained
to think, write and articulate
their ideas in broad, interdisci-
plinary ways—skills that make
them better economists,
accountants, businesspeople
or politicians.
31
MAJORS
Accounting and Business AdministrationAccounting: Public AccountingArt HistoryBiochemistryBiologyBusiness AdministrationChemistryChemistry-EngineeringClassicsComputer ScienceEast Asian Languages and LiteratureEconomicsEnglish
Environmental StudiesFrenchGeologyGerman LanguageGerman LiteratureHistoryIndependent WorkJournalismMathematicsMedieval and Renaissance StudiesMusicNeurosciencePhilosophyPhysicsPhysics-EngineeringPoliticsPsychologyReligionRomance LanguagesRussian Area StudiesSociology and AnthropologySpanishStrategic CommunicationsStudio ArtTheater
MINORS
Africana StudiesArt HistoryBiologyClassicsComputer ScienceCreative WritingDanceEast Asian StudiesEducationEducation PolicyEnvironmental StudiesFilm and Visual CultureFrench GermanLatin American and Caribbean StudiesMass CommunicationsMathematicsMuseum StudiesMusicPhilosophyPoverty and Human Capability StudiesRussian Language and CultureStudio ArtTheaterWomen’s and Gender Studies
INTERNATIONAL STUDY
W&L considers international travel and study an essential component of an education with relevance in the 21st century. The 12-12-4 calendar provides an excellent opportu-nity for students to spend time abroad without having to miss a 12-week term in Lexington. This option is particularly helpful to varsity athletes or science students with lab requirements. Each Spring Term, more than a dozen faculty-led trips combine travel with focused study and cultural immersion in coun-tries around the world.
For students wishing to study abroad for a semester or full year, W&L offers affiliations and exchanges with universi-ties in Italy, Australia, England, Brazil, Germany, Japan, Scotland and other countries. Additionally, the Center for International Education works closely with students wishing to explore other programs or destinations.
Programs of StudyWith all of the opportunities for close teaching and collaborative research afforded by its intimate size, Washington and Lee also offers a curricular breadth that the Washington Post called “the envy of many larger institutions.” Students choose from 38 majors, 25 minors and more than 1,200 courses. W&L also stresses the importance of international education, encouraging students to explore the world and giving them the resources to do so.
“�Alumni�joke�about�
majoring�not�in��
subjects�but�in�
professors.”
• RECENT SPRING TERM international
study courses include Drawing
Italy in Rome, Spoleto, Cortona,
Florence, and Venice; Technical
Examinations of 17th Century
Dutch Paintings in the Nether-
lands; Japanese Language and
Culture in Kanazawa; Regional
Geology of New Zealand; Business
in Ireland; and Economic Develop-
ment of Sub-Saharan Africa in
Ghana.
• W&L OFFERS A NUMBER of first-year
seminars focused on a single
topic, issue or problem. Limited to
15, these seminars are reading-
and discussion-based, enabling
students to develop critical analy-
sis skills that will inform the rest of
their college careers. Past topics
included The Wired Self (anthropol-
ogy); Robot and Mind (computer
science); Great Trials in History
(journalism); Close Encounters
with the Impossible (math); Race
& Justice in America (philosophy);
and Death & Dying (religion).
A RECENT $33 MILLION renova-
tion and expansion of W&L’s
science facilities brought the
departments of biology, chem-
istry, computer science, geol-
ogy, physics and engineering,
and psychology under one
roof. The amply equipped labs
and classrooms foster a wide
array of scientific learning and
research.
32
THE I.Q. CENTER
The center is home to sophisticated imaging and computational instruments rarely available in undergraduate settings, including confocal and scanning electron microscopes, and a powerful 3-D imaging lab. In addition, the Physical-Mechanical Lab and technology-rich teaching and meeting spaces serve to engage students in a flexible, active hands-on learning environment.
SHEPHERD POVERTY PROGRAM
The Shepherd Program for the Interdisciplinary Study of Poverty and Human Capability invites W&L students to add significance to their study by seeking solutions to poverty—in Lexington and throughout the world. Through a combination of course work, service, and personal reflection, students of all majors think critically about poverty and the surrounding issues while devel-oping perspectives and tools that enable productive action.
SUMMER RESEARCH SCHOLARS
Designed to encourage collaboration between students and professors, the Summer Research Scholars Program provides stipends of up to $3,100 for students to assist with faculty research or to initiate their own research project under faculty supervi-sion. Over a 10-week period, students become familiar with research tools, techniques and
methodology—skills of partic-ular value to those intending to attend graduate school.
