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Hats off to SA for a fantastic job during the Centennial

Published: Friday, October 19, 2012

Updated: Friday, October 19, 2012 12:10

While some aspects of the Centennial Weekend left much to be desired, the event as a whole served as a reminder for students that the university we attend is a unique place with a colorful history and a myriad of opportunities that we would not have elsewhere. 

For undergraduates, the successes of Centennial Weekend were for the most part thanks to student-led organizations, in particular the Student Association and Rice Program Council. Without the organizational work and advocacy of these two groups, it has become apparent that the administration would not have done much to interest students for the weekend. The number of student-oriented events was still limited, but the return of Esperanza in an extravagant tent in particular kept students on campus for what was the biggest weekend of the year for the entire Rice community. 

Overall, the Centennial events were well-received. Especially notable were events that encouraged mingling with alumni, like Willy’s Pub’s Young Alumni event and receptions held at the colleges, as well as the awe-inspiring Spectacle, a unique, aesthetically and technologically fascinating way to celebrate Rice’s history. In a previous staff editorial (“Centennial year holds promising speaker line-up” Aug. 17, 2012), the Thresher lauded Rice’s lineup of speakers for the Centennial Lecture Series, who lived up to their high expectations by giving thoughtful, academically inclusive talks. 

Along with Esperanza, RPC and the SA also organized the Student Vision for the Second Century Town Hall and the Mr. Rice competition. Each of these events was able to engage the greater undergraduate population on different levels – some purely fun, some intellectual – and contribute to the value of the weekend as a whole. Esperanza sold more than 2,000 of the 2,300 available tickets to undergraduates and sold out the rest, a sign of the party’s incredible success. The SA and RPC were able to cooperate on the timing of Mr. Rice, deciding to hold the event during the Centennial Weekend. Inclusive events like these were well-attended and popular, encouraging the present student body’s excitement about Rice and Rice’s future. 

The administration undeniably dropped the ball on planning events for students for the Centennial, but the students themselves stepped up to correct the deficit. In the future, the Thresher hopes undergraduate events and events that include both alumni and undergraduates can be planned in harmony, rather than in competition with each other. It is commendable that ultimately the SA, RPC and the administration were able to work together to throw an absolutely memorable weekend with events that fostered a sense of community for current and former students, faculty and staff, and the local public. The administration should recognize the benefits of allowing the SA to plan events for the current student body and helping to fund those events, and the administration should keep Rice’s internal community in mind when planning future blowout weekends. 

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7 comments

Actual current undergrad
Sat Oct 20 2012 16:03
Of course it's not the administration's job to plan student events. I think the 'beef' here is that the admin didn't go out of their way from the start to ensure students felt included/engaged until student organizations stepped in. Events were clearly targeted toward alumni, donors and visitors. Kudos to admin for giving SA funds when they asked for it and doing pretty much everything the SA wanted AFTER the SA stepped in and asked and after most of the calendar was in place, but if they're gonna make a big deal out of Centennial, current undergrads and grads shouldn't be an afterthought
Incredulous
Sat Oct 20 2012 09:33
I still don't understand what the beef is with the administration in this instance. It sounds to me like the Student Association and Rice Program Council did their jobs to market and advocate for the Centennial. Am I to understand that the complaint is that the administration itself, rather than the student organizations, should have been doing this work??? Does the editorial board want the administration itself to plan Mr. Rice, Centennial Cup, Architectronica, and the Student Vision for the Second Century? The Thresher's complaints make absolutely no sense. These events are geared toward students and should rightly be planned by students. If it had been the other way around, we would be reading another angry editorial anyway. If students want to go tubing in Austin rather than stick around for Centennial, that's their prerogative. But don't pretend that has anything to do with the Centennial event planners. The schedule has been hiding in plain sight for literally *weeks* on the Rice website.
Actual current undergrad
Fri Oct 19 2012 20:40
Edit to comment below-

"From what I've heard from peers, most students didn't attend many of the weekend Centennial events planned by the administration and staff (with the exception of Spectacle, Esperanza and the Picnic) because they had never heard of the lecturers or didn't care about the panels and exhibits. Faced with the choice of going to Austin with friends for fall break and going to lectures, panels, and exhibits on campus, most undergrads would have chosen the former."

