-a-* -..'- I W~'5~~6 - E UVtE*1 WI V- -_______ ...........I I( i~ -L. , .-L"ui'I"e.i'+1 11I+L I'M&1=1"c=a.s __ .._ ._. .a_. .j .... .. -, a-..sw rr w rri lgJ4.r, 4/CS.Cl/1 ACrtes, scientia, iV y at c By Sue Warner VY IS INDEED creeping up and around the Uris Library tower. Just down the street, Sage Chapel has become nearly encased in the leafy vines, while across the quad, Sibley Hall faces a similar fate. Over the years, ivy has certainly established itself at Cornell University. Cornell is a member of the Ivy League which means, technically, that its athletic teams regularly battle those of Brown, Columbia, Dartmouth, Harvard, Princeton, Penn, Yale, and sometimes MIT. But the Ivy League is more than squash courts and crew tanks. It is a status, a reputation, perhaps a mystique, for Ivy League schools are commonly regarded as the bastions of academic excellence and preppie snobbishness. And although it is somewhat meaningless to stereotype anything as diverse as a university, the image remains, often justified and often not. The similarities between Cornell and this University are striking. At noon the carillon in the bell tower rings out over Cornell's central quad where sidewalks diagonally converge on a central point. Just off campus there is a bagel store, a record shop, complete with Devo display in the front window, and a few bars and restaurants decorated in the 1890s motif so common in downtown Ann Arbor. And there are posters all over campus advertising a midnight showing of the ubiquitous Rocky Horror Picture Show. Cornell President Frank Rhodes left his post as Michigan's vice-president for academic affairs in 1977 and is the fourth Cornell president to be imported from Ann Arbor. Rhodes claims the similarities between the two universities "far overshadow the differences." "There's a lot of little things," says Judy Westerman of the differences between Michigan and Cornell. An Ann Arbor native, Westerman spent two years at Michigan before transferring to Cornell last year. "There were a lot of things I noticed at first, like hockey's real big here, but now I realize people are pretty much the same everywhere." - Rhodes and Westerman are right. Basically, Sue Warner is co-editor of the students are the same; they wear down jackets, they hope to understand calculus, and they would like, someday, to be employed. Yet there are differences between the universities, most of which are matters of degree. Although most Cornell students deny they fit the Ivy stereotype, there is no question that the Cornell campus, physically, fits that mold. Perched high on the side of a mountain, Cornell is located about three-quarters of a mile (straight up and down) outside of tiny Ithaca, New York. The campus looks out over the south end of Cayuga Lake, one of New York's finger lakes, and is surrounded by rolling hills and rural countryside. The Ivy image is further sustained by the older, stately brick buildings, and a few impressive modern structures, which house lecture halls, classrooms, and professors' offices. Inside the buildings are shiny wooden floors and elaborate wooden banisters which often wind up circular staircases. Willard Straight Hall, commonly known as "the Straight," is one of three student unions on campus and the building seems to typify gracious living. The upper walls of Straight lobby are adorned with a giant mural depicting scenes from antiquity. Beyond the lobby is a wood-panelled ballroom where giant flags bearing the symbols of social and academic organizations hang from the high ceiling. The room looks as though it could be part of a feudal castle. And everywhere there is art. Life-size imitations of Greek sculpture stand in the lobby of Goldwin Smith Hall, and among the tables of the on-campus coffee house called "The Temple of Zeus." Even the sterile corridors of the administration building are lined with original works of modern art. The setting is lavish, picturesque, and just what imaginations dream a college campus should be. the white, middle-to-upper class norm are far less frequent than in Ann Arbor.. A collection of wooden boxes in the Straight lobby quickly reveals the hometown background of the Cornell student body. Students slip notes offering, and asking for, rides to various parts of the country. The Manhattan box is stuffed with slaps of paper and Westchester County, Boston, and Connecticut also are popular enough to warrant their own boxes. Long Island has several boxes all te itself. And near the bottom is a slot labeled simply "the midwest." Rhodes says the Cornell student body is more "cosmopolitan" than Michigan's, with a "relatively smaller in-state population." But Rhodes also says Cornell students represent a "wide range of social and economic backgrounds." And, he is quick to point out, 77 per cent of Cornell students receive some form of financial aid to counter balance the whopping tuition fees-$4,800 a year for the College of Arts and Sciences. "Sure, I get a $200 Regents Scholarship," said senior Elaine Klionsky., "Big deal." She added that many students, like herself, receive stipends from Cornell and other private or public sources on the basis of academic merit, although the money doesn't make a sizeable dent in total costs. In fact, protesters disrupted Rhodes' inauguration ceremony, demanding that scholarships be granted more on the basis of need than on academic merit. "Yeah, there's a lot of rich kids here from the city and Long Island, in the Arts School, but we don't get too snobby because we've got the Ag school to balance things out," says