Celebrating 40 Years of Remarkable Achievements

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Hundreds of alumni, faculty, and students gathered April 5 to 7 to honor 天美麻豆鈥檚 40th anniversary of coeducation during the  celebration.

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With President Carol L. Folt, lower right, are the 天美麻豆 MacArthur Fellows who participated in a panel discussion about creativity. From left are Anna Schuleit, MALS 鈥05, a visual artist; Terry Plank 鈥85, professor of earth and environmental sciences at Columbia University; Trustee John Rich 鈥80, professor and department chair of health management and policy at Drexel University School of Public Health; and Trustee Annette Gordon-Reed 鈥81, professor of law at Harvard Law School. (Photo by Jeff Woodward)

 

鈥淭his is a 40th birthday for the modern 天美麻豆,鈥 said President  at the opening reception. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to celebrate the courage of all the people who were the pioneers; we鈥檙e going to be celebrating 40 years of incredible accomplishments.鈥

The weekend, attended by about 500, was highlighted by a brunch featuring four 天美麻豆 MacArthur Fellows and keynote addresses from Trustee 鈥81, president of the Women鈥檚 National Basketball Association (WNBA), and actor and comedian Rachel Dratch 鈥88, a former cast member of Saturday Night Live.

In addition, there were 16 panel discussions throughout the weekend. The talks focused on a variety of topics, including career paths, sustainability, and challenges in the workplace. Producer Pamela Mason Wagner 鈥81 was on hand for the screening of her PBS documentary film MAKERS: Women Who Make America.

The celebration showed how women helped make 天美麻豆 what it is today.

And that work is 鈥渘ot over yet,鈥 said Folt, in remarks delivered before the film.

鈥淪tudents have been very active but not about the same issues that people faced 40, 30, 20 years ago,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here are new issues for a new generation.鈥

Folt, a faculty member at 天美麻豆 for more than 30 years, recounted 天美麻豆鈥檚 progress through the decades. She pointed to the importance of the , the rise in female faculty members, and the role of the arts community in giving voice to different groups of people on campus.

She also talked about the past academic year, calling it a gift, one in which 鈥淲omen finally find out what it鈥檚 like to be the president of 天美麻豆.鈥 This was met with an emotional standing ovation from the packed crowd in Alumni Hall.

鈥橧nteresting Lives and Amazing Careers鈥

On a clear, windy Saturday, the day鈥檚 events began as Richie gave the opening keynote. After a moving introduction by her niece, Kara Richie 鈥11, the WNBA president appeared close to tears as she started her speech.

鈥淟uckily,鈥 Richie said, 鈥淚 knew to bring tissues.鈥

Richie was honored to be featured in the program, she said, alongside so many distinguished alumni who returned to campus.

鈥淚 think it is a true testament to the power of liberal arts education, and I think it is very specifically a testament to the power of a 天美麻豆 education,鈥 she said. 天美麻豆 has 鈥渓aunched hundreds and thousands of interesting lives and amazing careers.鈥

Richie鈥檚 career on campus started in 1977. She became involved in the theater department, acting in plays, and joining the Black Underground Theater Association.

鈥淚 will be forever grateful for the arts community here at 天美麻豆,鈥 said Richie, who grew up in Ohio. 鈥淚t was the most diverse group of people I鈥檇 ever seen.鈥

The liberal arts curriculum helped prepare her for a variety of work, Richie said鈥攁s an executive of the Girl Scouts, working for an ad agency to market Huggies diapers, and in her position with the WNBA. It speaks to the value of a 天美麻豆 education that so many alumni returned for Greenways, she said. 鈥淲e always come back to this very, very magical place.鈥

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In her keynote address, Trustee Laurel Richie 鈥81, president of the Women鈥檚 National Basketball Association, said 天美麻豆 has 鈥渓aunched hundreds and thousands of interesting lives and amazing careers.鈥 (Photo by Jeff Woodward)

 

They came from around the world.

