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            March 
              21, 2001: Features 
             
             Winds 
              of Change 
            Janet Dickerson hopes 
              to make student life better for all students 
               
            by Maria LoBiondo 
            At midnight on a bitterly 
              cold November night, a group of students organized by the 
              USG is casing Princeton's campus, searching out dark and potentially 
              dangerous corners. Huddled in with the pack of undergraduates, bundled 
              up against the cold, is Janet Smith Dickerson, the university's 
              first-ever vice president for campus life. 
            Students hope that this 
              type of personal involvement will be representative of Dickerson's 
              style. After all, the shape of campus life outside the classroom 
              for Princeton's next generation of students is largely in Dickerson's 
              hands. She arrives at a turning point, signaled by the opening of 
              the new Frist Campus Center, the upcoming 500-student increase in 
              undergraduates, the planning for a sixth residential college, and 
              recent decisions to make Princeton more affordable to students of 
              more diverse backgrounds - and she knows it. 
            "I think Princeton 
              is in a most fortunate position," Dickerson says. "We 
              have resources equal to those of the very best universities in the 
              world. With them, we are able to assemble faculty and entering classes 
              of the very best scholars, from every state and nation, from every 
              cultural and socioeconomic background. A great challenge - and a 
              great opportunity - comes as we determine what the quality of their 
              experience will be." 
            It's a good thing Dickerson 
              feels this way, because she has her work cut out for her. She succeeds 
              former Dean of Student Life Janina Montero (who came under fire 
              from students and alumni alike for a bureaucratic demeanor and for 
              doing away with the Nude Olympics) and like Montero will oversee 
              the Office of the Dean of Undergraduate Students, athletics, health 
              services, and religious life, and will collaborate with the Graduate 
              School on student life issues. In addition, she will supervise Frist 
              and a planned new Center for Community Service. In other words, 
              it's a big job. 
            Not that Dickerson hasn't 
              faced similar challenges and opportunities in her professional life 
              before. She spent nine years as vice president for student affairs 
              at Duke and, prior to that, 10 years as Swarthmore's dean of the 
              college. (Dickerson earned her undergraduate degree from Western 
              College for Women, which later merged with Miami University of Ohio, 
              and her master's degree in educational guidance from Xavier University.) 
              At Duke Dickerson played a pivotal role in several areas she will 
              need to address at Princeton - alcohol policy, race relations, the 
              interactions among different groups of students, and possible improvements 
              to students' social options. 
            "Her decade at Swarthmore 
              and her time at Duke were wonderful preparation for us, since we're 
              an institution that seeks to combine the intimacy of community that 
              Swarthmore has, and the vitality and energy of a great research 
              university like Duke," says Thomas H. Wright '62, university 
              vice president and secretary. 
            Ask Dickerson what she 
              sees as problem areas and she quickly refers to a survey, called 
              Visions of Princeton, conducted last year by the Undergraduate Student 
              Government. The survey asked undergraduates four questions: What 
              is right with Princeton? What is wrong with Princeton? Describe 
              the ideal Princeton you would like to come back to for your 10th 
              reunion. Does Princeton need to make changes for your vision to 
              become reality?  
            About 650 students responded, 
              and though some comments were contradictory, it became clear that 
              five crucial areas need improvement and attention: diversity, health 
              services, performance space, student-group funding, and athletics. 
              Dickerson took those five issues to heart, as reflected in her five-year 
              goals presented in October to the budget-setting Priorities Committee. 
              Among her plans: bolstering health and athletic offerings; adding 
              reserve shifts of employees to provide service for students around 
              the clock; bringing the departments under her purview up to snuff 
              technologically; and building a new, comprehensive healthcare facility. 
               
