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Freshman
Address:
"You Have Come To a Serious Place"
Addressing
the first freshman class to include more women than men, President
Levin reached back 40 years to demonstrate the continuity of Yale's
purpose.
October
1995
by Richard C. Levin
Yesterday,
as you unpacked your belongings, met your roommates and freshman
counselors, and moved from one activity to the next,
you probably had little opportunity to pause and reflect on what
lies before you. That's the purpose of this afternoon's convocation.
In this grand hall, built at the turn of the last century to commemorate
Yale's two hundredth birthday, you participate in an ancient and
solemn ceremony of welcome. You heard the power and glory of one
of the world's great organs; as the procession began, you felt its
bass notes rumble beneath your feet. You saw the University's officers,
masters, and deans
march to the platform where they now sit arrayed before you, their
gowns and hoods symbolizing decades of study and scholarship.
All this announces to
you: You have come to a serious place. This is a place where ideas
are taken seriously; where study is taken seriously; where athletics,
extracurricular activities, and community service are taken seriously;
where involvement and moral responsibility are taken seriously.
We welcome you to a tradition that has for nearly three hundred
years celebrated learning, cherished excellence, and encouraged
commitment. This ceremony is for you -- the most accomplished, most
engaged, and most promising of your generation. We have boundless
hope for you, and confidence that you will make the most of this
serious place. It will shape your lives, and you in turn will help
to shape its future.
No doubt you are wondering:
what does this serious place have in store for us? I thought it
might be interesting to answer this question by reflecting on the
words of some of those who have gone before you. Such words may
be found in the personal essays published on the occasion of a class's
25th reunion. I chose for today's text the 25th reunion book of
the Class of 1955, but it could easily have been another.
The Class of 1955 --
though its members might object to this characterization -- was
a class like any other. Of course, like the 253 graduating cohorts
that preceded it, there were no women in the class. In fact, the
first 25th reunion of a coeducational Yale College class will occur
this coming spring, in June 1996, a quarter-century after the graduation
of the pioneering women who entered Yale as juniors in the fall
of 1969. In any event, the Class of '55 includes hundreds who have
made an impact on their local communities, churches, civic organizations,
places of work, and professions. Some have made a notable impact
on the wider world -- the governor of our largest state, a Pulitzer
Prize-winning biographer, and several other distinguished scholars,
one of whom is sitting behind me -- the beloved Master T., the Master
of Timothy Dwight College.
What
did these graduates, reflecting on their own experience, point to
as the essential features of a Yale education?
First, they learned to take ideas seriously. Consider this comment
by a civil engineer who later became a lawyer:
Yale introduced me to
the intellectual world, and to the people who inhabit that world.
It also gave me exposure to the really able people of that world.
The questionsraised in my mind while I was there have stimulated
a lifelong search for answers, and in so doing have vastly enriched
my life.
You will encounter ideas
here. Many will excite your curiosity and open you to entirely new
areas of knowledge and new perspectives. You will also learn that
there are people for whom the life of the mind is the essence of
life. Most of you, like our first witness from the Class of '55,
won't choose that course for yourselves, but you will come to appreciate
how such people -- scholars and scientists, your professors among
them -- enrich the lives of others.
Many members of the
Class of '55 comment how their exposure to new ideas at Yale gave
them a lifelong appreciation of literature, philosophy, and the
arts. For example, a clergyman commented:
I am increasingly grateful
for the quality of my Yale education. Yale taught me how to think
and how to analyze, and it led me to appreciate the arts.
Or this from a neurosurgeon:
I enjoy classical concerts
[and] traveling to art museums . . . My Yale education has given me
intellectual channels to pursue outside my profession.
Or, as a distinguished
literary critic, who has spent his life teaching in one of the world's
great universities, told his classmates:
I remain constantly
grateful for my four rewarding -- indeed liberating -- years in
New Haven. I have never encountered an undergraduate education that
could match Yale's.
