|
|
| 2/12 - S. Frederick Starr (1940- ) |
| Scope and Content |
|
Expansive in terms of range, and volume (81.9 l.f.), the presidential
papers of S. Frederick Starr mirror the work of a proactive leader who
sought to make Oberlin College one of the nation's most distinctive
liberal arts institutions. Within these official records, the researcher
will find delineated the decision and policy making actions of the Starr
administration with fine detail on building projects, campus unrest,
financial planning and development, personnel issues, and his promotion
of college departments and programs. Consisting of eighteen record
series, these official records are arranged as follows: Annual Reports,
Appointment Calendars & Telephone Message Logs, Awards and Honors,
Budget and Fiscal Files, Commencement and Honors Day Files, Committee
Files, Correspondence, Miscellaneous Files relating to Grievances and
Separations, Miscellaneous Correspondence with External Organizations,
Miscellaneous Files relating to Divisions, Departments, and
Administrative Units, Name Files, Personnel Files, Publicity Files,
Special Initiatives and Project Files, Speeches and Writing Files,
Subject Files, and Non-textual records. These files represent a mix of
the original, information copy, and personally annotated documentation
created and received by President Starr during his eleven year
presidency (1983-94).
Documentation regarding the primary goals of Starr's presidency
varies in its depth and consistency. While providing a fair accounting
of the Starr presidency, some serious problems exist in this record
group; namely, these files were poorly administered prior to their
accession by the Oberlin College Archives. During the active phase of
these records, the president's staff apparently operated without a
systematic files administration plan and support staff did not receive
administrative direction. Thus, general files consisting of individual
folders or expanding file folders were arranged largely by alphabetical
(name and subject) order. However, files created out of the same
activity and/or relating to the same topic may have been assigned
different folder headings and filed in more than one place. Hence, in
conducting research into the records of the Starr administration, one
will need to read through an assortment of alpha files, chronological
files, and subject files.
In the process of arranging and describing this group, every effort
was made to increase access to the records by bringing together files
which held common record characteristics. For example, researchers will
find that all of the records regarding Starr's committee work are
organized under Series 6, Committee files, rather than being scattered
alphabetically across the group in individual folders. Notwithstanding,
researchers must be prepared to utilize a variety of research
strategies, recognizing that corresponding material can be found in the
several different series of this record group.
Gaps also exist in the record. Documentation for the last year of
Starr's presidency is very thin. The chronological correspondence in
Series 7 does date through June of 1994; but, the other administrative
records in this group vary in their coverage. Aside from a lack of
systematic and consistent record keeping (as mentioned above), the
reasons for this uneven coverage is not clear.
Additionally, while the majority of these records document the years
of Starr's presidency (1983-94), these official papers do contain files
inherited from previous presidential administrations. On occasion,
researchers will encounter material dating from the administration of
William Edwards Stevenson (1946-59), although most early records
originate from the presidency of Emil C. Danenberg (1973-81) and acting
president James L. Powell (1981-83). Included with this record group are
also an assortment of President Starr's writings and speeches (1958-94)
(Series 16), which cover such topics as architecture, higher education
in the United States, jazz music, and Soviet and Eastern European
affairs.
Evidence of Starr's administrative style and vision for
Oberlin College can be found in Series 1, Annual Reports. These records
document a president who was continually seeking to identify ways to
improve upon and market the College's strengths through the
accomplishments and efforts of individual offices and departments. The
President's Annual Reports tended to be thematic in character, in which
Starr focused upon and promoted different aspects of Oberlin's
educational mission. Issues which were given constant emphasis during
his administration (the Conservatory of Music, international studies,
and science education) provided the subject matter for a number of
Starr's annual reports. Subseries 2, Annual Reports Received by the
President, document the work of the individual divisions, departments,
and offices of the College, while also displaying Starr's proactive
leadership style. His written responses and suggestions accompanying
these reports, give an account of how Starr perceived the contributions
of individual offices to the overall success of Oberlin College.
Starr's activities, on and off of the college campus, are documented
in Series 2, Appointment Calendars and Telephone Message Logs. Details
regarding Starr's meetings with Oberlin College faculty, staff, and
students, as well as his time out of the office to participate in events
external to the College, are noted in his appointment calendars. For
more information concerning those external organizations and projects
which often drew the President away from the Oberlin campus, users
should refer to Series 10, Miscellaneous Correspondence with External
Organizations, and Series 15, Special Initiatives and Project Files.