JOHNSON OPPORTUNITY GRANTS
Every summer up to 30 rising juniors and seniors receive funds to support independent projects all across the country and around the world. Funded by the Johnson Program in Leadership and Integrity, the grants allow students to investigate questions of academic and personal interest, while also exploring their own career aspirations and leadership abilities. Past projects have taken students to Africa, Bulgaria, Dubai, Greece, Greenland, South Korea and many other sites in the U.S. and abroad.
WASHINGTON TERM
W&L’s Washington Term sends approximately 20 students to Capitol Hill each spring for internships in various government offices and D.C. nonprofits, including congres-sional offices, the White House, the Supreme Court, the AFL-CIO, the Department of Education and the Republican and Democratic National Committees. Students gain valuable professional experi-ence and outstanding network-ing opportunities.
WILLIAMS INVESTMENT SOCIETY
In 1997, Washington and Lee entrusted $1 million of the University’s endowment to the supervision of a student-founded investment group. Since then, the funds managed by the society have consistently outper-formed the S&P 500. In recogni-tion of the Society’s excellent track record, they were given an additional $3 million in 2014, bringing the student-managed portion of W&L’s endowment to over $5 million. Members of the group have appeared on the CNBC program “Power Lunch” and have met with Warren Buffett.
STUDENT CONSULTING
Bridging the classroom and business worlds, W&L Student Consulting provides pro bono consulting services to business and community organizations in Lexington and beyond. Serving a variety of clients—from local community groups to international entrepreneur-ial ventures—students hone their strategic management and implementation skills by draft-ing business plans, consulting on communications, or advis-ing on human resource issues.
• IMPACTING CAMPUSES and com-
munities beyond Lexington, the
Shepherd Program offers Alliance
Internships (funded in part by a
Congressional grant) that partner
W&L students with peers from
Berea, Morehouse and Spelman
Colleges for eight-week summer
internships with agencies in urban
and rural communities through the
eastern United States and Latin
and Central America. Alliance stu-
dents confront such issues as edu-
cation, health care and housing.
• A SAMPLING of recent summer
research projects: Virtual
Exploration of Archaeology on
Washington and Lee’s Colonnade
(anthropology); Laser Diagnostic
Temperature Measurements in a
Supersonic Jet (physics-
engineering); Android Control
Software for a Miniature Aerial
Surveillance Vehicle (computer
science); Geochemistry of the
James River Watershed (geology);
Poetry’s Possible Worlds (English).
W&L devotes considerable resources to bringing the world to Lexington—or, when called for, sending students out into the world. From a landmark poverty studies pro-gram to fully funded summer research alongside leading scientists, from internship programs on Wall Street, Capitol Hill or overseas, to the privilege of having a say in how the University manages its stock portfolio, rare opportunities and responsibilities abound for W&L students. The following are a few of the most distinctive.
“�Every�summer�nearly�a�hundred�Washington�and�Lee�stu-dents�stay�in�Lexington�and�work�with�faculty�members�on�research�projects.�Some�of�their�work�will�contribute�to�faculty�publications�and�grants;�some�of�it�will�lead�to�co-authored�papers�and�conference�presentations.”
Opportunities
AN ADDITIONAL ADVANTAGE
enjoyed by students spending
Spring Term in W&L’s Washing-
ton Term Program is the four-
week head start they get on
internships over students from
other schools—an advantage
that translates into greater
experience and opportunity.
33
ARTS
The fine and performing arts are a mainstay of life at W&L. Dozens of department- and student-run ensembles, scores of performances each year and prominent displays of art across campus ensure that the University’s intellectual life is interwoven with artistic expression.
The expansive Lenfest Center for the Arts offers a variety of theaters, concert halls and galleries for performances and exhibitions by student and visiting artists. Its robust, eclectic lineup of events can be viewed online at lenfest.wlu.edu.
Student LifeCampus visitors often get the sense that Washington and Lee is a bigger place than it actually is. For a university of only 1,855 undergrads, W&L boasts more than 130 organizations and activities—groups spanning the arts, media, cultural awareness, politics, religion, service, advocacy, leadership, outdoor life and athletics. It would take a longer book than this one to do them all justice. Some highlights are included below, but to learn much more, visit go.wlu.edu/student-activities.
“�There’s�a�place�here�for�everybody.�There’s�always�
somewhere�within�the�W&L�community�you�can�fit.�
You�can�search�out�people�who�really�speak�to�you,�
and�really�understand�you�and�get�you.”
FROM MUSIC TO THEATER to
dance to fine art, extracurricu-
lar arts energize campus. All
are welcome, and the vast
majority of participants are
non-arts majors.
34
Music
Students enjoy performing with or listening to an exciting slate of musical ensembles—the University-Shenandoah Symphony Orchestra, the highly selective Chamber Singers, the jazz and wind ensembles, the University Chorus and four a cappella groups. Wilson Hall offers students outstanding spaces for music and performance. Several music ensembles regularly tour the United States and interna-tional destinations.
