Moral Relativism
As I attempt to produce another column, I find in me, again, an urge to refute what I have previously written.
As I attempt to produce another column, I find in me, again, an urge to refute what I have previously written.
As part of a state pilot project, Grafton and Rockingham counties will introduce a family court this summer to encourage alternate dispute resolution and allow families to see the same judge for different familial problems. "Once people get to the court, we are hoping to make it easier for them to use and understand the process," Project Coordinator Craig Briggs said. The project is part of a legislative act that directs the New Hampshire Supreme Court to establish pilot programs in Grafton and Rockingham counties with four family court sites in each, Briggs said.
Dartmouth's education department and Jimmy Hoffa have more in common than you might think. Both were up against a powerful and secretive group that wanted them eliminated.
One term after being commissioned by Dean of the College Lee Pelton to review the way the College handles cases of sexual assault, the Mediation Committee is comparing Dartmouth's mediation practices to those at other schools and has established the questions it needs to answer. Pelton charged the committee with reviewing the College's non-disciplinary ways of handling incidents of sexual abuse and asked the committee to produce its recommendations before the end of Spring term. But some students say the review is taking too long. Co-Chair of the Mediation Committee Daniel Siegel said the committee needs more time to complete their mission, which he defined as "making a recommendation on whether or not there should be a relationship between mediation and the College disciplinary process." "Pelton told us not to rush under any circumstances, especially considering the importance of the issue at hand," he said. The other co-Chair of the committee, Undergraduate Official Affairs Officer Marcia Kelly, wrote in an e-mail message "at this point, the committee is still trying to arrange meetings and does not have anything conclusive to report." Siegel, who is also the adviser for the Dartmouth College Mediation Center, said the committee has met three times -- once in the Winter term and twice this term. In these meetings, Siegel said the committee has "reviewed the charts and the information given to them by Dean Pelton," as well as "looked at ways mediation is handled at other institutions." Siegel said the committee has succeeded in "establishing the right questions to ask." These questions, he said, have to do with the "relationship and the formal connections between the College disciplinary process and mediation," as well as whether "mediation can be conditional on the behavior of a third party." Siegel also said the committee investigated "to what extent should College disciplinary process be informed," and whether it "should make recommendations." He said these questions will be discussed in a meeting to take place before the end of Spring term. He also said the Mediation Committee appeared as a response on the part of the administration to a student request, "the desire to have mediation as an option" in solving student disputes. He said the main concern of the committee are incidents of sexual abuse, although it might expand to cover other issues in the future. Emily Stephens '97, whose allegations against the College's mishandling of a sexual abuse case prompted the creation of the Mediation Committee, said she was disappointed with the progress made by the committee so far. She also said the committee is taking too long to reach a resolution, and thereby "letting the issue flounder." She said "by capitalizing on students' research and interest the committee would have been able to reach a resolution by the end of Winter term." Last spring, Stephens said she was persuaded to resolve her sexual abuse complaint through mediation, instead of proceeding with a Committee on Standards hearing.
The Arts at Dartmouth Awards Ceremony took place yesterday afternoon in Spaulding Auditorium to much fanfare.
In last night's panel discussion about Taiwan's position in world politics, three panelists said the first-ever democratic election on Chinese territory heralds a long period of domestic and international adjustment. Approximately 40 students and faculty members attended the discussion, titled "Democracy in Taiwan," in the Hinman Forum of the Rockefeller Center. Kristie Wang, program director of the Center for Taiwan International Relations in Washington, D.C., said 10 million Taiwanese citizens -- more than three-quarters of the voting population -- cast their votes in their presidential election in March. But she said democratization entails a new cast of problematic issues. Natale Bellocchi, former chairman of the board and managing director of the American Institute in Taiwan, expressed mixed emotions over a democratic Taiwan.
The Student Assembly last night passed a resolution urging the faculty of the arts and sciences to reject the recommendations from the Social Sciences Council to convert the education department into an academic program. The Assembly passed two other resolutions -- one calling for an administrative meeting to be held to reevaluate the College policy governing the use of the Green and the other calling for the Assembly to subsidize student buses to Boston and New York at the end of the term. The education department resolution, sponsored by Case Dorkey '99 and Dominic LaValle '99, passed by a vote of 18 to three with one abstention. LaValle said Associate Dean of the Faculty of the Social Sciences George Wolford gave students three reasons why the education department should be restructured and turned into a program at the meeting in 105 Dartmouth Hall last Thursday, but "the students weren't happy with" his argument. LaValle cited Wolford's reasons as personnel problems, structural problems and difficulties finding a department chair.
Acting Assistant Dean of First-Year Students Stephanie Hull will continue her position on a permanent basis beginning July 1. The assistant dean of first-year students' job is essentially two-fold, said Dean of First-Year Students Peter Goldsmith.
To the Editor: Last Saturday I attended the "Crisis is Nigeria" discussion presented by AfriCaSo in which key note speaker, Hafisat Abiola, daughter of the imprisoned president-elect, described the plight of her family and her country.
Kristin Pierce '96 took the 5,000 meters in 17:23.97 at last weekend's New England Championships to bring home not only a win, but also All-New England honors. In addition to her success at New Englands, Pierce has found success throughout the season.
To the Editor: On July 27, 1995, Congress and the President of the United States sent a message to the citizens of this country -- they are willing to suspend all major environmental legislation to allow timber companies to log in previously protected areas.
