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Tercentennial Talent
Summer
2001
by Bruce Fellman
During
a weekend this April
on a campus filled with singing group performances and pro-union
demonstrations, Anita Hill '80JD, who gained national notoriety
ten years ago when she accused then-Supreme Court nominee Clarence
Thomas '74JD of sexual harrassment, pondered the role of law in
creating social change for women. Cartoonist Garry Trudeau '70,
'73MFA, made a rare public appearance to talk about the origins
of his internationally syndicated comic strip "Doonsebury." And
the nation's 41st president, George Bush '48, told tales about "Gorby,"
the Babe, and "43": former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, baseball
legend Babe Ruth, and his son George
W. Bush '68, the 43rd U.S. president.
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Yale
mixed top faculty with some of its most prominent alumni
to produce a Tercentennial thank-you of powerful proportions.
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The occasion
was the Alumni Leadership Convocation that took place April 19-22
and brought some 1,500 Yale graduates and their guests to New Haven
to celebrate what organizers called "300 years of creativity and
discovery." The gathering of so many alumni, each of whom plays
a leadership role in alumni affairs, also attracted the attention
of well-organized groups of protesters who gathered on the New Haven
Green, on the streets, and in various places around campus to urge
support for the unionization efforts
of graduate students and
hospital workers, and various other causes.
While
the demonstrations were spirited, at least one middle-aged Blue
was not impressed. "Compared with our day, this was pretty mild
stuff," said Jim Babst '71, of New Orleans. Still, the protesters
got their points across, noted Mehmet Kahya '73, who came to the
weekend from his home in Turkey where he is president of the local
Yale club. "If the students want something, I think one has to listen
to them," said Kahya.
Inside
classrooms and dining halls, attendees listened to some of the University's
best teachers and most noted alumni talk about their work. "We featured
what Yale holds to be its heart -- teaching and learning in the
liberal tradition," says Linda Koch
Lorimer, University Secretary and head of planning for the year-long
300th birthday celebration.
The convocation
was the second in a trio of major events held in honor of the University's
Tercentennial.
The kickoff last October 21 paid tribute to Yale's ties to the Elm
City (see Dec. 2000), while
the finale on October 5-7 will be more of a party for the campus
community.
For the
April event, the planners put together a weekend that examined virtually
every field of Yale endeavor. Implementing such a program required
a coordinated, Yale-wide effort worthy of a military campaign, said
Lorimer. "This was an achievement that showed the capacity of the
University staff, from custodians and dining hall workers to professors
and administrators, to work together," said the secretary.
The Convocation
featured both entertainment and education. Naturally enough, the
evening portion of the program revolved around music and offered
everything from Charles Ives, Class of 1898, and Cole Porter '13
to football cheers and a cappella singing groups. The daytime portion
explored Yale's intellectual landscape through 57 different presentations,
five on Friday, April 20, and 51, divided between three time periods,
on Saturday. The entire group then convened in Woolsey in the late
afternoon to hear George H.W. Bush talk about world events, his
presidency, his Yale experiences, and public service. The following
morning, the Convocation reconvened in Battell Chapel for an ecumenical
service.
Any program
that included musician Willie Ruff singing spirituals and exploring
the history of the three-string bass fiddle and Sterling
Professor Emeritus of English
Marie Boroff leading attendees in a chorus of "Brush Up Your Shakespeare"
was certainly wide-ranging. But, of necessity, "it was not all-encompassing,"
said Penelope Laurans, a dean and assistant to the President who
helped develop and coordinate the presentations. "We had to make
terrible choices."
Just
as the AYA had to whittle down its guest list from the estimated
35,000 alums who have taken part in some aspect of volunteerism
to the 1,500 or so current leaders who could be housed in a limited
supply of local hotel rooms and accommodated in Yale's classrooms
and dining halls, so too did Laurans and her team have to limit
the talent and ideas they wanted to put on display.
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Who
could choose between sessions on the invention of football
or the Palm Pilot, or between considerations of the new
urbanism with Vincent Scully or literary criticism with
Harold Bloom?
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But even
this highly selective version of the Blue Book and the alumni directory
had convocation attendees scratching their heads and wondering how
to choose between sessions on the invention of football or the handheld
computer, or between considerations of the new urbanism with Vincent
Scully or literary criticism with Harold Bloom. In the first set
of Saturday morning sessions, for example, there were opportunities
to practice the art of conducting under the direction of Lawrence
Smith, conductor in residence at the School of Music; to learn how
the work of Phillips Professor of Mathematics Ronald Coifman is
enabling technicians to restore old Caruso recordings and scientists
to develop an artificial eye; or to discuss investment strategies
with Yale's chief investment officer David Swensen '80PhD. Maddeningly,
all these presentations met at the same time.