Bill Higgins, a Cornell junior. Higgins was referring to Cornell's School of Agriculture and Life Scien- ces, one of four state-supported units of the university. As state-run colleges, Cornell's Agriculture, Human Ecology, Industrial and Labor Relations, and Veterinary Schools must accept a quota of New York State residents and tuition is lower for students in those colleges ($2,025 per year for New York residents) than for students in the privately- endowed colleges. The state schools also have less competitive ad- mission standards. "I have some friends who go to other Ivy League schools and they're a lot more preppie than Cornell," Higgins continued. "Columbia's not so bad, but some of those people who go to Yale are ridiculous." Most of the students at Cornell say they don't identify with other Ivy League institutions. They are, however, quite aware of those other Ivy schools. Since most are originally from the Northeast, many Cornell students have visited the other universities and have high school friends who attend other Ivy schools. The condemning generalizations come quickly: "All the preppies go to Yale," or, "If you're not in an eating club at Princeton, forget it." "Cornell is often considered the bottom of the Ivy League," said Stuart Berman, managing editor of the student paper, The Cornell Daily Sun. "I think there is a sort of academic inferiority complex here, although that is more on the part of the faculty than the students." But for the most part, Cornell students are proud of their proletariat image in comparison to upper crust schools such as Princeton, Harvard, and Yale. Despite their lack-of identification with the Ivy League, Cornell students strongly identify with Cornell University. They are constantly aware of the fact that they are students, and not just students, but Cornell students. HERE IS A BIG iron gate at the south en- trance to campus which captures the sense of university's isolation from Ithaca and, for that matter, the outside world. The campus sits on its mountain, surrounded by farmland, and the students are forced to look inside the university for diversions. They read the Sun because there areno nearby metropolitan dailies like The Detroit Free Press. Any concerts, films, or theatre productions are centered on campus since Ithaca, unlike Ann Arbor or Detroit, has little to offer. In addition, Cornell, like most Ivy schools, is smaller than huge state universities such as Michigan, Wisconsin, or Texas. There are 16,000 students at Cornell, and despite some segregation along the lines of separate schools within the University, it is easier for students to get to know one another than it is on a campus of 40,000. Because Cornell is smaller than Michigan, there are fewer extracurricular activities. For example, there is only one film society, compared to Michi- gan's four. At Cornell, there is no student gover- nment as such, although five students are elected to the university's 70-member Board of Trustees. At Cornell, social life centers on campus. There are 49 fraternities and students generally admit the Greeks dominate Cornell society. It is the frater- nities who throw massive all-campus parties on Saturday nights. One recent bash was jointly spon- sored by a nation-wide rum producer and the cam- pus fraternity coordinating council. The company donated 40 cases of rum, and the toga-clad brothers hosted the party which was highlighted by the ap- pearance of a Penthouse 'pet.' But social activity is not confined to Saturday night. The university operates several central cafeterias on campus where students gather for lunch. The Ivy Room, a cafeteria in the basement of the Straight, a microcosm of Cornell life. The Kap- pas sit at the first table and behind them, the men of Sigma Chi. Meanwhile, non-Kappa and non-Sigma Chi students balance their trays of fish chowder and barbequed beef sandwiches while standing and glancing about the room, This searching is what Cornell students call "face time," or simply checking everybody out. The students are friendly and quickly start up conversations with strangers who may be seated next to them at the long wooden tables. The subject is nearly always the same-school. .Orn( Academics come first at t "I went to sleep thinking woke up thinking Bio," student on the morning of a School is almost always week nights, Uris Librar dergraduates exchanging questions, and speculating scales. The classes are generall Michigan and sewhat m an emphasis on original sot concern for interpretation. Transfer students who ha say they found their Cornel ficult. But all agree that w harder or not, Cornell stu than students at Michigan. "Everybody studies their Roger Freeman, a sophomr Michigan from Cornell this i "I lived in a dorm my fres people on my hall partied "Everybody else sat in their rather enjoy myself a little. Freeman said he thinks t from the 60s" in Ann Ai "they're really into the 70s. oriented people at Ithaca." Among the Cornell Arts population pre-law, pre-me predominate, and even the i professionally-oriented. D "Agricultural Economic, Engineering." Cornell is competitive. It a sterling grade point avers out with one. Most of the themselves to their demand accepted school as a way i and about five times each 3 out" by leaping off one of se a gorge which cuts through t "We don't really hear suicides)," said one studen while, the cops have the br kind of know what happened But a rigorous academic E a part of the Cornell traditi millionaire farmer who fou 1865, is himself. 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