Campus Life at Washington University in St. Louis

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For the student newspaper of Washington University in St. Louis, see Student Life (newspaper)

Contents

[edit] Student Organizations

Washington University has over 200 undergraduate student organizations on campus. All are funded by WUSTL's student government Student Union, which has a $2 million annual budget that is completely student controlled and is one of the largest student government budgets in the country. Known as SU for short, it sponsors large-scale campus programs including WILD (a semesterly concert in the quad), free copies of the New York Times, USA Today, and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch through The Collegiate Readership Program; the Assembly Series, a weekly lecture series; and the campus television station, WUTV and the radio station, KWUR.

[edit] Student Government

Founded in 1967, SU carries out three major activities: representing student interests; registering, funding, and supporting student groups; and planning campus-wide events. It is divided into three branches: the Executive, Legislative, and Judicial branches. The Student Union Executive Branch is comprised of 4 elected individuals, who are the student body officials - the President, Vice President, Treasurer, and Secretary - who are charged with managing the and allocating the budget, being the point of contact with University administration, and leading and setting the direction for Student Union. The Legislative branch includes the Treasury and the Senate. The Treasury of the Student Union recently restructured the process for funding the speakers for the Assembly Series and continues to hear appeals for finances from various student groups. Recent resolutions of the Senate include adding new capabilities to student ID cards, forming a GLBTQA task force, requiring all professors to distribute course syllabi and midterm grade progresses, and increasing the minimum wage of University workers. The SU Judicial Branch includes a Constitutional Council comprised of a Chief Justice, four Associate Justices, and one Alternate. The Election Commissioner and the Financial Advisory Review Board (FARB) fall under the Judicial Branch of Student Union. SU is one of the few student governments in the country that does not compensate its elected offers. More information about the history and responsibilities of Student Union can be found here.

[edit] Music

There is a large interest in A cappella music on campus, spawning groups such as The Mosaic Whispers, The Stereotypes, After Dark, The Pikers and More Fools Than Wise. A body known as ACAC (All A Cappella Auditions Council) oversees auditions for member groups each fall. The University also has a Department of Music that, in addition to providing concentrated study for music majors, also provides instrument and voice lessons to students. There are also a number of instrumental groups and ensembles in which students may participate. Other student organizations, such as Team 31 and The Gargoyle Committee, bring in popular national bands and lesser-known independent alternative performers.

[edit] Residential Life

The clocktower at the edge of the South 40.
The clocktower at the edge of the South 40.

75% of undergraduate students live on campus. Most of the dormitories on campus are located on the South 40, named because of its adjacent location south of the Hilltop campus and its size of 40 acres. It is the location of all the freshman dorms as well as several upperclassman dorms. All of the dorms are co-ed. The South 40 is organized as a pedestrian friendly environment where residences surround a central recreational lawn known as the Swamp. Wohl Student Center, the Habif Health and Wellness Center (Student Health Services), the Residential Life Office, University Police Headquarters, various student owned businesses (e.g. the laundry service, "Wash U Wash"), and the baseball, softball, and intramural fields are also located on the South 40.

[edit] Residential Colleges

Residences on the 40, as it is frequently abbreviated, are broken into small groups known as Residential Colleges. Residential Colleges typically have social events for their member houses and are administratively a single unit. Each College was originally supposed to consist of a freshman dormitory and an upperclassman dormitory paired together, but currently only five out of the nine include at least one freshman dormitory and at least one upperclassman dormitory.

Residential Colleges include:

  • Wayman Crow (Howard Nemerov and Nathan Dardick Houses)
  • Robert S. Brookings (Arnold J. Lien and Kate M. Gregg Houses)
  • William Greenleaf Eliot (WGE) (Elizabeth G. Danforth, Ethan A.H. Shepley, and Butron M. Wheeler Houses)
  • Park/Mudd (Helen Ette Park and Mudd Houses)
  • JKL (Thomas G. Rutledge, Carl A. Dauten, and Shanedling Houses)
  • HIGE (Herbert F. Hitzeman, Chester Myers, Frank E. Hurd, and Thomas H. Eliot Houses)
  • Lee/Beaumont (John F. Lee and Louis Beaumont Houses)
  • Ruby/Umrath (Helen F. Umrath and Maurie Rubelmann Houses)
  • Liggett/Koenig (John E. Liggett and Edwin C. Koenig Houses)

Each Residential College includes the following ameneties:

A freshman room.
A freshman room.
  • Residential College Director
  • Faculty Families - A professor that has an aparment inside the Residential College
  • Faculty Fellows/Associates - Faculty members who are paired with freshman floors. They have dinner with their floors weekly, make occasional visits and participate in floor programming
  • Residential Advisors - Juniors and Seniors who create programming for members of the College. They implement programs and keep up the integrity of the community
  • Residential Peer Mentors - Sophomores who serve as tutors for large freshman classes(Calculus, Chemistry, Writing, etc)
  • Residential Academic Peers - Sophomores who assits freshman with the social transition to college
  • Residential Peer Health Educators - Sophomores who are trained to answer questions about, and implement programs to educate freshman on the health transition in college
  • Residential Computer Consultants - Upperclassmen who are trained to fix common computer problems that arise
  • Rooms - Freshman are typically housed in suites of two doubles joined by a bathroom while upperclassmen live in suites of four singles joined by a common area and 2 bathrooms
  • Computer Labs - Free printing, and PC and Macintonsh computer sations
  • Lounges - Each floor in the residential houses have common lounges with couches, tables, small kitches and televisions
  • Kitchens - Each residential house contains a full kitchen

[edit] Wohl Center

The Wohl Center is the student center on the South 40. It contains two dining areas (Bears Den and Center Court), a grocery store (Bear Mart), a gift shop (Bear Necessities) and student mailboxes/postal services. The Wohl Center also houses Friedman Lounge, a student meeting space/piano room. The South 40 Master Plan calls for the Wohl Center to be torn down and rebuilt; however this event is likely several years away.

[edit] North Side

Another group of residences, known as the North Side, is located in the northwest corner of Danforth Campus. Only open to upperclassmen and January Scholars, the North Side consists of Millbrook Apartments, The Village, and all fraternity houses except the Zeta Beta Tau house, which is off campus and located just northwest of the South 40. Sororities at Washington University do not have houses by their own accord. The Village is a group of residences where students who have similar interests or academic goals apply as small groups of 4 to 24, known as BLOCs, to live together in clustered suites. Like the South 40, the residences around the Village also surround a recreational lawn as well as its own student center.


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