In the
next set, paleontologist Jacques Gauthier offered a behind-the-scenes
tour of the Peabody Museum's fossil collection, Leffingwell Professor
of Painting Richard Lytle led a hands-on consideration of color
theory in which participants were given paper, paint, and glue to
work through exercises developed by Josef Albers when he taught
at Yale from 1950 to 1958, and two-time Olympic rower Chris Ernst
'76 led a panel discussion about the evolution of her sport at Yale.
But as before, each attendee could only pick one from the 19 presentations
offered during the 10:45 a.m.-to-noon time slot.
Some
of the sessions filled to capacity, but any available seats were
made available to students, more than 800 of whom secured tickets.
"We didn't want the convocation to be seen as exclusionary," said
Jeffrey Brenzel '75, executive director of the AYA, which played
a lead role in organizing the convocation. "Besides, the alums love
to rub elbows with undergraduates."
After
a buffet lunch at the residential colleges during which students
and alumni compared notes, convocation attendees returned to a program
that offered fewer, but no less easy, choices. There was the possibility
of watching playwrights Christopher Durang '74MFA and Wendy Wasserstein
'76MFA critique student productions of their plays or of listening
to the Tokyo String Quartet rehearse its repertoire. For readers
curious about why the best-selling novel, A Man in Full,
ended so abruptly, author Tom
Wolfe '57PhD, in a program on "The Making of a Writer," had
a surprising revelation. "I ran out of time," said the man in trademark
white. "I crashed the book into a wall and walked away."
While
Wolfe was making his mea culpa, Alan Shestack, who directed the
Yale Art Gallery from 1971 to 1984, described one of its odder "defining
moments." The gallery had been in the middle of meeting a challenge
grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, and Shestack had
asked each member of the governing board for a donation. One member
was Paul Mellon '29, but because the philanthropist had just endowed
what would become the Center for British Art, Shestack asked for
only a token gift.
"I won't
give you a nickel," was Mellon's response, Shestack recalled. However,
"he then wondered if I'd be interested in a few paintings. I had
only wanted a hundred bucks, but we wound up with 16 paintings by
French impressionists that were worth millions."
While
Shestack reminisced, "Doonesbury" creator Garry Trudeau, who almost
never speaks in public, told a packed Sprague Hall that the inspiration
to try to go commercial with his comic strip, which was then called
"Bull Tales" and was running in the Yale Daily News, came
from the success his tutor Erich Segal had with Love Story.
"I took a look at my own work, which was about equally shallow,
self-involved preppies, and said, hey, I've got a business model,"
Trudeau explained. The cartoonist also defended his treatment of
the current U.S. president, who appears in the comic strip as an
asterisk in a ten-gallon hat. "Is this the kind of thing a member
of the Class of 1970 should be saying about a member of the Class
of 1968? Well yes, it is," said Trudeau.
In a
sense, George W. has actually fared better than his father, whom
the cartoonist depicted as nothing at all. But the 41st president
was solidly in evidence onstage in Woolsey Hall where he fielded
questions from President Levin, history professor Paul Kennedy,
international relations graduate student Maria Ivanova, and graduating
senior Peter Massa, outgoing captain of the football team. The senior
Bush was by turns humorous and caustic in discussing the end of
the Cold War, the defeat of Iraq during Operation Desert Storm,
the role of the United Nations, and his own political fortunes.
The 77-year-old
president often began his answers with a personal anecdote, such
as "I'll never forget an evening in Madrid," or, "the day the Berlin
Wall came down, I remember sitting at my desk." Bush, in a relaxed
manner evocative of a fireside chat, then went on to describe behind-the-scenes
meetings with world leaders that changed the world's political landscape.
The entire
discussion, along with most of the other sessions, is available
on the Web at www.yale.edu/yale300/aprilweekendvideos/index.htm,
but several moments stand out. One was Bush's advocacy of humility
on the world stage. "We can't treat everyone with arrogance just
because we're now the only superpower," he said, adding that this
was especially true in dealing with Russia. "I didn't want to put
my fingers in Gorby's eyes -- we have to treat them with respect."
Bush
appeared genuinely moved when panelist Ivanova, who grew up in Soviet-dominated
Bulgaria, thanked him for his role in "the events that transformed
my life . . . This was the time in history when we got a new dream,"
Ivanova said.
Perhaps
the most poignant moment was Bush's response to a question by Peter
Massa '01, who is embarking on a career in public service. Massa
asked about the lessons Bush had learned from sports. The president
answered with a story in which he told his mother that he'd scored
three goals an Andover soccer game. Instead of praising the boy
for his achievement, his mother asked, "But George, how did the
team do?"
Assembling
a good team and bringing out its best effort was the essence of
leadership, and Yale had made a "huge contribution" to providing
leaders, said Bush. "Public service is a noble calling. There's
no definition of a successful life without service to others."
Related story:
The March 2001 Special Tercentennial
Issue of the Yale Alumni Magazine.
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