Tufts College has approved a plan giving students the power to make all rules relating to dormitory life--including sex, drugs, and liquor as long as they don't violate either federal or state laws.
As far as is known, Tufts is the first college in the United States to give such far-reaching power to students.
After a six-month discussion, the student-proposed plan was voted Friday by the Committee on Student Life (CSL), a combination student-faculty-administration committee created late last spring.
Dorm Discussion
An informal dormitory discussion last February with new Tufts University president Burton C. Hallowell precipiated last week's change. During that discussion several students made impassioned speeches about the conservative parietal rules. Aroused by the discussion, the students circulated a petition to all resident students which called for liberalization of parietals.
Petition
Signed by an unprecedented 80 percent of the dormitory residents, the petition became a rallying point for student dissatisfaction. In April the Tufts Administration ignored the petition. Demonstrations were threatened but the Administration capitulated before any took place.
Read more in News
Editors for this Issue:Recommended Articles
-
Faculty Sign Petition Against Invasion of IraqAs University President Lawrence H. Summers and others on campus continue to trade blows over a recent petition calling on
-
A Course in Aeronautics.(The Crimson invites all men in the University to submit signed communications of timely interest. It assumes no responsibility, however,
-
ALTER METHOD OF NAMING DORMITORY COMMITTEESAn innovation in the method of selecting the members of the Dormitory Committees for the three Freshman Dormitories was announced
-
PROGRESS AND RHETORIC AT TUFTSTo the Editors of the CRIMSON: I should like to reply to Robert M. Krim's article in the CRIMSON describing
-
Hong Kong Moves To Extend Hours
-
Sexual Assault Referendum Makes UC BallotWhen students vote for Undergraduate Council president this fall, they can also cast a vote calling on Harvard to revise its policies for handling sexual assault.