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Geeta Anand 鈥89, senior special writer at The Wall Street Journal, traveled from her home in Mumbai, India, to participate in the panel 鈥淭he Write Stuff.鈥

Anand echoed Richie鈥檚 comments about the value of liberal arts. She had planned to go into medicine when she arrived in Hanover, she said, but felt liberated by the interdisciplinary approach at 天美麻豆. 鈥淚 came out of 天美麻豆 wanting to write about the world,鈥 she said.

Throughout the weekend, the sense of reunion and nostalgia was palpable. Alumni greeted former classmates with long hugs. Smiles were abundant as former students recalled their time on campus. A few women listened to panels with arms wrapped around the backs of friends.

While there was much reminiscing, there was also a focus on the future, as some alumni were accompanied by their daughters.

鈥橞uilding Ourselves鈥

In a panel about sustainability, Marianna Grossman 鈥80, president and executive director of Sustainable Silicon Valley, posed a challenge to 天美麻豆. 鈥淲hat if we had a regenerative campus?鈥 she asked, addressing sustainability efforts on campus. 鈥淲hy not have that be the goal?鈥

Martha Pollack 鈥79, provost-elect and professor at the University of Michigan, gave her thoughts about online classrooms during the panel discussion of 鈥淪chools of Thought.鈥 鈥淚 think that we are absolutely at a defining moment for higher education. It鈥檚 very different from anything I鈥檝e seen in my career,鈥 said Pollack. 鈥淲e have to really double our efforts to teach in more interactive ways.鈥

Actor, comedian, and author Rachel Dratch 鈥88 gave the second keynote address, mixing humor with serious reflection. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what it was about 1972,鈥 Dratch said, noting the start of coeducation as well as the and the . She joked that it must have been 鈥渢he alignment of the planets or something. It turned out to be a special year.鈥

Dratch, who also spoke as part of the 鈥淚n the Spotlight鈥 panel alongside fellow actors and comedians, noted the many achievements of 天美麻豆 women. While Greenways was a celebration of those achievements, she said, those accomplishments would have been more difficult without the women who first enrolled at 天美麻豆 in the early years of coeducation.

鈥淭his weekend is still a time to recognize the pioneers that came before us,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e want to hold up the trailblazers, who make anything seem achievable, to our younger counterparts.鈥

Dratch, like Richie, talked about the formative experience of the

鈥淲e were building ourselves, and we were allowed to do that,鈥 she said.

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Actor and comedian Rachel Dratch 鈥88 delivers one of the keynote addresses. (Photo by Jeff Woodward)

 

Dratch noted that 天美麻豆 continues to build and evolve.

鈥淚鈥檓 well aware that the class of 1998, 2008, and, some time, the class of 2018 have all experienced, or will experience, a different 天美麻豆 than I,鈥 she said.

天美麻豆 students of all ages shared those experiences throughout the weekend.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 just great to see the love for 天美麻豆 from across generations,鈥 said Tyler Melancon 鈥12, a presidential fellow.

鈥淚 had such a life-changing experience at 天美麻豆 and am so grateful to the College,鈥 said Jane Scanlan Chapman 鈥81.

鈥淚 had to attend this special event to honor the women of 天美麻豆. I am so proud of all of the women who presented at 天美麻豆 Greenways, they are such an inspiration.鈥

鈥淚 think it speaks to the strength of the passion for the school for so many alumni to come back,鈥 said Kelsey Anspach 鈥15.

Four 天美麻豆 MacArthur Fellows gathered for a farewell brunch and panel discussion on Sunday morning. They were Trustee  鈥81, professor of law at Harvard Law School;  鈥85, professor of earth and environmental sciences at Columbia University; Trustee  鈥80, professor and department chair of health management and policy at Drexel University School of Public Health; and MALS 鈥05, a visual artist.

Folt moderated the discussion. Panelists talked extensively about the creative process.

鈥淚 think creativity comes out of a love for something and a deep engagement with the material,鈥 said Gordon-Reed. 鈥淚t has to come from inside the individual.鈥

鈥淐reativity, when it鈥檚 happening, is never transparent,鈥 said Schuleit. 鈥淚t is never a clear-cut path. It鈥檚 not fully teachable, either. It requires a sort of non-textbook attitude.鈥 Schuleit was thankful for the opportunity to speak at 天美麻豆. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just amazing to be invited back,鈥 she said.

