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A
Festive Finale
December
2001
by Mark Alden Branch
Although
sobered by the events of September 11, the University pressed forward
with the plans to conclude its 300th birthday with a flourish. The
celebrants included a host of prominent alumni, from Bill Buckley
to Bill Clinton, who shared in an event for the record books.
After
the terrorist attacks of September 11, Yale officials were at first
in a quandary over whether and how to proceed with the planned Tercentennial
celebration of October 5-7. In the end, the festivities went on
largely as planned (just before the United States began air strikes
in Afghanistan), with some song and silliness, but with an underlying
seriousness of purpose and with a recognition of the importance
of higher education in the current uncharted waters of international
affairs.
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More
than 25,000 people filled the Yale Bowl for a show called
"For God, For Country, For Yale, Forever."
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The weekend
opened on a beautiful Friday afternoon with an academic convocation
on Cross Campus that began with a Commencement-like procession of
students (clad in blue robes), faculty, administrators, and guests
representing other colleges and universities. The most striking
elements of the procession were the flags of 97 countries (a loan
from the United Nations arranged by Ambassador Joseph Verner Reed
'61), each carried by a current Yale student who is a native of
the respective country.
Presidents
Lawrence
Summers of Harvard and Shirley
Tilghman of Princeton brought greetings from their institutions,
after which Sterling Professor
of English John Hollander read a poem composed for the occasion,
in which he called on the University to "celebrate today, with little
shame/ Amid our national solemnities/ A yet bright moment in Yale's
history."Addresses were made by representatives of Yale's faculty
(Dean
Richard Brodhead), students (Tali
Farhadian '97, a Yale law student), staff (Michael
Morand '87 of the Office of New Haven Affairs), and alumni (Kurt
Schmoke '71, senior fellow of the Corporation).
President
Levin used his address to stress five areas
in which Yale and other universities contribute to society: by educating
citizens and leaders, demonstrating freedom of expression, serving
as an engine of economic growth, fostering the development of the
surrounding community, and promoting greater understanding among
the peoples and nations of the world. He also announced the launch
of a "major study of education in Yale College" that will be led
by Dean Brodhead and declared his eagerness to improve union
relations at Yale by "relying on day-to-day collaboration rather
than periodic confrontation."
On Friday
and Saturday, members of the Yale faculty spoke in several campus
locations as part of a Tercentennial symposium titled "Democratic
Vistas, Global Perspectives." While some of the talks were adapted
from last year's "Democratic
Vistas" DeVane Lecture series, there were also panel discussions
featuring Yale international affairs scholars. (The talks also served
as the program for an abbreviated Association of Yale Alumni Assembly.)
Friday
night at the Yale Bowl, more than 25,000 people sat down to a show
called "For God, For Country, For Yale, Forever." From a stage in
the middle of the field built to resemble the Walter Camp Memorial
Gateway, President Levin began the show with a short statement about
the events of September 11 and asked the audience to join in singing
"America the Beautiful." After that, the crowd was treated to a
two-hour mix of songs, skits, video montages, laser lights, and
fireworks. The cast of characters was wildly eclectic: William
F. Buckley Jr. '50 shared the stage with Sesame
Street's Big Bird, Tom
Wolfe '57PhD with Elihu Yale (portrayed by Drama School actor
Derek Lucci). A 300-person chorus, including singers from the Glee
Club, the Alumni Chorus, and the Camerata, sang a medley of musical
theater numbers written by Yale alumni, backed up by an orchestra
with personnel from the Symphony, the Philharmonia, and the Concert
Band.
The
evening's most prominent surprise guest was an honorary alumnus:
Singer Paul Simon,
who received an honorary Doctor of Music in 1996, performed his
"Graceland" and "Bridge Over Troubled Water" to the evening's loudest
ovation. The evening ended with an extended fireworks display that
was heard throughout New Haven (to the alarm of some jittery residents).
Before
the show inside the Bowl, visitors enjoyed a festival outside that
included performances by Yale singing groups, games and activities
for children, and exhibits from Yale departments. The weekend's
major union
demonstration also took place Friday evening, when 2,500 students
and workers rallied in Edgewood Park, then marched to the Bowl carrying
candles and wearing shirts with the legend "Hope Not Fear."
The campus
awoke Saturday morning to dark clouds, gusty winds, and rain, in
contrast to the clear, warm weather on Friday. But by afternoon,
the sun was out, and a record 8,000 people packed the Cross Campus
to hear the first major campus address
by former U.S. president Bill Clinton '73JD. Not surprisingly, Clinton
devoted most of his 40-minute talk to assessing the world situation
after September 11, describing terrorism as "simply the dark side"
of a generally positive trend toward global interdependence. Responding
to the question he said he has been hearing since the 11th, Clinton
assured the audience that "we're going to be all right." The crowd
received the former president with loud cheers, especially when
he walked into the audience afterwards to shake hands for several
minutes.
The weekend
was capped off on Sunday with a special worship service in Battell
Chapel, a football game against Dartmouth at the Bowl, and an evening
concert by the rock group Counting
Crows on the Old Campus. In order to accommodate the festivities
in the Bowl Friday night, the game was played on Sunday -- a first
in 129 years of Yale football. The Bulldogs lost to the Big Green
32-27 in a game attended by about 20,000 people.
All in
all, it was a difficult time to be celebrating, but if events at
home and abroad dampened the University's sense of enthusiasm, they
only sharpened its sense of mission. At Friday's convocation, law
student Tali Farhadian recalled how a speaker at Yale's Bicentennial
in 1901 had declared that "America needs Yale." Today, she concluded,
"The world needs Yale. We are ready." 
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