Theater and Dance
At home in the fully equipped Keller Theater, student actors put on a diverse body of performances each year, a lineup that includes large-scale mainstage plays and musicals, dance concerts, an annual playwright festival, a series of student-directed one-acts, and student-produced workshop productions.
W&L offers beginning and advanced students of dance the opportunity to learn and perform modern, ballet and
jazz. Regular student perfor-mances are supplemented by performances and lectures by visiting dancers and choreographers.
Fine Art
The W&L campus is a testa-ment to the community’s commitment to the fine arts and to the quality and volume of student artwork being produced here. In addition to the frequent exhibitions of paintings, sculpture, prints and photographs in the University’s galleries in the Lenfest Center and Wilson Hall, artwork and sculpture can be seen in academic buildings and public spaces across campus. The Williams School’s Huntley Hall houses two galleries featuring the work of profes-sional artists. The Reeves Center and Watson Pavilion feature a world-renowned collection of Asian art and Chinese export porcelain.
SERVICE LEADERSHIP
Many at W&L feel that selfless service is an important aspect of leadership. Supported and enriched by the Shepherd Program, a number of campus organizations strive to create opportunities for community outreach and visibility for the issues surrounding poverty,
hunger, homelessness and other social problems. W&L students contributed over 64,000 hours of community service last year.
The Nabors Service League is an umbrella organization for service-based outreach at Washington and Lee, connect-ing students with service opportunities in the Lexing- ton and greater Rockbridge County communities.
The Community-Academic Research Alliance provides free research and analytical study in an effort to assist commu-nity agencies in overcoming socioeconomic problems in Rockbridge County. Projects are faculty-run but executed by students, often as part of a University course.
Part of a larger national effort, Campus Kitchen at W&L adopts a holistic approach to combating hunger by collect-ing unused food from dining halls and local restaurants and preparing nutritious meals for the hungry, homeless and elderly of Rockbridge County, while also providing compan-ionship and education about nutrition to the people it serves. Campus Kitchen was recently recognized with the Virginia Governor’s Award.
MOCK CONVENTION
Following William Jennings Bryan’s visit to campus in 1908, students staged a mock politi-cal convention in his honor. Held every four years since, W&L’s Mock Convention is remarkable not only for its accuracy in predicting the eventual nominee—correct 13 of 15 times since 1952 and 19 of 25 overall—but also for the extent of community involve-ment. More than 95 percent of the student body participates. Known and respected nation-ally, the Mock Convention has attracted a star-studded lineup of guest speakers—Bill Clinton, Jimmy Carter, Bob Dole, John Huntsman, Newt Gingrich, the late Geraldine Ferraro, Mike Huckabee and Jesse Jackson among them.
The convention itself is just the tail end of a three-year process
of planning and research—education by immersion in the nuances of the American political process. It is a key demonstration of the ability of W&L students to come together in matters of civil discourse; staunch Democrats and Republicans cross party lines for what is commonly regarded as the best civic educational exer-cise at any college in the nation.
MEDIA
W&L offers outlets for news and self-expression across a variety of media. In addition to a weekly newspaper, students produce a news magazine, a journal of economics and politics, a journal of student
and faculty scientific research findings, a literary journal, an interdisciplinary topics journal and a yearbook. Beyond the printed page, students work at a cable TV station and an award-winning weekly news website, “Rockbridge Report” (rockbridge report.wlu.edu). Though enhanced by the presence of the Journalism Department, these initiatives are managed, staffed and produced by students, and any interested student may participate, regardless of major. They also may work at the campus radio station, WLUR.
ATHLETICS
Washington and Lee athletic teams, known as the Generals, compete in the Old Dominion Athletic Conference (ODAC) in the NCAA Division III—which means that athletes can train and compete at a high level without sacrificing their academic experience. The teams are competitive, having won the ODAC Commissioner’s Cup for overall athletic excellence in 18 of the past 20 years. Last year four teams participated in postseason national playoffs, and W&L secured conference championships in six of 24 sports. A full list of men’s and women’s varsity sports can be found on the inside back cover of this book.
Nearly three-quarters of all students participate in some sort of organized athletic activity. The rich array of intramural and sport clubs include cheerleading, cycling, disc golf, eventing, fencing, ice hockey (men’s), lacrosse, paint-ball, raquetball, rowing, rugby, running, skiing, softball, soccer, squash, ultimate Frisbee, and volleyball.
“�Sports�are�another�niche�on�this�campus.�You�have�
your�set�of�friends�from�this�club�or�this�fraternity�or�
that�sorority,�and�then�you�have�your�sports�team,�too.”