Series 4, Budget and Fiscal Files, provide details regarding the
specific expenditures of the President's office, as well as on
campus-wide fiscal policy. For more documentation regarding the
college's financial activity during Starr's administration, readers will
want to consult the records of the Advisory Committee on Social and
Political Concerns (1982-86), the Budget and Finance Committee
(1983-90), the Investment Committee (1982-92), and the Shareholder
Responsibility Committee (1982-92), which are all found in Series 6, as
well as records in Series 11, Subseries 1, relating to the Office of the
Provost and the Office of the Treasurer. The records of the Board of
Trustees (RG 1), the Office of the Provost (RG 4), the Vice President of
Business and Finance (RG 6), and the Office of the Treasurer (RG 7)
should also provide further information on college budgetary
matters.
Series 6, Committee Files, displays a president who had a genuine
interest and concern regarding the outcome of college committee work.
Starr's involvement in campus construction and beautification,
curriculum development, divestment of funds in South Africa, and student
retention, are some of the major campus-wide issues are documented here.
Users should note, however, that material is scant regarding Starr's
involvement with Conservatory of Music committees.
Series 7, Correspondence, represents the most significant set of
files covering the Starr presidency. Divided into alphabetical files,
chronological files, general correspondence, and recommendation letters
written, the proactive character of Starr's presidency is duly exhibited
here. Letters directed to college trustees, faculty, parents, staff,
students, and other individuals, cover a broad range of subjects. For
example, filed among the routine correspondence of thank you letters and
R.S.V.P.'s, users will find letters to college trustees and senior staff
regarding college hiring practices, development campaigns, divestment,
legal matters, negotiations with the UAW, and the student protests of
April 13, 1990. Included also are copies of Starr's handwritten notes to
faculty, friends, staff members, and trustees, in which he remarks, in a
more personal manner, on the issues and decisions being made at the
college.
The correspondence in Subseries 1, Alphabetical Files, is arranged by
corespondents' names, and letter subject. Only a small number of letters
exist for D to GO, the majority of which are missing. The general
correspondence of Subseries 3, consists of letters, which at the time of
transfer to the archives, were unfiled, or, were interspersed throughout
the record group. Of note are Starr's letters for the record, in which
he discusses his impressions of Oberlin (1985) and sums up the successes
and failures of his presidency (1994). This series also contains those
letters Starr received in response to the announcement of his
resignation from Oberlin College (1993) and upon his acceptance of the
Presidency of the Aspen Institute in Washington D.C. (1994). Filed
alphabetically, correspondence with alumni and students exists for the
letters A and B. It is assumed that the remaining letters to students
and alumni were interfiled in the remaining correspondence series.
Users should be prepared to search for select pieces of
correspondence by examining all of the correspondence subseries, as well
as searching in the other series of this record group. Correspondence
will be found interfiled in Series 10, Miscellaneous Correspondence with
External Organizations, Series 11, Miscellaneous Files relating to
Divisions, Departments, and Administrative Units, Series 12, Name Files,
and Series 13, Subseries 1, Former Faculty and A&PS Files.
While relatively small (1.0 l.f.) in comparison to the other series
in this record group, Series 8, Miscellaneous Files relating to Campus
Demonstrations, provides a valuable gauge in measuring the health and
stability of the Starr presidency. Here the researcher will find
President Starr's collected files relating to several incidents of
campus unrest at Oberlin College. Of special interest are Starr's notes
concerning the College's response to the student demonstrations of April
13, 1990, an incident which may have marked the beginning of the end of
the Starr administration. Included with these files are records
regarding the work of the 3-3-3 Committee, in which is addressed the
Oberlin College Policy on Student Demonstrations (1990). Likewise, the
college's handling of alleged age and racial discrimination charges as
filed by Clark Drummond (1994) and Dwight Hollins (1992-94) can be found
in Series 9, Miscellaneous Legal Files relating to Grievances and
Separations. For further information regarding the College's involvement
in legal matters, users should refer to the records of the By-Laws and
Legal Matters Committee found in Series 6, Subseries 1. Material on the
College's process to update its 1982 policy on sexual harassment
(1991-94) can be found in Series 6; and, information detailing the
college's handling of the Solomon Amendment (1983-84) is located in
Series 11, Subseries 3. Files regarding the dismissal of college
Chaplain, Willis Ludlow (1984) are located in Series 13, Subseries
1.
Starr's national, regional, and local efforts to shape, improve, and
enhance higher education in America are documented in Series 10,
Miscellaneous Correspondence with External Organizations. Through his
involvement on the American Council of Education, the Independent
College's Office, and the Great Lakes College Association, Starr
addressed such issues as the costs of a college education, increasing
international exchange programs and language requirements at colleges
and universities, and the impact of politics and government on higher
education.
