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Bring Morsman Back!

  • Writer: ooiu 123
    ooiu 123
  • Nov 10, 2010
  • 2 min read

My current sit-down table is made up of wonderful students and an amusing faculty member who engages us in conversation, and I enjoy meals enormously.

At the same time, I have already been assigned to this table once this year with two of the same people. The online rotation declared our first waiter to be a male day student with a broken collarbone.

Last time around, I was one of two girls at my table. Other tables have similar gender imbalances, first- and second-waiting confusion, including back-to-back (and sometimes, back-to-back-to-back) waiting assignments, and student table heads. What has happened to the dining hall?

The answer is simple. Mr. Morsman doesn’t do the rotations anymore, a fact that single-handedly defeats the point of sit-down, confuses almost the entire school, and kills a wonderful tradition.

I have a great table, but I also have managed this when sitting with students whom I have never met before.

I enjoy meeting new faculty whom I don’t get a chance to meet in the classroom. As I see it, one of the major aims of sit-down is to get to know other students you otherwise would not interact with, and to have a diverse experience. Without these original tables, we are losing a vital part of sit-down meals.

Mr. Morsman was a personal Deerfield link in the system of assigning tables, making sure rotations were fair to waiters, boys, girls, day students, and boarders. Mr. Morsman-controlled rotations also gave sit-down meals flavor, instead of a random assignment. Tales of exes assigned to the same table, along with other memorable things such as a table composed entirely of redheads, dubbed “the ginger table,” were all Mr. Morsman’s handiwork.

We pride ourselves on our tight-knit, well-acquainted community. Sit-down meals, Mr. Morsman-style, are undoubtedly vital to these school traits of tradition and community. As Audrey Cho ’11 put it, “Deerfield is a school that values tradition, and Mr. Morsman himself embodies tradition.”

Ms. Futter has undeniably done a great job so far coordinating tables with the computer. But she has the added stress of assigning APs, dealing with weekend slips, and much more. How about we give her a break?

Mr. Morsman added wit and panache to the table rotations. He still makes the announcements during meals; why not make the rotations, too?

 
 

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The Deerfield Scroll, established in 1925, is the official student newspaper of Deerfield Academy. The Scroll encourages informed discussion of pertinent issues that concern the Academy and the world. Signed letters to the editor that express legitimate opinions are welcomed. We hold the right to edit for brevity.

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