• TO ENSURE THAT THE WORLD beats
a path to W&L’s door, the student
organization Contact brings a
robust slate of prominent speak-
ers to campus each year. Guests
have run the spectrum from
science personality Bill Nye to
former NAACP chairman Julian
Bond.
• GIVEN W&L’S SPECTACULAR
SETTING, it’s not surprising that
the Outing Club is one of the most
active organizations. Within 35
minutes of campus, students can
take advantage of 11 rivers and
creeks (at least), 15 caves, two
National Forests, the Appalachian
Trail, three federally designated
wilderness areas, 70-foot cliffs,
and numerous waterfalls, swim-
ming holes, bike trails and scenic
byways.
• THE DRIVE TO WASHINGTON, D.C.,
Richmond and Roanoke takes 3,
2, and 1 hours, respectively, so
the urban pulse is always avail-
able to students interested in a
weekend getaway. In truth, off-
campus forays are relatively rare:
the campus teems with things to
do, and students report that they
usually don’t feel the need to leave.
• IN SPITE OF THE UNIVERSITY’S SIZE
relative to many of its competitors,
Washington and Lee varsity ath-
letes have earned 734 All-America
Citations in school history. W&L
lacrosse players alone have
garnered All-America honors a
staggering 183 times since the
program became a varsity sport in
1947. W&L student athletes excel
in the classroom, too. They have
won 37 NCAA postgraduate schol-
arships, including 18 in the last 11
years.
35
THE HILLEL HOUSE at Washington
and Lee not only provides a
space for gatherings, including
religious services for Jewish
students, but also features a
kosher café that is popular
among students and locals
alike.
FIRST-YEAR LIVING
Students spend their first year living on a hall with 12 to 20 students—mini-communities that provide a first family as college begins. Each group is supervised by trained, upper-class residence life staff members who advise and support and who plan a range of activities for the group—from orientation sessions early in the year to social outings or group dinners in Lexington.
In keeping with W&L’s princi-ples of student self-governance, each first-year group is respon-sible for drafting a statement of social responsibility that determines such issues as quiet hours and intervisitation policy. Substance-free housing is avail-able to interested students.
The first-year residence halls are the subject of an exciting renovation, slated for comple-tion by September 2015.
Sophomores also live in campus housing and choose from a number of options, including on-campus apartments, the University-owned fraternity and sorority houses, or one of several theme houses.
Beginning in fall 2016, a new housing community will open, made up of apartment-style housing designed specifically for upper-class students. The new housing will be a short walk from the central campus and will include informal gath-ering spaces indoors and out, as well as common green spaces that will preserve and enhance the close-knit, residential char-acter of W&L. This improve-ment in housing choices for upper-class students will ensure that all students will live in campus housing through the junior year.
Seniors may live on or off campus and often rent apart-ments in downtown Lexington or houses in the surrounding countryside.
GREEK LIFE
Like so much else in this community, Greek life here is a civil affair—inclusive, egalitar-ian and welcoming. About 80 percent of Washington and Lee students choose to join a fraternity or sorority, adding to the many overlapping identi-ties that describe each student here. Greek life at W&L offers the opportunity for students to come together around shared interests, enjoy discussion and debate during meals, band together for community service, or compete on the field through intramural sports. W&L’s Greek system is distinguished by a culture of inclusivity and is notable for its socioeconomic and ethnic diversity, within each house and across the system. Most Greek social events are open to all students, and members of different Greek organiza-tions—as well as students who choose not to join—have the same opportunities and enjoy the same rich, multifaceted social lives.
W&L’s Greek houses, all of which are University-owned, have undergone substantial renovations within the past decade. As a result, they are comfortable, attractive places to live or just to hang out.
DINING
The Marketplace (also known s the D-Hall), located in the Elrod Commons, is open 7:15 a.m. to 8 p.m. and offers a wide variety of food, including a full-service salad bar, specialty sandwiches with panini grills, a pizza station, and entrees that include vegetarian alternatives and ethnic cuisine.
All first-year students are required to have a full-meal plan, which offers an unlimited number of meals per week in the Marketplace. Special dietary needs may be brought to the attention of the Marketplace chef and will be addressed individually.
The Marketplace promotes sustainability and supports local-foods initiatives.
Residence LifeWashington and Lee students enjoy life on a comfortable, walkable campus, eclectic cuisine at the Elrod Commons and elsewhere in Lexington, and a range of residential options. Over the course of four years, a student might live in a residence hall, the Outing Club House (or another themed house), a fraternity or sorority house, and an off-campus apartment—a range of experiences that offers variety and a helpful transi-tion to the excitement and challenge of independent life after college.
• W&L BOASTS some of the finest
athletic and fitness facilities to
be found at the Division III level.
Resources from the turf fields to
the indoor tennis center to the
state-of-the-art fitness facility
(upper right) are available to var-
sity athlete and casual participant
alike.
