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The Dartmouth
May 6, 2024 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth

Controversy and celebration: '92-'93 revisited

The campus witnessed a tumultuous year of change. There was cause for some lament and some celebration as 1992-93 tried to usher the College into a new era.

The year began with a daring call by Student Assembly President Andrew Beebe '93 during Convocation for the Class of 1996 to revolutionize the Greek system. Less than a month later the annual building of the Homecoming bonfire was marred by violence.

At the start of winter the College paused to mourn the loss of a beloved former College president. Since then there has been a scandalous student election, the formal ending of the more than 100-year-old clay pipes tradition and, of course, a little construction here and there to tidy up the campus.

People

In December, the Dartmouth community grieved the loss of former College President John Kemeny, who died of heart failure at the age of 66. Kemeny, president from 1970-81, oversaw the implementation of co-education and the Dartmouth-plan in 1972. He was best known outside the College for developing the BASIC computer language.

Provost John Strohbehn, a close friend of current President James O. Freedman, stepped down to resume teaching and research. Associate Provost Bruce Pipes is serving as provost until 1994 when Lee Bollinger, the dean of the University of Michigan Law School will take the job.

The Board of Trustees found itself in transition as well. President Bill Clinton selected Trustee Robert Reich '68 to serve as Secretary of Labor.

Lisle Carter Jr. '45, Robert Douglass '53 and Chairman I. Michael Heyman '51 left the board. Susan Dentzer '77, the first woman ever to be elected by alumni to serve on the Board, replaced Heyman's elected Trustee position.

Teoby Gomez assumed the position of assistant dean of Students and dean for the Class of 1994. He replaced Susan Wright.

Diana Beaudoin, dean of Freshman, also decided to leave the College after Spring term.

The World and Dartmouth

The College found itself embroiled in numerous political controversies this past year. Fall term started with a group of students protesting the College's investment in Hydro-Quebec, a Canadian hydroelectric project which critics claimed supported the cultural genocide of Native Americans near the project.

In November, the Student Assembly passed a resolution calling for divestment from Hydro-Quebec, and in January the Trustees ordered the College to divest its $6.8 million holdings.

In October, the construction of the traditional Homecoming bonfire was marred by violence. Bags of vomit and feces were hurled back and forth between upperclass students and the first-year students guarding the site.

In an effort to prevent future incidents, the administration decided not to allow the construction to begin until the Thursday before Homecoming, an attempt to avoid confrontations that resulted after fraternity meetings on Wednesday nights.

The short construction time will probably end the days of the sky-scraping bonfires -- this year's bonfire was called the smallest in recent memory.

The Dartmouth Review, an off-campus conservative journal, was again involved in campus controversy. Several African-American students, in protest to what they said was racism in The Review, systematically removed copies of the newspaper from College dormitories.

Although The Review lambasted the students' efforts, equating them to censorship, the students continued collecting the journal and discarding them for several weekends. Dean of Students Lee Pelton responded by asking students not to remove copies of The Review but emphasized that students who chose to do so were not violating any College rules. Eventually the collection halted.

The women's softball team filed a discrimination complaint with the federal Education Department's Office of Civil Rights this spring, claiming the College gives men's athletic teams preferential treatment and greater funding.

The softball team, which has sought varsity status for four years, argued that the College's continual refusal to grant them varsity status violates Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, which prohibits federally-funded academic institutions from discriminating on the basis of sex in any program or activity.

And finally, the year came to a close with a heated discussion on the more-than- 100-year-old Class Day tradition of smashing clay pipes against the stump of the Lone Pine tree.

Class Day is the day before Commencement when seniors gather for one last time. The clay pipes ceremony was meant to symbolize a clean break between the students and the College.

In April, a committee chaired by Pelton voted unanimously to end all College support of the clay pipes ceremony, which Native American students at the College said was an insult to cultures that consider pipes to be sacred objects.

In May, the Class Day Committee decided to replace the clay pipes with mugs. On June 12, seniors shared a toast in the mugs, and then smashed them in a fashion similar to the clay pipes ceremony.

"Animal House" days over?