            To achieve these objectives, 
              Dickerson and those who work under her have been hammering out a 
              mission statement and strategic plan that will set forth core values 
              and objectives - and a common vision. "I hope to encourage 
              an atmosphere of openness and continuous learning in all our areas. 
              While most of us don't 'teach' in the traditional sense, I aspire 
              to have us all be recognized as educators. And I hope to bring a 
              spirit of fun and collegiality to our work - despite the challenges 
              we face," she says. 
            Here lies a hint of Dickerson's 
              management technique. Princeton's first female African-American 
              vice president describes herself as a facilitator, a person who, 
              as she puts it, "makes things that seem hard, not so hard." 
              Her South Carolina upbringing fostered a genteel manner; her daily 
              schedule is packed, but she talks with a visitor as if only that 
              appointment fills her agenda.  
            "She speaks with 
              a quiet authority," Wright says. Adds Theodore Nemeroff '01, 
              who served on the search committee for Dickerson's job, "She's 
              sensitive to what people are thinking." Nemeroff remembers 
              forging this impression 
              at a U-Council 
              meeting, when a discussion on health services began to heat up. 
              "She raised her hand and answered so that what could have gotten 
              contentious didn't. She seems good at making people look at things 
              in a productive 
              way."  
            She also is up-front 
              without being abrasive. Case in point: She agrees to allow a reporter 
              into a meeting on space for student organizations, then abruptly 
              changes her mind when other meeting participants object. Dickerson 
              doesn't hedge when giving her apologies, explaining that Princeton 
              can be a sensitive place: "I'm fairly comfortable with administration, 
              but the Princeton culture is unique. It's taken me a full semester 
              to begin to understand how processes work." 
            One process she cut her 
              teeth on was financial - making budget requests to the Priorities 
              Committee soon after her July 1, 2000 arrival. Her assessment: "Princeton 
              tends to be a frugal institution."  
            Even so, getting funding 
              for concrete goals - such as the $64,000 for psychiatric and counseling 
              services Dickerson convinced the Priorities Committee was an immediate 
              need - may be easier to accomplish than the intangibles of campus 
              life she also hopes to address, such as fostering connections between 
              various groups on campus, and dealing with the sensitive issue of 
              race. "I grew up in South Carolina and went to segregated schools 
              and didn't ever talk to a white person who was my peer until I went 
              to college," Dickerson told PAW in an October interview. "Jim 
              Crow was painful, and I'm coming here from Duke, so I got to think 
              for nine long years about what happened and how deeply did these 
              policies impact people."  
            But, she added, "It's 
              just exciting to realize that we're in an environment and in a time 
              where we can change all those things - in a time where students, 
              through their research, their understanding of the biological and 
              anthropological implications of race, and through political science 
              and history, can help us unlearn things that were passed along." 
               
            One proposal she thinks 
              might help is Sustained Dialogue, a project suggested by former 
              trustee Harold Saunders '52, in which small groups of 10 to 12 people 
              from different backgrounds meet regularly to talk about race relations. 
              Another is the effort of current USG President Joseph Kochan '02 
              to take the Visions survey a step further on issues of race and 
              gender. Kochan is forming two committees to interview and document 
              campus views. "People raise these issues, but it doesn't go 
              beyond this," he says. Dickerson has pledged her support to 
              the effort. 
            One effort the university 
              has made to counter Princeton's fractionalized social life is Frist, 
              a space to meet informally to eat, play pool, or watch the wall-size 
              television, or for organized events, especially those providing 
              a nonalcoholic alternative like the Thursday and Saturday late-night 
              activities currently offered. Not everyone is convinced it works. 
              "The center is just a bigger, better place for students to 
              segregate themselves," says Bridget Wright '01, although she 
              adds that Frist does serve a broader student base than was possible 
              in Chancellor Green.  
            Dickerson is mindful 
              that funding to keep activities going and to make Frist work is 
              important. She has also proposed a venture fund for social activities 
              suggested by groups that don't usually do things together.  
            "Our planning for 
              a sixth residential college and for stronger educational programs 
              must be complemented by our planning to provide a truly inclusive 
              community, one that is hospitable and accessible to all," she 
              says. "No person should feel diminished or marginalized because 
              of his or her background." 
            Perhaps the strongest 
              clue to how Dickerson will conduct her tenure at Princeton comes 
              from the speech she gave at this year's university celebration on 
              Martin Luther King Day. Reflecting on her father, a tailor who measured 
              garments exactly, and her mother, whose cooking style ran in the 
              opposite direction, Dickerson says she learned, "It's important 
              to understand the basic rules very well, and then transcend them." 
                
                
            Maria LoBiondo is a freelance 
              writer in Princeton and frequent contributor 
              to PAW.  
               
            
            
            
             
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