• STUDENTS WITH SHARED INTERESTS
may live together in W&L’s themed
houses: the Global Service House,
the John Chavis House (named for
the University’s first African-Ameri-
can student), the Outing Club
House or the Casa Hispánica. Inter-
ested students may apply for resi-
dence in any of these houses after
their first year.
36
A NEW CAMPUS NEIGHBOR-
HOOD, made up of apartments
for upper-class students will
be completed by September,
2016. Featuring beautiful
green space with residences
designed for independent
living, the new housing will be
near the central campus and
adjacent to W&L’s new nata-
torium, also slated for ground-
breaking soon.
CAMPUS
From the stately white pillars of the Colonnade to the state-of-the-art multimedia labs in the Journalism Department, W&L has been a careful steward of tradition, while pouring enormous resources into facilities and equipment for research, teaching, perfor-mance, living and recreation.
The 55-acre central campus is adjoined by 40 acres of play-ing fields and an additional 305 acres of University-owned woodland, streams and coun-tryside. Students can walk from any campus residence to anyplace else on campus in 10 minutes or less.
In the past decade, W&L has undergone significant construction and renova-tion—including a new student center, fitness center, perform-ing arts complex, Hillel House and athletic fields—as well as substantial improvements to the journalism facility and Williams School. A wireless network enables flexibility for student computing. Upcoming renovations to the athletic facilities and the nearly completed renovation of the Colonnade will continue to create more opportunities for students.
LEXINGTON
With a population of about 7,000, Lexington is the perfect complement to W&L—inti-mate, friendly and accessible. On the banks of the Maury River, the town is energized by a constant influx of tourists and college students; Virginia Military Institute also calls Lexington home. The historic district offers an attractive mixture of coffee shops, art galleries and boutiques in keeping with its small, college-town feel. Those looking for a dinner out have their choice of Caribbean, Mexican, Japanese, Italian, Chinese, American contemporary, pub fare or Southern buffet, as well as the usual fast-food options. The
center of the W&L campus and the heart of Lexington are sepa-rated by a five-minute walk, and students and faculty make up a good portion of the daily foot traffic.
THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY
Lexington sits at the foot of House Mountain in the Great Valley between the Blue Ridge and Allegheny mountains. The surrounding countryside is rich with outdoor opportuni-ties. Road or mountain biking, canoeing, kayaking, climbing, caving, fly fishing, white-water rafting, tubing, hiking, skiing and spelunking are all popular outdoor pastimes, as is loung-ing in the sunshine on the banks of the Maury River.
SettingStudents choose W&L for many reasons, not the least of which is the chance to spend four years living and learning in a place as beautiful as it is historically significant. They are inspired by the lush green lawns and red brick buildings of campus, by the bustle and charm of Lexington’s downtown district, and by the character of the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, with its rich historical traditions and unmatched opportunities to enjoy life outdoors.
“�Lexington�is�great.�There�are�restaurants.�There�are�cafés.�
There�are�places�to�go�eat�or�have�a�cup�of�coffee�or�hang�
out�with�your�friends�two�blocks�away�from�campus.�You�can�
walk�anywhere�in�about�10�minutes.”
ASKED TO EXPLAIN their choice
of W&L, many students point
to the intangible benefits of
beauty. Architecture buffs,
nature lovers or those who
just like clean air and relative
calm find inspiration and focus
in and around Lexington.
• LEXINGTON’S CHARM IS WELL-
KNOWN in Hollywood. “Brother
Rat,” starring the late President
Ronald Reagan, was filmed here,
as was “Sommersby” with Richard
Gere and Jodie Foster, as well as
parts of Spielberg’s “War of the
Worlds” with Tom Cruise.
• THE W&L OUTING CLUB makes it
easy for students to get outside,
supplying equipment, teaching
classes, and organizing outings,
both locally and farther afield—
sea kayaking in the Everglades or
skiing in the Colorado Rockies, for
example. One year a group sum-
mited Tanzania’s Mt. Kilimanjaro.
• NOTABLE HISTORICAL SITES in Lex-
ington include Stonewall Jackson’s
home and grave, the George C.
Marshall Museum, Sam Houston’s
birthplace, and Robert E. Lee’s
office, preserved as he left it in Lee
Chapel. Visiting Lee enthusiasts
leave apples on the grave of Lee’s
horse, Traveller, which is just out-
side the chapel museum.
• THE W&L CAMPUS boasts the
longest non-suspension concrete
footbridge in the United States.
37
• W&L GRADUATES ARE SUCCESSFUL
in many fields but boast particu-
larly impressive numbers in civic
and institutional leadership.
Alumni include 27 U.S. senators,
67 U.S. representatives and 31
state governors; four Supreme
Court justices; and seven Ameri-
can Bar Association presidents.