Series 13, Miscellaneous Files relating to Divisions Departments and
Administrative Units, is rich in documenting the administrative
relationships under Starr's management, and the records themselves
detail Starr's role in administrative oversight and in the
implementation of institutional policies. Subseries 1, Files relating to
Offices reporting to the President, provide detail on Starr's
communications and directives to his Senior Staff as well as to the
Affirmative Action Officer, the Chaplains Office, and the Office of
Gender Equity. The creation of a coordinator for minority admissions
(1985), personnel reductions for the College of Arts and Sciences
(1991), support for the Chaplain's Office (1992-94), advice given to the
Conservatory of Music regarding admissions goals (1988) and recruitment
(1985), and the creation of the Dean of Student Support Services (1984)
are detailed here. Likewise, users will find documentation regarding
Admissions Office recruitment tactics, staffing issues, and long range
strategies for financial aid in this subseries. Material documenting
Starr's promotion of the educational interests of the Conservatory of
Music, and documentation regarding the Treasurer's office are thin. For
more detailed documentation on the Conservatory, users should consult
the records of the Conservatory of Music (RG 10). Information regarding
the Treasurer's Office will be found in Series 6, with the files of
those committees which oversaw the monetary policies of the College, and
throughout the President's correspondence in Series 7.
Evidence of Starr's support for the College's science curriculum is
documented in files regarding the British Petroleum science program, and
the neuroscience and biopsychology program in Series 13, Subseries 2.
Likewise, Series 17, Subject Files, contains information on the Oberlin
College Science Conferences. Material regarding the improvement of the
college science facilities can be found with the records of the Natural
Sciences Division Committee in Series 6, Subseries 2. These records
include the Earl R. Flansburgh and Associates, Inc. consultant's report
on Natural Sciences Comprehensive Facilities Plan (1990). The Report was
based on work done by the College's Science Space Planning Committee,
chaired by Richard Schoonmaker. (See Chemistry Department Records.)
Starr's interest in increased recruitment of student athletes by the
department of physical education, his efforts to establish a chair in
Arabic and Islamic Studies (1990), and his creation of the Business
Initiatives Program (1985), are also documented here. Information
regarding the closure of the Communication Studies Department (1986) is
also detailed in this subseries.
Series 13, Subseries 3, Files Relating to Administrative Offices and
Units, provides in-depth information regarding Starr's pro-active
efforts on the development and fund raising front which led him to
create the ACTION campaign (1983-85), and the Capital Campaign
(1986-91). For additional material regarding the ACTION campaign, users
should consult the records of the Alumni Association (RG 20). Materials
regarding the college's handling of the Solomon Amendment controversy
are also found in this subseries. Files regarding campus building
projects include material on the renovations to Carnegie Library, the
addition to the Conservatory library, and the construction of Heisman
Field House and Stevenson Dining Hall (North Campus Dining Facility).
Other records regarding campus construction and beautification efforts
can be found in Series 6, in the files of the Buildings and Grounds
Committee (1983-90), and the Cox Renovation Committee (1984-85). Records
from the Architectural Review Committee (1986-94), a body established by
Starr, also document campus construction and beautification efforts.
Information concerning the Bandstand Competition (1986-89) can be found
in Series 15, Special Initiatives and Project Files.
Series 17, Subject Files treat Starr's every connection and interest
on matters such as class availability (1993), domestic partnership
(1992-93), grading practices (1986), science conferences (1985-88), and
sexual harassment (1992-93). Starr's collected material regarding the
Justice Department's investigation into the College's possible
involvement in tuition price fixing (1989-92) is filed here. Finally,
files exist on the Oberlin College Sesquicentennial Celebration (1983),
an event which was well underway before Starr assumed the
presidency.
Series 15, Special Initiatives and Project Files, details Starr's
activities which were external to the daily administration of the
College, but were nonetheless for the benefit of Oberlin. Records
regarding the American Soviet Youth Orchestra (1986-94), the Bandstand
Competition (1986-89), the Jazz Masterworks Editions (1986-94), the
Louisiana Repertory Jazz Ensemble (1982-1990), and the Three Year B.A.
degree (1990-93) (which includes Starr's 1993 document of the same name)
are highlighted in this series. Further information regarding the
American Soviet Youth Orchestra can be found in the records of the
Conservatory of Music (RG 10) and the Office of Communications (RG
18).
The remainder of this record group is made up by Awards and Honors,
and Commencement and Honors Assembly Files. Series 18, Non-textual
records, is made up primarily of recordings of the Louisiana Repertory
Jazz Ensemble, and the American Soviet Youth Orchestra. This series also
contains select photographs, video, and audio recordings of Starr's
speeches and appearances during his presidency. Computer disks
containing copies of Starr's correspondence are filed with Series 7. For
photographs, sound recordings and other non-textual records documenting
the Starr presidency, users should consult the records of the Office of
Communications (RG 18), Photographs (RG 32), and Motion Pictures and
Tape Recordings (RG 37).
