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Freshman Convocation: The Continuity of Change
"PENN HAS NEVER BEEN RELUCTANT TO CHANGE,"
said Dr. Judith Rodin, CW'66, president of the University, as she
addressed the incoming Class of 2002 for the first time. Which may explain
why this year's freshman convocation was held not inside Irvine Auditorium
(closed for renovations) or the Palestra (last year's substitute venue)
but outdoors, on College Green. Behind her, beneath a darkening sky, the
pale-green limestone of recently renovated College Hall, bathed in soft
floodlights, formed a dramatic backdrop.
"You may be feeling a little anticipation, even
a little anxiety," she added, the thunder rumbling ominously but
harmlessly in the distance. "As a psychologist and as someone who
sat exactly where you are some 30 years ago, I can tell you that it is
perfectly normal."
The incoming class, Rodin noted, was selected from the
largest applicant pool in Penn's history, representing 59 nations and
48 states in the Union. The class includes 200 editors of their high-school
newspapers, magazines, and yearbooks; 154 student-council and class presidents;
240 community-service volunteers; upwards of 550 team captains; and 24
Olympic hopefuls -- not to mention a student in the process of patenting
a math theorem, a junior Olympic medalist in table tennis, a pianist at
the Ritz Carlton Hotel, the developer of a human-powered airplane, and
the founder of a state-wide AIDS organization.
Dr. Michael Wachter, the interim provost, noted that
the class will be "the first generation at Penn to fully experience
the dramatic changes that are occurring through distributed learning --
learning through the computer and Internet." He added that the students
will also have access to "increased academic support directly in
your College Houses 24 hours a day, seven days a week, in math, writing,
and research, among other topics."
The students got a warning about certain other nighttime
activities from Rodin, who noted that last year, "freshmen at MIT
and Louisiana died from alcohol overdoses." Pointing to a recent
survey in which "76 percent of Penn students reported that they do
not need to be drunk or high to have a good time," she admonished:
"Do not be guided by the perception that everyone drinks."
A few days later, however, The Daily Pennsylvanian
reported that a freshman at Ware College House in the Quad was hospitalized
for alcohol-poisoning, and the following week a 17-year-old female freshman
was rushed to the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania after having
reportedly consumed about 10 mixed drinks and at least two shots of tequila
at a fraternity party. She was released later that morning and has recovered.
Ironically, the University had just released a 10-page report outlining
strategies for dealing with binge-drinking.
Rodin closed her remarks by quoting from a song she
had overheard on MTV -- "Let me say for the record that my 16-year-old
son is the MTV fan" -- whose refrain was "[We] can't
be held responsible; we were merely freshmen."
"You are not merely freshman," she
said. "You are freshmen at the University of Pennsylvania, one of
the greatest institutions of higher learning in the nation and the world."

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Copyright 1998 The Pennsylvania
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