Forty-six have gone on to become
college or university presidents
(including W&L’s own Ken Ruscio).
• THE QUALITY OF A W&L EDUCATION
has been recognized by many of the
world’s leading postgraduate fel-
lowships: the University has pro-
duced 119 Fulbright scholars, 17
Goldwater fellows, 13 National Sci-
ence Foundation fellows, 15 Rhodes
scholars, six Truman scholars and
37 NCAA post-graduate scholarship
winners.
38
ALUMNI
About 25 percent of graduating W&L seniors head directly to graduate or professional school. Of the rest, 95 percent typically have jobs within six months of graduation. A handful each year pursue some of the world’s most prestigious postgraduate fellowships. In the past few years, W&L alumni and under-graduates have won Truman, Goldwater, Luce, Watson and Beinecke scholarships and a number of Fulbright fellow-ships. Some join such service-oriented programs as Teach for America, Americorps, or the Peace Corps, and others choose to travel.
W&L students and alumni enjoy high rates of acceptance to graduate schools. Typically, more than 90 percent of appli-cants to programs in law and in medical, dental, veterinary and other health professions gain admission. Applicants to human- ities, social science, arts, science and mathematics programs are admitted at similar rates.
CAREER DEVELOPMENT
The Career Development office at W&L is a full-service career counseling and support center that offers one-on-one advising to create personalized job and internship search strategies. Career Development offers self-assessment tools, interview training, help with cover letter and résumé writing, and strong relationships with employers who come to campus to recruit and interview W&L students for full-time jobs and intern-ships each fall and spring. Career Development resources and programs are available to interested students as early as their first year. The office maintains active memberships in the Selective Liberal Arts Consortium and the Liberal Arts Career Network, affording students exposure to employers
in major job and internship markets such as Boston, Dallas, Chicago, Atlanta, New York City and Washington, D.C.
ALUMNI NETWORK
The Washington and Lee alumni network is another formidable career resource for graduating students. W&L alumni represent a body of successful women and men in every field, most of whom share a spirited devotion to the University. Alumni have a strong record of hiring fellow graduates. Particularly in professions that prize integrity most highly, alumni seek students or recent graduates for internships or full-time jobs.
After W&LGraduates leave Washington and Lee broadly and deeply educated, capable of thinking critically and communicating their ideas and opinions with confidence. By virtue of four years spent steeped in a culture of honor, they are well-grounded people of integ-rity and character. Even if they don’t yet know what they want to do with their lives, they know who they are and what they value. They are part of a growing family, 26,000 strong, who embody and champion the ideals of their alma mater.
“�This�education�isn’t�about�the�first�job�you’ll�have�
out�of�college,�but�the�last�one.�We’re�educating�not�
for�entry�level,�but�for�advancement�and�leadership.”
ALUMNI OF NOTE:
• Terry Brooks ’69L fantasy fiction author
• Sascha Burns ’93 political strategist, commentator
• John Chavis 1795 missionary, preacher and possibly the first black graduate of any American college
• Kerry Egan ’95 author
• Tricia Escobedo ’95 TV/web producer
CELEBRATED AUTHOR Tom Wolfe
’51 (“The Right Stuff,” “Bonfire
of the Vanities”) remains a
devoted contributor to his alma
mater. Wolfe’s lecture/seminar
series brings luminaries to
campus—such as writer Chris-
topher Buckley (“Thank You for
Smoking’) and New York Times
columnist David Brooks.
• Kelly Evans ’07 cohosts, “Closing Bell,” CNBC
• Dr. Joseph L. Goldstein ’62 Nobel Prize winner, medicine
• Mike Henry ’88 TV writer, and voice actor for “Family Guy,” “The Cleveland Show”
• Bill Johnston ’61 former New York Stock Exchange president
• Alex Jones ’68 Pulitzer-Prize winning former New York Times reporter
• Meriwether Lewis 1790s explorer
• David Low ’78 astronaut
• John M. McCardell Jr. ’71 president, University of the South
• Walt Michaels ’51 former New York Jets head coach
• Bill Miller ’72 chairman, chief investment officer and portfolio manager, Legg Mason
• Roger Mudd ’50 news correspondent
• Lewis Powell Jr. ’29, ’31L Supreme Court justice
• Cy Twombly ’53 abstract artist
• Cecily Tynan ’91 Philadelphia news anchor
• Lyrae Van Clief-Stefanon ’93 poet
• John Warner Jr. ’49 retired U.S. senator, former Navy secretary
VISITING
Much of what is most exciting and unique about Washington and Lee can be understood only when it is experienced firsthand. Interested students are warmly invited to visit—to take a campus tour, to interview with an admissions officer, to sit in on a class, to walk the streets of Lexington, to soak in the majesty of the Shenandoah Valley, and to participate in the Speaking Tradition while strolling the same pathways that two centuries of students have walked. A visit usually helps answer the basic question of whether W&L is a good fit.