Outline of the Arrangement
- Series 1. Annual Reports
- Subseries 1. Annual Reports of the President
- Subseries 2. Annual Reports Received by the President
- Series 2. Appointment Calendar and Telephone Message Logs
- Series 3. Awards and Honors
- Series 4. Budget and Fiscal Files
- Series 5. Commencement and Honors Assembly Files
- Series 6. Committee Files
- *Subseries 1. Board of Trustee Committee Files
- *Subseries 2. General Faculty and College Faculty Committee Files
- Series 7. Correspondence
- Subseries 1. Alphabetical Files
- Subseries 2. Chronological Files
- Subseries 3. General Correspondence (alpha and chron)
- *Subseries 4. Recommendation Letters Written
- Series 8. Miscellaneous Files relating to Campus Demonstrations
- *Series 9. Miscellaneous Case Files relating to Grievances and Separations
- Series 10. Miscellaneous Correspondence with External Organizations
- Subseries 1. National
- Subseries 2. Regional
- Subseries 3. Local
- Series 11. Miscellaneous Files relating to Divisions, Departments,
and Administrative Units
- Subseries 1. Files relating to Offices Reporting to the President
- Subseries 2. Files relating to Academic Departments and Programs
- Subseries 3. Files relating to Administrative Units
- Series 12. Name Files
- Subseries 1. Board of Trustee Name Files
- Subseries 2. General Name Files
- Series 13. Personnel Files
- *Subseries 1. Former Faculty and A&PS Files
- *Subseries 2. Senior Staff Search Files
- Subseries 3. Personnel Subject Files
- Series 14. Publicity Files
- Series 15. Special Initiatives and Project Files
- Series 16. Speeches and Writings Files
- Series 17. Subject Files
- Series 18. Non-textual Records
- Subseries 1. Audio Cassettes/Reel-to-Reel Recordings
- Subseries 2. Photographs
- Subseries 3. Records
- Subseries 4. Videotapes
* various restrictions have been placed on these records |
| Series Descriptions |
| Series 1. Annual Reports, 1982-1992 (1.6 l.f.)
Annual reports represent those both created, and received by the
Office of the President. The President's annual reports tend to be
thematic in character, with each report designed to focus on a specific
aspect of Oberlin College's educational mission. The annual reports
received are from Senior Staff offices, academic departments, and
administrative units, and report on the specific activities of those
units for a given academic year and outline programmatic goals and
objectives for the next year. Series is arranged into two subseries:
Annual Reports of the President, and Annual Reports Received by the
President.
Subseries 1. Annual Reports of the President, 1983-1992 (0.4 l.f.)
Among the topics covered in these reports are international education
(1987-88), the Conservatory of Music (1986-87), independent learning
(1988-89), and the social sciences at Oberlin (1989-90). Included are
the drafts and files kept by Starr during the production of his annual
reports. Reports were not prepared for academic years 1992-93 and
1993-94. Arrangement is chronological.
Subseries 2. Annual Reports Received by the President, 1982-1991 (1.2
l.f.)
Annual reports from Senior Staff offices, academic departments, and
administrative units, vary in their size and scale. In many instances,
reports are accompanied with a copy of Starr's comments upon the
reported activities of the unit and sometimes include his suggestions as
to that unit's continued work. Subseries is arranged chronologically and
alphabetically thereunder.
Series 2. Appointment Calendar and Telephone Message Logs, 1983-1994
(3.0 l.f.)
Subseries 1. Appointment Calendar, 1983-1994 (1.0 l.f.)
Maintained by the President and his administrative assistants, the
appointment calendars (1984-94) detail Starr's appointments, scheduled
meetings, and time out of the office to participate in Alumni
Association events, professional meetings, performances with the
Louisiana Repertory Jazz Ensemble, and as a guest speaker at other
Colleges and Universities. Calendars are arranged chronologically.
Subseries 2. Telephone Message Logs, 1987-1994 (1.2 l.f.)
These 84 volumes represent the telephone messages taken for the
President by his support staff. On occasion, the messages will logs will
identify the message subject. Users should note that the President's
executive secretary and administrative assistant took messages in
separate log books during the same time period. Hence, these separate
message volumes overlap in their time span. Arrangement is
chronological.
Subseries 3. Itineraries, 1983-94 (.80 l.f.)
Itineraries of President Starr. Some itineraries or supporting
documents have been corrected. [1997/95]
Series 3. Awards and Honors, 1983-1994 (1.2 l.f.)
Honorary degrees from Marietta College (1994), Middlebury College
(1985), and Olivet College (1984) can be found here. Other items include
a Golden Toad Award (1994); and, a scrapbook (1983) that contains the
certificates of congratulation sent to Starr from other colleges and
universities upon his selection as President of Oberlin College. Series
also contains a file on Starr's presidential inauguration (1983).
Arrangement is by type of award, and chronological thereunder.