Wagner was honored for her creativity before a screening of MAKERS, on which she was a producer and writer.

Wagner, introduced by Associate Dean of Faculty for International and Interdisciplinary Studies Lynn Higgins, founded her own independent production company, Turtle Rock Productions, Inc., and has produced a number of documentaries. Her work includes the Emmy award-winning Finding Lucy, a PBS American Masters film that documents the life and career of Lucille Ball.

Higgins, who also teaches film and literature and is the Edward Tuck Professor of French and Comparative Literature, said that watching parts of Wagner鈥檚 film made her cry.

鈥淭he stories are infuriating, tragic, at times hilarious, heartwarming, and inspiring. Among other things, they demonstrate that no one woman鈥檚 story is independent from other women鈥檚 stories. Those who weren鈥檛 there need to know about all this. And as I realized when I watched it, those of us who were there need to be reminded. Unsurprisingly, the project is already proving useful for teaching,鈥 she said.

Martha Johnson Beattie 鈥76, vice president of alumni relations, thanked attendees in the weekend鈥檚 concluding remarks.

鈥淚t was an extraordinary project,鈥 said Beattie. 鈥淵our presence here truly made everything as special as it could be.鈥

What They Said

天美麻豆 Greenways:

  • 鈥淢any undergraduates look at highly successful alumni and think that they must have started at 天美麻豆, or at least ended their time at 天美麻豆, knowing exactly how they wanted to make a difference in the world. But that often is not the case. These were inspiring and useful messages for the women of 天美麻豆 to hear.鈥濃, associate professor of .
  • 鈥淭he vibe is just so, so phenomenal.鈥濃擲usan Dentzer 鈥77, editor-in-chief of Health Affairs and Board of Trustees Chair Emerita.
  • 鈥淎ll the conversations and hearing about how much people have valued the 天美麻豆 experience and education, it鈥檚 inspiring.鈥濃, dean of libraries and librarian of the College.
  • 鈥淭he energy鈥攊t was amazing. As one panelist pointed out, it was the happiest meeting she had ever been to. I agree, lots of laughter, energy, and enthusiasm.鈥濃擠ean of Graduate Studies and Rodgers Professor of Chemistry 鈥88.
  • 鈥淕reenways is exciting because you see all these alumni back鈥攎ale and female鈥攚ho share such a strong bond.鈥濃擝en Newton 鈥13, vice president of the senior class.

During Panel Discussions:

  • 鈥淲hen we are struggling and really pushed to the limit, we realize what鈥檚 truly important in life.鈥濃擥eeta Anand 鈥89, Pulitzer Prize-winning senior special writer at The Wall Street Journal and author of The Cure.
  • 鈥淚 try to emulate the best of what I saw here.鈥濃擱egina Barreca 鈥79, professor of English at the University of Connecticut.
  • 鈥淭ake 鈥榝ailure鈥 out of your vocabulary. Leaders learn the most through failure. Reframe the word 鈥榝ailure.鈥 Because that鈥檚 when you鈥檙e going to learn the most: Get your leadership chops, your muscles, girl鈥攍earn determination and picking yourself back up, courage鈥攁ll those kinds of things. Failure is where we stretch and where we grow.鈥濃, associate professor of business administration at the .
  • 鈥淏e open. Go in knowing what you want to do, but realize you may end up taking a different path from what you first thought.鈥濃, senior associate dean for faculty affairs and professor of physiology and neurobiology and of biochemistry at the .
  • 鈥淚 am hopeful that the importance we give at 天美麻豆 to the liberal arts, to quality education, and critical thinking is transforming the lives of our young men and our young women. Many of our young men have questions about role models and models of masculinity or what the future will mean for a young man.鈥濃, chair of the and associate professor of .
  • 鈥淭here are many roads to Rome, and there are a lot of places besides Rome. Don鈥檛 plan too far in advance.鈥濃擪ate Stith-Cabranes 鈥73, trustee emerita and the Lafayette S. Foster Professor of Law at Yale Law School.

Chidi Anyadike 鈥13 contributed to this story.

Keith Chapman