Advertisement

ROTC, Exams Discussed at Faculty Meeting

Wisse said she was unhappy to hear reports that Dean of the College Harry R. Lewis '68 had told members of the Bisexual, Gay, Lesbian, Transgender and Supporters' Alliance (BGLTSA) that no changes were to be forthcoming.

"I realize that students who want to challenge the status quo are sometimes taken more seriously than those who support the institutions of our country," she said. "Personally, I believe that this policy of contempt for the military comprises everyone at the University, the administrators down to the students."

Lewis said he had told BGLTSA members that because neither the Faculty's non-discrimination policy nor the ROTC program itself have changed since the Faculty last considered the issue, he did not think it would take it up again soon.

One Less Chair At the Table

Yesterday's Faculty meeting also marked the final meeting attended by a president of Radcliffe College.

Advertisement

Dean of the Faculty Jeremy R. Knowles noted that Radcliffe presidents have sat at the central table with the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) deans for 40 years.

"Linda, if I had a glass of anything more exciting than water, I would raise it to you. I thank you," Knowles told Radcliffe President Linda S. Wilson, who announced April 20 that she will step down as Radcliffe's seventh and final president on June 30.

Harvard and Radcliffe announced then that the two schools intend to merge. Under the plan, Radcliffe will no longer admit undergraduate women and will form a new Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, headed up by a dean. The new dean will not have the advisory role within FAS that Radcliffe presidents have enjoyed, which has included Faculty meeting attendance.

Later in the meeting, Wilson and Rudenstine presented the merger plan to the Faculty.

"It is not an acquisition," Wilson said of the merger. "It is not an absorption. It certainly isn't the demise of an institution."

"There really is no analog to the new Institute. We have in mind to build something new," she added.

Sunday Exams and More

In other business, Dean of Undergraduate Education William M. Todd III explained to the Faculty a recent change in the academic calendar to allow for a full week of intercession beginning in the 2000-2001 year. In some years, the new plan calls for exams on Sunday afternoons.

Plummer Professor of Christian Morals Peter J. Gomes questioned if the Sunday exam plan might be reviewed by University committees that deal with issues of religion.

Knowles agreed that the plan could be further discussed next year.

"We will see then if it can be more than souls that can be examined on Sundays," he quipped.

The Faculty also approved a new Ph.D. program in Information Technology and Management. The program will be run jointly by the Business School and FAS Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences.

In a letter distributed to members of the Faculty yesterday, Knowles noted that Todd and Christoph Wolff, dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, would step down from their respective posts in June 2000. Knowles solicited suggestions for successors that "have the energy, tact and good humor that these important positions demand."

Recommended Articles

Advertisement