Willard College Prepares for the Shipwreck: “There are only so many Lifeboats”

Dear Senior Leadership and Board of Trustees,

As we ponder the multiple threats now emerging to continued survival of Willard College, those being 1)the demographic cliff, 2) the possible elimination of the Department of Education and with it all those sweet supports to higher ed, 3) the skyrocketing cost of room, board, and tuition and 4) the cratering of our endowment, it is incumbent upon any responsible leadership team, to develop a worst case scenario plan. What follows is such a plan. This is to remain confidential. Please share with no one.

“There are only so many lifeboats: A Plan for Staff and Faculty Reduction to Align Declining Budget with Continued College Operations”

What follows is a synopsis and key points. This is the order in which employment terminations will take place.

  1. Faculty in Humanities and Arts (those who are left) will be asked to quickly and quietly vacate their offices, dropping of their keys and laptops, with security at the West Entrance
  2. All Student Services Staff, including Dining Hall employees will remove themselves at the earliest moment possible, and do so in a manner as unobtrusive as humanly possible.
  3. Maintenance staff, except those responsible for maintaining the power grid, should not report to work upon receiving their notice of termination and thanks for their service to the college
  4. Bursar and other financial staff will self-remove as their names are called. At President Cotton’s discretion, those staff with special expertise in bookkeeping practices unique to our institution, will be kindly asked to carry on under the direct and discrete direction of said President Cotton
  5. The service of provosts, associate provosts, deans, associate deans, assistant deans, and their staff will no longer be necessary.
  6. Director of Public Safety will turn out the lights on his way out.
  7. Athletic staff will hold a last practice.
  8. President Cotton shall remain in his office, in the dark, waiting for bank officials and law enforcement to remove him, by force.

This list is not comprehensive. President Cotton reserves the right, with the coordination of the Board of Trustees, to remove people from the above this, or to add people to the list.

Dr. President Henry Cotton

Shaping Leadership Narratives: A Conversation between President Dr. Henry Cotton and President Dr. Degrafeuse of Terwilliger College

Willard Community,

If you missed last week’s amazing conversation between Dr. President Cotton and his Terwilliger College counterpart, and sometime rival, Dr. Degrafeuse, keep reading because we have excerpted some of the evening highlights!

Dr. Degrafeuse: Talk to us about your Leadership Principles?

Dr. Cotton: What an interesting question! Leadership requires confidence. Leadership means knowing when to not ask questions. Curiosity and questions are signs of weakness. If you are at the front, you can’t worry about everyone behind you. You move forward. You don’t look backwards.

Dr. Degrafeuse: What a wonderful answer to my interesting question! How do you know when your leadership is working?

Dr. Cotton: When I’m leading, my leadership is working. When I’m not leading, my leadership is failing.

Dr. Degrafeuse: Some people look at your life style, the houses in Vail and Florida, the expensive cars, and they wonder how a college president can be so well compensated. What do you say the critics?

Dr. Cotton: I’m reminded of a wonderful question: what is a crown to the clouds? Meaning, you have everything in this world to be successful. You don’t needs watches, or jewelry, or fancy clothes. You don’t need frivolous affirmations. Everything beneath the sun is yours to use. Again, what is a crown to the clouds?

Dr. Degrafeuse: What a great question. What is a crown to a cloud? Much has been made about the decline of the Humanities in American colleges. Your thoughts?

Dr. Cotton: We are all humans. And we all have Humanity. I don’t see less Humanity at Willard College. What about Terwilliger College?

Dr. Degrafeuse: Gosh, people seem great on our campus. It bothers me that the folks in History or English seem to claim all the Humanities. That seems, well, wrong. Henry, how do you set priorities?

Dr. Cotton: I start by setting boundaries. Boundaries first. Then Priorities. And my first priority for Willard College is to lead authentically. My authenticity is where it all starts. And if someone questions by authenticity, we have a problem. A crisis. If you can’t trust me, trust me blindly, what are we even doing? That is what I tell my team. Every. Day.

Don’t Miss Dr. Penny Jarlid’s Installation Art Piece

Dear Campus Community,

When you return to Campus for the Spring Semester, make sure not to miss Dr. Penny Jarlid’s new art installation entitled “Rites of Spring” which is located outside of her home on Charcot Street. Dr. Jarlid, according to Dr. Jarlid, is an internationally acclaimed artist of found materials. 

Dr. Jarlid has had a storied career at Willard College. First hired as an adjunct Chemistry professor, she quickly gained a reputation as an artist of found objects. Later, during a period of institutional challenges, Dr. Jarlid served as the College’s first Adjunct Associate Provost, a position which she held for thirty two years until Provost Pillow as hired. Recently, Dr. Jarlid has worked with our Provost Lying to develop centering exercises.

In her spare time, Dr. Jarlid collects items to use in her art installations and travels with her husband, Provost Lying.

Hope everyone is having a restful break,

Provost Lying