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Countdown
to 300
There
will be plenty of celebrating in Yale's Tercentennial year, which
begins in October 2000. But the planners also hope the occasion
will prompt some serious reflection on Yale's last century -- and
its next.
October
1999
by Mark Alden Branch '86
In October
1901, 5,000 graduates of Yale joined with students, faculty, and
a number of distinguished guests to celebrate Yale's bicentennial.
The decorations -- including Japanese lanterns festooned across
University buildings and electric lights strung on the Green --
were designed by Louis Comfort Tiffany. The guests -- some 61 of
whom received honorary degrees -- included Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow
Wilson, and Mark Twain. A torchlight parade featured students dressed
as Pequot Indians, Puritans, Revolutionary War soldiers, and Rough
Riders. And visitors took note of three grand new buildings constructed
in honor of the Bicentennial: Commons, Woolsey Hall, and Woodbridge
Hall. All told, it was a Gilded Age celebration that ushered in
the American Century with the swagger of a Walter Camp football
team. But to today's eye, it was all a bit much. Yale historian
Gaddis Smith '54, '61PhD (see "The Path to the Great Stage") says the University's Bicentennial was a "vacuous, backward-looking,
and brainless" celebration that demonstrated "how conservative
the place was."
If such
a celebration reveals much about Yale and America at the time, how
will observers in 2101 interpret the upcoming Yale Tercentennial
celebration, which will begin a year from this month and continue
through October 7, 2001? Instead of a set of commemorative buildings,
visitors will inspect the progress of a decade-long effort to restore
and update Yale's existing buildings. Much of the observance will
be folded into existing programs. And while there will be plenty
of pomp and fireworks, the Tercentennial will, according to the
planners, be a time for self-assessment, not just self-congratulation.
"I'd like to have a sense that we celebrated," says Janet
Lindner, who is organizing the event, "but also that we were
thoughtful about who we are and where we're going."
There
is little about Yale that will not be examined in symposia,
books, and exhibitions between October 2000 and October 2001. Monthly
reports from Lindner's office (which was established in 1997 to
coordinate the festivities) list dozens of initiatives currently
in the works. Books are to be published on great Yale teachers,
on Yale architecture, and on the history of the School of Medicine,
among other subjects. Exhibits will focus on the role of Yale alumni
in art and architecture and on the library's collections since the
initial gift of books by Yale's founders. Symposia will ask questions
about the place of faith in the University, the challenges of internationalization,
and the future of the humanities. A postcard will be issued by the
U.S. Postal Service. A hymn is being written by Episcopal bishop
Jeffrey Rowthorn, and a poem by Sterling Professor of English John Hollander. The School of Music promises
300 musical events during the year.
With
so much on the agenda, there is a danger that the Yale and New Haven
communities could suffer a kind of "Tercentennial desensitization,"
with the anniversary coming to seem less special as a result of
so much exposure. To help focus the celebration, three major events
-- which will be sponsored by Colonel William Lanman '28S, who has
funded several capital projects at Yale -- are planned to mark the
beginning, middle, and end of the Tercentennial year. The first,
scheduled for October 14, 2000, is to be a University-wide open
house intended primarily for the New Haven community. Building on
the work that University Secretary Linda
Koch Lorimer, Vice President Bruce Alexander, and others have done in recent years to strengthen
Yale's relationship with its host city, the open house will give
residents an inside look at the Yale University Press, the robotics
laboratory, the Art Gallery's conservation department, the President's
office, Payne Whitney Gymnasium,
and a number of other sites. "We put this event at the beginning
so people in the city will become more familiar and comfortable
with Yale, then come back for the other events," says Lorimer.
"We want more people in New Haven to feel there are parts of
Yale that are theirs to take advantage of." A symposium on
Yale in New Haven will round out the day's activities.
Six months
later, on a long April weekend that coincides with the semiannual
Association of Yale Alumni's Assembly and the student body's Spring
Fling, the University will host a conference titled "300 Years
of Creativity and Discovery." The event will explore the many
scientific, legal, artistic, and other innovations developed at
Yale through a series of master classes, panels, and exhibits, culminating
in a concert on Cross Campus featuring Yale choral groups, the Philharmonia,
and the Symphony.
The "Charter
Weekend" of October 5-7, 2001 will serve both as the commemoration
of the University's actual Tercentennial (although the Connecticut
General Assembly probably passed the act granting the "Collegiate
School" its charter on October 15 or 16) and as a finale for
the year's events. Lindner says she learned from researching similar
events that "you have to make it stop. You have an end point
with a big crescendo."