Of course, it is not
mere exposure to ideas that Yale will provide for you. As our clergyman
testified, you will also learn to think and to analyze. Indeed,
sharpening the faculties that will permit you to think critically
and independently is just about the greatest gift that Yale can
give you. Our teachers will not teach you what to think, but how
to think. This feature of a liberal education was much appreciated
by the Class of 1955. As a stockbroker observed:
I will
always be grateful to Yale for giving me the confidence (and sometimes
the ability) to question anyone on anything
that doesn't make sense to me. I am rarely intimidated and am getting
less surprised at how many times the experts and conventional wisdom
are wrong.
There is, to be sure,
more to Yale College than the development of one's critical and
intellectual capacities. Over these four years each of you will
develop your character as well as your mind. For more than a century,
Yale has been noted for its "second curriculum," the enormous
number and variety of activities in which its students engage. Indeed,
as a well known journalist from the Class of '55, recalled:
I'm probably one of
the few people who chose Yale over Harvard just because I thought
the Yale Daily News was a better paper!
You will find here an
extraordinary array of activities, and you will find yourselves,
like generations of Yalies before you, drawn almost irresistibly
to an intense and passionate commitment to one or more of them --
to athletics, music, drama, a publication, a political organization,
or voluntary service in the New Haven community. In such activities
you will learn the value of commitment, the virtues of engagement,
and you will develop the capacity to work with others, to lead,
to make a difference. Listen to these voices. First, a physician:
The principal thing
Yale gave me had nothing to do with concrete intellectual or cultural
knowledge. It had to do with values, with an ethic, a way of being,
a habit of mind. I am a "doer" -- I can't sit back --
and while some of that was in me from the beginning, I think it
was nurtured by Yale. My belief that you are on the earth to make
a difference, that fighting for right is better than accepting wrong,
and that intellectual and cultural pursuits enrich life: No one
exactly told us these things, but they were in the air, and I became
the person I am partly because of them.
And this from a lawyer
and active civic leader:
a Yale graduate should
either believe or pretend to believe (1) that each individual has
an obligation to give more to his or her community that he or she
takes, (2) that the lot of people everywhere can be improved, and
(3) that one person can make a difference.
An introduction to new
ideas, a sharpening of the intellect, a love of engagement, and
an obligation to make a difference -- this is not all that your
Yale education will provide. It will also provide an opportunity
to live among extraordinary people, to learn from one another and
to learn about yourselves. A banker from the Class of 1955 put it
this way:
The education I received
was not just from the classroom but from the sharing of ideas,
understanding, and friendship. Learning to live with classmates
who had different outlooks and values and to find common ground
on which to build respect and friendship was an experience for
which I shall always be grateful. That education has enabled me
to appreciate that it is relationships with other persons that
contain the seeds of true and lasting happiness.
If the
"friendships formed at Yale" are themselves an important
part of your education, so
too is the development of capacity for self-understanding. As one
scientist told his classmates:
In our time, Yale
did not stimulate any of the questions I have been asking myself
for the past ten years. But it did equip me to ask them when I
was ready, and it gave me reasonable ideas about how to pursue
answers.[T]he liberal education I received at Yale has been --
and will continue to be -- of central importance in my life.
So we may recapitulate:
At Yale you will learn to take ideas seriously, to appreciate the
life of the mind, to think critically and independently, to engage
actively in something you are passionate about, to contribute to
the betterment of a community, to enjoy the virtues of those around
you, and to understand yourself. These are the lessons we learn
from the Class of 1955: To think, to understand, and to enjoy --
to think (for oneself), to understand (ideas, oneself, and others),
and to enjoy (each other's company, the active pursuit of a passion,
the engagement with a purpose larger than oneself). But lest you
should imagine that my selection of these themes is the product
of my own idiosyncratic reading of the "texts" provided
by graduates of bygone days, let me provide one further piece of
evidence, testimony about what was told to the Class of '55 upon
their matriculation into Yale College, testimony that bespeaks a
reassuring continuity of the values that are most central to this
place, testimony that links the speaker, his classmates, and you
to one ancient and living community. One final reunion reflection
from the Class of '55:
As each year passes,
my appreciation of Yale and its value increases. We were taught
"to think, to understand, and to enjoy." Those were the
words, as best as I can remember, from one of our first convocations
held in Woolsey Hall in September of 1951. I have recalled those
words many times.
Welcome to this serious
place. May you thrive here, and may this place enrich the rest of
your lives.
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