Ambassadors for Yale: A Vision Realized
March/April 2009
by Mark
Dollhopf '77
Mark
Dollhopf '77 is executive director
of the Association of Yale Alumni.
You—alumni of all ages and affiliations—are making a
difference.
For Yale, on behalf of Yale, in traditional classes and clubs, in not-so-traditional
affinity groups, you are changing the face of alumni relations for the next
generation.
This past year was the first year of changes
implemented as a result of the AYA Strategic Plan, and the changes have been at
once sweeping, inspiring, and engaging—a dramatic increase in new programs and
staffing; scores, if not hundreds, of volunteers creating new alumni
communities and taking action in new initiatives; and a renewed sense of energy
and excitement about the possibilities for what you, as alumni, can do as
ambassadors for Yale.
You can find our first-year "state of the union"
letter at aya.yale.edu/strategicplan/SOUnov2008.pdf.
The momentum is palpable. Nearly 5,000 alumni are now
engaged as advisors or board members in a cornucopia of alumni organizations at
Yale, whether they be the 187 Yale Clubs, more than 75 classes, the 14 graduate
and professional schools, or the over 100 "shared interest groups" ranging from
athletics to singing, from debate to politics, from real estate to entrepreneurship,
from community service to service abroad.
There are emerging new alumni associations for Asian,
Black, Latino, and Native American alumni, as well as alumni of the Political
Union, the Debate Association, the Yale Five-Year BA Plan, a number of senior
societies, and singing and performing groups too numerous to mention. Our new
service initiatives this year include an international Yale Day of Service on
May 16, a one-week "Peace Corps" mission to Monterrey, Mexico (March 7 to 15),
and an alumni exchange program with the University of Tokyo in Japan (June 27
to July 12).
These new initiatives, indeed the strategic plan
itself, are coming to life because of extraordinary volunteers—men and women
who have demonstrated a passion for their willingness to give back, a penchant
for innovation and out-of-the-box thinking, and a commitment to selfless
service to Yale. To commemorate these accomplishments, the staff and board of
governors of the AYA at last November’s Assembly recognized the following alumni
volunteers with the first AYA Ambassador for Yale Leadership Awards:
Kathy Edersheim '87 for pioneering—and "executive
producing"—Yale’s first Global Alumni Leadership Exchange (GALE) to Australia
and the Australian National University.
Ed Greenberg '59 for creating the successful new Yale
Club of Lower Fairfield County—a phoenix that arose from the ashes of previous
Yale Clubs.
Timothy Harkness '87 and Jordan Warshaw '87 for the
inspiration of creating, and the perspiration of implementing, the first Feb
Club Emeritus.
Mickey Dobbs '92 for his accomplishments at
organizing, sustaining, and advancing the mission of Yale GALA, a pioneer among
shared interest groups at Yale that celebrates its 25th anniversary this year.
Kathy, Ed, Tim, Jordan, and Mickey are but a few of
the outstanding stories of alumni in action. There are other alumni currently
writing their own stories, individually and collectively.
If you are reading this as one of the thousands of
alumni who volunteer for Yale, congratulations. You are to be commended for
your steadfast service and continuing innovation. If you are reading this as
one who is not yet engaged in the life of this remarkable institution, there is
no reason to wait. Volunteer opportunities abound through our new strategic
plan. Jump in now. Be an ambassador for Yale.
At the founding of the AYA in 1971, the mission, or
as it was then called, the "major objective," of the AYA was to "develop more
meaningful participation by Yale alumni in her affairs.”
The mission is alive and well. |