Actual current undergrad
Fri Oct 19 2012 20:37
True, the admin did an incredible job planning, organizing, and making sure everything ran smoothly, but let's be real here: without the marketing and advocacy of the SA to make the Centennial relevant to students, most people would have traveled out of Houston for fall break or gone home. From what I've heard from peers, most students didn't attend many of the weekend Centennial events planned by the administration and staff (with the exception of Spectacle, Esperanza and the Picnic) because faced with the choice of going to Austin with friends for fall break and going to lectures, panels, and exhibits on campus, most undergrads would have chosen the former. A couple lectures, one formal, and a top secret 15-minute light show would NOT have kept most students on campus for a 4-day weekend or gotten students excited about Rice's 100th birthday.

Esperanza and the Spectacle were probably the two most enjoyable events of the weekend. If student organizations hadn't hosted other events to get students excited about the weekend like Centennial Cup, Real World Roundup, alumni dinners, Architectronica and the homecoming tailgate, most of us would have left campus for fall break and not have bothered to stay to experience Spectacle or Esperanza for ourselves.

Incredulous
Fri Oct 19 2012 18:41
"Without the organizational work and advocacy of these two groups, it has become apparent that the administration would not have done much to interest students for the weekend" - does this mean to say that Rice students are now so dumb that they have no interest in John Roberts, Esther Dyson, Craig Venter, Rem Koolhaas, Shirley Ann Jackson, Shepherd School of Music concerts, Centennial picnics, research poster presentations, faculty mini lectures, art exhibits, light shows, Esperanza, football games, or statue dedications? Those damn administrators... why didn't they do more for their poor students!!! At the least, couldn't they have given the poor kids some time off of school? Oh wait, they did that too?
Another Recent Alum and Current Grad Student
Fri Oct 19 2012 15:10
This editorial has such narrow perspective! So much "me,me,me." Stop your whining.
The events at Rice were as much for undergrad students as they were for everyone else.
Recent Alum
Fri Oct 19 2012 13:36
Christ, can't you kids write an editorial without criticizing the administration? It's like y'all are professionals at being offended. It really undermines you whenever you *do* actually have legitimate beefs. I've gotta say, the administration did an amazing job of planning the Centennial. Everything that I saw went off without a hitch. I got to see Rem Koolhaas, Craig Venter, and the Chief Justice for free. I got to go to my five-year reunion at the Armadillo Palace, which was reasonably priced and served great food. I got to go to the Volcano and see tons of Rice people. I got to attend an absolutely amazing party in the Centennial tent and see an amazing light show twice, also at a very reasonable price. I got to go to a football game for a reasonable price. There was even free parking.

You undergrads had open access to a bunch of amazing speeches by famous people, got to have your Esperanza dance in the big tent, and got to see one hell of a light show. You got to go to a well attended and fun football game that we won. What on earth are you complaining about? How is it that the administration didn't "recognize the benefits of allowing the SA to plan events for the current student body"? Earlier in the editorial you tip your hats to the SA for doing such a great job! You are contradicting yourself in the same piece! Did the administration's bogey men stop the SA from doing things for the undergrads? Doesn't sound like it to me.

The quality of stuff available to current undergrads on Rice campus far surpasses what we had even six years ago. The buildings are nicer, the student programs better funded, the prestige of the school is higher, the quantity and quality of planned events is better... We sure as heck never had Esperanza in a 250,000 mega-tent. I'm sick of hearing you guys complain, complain, complain. Go work for a soup kitchen and see some people who are really being left behind by our society!





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