ADMISSIONS
Successful applicants to Washington and Lee must demonstrate an outstanding record of achievement in a rigorous high school curricu-lum, competitive standardized test scores, compelling letters of reference, and excellent writing ability in the form of a personal statement. Beyond admitting
intellectually capable students, the Admissions Committee strives to assemble a class of students who demonstrate leadership, passion, talent and potential in a wide variety of areas. Applicants should care-fully document their extra-curricular involvement and achievements.
In addition to the regular- decision application option, W&L offers two rounds of bind-ing early decision for students whose first choice is W&L.
FINANCIAL AID
Washington and Lee seeks to ensure that a W&L education is affordable for all admitted students regardless of financial background and will provide
more than $38 million in undergraduate financial aid this year. All admitted students who submit a complete need-based aid application on time (including the College Board’s PROFILE form) will receive an aid package that covers their family’s full institution-ally determined financial need with grants and a work study job, not loans. In addition, the W&L Promise ensures that admitted students from families with income below $75,000 and assets typical of their income level will receive full tuition without loans. The Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) is the only applica-tion required for students seek-ing only federal financial aid.
About half of the student body receives financial assistance from the University.
JOHNSON SCHOLARS
Made possible by a $100 million gift from a W&L grad-uate, the Johnson Scholarship Program awards full scholar-ships to 44 students in each class—students with superla-tive intellectual and personal promise. Johnson Scholars pay no tuition, room or board and graduate with no loan debt. Applicants wishing to be considered for the Johnson Scholarship should submit the separate application, along with their complete admission appli-cation, by Dec. 1.
For the right student, four years here can be transformative. Those who think they might be a good fit should visit campus. Those interested in applying should challenge themselves, work hard, and pursue their passions with conviction. Those worried about the high cost of private education should rest assured that W&L offers aid to cover the financial need of all admitted students and also awards full-expense Johnson Scholar-ships on the basis of academic and personal merit to 44 students in each class.
“�When�I�visited�campus,�it�was�about�20�degrees�and�
snowing,�and�the�campus�was�beautiful�with�snow.�
The�red�brick�with�the�white�contrast�was�just�beau-
tiful,�and�I�was�like�‘Yeah,�I�could�definitely�spend�
four�years�here’.’’
Before W&L
• DEADLINES:
Regular Decision: Jan. 1
(for April 1 decision)
Early Decision I: Nov. 1
(for Dec. 22 decision)
Early Decision II: Jan. 1
(for Feb. 1 decision)
Johnson Scholarship application
due date: Dec. 1
Early Decision I, need-based finan-
cial aid due date: Dec. 1; Early
Decision II: Jan. 15
Regular Decision need-based
financial aid due date: Feb. 15
THE SPECIAL CHARACTER of W&L
must be experienced to be fully
understood, so a visit is
strongly recommended. There
is plenty of natural beauty and
historical interest to keep par-
ents occupied while students
stroll the campus.
WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY is located in
Lexington, Virginia, just off I-81 and I-64.
Driving from the north Take the first Lexington exit
and follow Route 11, which becomes Main Street,
past Virginia Military Institute to the W&L campus
(8 miles from I-81).
Driving from the south Take the second Lexington
exit (I-64 west) and follow directions to Route 11
south and the W&L campus (2 miles from I-64).
By air The Roanoke airport is served by Allegiant Air,
American Airlines, Delta, United and US Airways.
From there, follow I-81 north about 45 miles and
follow the directions (above) for driving to Lexington
from the south.
CANADA
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LEXINGTON
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PhiladelphiaPittsburgh
Washington, D.C.
Boston
Hartford
Charlotte
Charleston
Atlanta
Knoxville Durham
New York CityPA
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NC
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39
Washington and Lee University does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, national or ethnic origin, sex, sexual orientation, age, disability, veteran’s
status, or genetic information in its educational programs and activities, admissions, and with regard to employment. See complete statement at go.wlu.edu/eeo.
— w&l facts —
W&L 14/15
HISTORY
The ninth-oldest institution of higher education in the country, Washington and Lee University recognizes and embodies the direct contributions of two of American history’s most influential figures, George Washington and Robert E. Lee.
CAMPUS
Washington and Lee’s historic, continually updated campus in Lexington, Virginia, consists of 55 acres, plus 40 acres of playing fields and 305 acres of woodland, streams and countryside.
STUDENTS
Undergraduate—1,855 students from 46 states (87 percent from outside Virginia), representing citizenship in 58 countries. Ratio of men to women is 50:50. Ethnic minorities: 12 percent.
