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Posts tagged ‘ron liebowitz’

Why 51 Main Should Stay Open

With a blog post, President (of the College) Ron Liebowitz re-opened the debate on the future of 51 Main, a nightlife venue in downtown Middlebury run by the school. September and October were the critical months to see if the venue could break even, financially. Ron says, “as of November 1, it looks like 51 Main is very close to meeting its two month break-even requirement, and so feedback from community members on the existence and possible continuance of the establishment will be helpful as we assess our options.”

He wants feedback, give it to him. Email him, write a blog comment, go to his office hours in Old Chapel, call x 5400, or inter-campus mail (write: “President’s Office”).

It’s no skin off my back since I’m graduating shortly, but I stand as a strong supporter of 51 Main. Why? 51 Main teaches college students the culture of drinking in a safe way. No one ever goes to 51 Main and gets trashed even though they serve hard alcohol. Student behavior is dictated by the environment and 51 Main is too classy for the likes of students drinking in stairwells of Atwater or slurring students getting a 2AM Dr. Feelgood in the Grille. 51 Main is what The Grille should have been. 51 Main promotes responsible and inclusive drinking out in the open. It’s good for the town, students, and administration.

It doesn’t outright solve “drinking” on campus, but it is a creative way of addressing the heart of that issue. 51 Main remains one of the most innovative things the school has done for its undergraduates in the last several years. And if this school cares as much as it says it does about drinking and social life, then 51 Main should stay open. Of course it also addresses town/gown relations and maybe, as Ron indicates in his post, an indirect path to diversity (not as far of a stretch as you’d think). If 51 Main stays at break even, it deserves the resources of this school

MiddBlog wants to know: Should 51 Main stay open? Why?

Budget Cut Analysis

Early this morning (2:10AM to be exact), President of the College Ron Liebowitz released the lastest in the budget cuts, accepting almost all of the recommendations of the Budget Oversight Committee (BOC). Below is a quick first-brush analysis of selected recommendations:

  1. Athletics: The big one for Athletics is letting the Crew team drop back down to a level 2 Club sport. Crew made level one several years ago meaning that many costs were paid for by the Athletics department. Now, that burden has been shifted back to the SGA Finance Committee and your own Student Activity Fee (SAF) dollars. Non-essential travel has also been eliminated for all teams, meaning it might be tougher to get to that spring break training trip or that extra scrimmage.
  2. Arts: The deepest cuts and consolidations this round were made to collective arts. The college museum will take a 10% budget cut, straight out. Well, at least the school didn’t sell off all its art. The biggest direct effect on students is the increase in price for music lessons from the applied music faculty. We’ll see if the Music Dept will continue subsidizing majors and other students who perform in the College Choir or Orchestra. But don’t expect students (who don’t otherwise charge it to their parents) to pick up the slack. Consolidating the box office and tech staff makes sense too.
  3. New England Review (NER): Not many students know what the NER actually is, but it will be going away entirely unless it can eliminate its current operating deficit by 2011. It’s a point of prestige for Middlebury to have its own journal but it’s for professors, not students.
  4. SGA: Assuming something came out of the SGA Crisis Contest, the three SGA recommendations ar: 1) reduce lawn care costs by cutting less, planting more natural grass, 2) develop a kitchenware loan program for residences with kitchens around campus, and 3) develop and then implement a flexible dining system. I am wary that the administration will take a SGA “recommendation” to have “flexible” dining as a blank check to implement a non-open dining system. I’ll be more clear: do not get rid of open dining. Even a “eat-as-much-as-you-want” meal plan misses the point. No checks at the door builds the system of trust at this school. And any tiered dining system requires money, time, staff etc. to check for cheaters of the system. Financially, checks may be less than the costs of freeloaders (“riding the panther”) but you must account for the social and community benefits of open dining. The kitchenware loan program is a genuinely good idea but again, requires a check to prevent students from taking dishware out of the dining hall at will, as it happens now.
  5. President’s House: If you’ve ever been invited to a reception or meal at the President’s house, you know it’s a nice place. But the BOC recommends a 50% cut in couse costs from catering to maintenance. Expect Ron to be doing more of his student gatherings in the new “flexible-mealplan” dining halls.

MiddBlog wants to know: What will affect you? Are these appropriate cuts?

Kiss That Cow, Ron!

Just in case you missed it, President of the College Ron Liebowitz kissed a cow for charity (Amnesty International):

(photo via the Campus, Andrew Ngeow)

Liebowitz: Breakfast Options ’09-’10

President of the College Ronald Liebowitz writes:

Since we decided to limit the use of Atwater Dining Hall for special events (e.g., lunch for Language Tables, dinners after special events such as lectures, and as a social space for student events), several students have suggested we offer continental breakfast at Atwater.

Our current plan is to offer full breakfast service at Ross and Proctor and no breakfast at Atwater.  We have another option, however.  We can add continental breakfast to Atwater if we reduce service at Ross to continental as well.  Proctor would continue to serve full breakfast (hot and cold).

The options are spelled out below.  Please let us know which one you prefer.

  1. Proctor and Ross dining halls serve full breakfast (hot and cold), and Atwater remains closed for breakfast; or
  2. Proctor serves a full breakfast (hot and cold), and Atwater and Ross serve continental breakfast (cold).

Please comment!

Additional Reading about: Dining Services, Ron Liebowitz, and Finances.

Yes He Can: Liebowitz Day

The day has finally come. Liebowitz Day – April 3rd. Subtitled, “Liebowitz Day 3, Yes He Can: Defending Truth, Justice, and the Middlebury Way” and “Budgetary Change We Can Believe In,” this year’s event features a fantastic poster and t-shirt of our College President Ron Liebowitz.

No one is ever quite sure what Liebowitz Day is beyond a promotional event for a campus concert but this has certainly morphed into something more. I might venture to say that this is the closest students will ever get to a “roasting” of our College President.

No, this is not a April Fool’s joke.

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