Series 4. Budget and Fiscal Files, 1982-1994 (2.45 l.f.)
Account books and files (1983-93) created and maintained by staff of
the office of the President detail daily and routine expenditures on
entertainment, equipment, postage, travel, professional memberships, and
supplies and services. College Budget files (1982-92) include financial
projections, ledger outlines, spreadsheets, and memorandum (through
1988) from Vice President of Business and Finance, Dayton Livingston. Of
particular interest are the files relating to the budget reduction
exercises of 1990, and to the issue of bond financing (1985, 1989).
Series is arranged alphabetically by type of item, and chronologically
thereunder.
Series 5. Commencement and Honors Assembly Files, 1982-1994 (0.4 l.f.)
Series consists of commencement and honors assembly directives from
President Starr to the Office of the Secretary and the Alumni
Association Executive Director regarding the planning for these two
annual events. Included are incoming and outgoing letters between Starr
and commencement and honors assembly guests, as well as draft copies of
Starr's speech notes. Of particular interest is a document prepared by
the college archivist, Roland M. Baumann, detailing the number of
students who walked around the Memorial Arch at the May 1994
Commencement Exercises. Series is arranged by event, and chronologically
thereunder.
Series 6. Committee Files, 1977-1994 (5.05 l.f.)
These assembled files represent President Starr's direct and indirect
involvement with Board of Trustee's, General Faculty, and College
Faculty Committees. Included are reports and materials sent to the
President as information copy, as well as materials from committees with
which Starr was actively involved and/or participated. Series is
arranged into two subseries: Board of Trustee Committee Files, and
General Faculty and College Faculty Committee Files.
*Subseries 1. Board of Trustee Committee Files, 1982-1994 (2.45 l.f.)
Files document in part President Starr's involvement (direct and
indirect) with committees of the Board of Trustees, in the capacity of
full member, ex-officio member, or as an interested observer. Included
is correspondence between Starr and committee members, meeting minutes,
and memorandum. Some files constitute information copy sent to the
President. Of note are the Trustee Committee files of the Building and
Grounds Committee (1983-90), the Executive Committee (1983-88), the
Honorary Degrees Committee (1983-86), and the Strategic Issues Steering
Committee (1992-93). Some miscellaneous files exist regarding the
identification of potential trustees, trustee lists, and Starr's own
personal notes on the search for his successor, Nancy S. Dye, Oberlin
College's thirteenth president. Subseries is arranged alphabetically by
committee name. Records are restricted.
*Subseries 2. General Faculty and College Faculty CommitteeFiles,
1977-1994 (2.6 l.f.)
Files consist of correspondence, meeting minutes, and reports from
General Faculty and College Faculty committees for which Starr was as a
full member, ex-officio member, or an interested observer. Some
committee material exists as information copy for the president, while
other files represent his active contributions to the work of
campus-wide committees. Of note are the files of the Architectural
Review Committee (1986-94), which was formally established during his
administration. Likewise, the 1990 survey conducted by the Lesbian, Gay
and Bi-sexual Concerns Committee regarding sexual orientation issues at
Oberlin College, and the 1983 report of the Retention Committee,
outlining student retention trends and influences, are found here.
Subseries also contains a variety of student government committee files.
Files inherited from previous administrations account for subseries time
span. Arrangement is alphabetical by committee name. Records are
restricted.
Series 7. Correspondence, 1981-1994 (24.6 l.f.)
Arranged into four subseries: Alphabetical files, chronological
files, general correspondence, and recommendation letters written, this
series contains the majority of Starr's official correspondence as
president of Oberlin College. Subseries tend to contain correspondence
of a like kind; however, file units were maintained as filed and used by
the President's office. The general correspondence consists of those
letters which were unfiled or scattered throughout the record group in
individual folders prior to the arrangement of these official papers.
Accompanying the correspondence are five 3.5" 1.1 MB microfloppy disks
(double sided, high density). These disks contain copies of President
Starr's outgoing correspondence (Microsoft Word for Macintosh) from 1992
to 1994. Disks also contain miscellaneous documents on financial aid
(1994), objectives (1992), and speeches (1992, 1993). Accompanying the
disks are printed directories detailing their contents.
Subseries 1. Alphabetical Files, 1983-1994 (11.0 l.f.)
Often affixed to this incoming correspondence is a copy of Starr's
response. Correspondents include college trustees, faculty, parents,
staff, students, and other individuals; and, letters cover such topics
as admissions policies, financial aid, the John Frederick Oberlin
Society, legal matters facing the college, and Presidential speaking
engagements. Presidential staff assigned each letter with a heading, and
filed the individual documents in alphabetical order. Document headings
used include the names of correspondents, the subjects of letters, and
the names of institutions. Only a small amount of correspondence exists
for the letters assigned with headings D to GO, the majority of which,
are missing.