The School of Law—422 students
FACULTY
Of the 190 undergraduate faculty members, 98 percent hold doctorates or terminal degrees. The student-faculty ratio is 8:1. The average class size is 15. Twenty-nine percent of classes have fewer than 10 students, 73 percent have fewer than 20 students, 92 percent have fewer than 25 students, and 97 percent have fewer than 30 students.
DIVISIONS
The College—This is where all undergraduate students begin with a broad study of the liberal arts and sciences (arts, humanities, and natural and social sciences).
W&L is the only top liberal arts college with a nationally accredited journalism program.
The Williams School of Commerce, Economics, and Politics—Here, students study politics, economics, accounting, business administration and public accounting.
W&L is the only top liberal arts college with a nationally accredited business school.
The School of Law—This school is among the nation’s top law schools.
DEGREES OFFERED
Undergraduate—Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Science, Bachelor of Science with special attainments in commerce
The School of Law—Juris Doctor, Master of Laws
PROGRAMS OF STUDY
The University offers more than 1,200 courses and 38 majors:
Accounting and Business AdministrationAccounting: Public AccountingArt HistoryBiochemistryBiologyBusiness AdministrationChemistryChemistry-EngineeringClassicsComputer ScienceEast Asian Languages and LiteratureEconomicsEnglishEnvironmental Studies FrenchGeologyGerman LanguageGerman LiteratureHistoryIndependent WorkJournalismMathematicsMedieval and Renaissance StudiesMusicNeurosciencePhilosophyPhysicsPhysics-EngineeringPoliticsPsychologyReligionRomance LanguagesRussian Area StudiesSociology and AnthropologySpanishStrategic CommunicationsStudio ArtTheater
Minors are also available in Africana studies, art history, biology, classics, computer science, creative writing, dance, East Asian studies, education, education policy, environmental studies, film and visual culture, French, German, Latin American and Caribbean studies, mass communications,
mathematics, museum studies, music, philosophy, poverty and human capability studies, Russian language and culture, studio art, theater and women’s and gender studies.
STUDENT LIFE
W&L offers more than 130 student activities and organizations, including drama, music and dance; media, including yearbook, newspaper and WLUR, our campus radio station; political action and advocacy organizations; multicultural and international organizations; groups with religious focus; service-oriented clubs and initiatives; Outing Club; and the nationally celebrated Mock Convention, among others.
About 80 percent of all students are members of one of W&L’s 22 Greek organizations, two of which are historically African-American organizations.
RESIDENCE LIFE
About one-third of rooms for first-year students are singles; students must live in on-campus residence halls or Greek housing (all owned and maintained by the University) through junior year.
ATHLETICS
The Generals play in the Old Dominion Athletic Conference, NCAA Division III. Four of W&L’s 24 teams and 14 individual athletes went on to NCAA post-season play last year.
Varsity sports—men’s and women’s basketball, cross- country, golf, lacrosse, soccer, swimming, tennis and track and field (indoor and outdoor); men’s baseball, football and wrestling; women’s field hockey and volleyball; and equestrian (coeducational).
Intramural and sport clubs—cheerleading, cycling, disc golf, eventing, fencing, ice hockey (men’s), lacrosse, paintball, racquetball, rowing, rugby, running, skiing, soccer, softball, squash, tennis, ultimate Frisbee and volleyball.
AFTER W&L
About 90 percent of W&L students graduate in four years. Approximately 25 percent of W&L alumni go directly to graduate school; overall, within six months of graduation, about 95 percent of W&L alumni are employed, are in graduate school, or are otherwise productively occupied.
FINANCIAL AID, SCHOLARSHIPS
W&L will provide more than $38 million in aid in 2014–15. The comprehensive Johnson Scholarship Program provides full scholarships to 44 students in each class. All admitted students meeting financial aid deadlines receive an aid package covering the family’s institutionally determined need with grants and a work-study job, not loans.
APPLICATION DEADLINES
Regular Decision—Jan. 1
Johnson Scholarship—Dec. 1
Early Decision, Round I—Nov. 1 (for Dec. 22 decision)
Early Decision, Round II—Jan. 1 (for Feb. 1 decision)
Required—The Common Application; SAT or ACT (and its writing test); two SAT subject tests of applicant’s choosing are recommended.
VISITING CAMPUS
Washington and Lee University is located in Lexington, Virginia, just off I-81 and I-64. A visit and inter- view are highly recommended.
CONTACT US
Washington and Lee University Office of Admissions 204 W. Washington St. Lexington, VA 24450-2116 [email protected] www.wlu.edu (540) 458-8710 (540) 458-8062 fax
[email protected] www.wlu.edu
(540) 458-8710
WASHINGTON AND LEEU N I V E R S I T Y
Lexington, Virginia 24450-2116