The crescendo
will be a weekend marked by a symposium on the future of higher
education, an academic procession and convocation on the Old Campus
(which will feature remarks from representatives of sister institutions
and the presentation of the Tercentennial hymn and poem), and a
Saturday night concert on Cross Campus featuring music and readings
by Yale performers. The Cross Campus event will interpret events
from Yale's history in words and music. "It'll be an evening
with a lot of 'wow,'" says School of Music dean Robert Blocker,
who is chairing the Tercentennial events committee.
While
all the hoopla goes on outside Sterling Memorial Library, a less
dazzling but more lasting Tercentennial initiative will be under
way inside. The other major project Yale is undertaking to
mark its anniversary, at the urging of former Secretary Henry Chauncey,
is an all-out effort to gather, catalog, and preserve the records
of the University's recent past. "We haven't been systematically
collecting our history as well as our predecessors did," says
Linda Lorimer. "We're more likely to find neatly preserved
records from 100 years ago than from 15."
As a
result, the Manuscripts and Archives division of the Library has
launched Archives
300, a five-year program to track down the records that are
stored in various departmental offices and determine which ones
should be saved and which should be discarded. "We want to
bring the archives program up to the level that Yale requires to
preserve its heritage," says University Archivist Richard Szary,
who is leading the project. "Also, because of Yale's position
in higher education, the University and its programs are important
subjects for scholarly research."
A team
of nine people has been working on Archives 300 since July 1997.
The staff is working with departments across the University to teach
administrative assistants and others how to manage potentially important
records. "We want to put into place an understanding that there's
a shared responsibility for records," says Szary. The staff
is also working with student organizations to ensure that their
publications and relevant records are deposited in the Archives.
The decision
to devote a significant amount of Tercentennial resources to such
a low-visibility (albeit important) project as archives maintenance
reflects the serious-minded spirit of the University-wide group
that shaped the Tercentennial. The planning committee, made up of
14 faculty members and administrators appointed by President Levin
and chaired by Linda Lorimer and Yale College Dean Richard Brodhead,
produced the blueprint for the Tercentennial: lists of official
goals, planning principles, and questions the University might address
in preparing for its 300th year. (A steering committee chaired by
Levin and including professors, administrators, Corporation members,
and alumni has since taken over the implementation.)
The ideas
that emerged say a great deal about how Yale sees itself at the
end of its third century. The Tercentennial has been envisioned
as a frugal, efficient affair, making use of existing resources
and concentrating on initiatives that will reinforce what are seen
as Yale's strengths.
One of
those, for example, is the free exchange of ideas and resources
among Yale's different schools. "There is a greater interconnectivity
between and among schools here than at other places," says
Lorimer, explaining that events like the University-wide open house
are intended to foster such exchange. "We want to bring different
parts of the University together to collaborate and converse,"
she says. "Just as the Bicentennial buildings were an effort
to build something that would unite the University, we're trying
to bring together the constituencies of Yale."
As for
using existing resources, Lorimer and the committee have been working
to ensure that the University's various regular conferences and
lecture series are devoted to Tercentennial themes. Next year's
DeVane Lectures, for example, will be given by School of Architecture
dean Robert A. M. Stern and will look at 20th-century architecture
through Yale buildings and the work of Yale-trained architects.
While
the Tercentennial Committee gave much thought to launching a building
project to commemorate the 300th (a renovation of Commons
was among the ideas discussed), it was decided that the University's
capital-improvements plate is sufficiently full with the current
renovation projects. "This period is characterized by rebuilding
Yale," says Lorimer. "So for a Tercentennial project we
could just say 'look around you.' The athletic facilities will have
been renovated and expanded, the library will be done, and three
residential colleges will have been renovated. All of this is reflective
of Yale at the junction between its third and fourth centuries.
We're not just restoring Yale, but refitting it for the 21st century."
Once
the committee had established a framework for the Tercentennial,
it was time to find someone who could make it happen. Lindner came
to the position from a tour as chief administrative officer for
the City of New Haven. Before that, she was assistant director of
New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani's office of operations, and
she has retained the intensity one might expect from someone in
that post. Lindner has the formidable task of sorting out all the
Tercentennial initiatives and making sure they run smoothly together.
To that
end, Lindner and others met with the people responsible for coordinating
recent anniversaries at Yale's peer institutions: Harvard's 350th
in 1986 and Princeton's 250th in 1996. Lindner said she learned
much from their experience. "Harvard's was packed tightly in
time, and Princeton's was spread over 18 months. We hope to be somewhere
in between."
While
a schematic plan of the Tercentennial is by now well in place, it's
the details that Lindner's office must still work out. Various components
of the College and the University are still developing their own
plans, and Lindner and the Tercentennial committee will help them
ensure that those plans are consistent with the celebration's overall
goals. And, Lindner adds, everyone must obey a simple but important
three-word mandate: "Plan for rain." 
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