October 11, 2000
From the
Editor
One of the first questions
we asked our returning undergraduate intern and writers this fall
was: "What do you think of Frist?" PAW's staff toured
the under-construction campus center last spring, and frankly we
were impressed by its sheer size and its scope. In its 185,000 square
feet, it boasts three different dining options (including an actual
bar), a movie theater, pool tables, and lots of hanging-out space,
complete with wide-screen TVs and surround-sound audio systems.
Compared to the old "student center," which claimed some
neat atmosphere and not much else, it's something of a palace. We
were curious to hear what the students thought.
"It seems pretty
good," they responded. "We'll really miss Chancellor Green,
though."
We've been talking a
lot about change here at PAW lately, for obvious reasons, and I
had to chuckle at this latest evidence that no change, no matter
how drastic an improvement, comes easily. When I started at PAW
eight months ago, an alumnus e-mailed me a quote from Robert Louis
Stevenson. It hangs on my bulletin board now: "Indeed, that
which [my successors] attend is but a fallen university; it has
doubtless some remains of good, for human institutions decline by
gradual stages; but decline, in spite of all seeming embellishments,
it does; and what perhaps is more singular, began to do so when
I ceased to be a student. Thus, by odd chance, I had the very last
of the very best of alma mater; the same thing I hear...had previously
happened to my father; and if they are good and do not die, something
not at all unsimilar will be found in time to have befallen my successors
of today."
It's certainly something
for Princeton to celebrate that, like the alumni of Stevenson's
mythical college, each successive generation believes that the university
was at its best when they were in attendance. But of course, Stevenson's
tongue-in-cheek anecdote also helps put resistance to change in
perspective. When Frist director Paul Breitman gave us our tour
last May, we asked him about the mild student furor over the closing
of Chancellor Green. He smiled and said, "In four years, no
one will remember Chancellor Green."
It's impossible to say
whether Frist will accomplish all that it's supposed to - probably
not, as the administration is hoping for nothing less than a transformation
of the campus environment into a more cohesive, inclusive community
- but there's no doubt that Frist will eventually change Princeton
life in many ways. Even with those changes, though, it's more than
likely that students post-Frist, too, will believe they got the
very last of the very best of alma mater.
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