Many Dartmouth juniors and seniors have been awarded national and College scholarships this year and will be using their awards to do research on everything from thyroid disorder and cancer research to anthropological field work in Iran. Fulbright Grants Holden Spaht '96 and Alexander Edlich '96 will travel to Europe on Fulbright grants to do research in Germany and France. Spaht, an economics major, plans to spend the next year conducting a case study of a West German firm that bought out an eastern-based firm. Spaht said he hopes the scholarship will enable him to investigate the effects of the buy-out on the work force and social conditions within the firm. Spaht, who said he has always had a knack for foreign languages, studied German at the College and spent his sophomore summer on the Language Study Abroad program in Mainz. After his year abroad, Spaht will work in investment banking for Morgan Stanley in New York. "It will be hard work and crazy, but I'll learn a lot," he said.
One of the springtime rites of passage of every Dartmouth sophomore is picking a major. In spite of the mercurial nature of our recent selections, a major question has since festered in my mind: What says more about a person -- their major, or the reasons they choose that major? In order to alleviate your "anticipating columnist cliche" pains, I will get my hackneyed but applicable dose of cliches out of the way early and rephrase my question at the same time: Do your means justify your ends, or do your ends justify your means (perhaps more idealistically, can your ends ever truly justify your means?). An overdue explanation will now follow. As far as my sophomore eyes see it, the major scenario plays out to three general schools of thought. First, there is the anal-retentive career-oriented bunch who choose their major for the sole purpose of inflating their grade point average (the most over-heard, over-emphasized words on any Ivy League campus) to the brink of its 4.0 boundary. Second, there are the premeditated pre-professionals whose tunnel-visioned folks have scoped out the most accommodating job market.
Entrepreneur turned academic Myra Hunt told about 20 students about the pitfalls of starting a new business, in a speech last night in a Thayer School of Engineering conference room. Hunt went from a management position at a chain of grocery stores to the founder of Staples office supply stores, a company whose sales surpassed $3 billion last year. Hunt is now a professor of entrepreneurial management at Harvard Business School. Hunt said ideas are never enough to start a successful business. "A great idea may lead you out of the darkness," Hunt said.
At yesterday's meeting of the faculty of arts and sciences, faculty heard Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid Karl Furstenberg explain the statistics for the Class of 2000, received news about a donation that will provide new computers for faculty and recognized the contribution of eight faculty members who are due to retire. Furstenberg told about 70 faculty members at the meeting that he is "quite disappointed" with minority representation in the Class of 2000 at a meeting of the faculty of arts and sciences yesterday. Dartmouth lagged far behind its peer institutions in enrolling students of color, in part because of the hate incidents that occurred during Winter term, Furstenberg said. While the Class of 2000 is 17.8 percent minority students, 40 percent of Stanford University's freshman class and 35 percent of Harvard University's freshman class are minorities. There was a particularly low yield among African-American and Latino applicants, he said. History Professor Marysa Navarro, who said she is disturbed by the dearth of minorities in the incoming class, asked Furstenberg why so few minorities matriculated.
As traditional Big Green spring sports come to a close, the anticipation for next fall is growing on the football practice fields.
To the Editor: John Dewey said: "What we want and need is education pure and simple, and we shall make surer and faster progress when we devote ourselves to finding out what education is and what conditions have to be satisfied in order that education may be a reality and not a name or slogan." Moreover, "the constant factors [in education] are the formation of ideas, acting upon ideas, observation of the conditions which result, and organization of facts and ideas for future use." When this cycle of learning is embraced by an entire community, it represents the essence of democracy and the core purpose of a liberal arts college. The education department is a century-old experiment.
BreeAnne Clowdus '97 and Mike Glatze '97 have been elected the new co-chairs of the Dartmouth Rainbow Alliance, the College's student organization for gays, lesbians, bisexuals and their supporters, replacing Herlena Harris '96 and Scott Reeder '96. Clowdus, the only one of four nominees to accept the nomination, was informed that she won the election yesterday in an e-mail message.
It was difficult to believe that the performers were college students, like the audience gathered to watch them. Perhaps this was because the women of the Untamed Shrews were breaking traditional boundaries of socially-conscious performance in depicting issues of feminism that were largely before their time. The Untamed Shrews, the campus's premier "collaborative women's performance group," recently completed a three-performance run of their play "The F-Word," which explores events and issues surrounding the most divisive "f-word" in recent times -- feminism. The group's presentation of a play marks a departure from their usual pastiche-type dramatizations of literature by and about women. "The F-Word" is a play written by four women known as the Sleeveless Theater Group.
Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid Karl Furstenberg said the low level of minority representation in the Class of 2000 is cause for concern, when he released a profile of the incoming freshman class yesterday. The Class of 2000 has enrolled 1,085 students and will contain fewer women and minorities than last year's class but attained higher Scholastic Achievement Test scores, according to admissions office statistics. The incoming class has the fewest minority students of any class in the last five years. Only 4.7 percent of the Class of 2000 is African-American, 7.9 percent are Asian-American, 3.7 percent are Latino and 1.5 percent are Native American. In the Class of 1999, 6.4 percent of students are African American, 9.9 percent are Asian American, 5.1 percent are Latino and 2.0 percent are Native American. Furstenberg said the fluctuation is a cause for concern.