Subseries 2. Chronological Files, 1981-1994 (8.75 l.f.)
Starr's outgoing correspondence includes letters to college trustees,
faculty, parents, staff, students, and other individuals. Some letters
are directed to representatives of external organizations such as the
Great Lakes Colleges Association, Ann Arbor, Michigan, the Kennan
Institute for Advanced Russian Studies, Washington D.C., and the Woodrow
Wilson Center, Washington, D.C. Topics cover routine as well as high
level college business, including the April 13, 1990 campus incident,
grant awards, invitations received, Soviet and Eastern European affairs,
and Starr's work on such special projects as the American Soviet Youth
Orchestra and the Louisiana Repertory Jazz Ensemble. Letters of
appointment and recommendation can also be found here, most of which are
restricted. Correspondence of Acting President James Powell is included
here, which was retained after the transition. This accounts for the
subseries time span. Arrangement is chronological.
Subseries 3. General Correspondence, 1982-1994 (3.85 l.f.)
Because this general correspondence was largely unfiled and
unorganized upon its transfer to the College Archives, related documents
in folders were grouped together in order to make this documentation
more user friendly. Covering a wide array of topics regarding colleges
and universities, fellowships and scholarships, foundations and trusts,
and grants, these separate file units vary in quantity and quality.
Starr's eight letters written for the record (1985, 1994) and letters
collected in regard to his resignation as president of Oberlin College
(1993, 1994) are important. Arrangement is alphabetical by type of
correspondence, and chronological thereunder.
*Subseries 4. Recommendation Letters Written, 1986-1992 (1.0 l.f.)
Subseries contains letters written for professional colleagues mostly
external to Oberlin and for non-college endowment grant applications.
Some letters written on behalf of students and college employees can
also be found here. Arrangement is alphabetical by name. These files are
restricted.
Series 8. Miscellaneous Files relating to Campus Demonstrations,
1987-1993 (1.0 l.f.)
Files contain clippings, correspondence, and reports regarding
incidents of unrest on the Oberlin College campus relating to the
divestment of funds in South Africa (1987), racism (1988, 1993), and the
student protests on the lawn of the President's house, 154 Forest
Street, Oberlin, OH, on April 13, 1990. Series is arranged
chronologically by demonstration.
*Series 9. Miscellaneous Case Files relating to Grievances and
Separations, 1979-1994 (0.2 l.f.)
Correspondence, clippings, and various legal briefs and reports
detail alleged discrimination and harassment cases faced by the College
administration. Of special importance are the files relate to Dwight
Hollins, Director of Multicultural Admissions at Oberlin (1992-94) and
Clark Drummond, Director of the Student Union and Student Activities
(1994). Arrangement is alphabetical by case name. Files are
restricted.
Series 10. Miscellaneous Correspondence with External Organizations,
1977-1994 (5.3 l.f.)
This subgroup represents President Starr's involvement with
professional organizations associated with Oberlin College. Included is
correspondence, meeting minutes, membership information, and reports.
Subgroup is arranged into three series: National, Regional, and
Local.
Subseries 1. National, 1983-1994 (1.6 l.f.)
Records relating to 39 national bodies cover such topics as
educational trends, international exchanges, and the impact of
government on higher education. Of note are files on the American
Council on Education, the Independent College Office, and the National
Association of Independent Colleges and Universities. Arrangement is
alphabetical by organization.
Subseries 2. Regional, 1983-1994 (2.9 l.f.)
Files include those of the Great Lakes College Association, the North
Central Association, and the Ohio Board of Regents. Topics include
Starr's role as chair of the Board for the Great Lakes College
Association (1991-92) and accreditation reviews performed by the North
Central Association (1986, 1988). Series is arranged alphabetically.
Subseries 3. Local, 1977-1994 (0.8 l.f.)
Files from Oberlin City and Lorain County based organizations can be
found here. Of note are files regarding the lease relationship between
Oberlin College and the Oberlin Golf Club (1977-93), as well as
negotiations regarding the new location of the Oberlin Public Library
(1984-85). Files inherited from previous administrations account for
subseries' time span. Arrangement is alphabetical by organization.
Series 11. Miscellaneous Files relating to Divisions, Departments, and
Administrative Units, 1971-1994 (10.4 l.f.)
Organized around the levels of the administrative structure of the
College, this series documents Starr's work with his Senior Staff,
academic departments and programs, and campus-wide administrative units.
Files include correspondence, memorandum, and reports between the
President and college faculty and staff. Series is arranged into three
subseries: Files relating to Offices reporting to the President, Files
relating to Academic Departments and Programs, and Files relating to
Administrative Units.
Subseries 1. Files relating to Offices Reporting to the President,
1980-1994 (2.8 l.f.)