In his first speech as president of the Student Assembly, Andrew Beebe '93 said the College should investigate making the Greek system co-educational.

Beebe's speech sparked debate across campus over the future of the Greek system, and in the Trustees' spring meeting, Beebe met with the members of the Board to discuss the merits of a fully co-ed system.

With more than 50 percent of upperclass students in Greek houses, such a change would drastically alter the College's social scene, typified by the movie "Animal House," which was loosely based on one graduate's experience as an Alpha Delta fraternity brother. No decision has yet been made.

Fraternities also felt the College tighten its grip around them over the course of the year.

Last summer, Pelton announced that students would no longer be allowed to live in Greek houses independent from the College. The ban caused several fraternities, who had broken ties with the College to protest the strict alcohol policies and delayed rush, to re-affiliate and subjugate themselves to College policy.

The College issued a new alcohol policy, which terminated the ban on common sources of alcohol, such as kegs, and gave the Greek system the power to enforce the policy.

In 1991, more than 800 students packed Webster Hall and expressed dissatisfaction with the alcohol policy that forbade kegs in fraternities and granted the College the power of enforcement.

Education

The new curriculum scheduled to be in place for the Class of 1997 has been delayed for a year by Dean of Faculty James Wright because the College does not have enough money to implement the changes.

Last April the faculty voted to accept a broad new curriculum which changes the College's distributive requirements, creates a more structured education and requires students to complete a "culminating experience," such as a thesis, within their major.

In February, a faculty committee responsible for approving curriculum changes voted to give students, beginning with the Class of 1994, the option of completing a minor.

In an attempt to promote a "live-and-learn" atmosphere in the residence halls, the Office of Residential Life announced plans to house graduate students in dorms to serve as academic mentors for undergraduates.

A recent internal review committee evaluating the Education Department recommended the department be terminated. The report, which has not yet been released, in part cited internal strife and mismanagement in the department as reasons for closing it. Students and faculty involved with the popular department sharply criticized the proposal.

The admissions office reported that the Class of 1997 is the strongest academic class in Dartmouth history. With 500 more applicants than last year, the Class of 1997 boasts a mean SAT score of 1316.

Males comprise 52.8 percent of the class and females 47.2, the closest Dartmouth has ever come to gender parity.

Finances

Despite a nationwide recession, the College's finances received both healthy contributions and a vote of confidence this year.

The $425 million Will to Excel Capital Campaign, scheduled to be completed in 1996, already raised more than $250 million, which is 60 percent of its goal.

In October, John Berry '44 provided a boost to the campaign, giving the College $25 million to expand Baker Library. His gift is the largest individual donation in College history.

Despite recommendations from the faculty to raise tuition more than in previous years, the Trustees held the annual increase to six percent, the lowest level in 65 years.

An international credit rating service that evaluates the most prestigious colleges and universities named Dartmouth one of the 11 most financially sound institutions in the nation.

Both represent a victory for Dartmouth's financial officers, who have engaged in strict financial planning to keep the College's budget balanced at a time when other schools are amassing multi-million dollar budget deficits.

Changing Face of Dartmouth

Even the granite of New Hampshire changes over time.

Dartmouth continued its campus expansion this year, and worked on construction that could significantly change the face of the College.

Collis Student Center closed in December for renovations that will refurbish Collis and College Hall. The new Collis will increase students' social options by providing a meeting place and late night alternative to fraternity basements. Construction is due to end by March 1993, but might be finished

as early as December.

The College's northward expansion into the space between Baker Library and the old Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital are underway. College officials and architectural planners will submit their final plans to the Trustees next year. So far, the plans call for a new psychology building, the construction of Berry Library and the new Sudikoff Computer Lab.

Student Assembly

After Stewart Shirasu '94 won the April elections with 32 percent of the vote in a seven person presidential race, allegations that he exceeded a campaign spending limit and that he swindled photocopies from a local store forced him to resign.

Nicole Artzer '94, who finished second in the first election, won in a special election to fill the empty presidential spot.

The Assembly's projects committee, which works to improve student services at the College, sought to computerize reserve readings and provide more computers for student use in public locations.