Correspondence, memorandum, and reports between President Starr and
his senior staff make up this series. Of interest is the report of the
Conservatory of Music Visiting Committee (1990), the study by Provost
Sam C. Carrier, "Comparative Perspective on Financial
Aid-Ethnicity-Percentage of Aid" (1989), Barnes and Roche's "Feasibility
Study Report" for the Office of Development's mini-campaigns (1992), and
the report prepared by Donna M. Raynsford, A.G. Monaco, and Michael K.
Getter on "Improving Operations Effectiveness" (1992). Series also
contains files relating to the Affirmative Action Officer, the
Chaplain's office, and the Office of Gender Equity. Inherited files
account for subseries time span. Arrangement is alphabetical by
office.
Subseries 2. Files relating to Academic Departments and Programs,
1971-1994 (2.0 l.f.)
The fiscal, program development, and staffing issues of academic
departments and programs are documented in this series. Of note is
material on the discontinuation of the Communication Studies Department
(1986), the report of the Oberlin College Natural Science Advisory
Committee (1992), and the report of the Ad Hoc Committee to Recruit
Student Athletes (1992). Information regarding the financial costs to
the College of study abroad programs can also be found here. Some files
were inherited by Starr from previous presidential administrations which
accounts for this series date span. Series is arranged alphabetically by
department.
Subseries 3. Files relating to Administrative Units, 1977-1994 (5.6
l.f.)
Files report on the budgetary issues, staffing, and program
performance of administrative offices and units at Oberlin College. Of
interest is the consultant's report of Maguire Associates, Inc.,
prepared for the Admissions Office on parental and student perceptions
of Oberlin (1993), files from the Alumni Association ACTION campaign
(1983-85), and the Capital Campaign (1985-91). Arrangement is
alphabetical by office. Buildings and grounds files detailing campus
wide construction can also be found here. Files inherited from previous
administrations account for time span. Arrangement is alphabetical by
office.
Series 12. Name Files, 1953-1994 (4.15 l.f.)
Name files of alumni, personnel, trustees, and other individuals
primarily contain incoming and outgoing correspondence regarding
institutional matters. Of these 134 files, nearly fifty were inherited
by Starr from previous presidential administrations, to which was added
historical material and correspondence created during his tenure. Key
names include: George R. Bent, Geoffrey T. Blodgett, Johnnetta Betsch
Cole, Bill Cosby, Erwin N. Griswold, Ellen H. Johnson, Herbert W. Kaatz,
Congressman Donald J. Pease, William R. Perlick, and Jessie Philips (d.
1995). Series is arranged into two subseries: General Name Files, and
Trustee Name Files, and alphabetically thereunder.
Series 13. Personnel Files, 1950-1994 (9.3 l.f.)
Correspondence, consultant's reports, memorandum, and search material
address specific college employees as well as broader personnel issues
at Oberlin. Arrangement is into three subseries: Former Faculty and
A&PS Files, Senior Staff Search Files, and Personnel Subject Files.
**Subseries 1. Former Faculty and A&PS Files, c. 1950-1994 (7.5 l.f.)
Included are files on members of the college faculty and A&PS, who
concluded their appointment during Starr's tenure as President.
Appointment letters, promotions, salary increases, and resignation
letters can be found in this subseries. Some files predate the Starr
administration as many of these appointments were made by the College
prior to 1983. Subseries is restricted.
**Subseries 2. Senior Staff Search Files, 1982-1993 (0.6 l.f.)
Correspondence, curriculum vitae, interview itineraries, memorandum,
and recommendation letters make up the contents of these senior staff
search files. Information on the successful candidates is thin, and more
substantive data is likely to be found in his or her faculty or staff
file. Documentation for the search of the Art Museum director, the
Alumni Magazine editor, the college chaplain, and Treasurer are also
found with these records. Subseries is arranged alphabetically by search
position. Files are restricted.
Subseries 3. Personnel Subject Files, 1982-1993 (1.2 l.f.)
These miscellaneous files consist of transactional documents relating
to personnel actions, position allocations, salary reviews, and research
status appointments. A variety of consultants reports on benefits,
compensation, conditions of employment, job classification, and position
descriptions can also be found here. Folders in this subseries are
arranged around A&PS files, faculty files, and general files.
Series 14. Publicity Files, 1958-1994, n.d. (0.8 l.f.)
A biographical file, newspaper clippings, press releases, and other
miscellaneous publicity material document Starr's activities on and off
of the Oberlin campus. Created and collected by the Office of
Communications, as well as by presidential office staff, this series
highlight's Starr's selection and inauguration as Oberlin College
president, his meetings with United States Presidents Ronald W. Reagan
(1988) and George Bush (1991), and his publication of Melnikov, Solo
Architect in a Mass Society, (Princeton, 1978). Series is arranged by
type of material, and chronologically thereunder.
Series 15. Special Initiatives and Project Files, 1981-1994 (4.3 l.f.)
Documentation of Starr's work with the American Soviet Youth
Orchestra (1986-92), Campus Compact (1985-93), Jazz Masterworks Editions
(1986-94), Louisiana Repertory Jazz Ensemble (1982-90), the Bandstand
competition (1986-89), Public Square Cleveland (1993), and the three
year B.A. degree (1990-93) highlights this series. Files include
correspondence, clippings, press releases, and financial materials.
Arrangement is alphabetical by project.
Series 16. Speeches and Writings Files, 1958-1994, n.d. (1.65 l.f.)
Series is comprised of Starr's articles, speeches and testimonies,
and book reviews. Covering such topics as architecture, higher education
in the Unites States, jazz music, provincialism, and Soviet and Eastern
European Affairs, these voluminous writings document the continuation of
Starr's scholarly and professional interests while serving as Oberlin's
president. Of note are those articles written under Starr's pseudonym,
Sybil Schwartz. Likewise, his publication "Affectionate Doodles from
Trustees Meetings and Diverse Other Meetings at Oberlin, 1983-1994"
(bound in loose leaf form) is also found here. Series is arranged by
type of publication, and chronologically thereunder.
Series 17. Subject Files, 1977-1994 (5.0 l.f.)
Arranged alphabetically by subject, topics include the availability
of classes (1993), domestic partnership (1992-93), the U.S. Justice
Department investigation into elite colleges and universities being
engaged in price fixing on tuition (1989-92), the sesquicentennial
celebration of Oberlin College (1993), and South African divestment
(1985-87). Included also are miscellaneous files relating to endowed
chairs and professorships, and student organizations. Files inherited
from previous administrations account for series' date span.
Series 18. Non-textual Records, 1983-1993, n.d. (1.5 l.f.)
Series contains a variety of non-textual records documenting
President Starr during his administration. These audio cassettes,
photographs, records, reel to reel recordings, and video tapes were
produced by the Oberlin College Audio-Visual department, Office of
Concert Sound, and by bodies and individuals external to the College.
Arrangement is into three series: audio cassettes/reel-to-reel
recordings, records, and videotapes.
Subseries 1. Audio Cassettes/Reel-to-Reel Recordings, 1984-1993, n.d.
(0.1 l.f.)
Starr's speeches and interviews cover such topics as the American
Soviet Youth Orchestra, higher education in the United States, and
Russian/Soviet affairs. Arrangement is chronological.
Subseries 2. Photographs, 1986-1992, n.d. (0.1 l.f.)
Photographs of Starr with Henry Kissinger at the Mazsaysny Assembly
in Bangkok, Thailand (November, 1987), and his meeting with President
George Bush (July, 1991) highlight this series. Other photographs
include head shots of Starr, and a contact sheet from the unveiling of
the John Mercer Langston portrait (1986), painted by Ivy Starr,
President Starr's mother.
Subseries 3. Records, 1983-1987, n.d. (0.5 l.f.)
Series contains long playing and short playing recordings of the
Louisiana Repertory Jazz Ensemble. Included is a recording of the
performance given at the Inauguration of S. Frederick Starr as President
of Oberlin College, September 24, 1983. Subseries is arranged
chronologically.
Subseries 4. Videotapes, 1983-1989, n.d. (0.8 l.f.)
Videotapes (VHS and Umatic formats) include programs on the Louisiana
Repertory Jazz Ensemble, the American Soviet Youth Orchestra, and
Russian/Soviet affairs. Arrangement is by format, and chronological
thereunder.
* Records are restricted for fifteen years.
** Records are
restricted for twenty-five years.
|
| Provenance |
| Transferred to the Oberlin College Archives in the following accessions, 1986/025, 1988/069, 1991/027, 1992/054, 1994/023, 1994/062, 1994/063, 1995/129, 1997/073, 1997/095, 1999/018, 1999/128, 2000/031, and 2001/007 these official papers included files from earlier presidential administrations. In most instances, these records were separated from Starr's papers and placed with their appropriate presidential record groups. However, on occasion records pre-dating Starr's administration were retained with this group because they were clearly used by Starr (or his staff) during his presidency. Personal papers, which may contain documents from this presidency, are in the possession of S. Frederick
Starr. |
| Related Materials |
| Institutional records held by the Oberlin College Archives corresponding to the years of Starr's presidency (1983-1994) will compliment information found in these official papers. Of note are the records of the Board of Trustees (RG 1), the Office of the Provost (RG 4), and the Office of the
Treasurer (RG 7). Users should also consult the papers of Emil C. Danenberg (RG 2/11), Erwin N. Griswold (RG 30/101), and Various
Committees (RG 33/1, 33/4). |
|