We Have Come of Age
I stand here today for every student who ever attended Pitzer College,
for every faculty member who ever taught here, and for every staff
member who ever dedicated themselves to our institution. I speak
for everyone who sat in a classroom illuminated by our faculty's
passion and love for the liberal arts. For everyone who has understood
and worked to sustain the mission of this college, we owe you respect
and a profound debt of gratitude.
There happens, at times, an intertwining of moments that occur in
synchronistic ways; when despite practical and rational limitations
there opens a boundless space for dreamers, poets, and us. Emily
Dickinson described such a moment:
I dwell in Possibility--
A fairer House than Prose--
More numerous of Windows--
Superior--for Doors--
Of Chambers as the Cedars--Impregnable of Eye--
And for an Everlasting Roof
The Gambrels of the Sky--
Of Visitors--the fairest--
For Occupation--This--
The spreading wide my narrow Hands
To gather Paradise--
Today we celebrate Pitzer College. Faculty, students,
staff, alumni, parents, community partners, trustees, and honored
guests-welcome. This is a significant day for Pitzer, and an extraordinary
moment for me. I am honored to be with you, this one morning out
of all of our lives, gathered here collectively in hope and trust
believing in our College's past and future.
Expectation and vision are fragile entities and
require constant support and belief. I have had experience with
such things. When I was a child, my family would drive past Claremont
every weekend, through the endless orange groves, to our cabin
in the San Bernardino Mountains. On one trip, when I was just
ten years old and apropos of nothing, I said to my mother from
the backseat, "When I grow up I want to do something important."
Without skipping a beat, she looked into the rearview mirror,
caught me dead in the eye said, "Well, you've had the idea and
that gets you fifty percent of the way there. Now you just have
to do the work." I sat back astonished, marveling in my good fortune,
almost home, just having had the thought. A quick exchange, soon
forgotten by my mother, yet never by me. And today, thirty-two
years later, here we are together, home at Pitzer College, at
such an important time in America's history.
Exactly forty years ago today, February 15, 1963,
Pitzer College was chartered-a new Claremont College born of hope
and possibility. In April of that year, John W. Atherton, a poet
and visionary, was hired as Pitzer's first president, and over
the next seventeen months he recruited students, faculty, and
trustees and constructed Scott and Sanborn Halls-just in time
for the beginning of the fall 1964 semester. During the College's
first year, students and faculty created the curriculum and our
system of governance.
That first academic year began with ten professors
and 153 students from sixteen states and five countries. In the
colorful words of President Atherton:
Pitzer was built of dreams -- and firmly rooted in the Claremont
village dump. Born from a mystical union of the Claremont Colleges,
the unborn infant drew its earliest nourishment from the cast-off
detritus of generations of Claremont citizens. The big yellow
bulldozers leveling the mounds for Scott and Sanborn Halls turned
up bedsprings and baby buggies -- all the effluvia of the early
pioneers underlay the educational hopes of the wonder child who
came to transform the world.
We certainly weren't short of expectation. But like most healthy
infants, we soon began to kick with our own desires. We thought
a new College with 'an emphasis on the social and behavioral sciences'
had a mandate to change the universe.
As you sit here today, now surrounded by the beauty of the arboretum
and in the company of buildings new and old, you are witness to
the transformation of this place by the guiding vision of the founders
and the sustained commitment of their heirs.
Forty years later, we have come of age.
We were different from the beginning, and proud of it. From the
start, our community demonstrated a unity and intentionality of
purpose in its respect for difference and independence of thought.
In 1963, the Dean of Students at UC Berkeley closed their campus
to "all student political action." The next year, Pitzer's faculty
thanked President Atherton following a Vietnam protest rally that
many in the college community had attended. In their letter, the
faculty recognized that the College had set an important precedent,
"concerning the right of faculty, students and administration to
participate in what [they hoped would] be a continuing discussion
and debate of current social and political issues." The letter concluded:
"We feel that this attitude of respect for all opinions and the
right to express them cannot fail to create an exciting and intellectually
stimulating atmosphere at Pitzer College." Some of the young faculty
firebrands who signed the letter were John Rodman, Ruth and Lee
Monroe, George Park, Werner Warmbrunn, and Valerie Levy. Their words
were prophecy. I believe everyone here today will agree that this
precedent for "a continuing discussion and debate of current social
and political issues" is still solidly in place at Pitzer and sorely
needed during our current troubling times.
For Pitzer, the heady days of exhilarating creation have given
way to a College that has been recognized time and time again for
its tremendous contribution to the landscape of higher education.
And while Pitzer is consistently rated highly by traditional benchmarks,
we are more than an excellent liberal arts college. We are at the
forefront of educating for and effecting social change. We stand
as a model for other liberal arts colleges of how they could and
should be educating.
Audre Lorde realized that, "The quality of light by which we scrutinize
our lives has direct bearing upon the product which we live, and
upon the changes which we hope to bring about through those lives."
After forty years of growing and changing as an institution, we
well know that our house will never be built. We must continue to
create our own tools and we must always keep our deeper purpose
foremost in our hearts and minds: to educate young people to see
their world, in all its beauty and tragedy, in all its socio-economic
differences, in all its prejudices and judgments, in all its joy
and promise. Martin Luther King, Jr. keenly understood the darkness
that comes with passivity, a lack of vision, and a deficiency of
will: "If we do not act, we shall surely be dragged down the long,
dark and shameful corridors of time reserved for those who posses
power without compassion, might without morality, and strength without
sight." We are living at a time when our commitment to intercultural
cooperation and understanding is being tested, and when our commitment
to community at the local, national, and international levels is
being challenged.
Today Pitzer has matured into one of America's great liberal arts
colleges, rightfully taking our place among our institutional elders,
having become their equal. Pitzer has grown to 824 full-time students
from forty-three states and twelve countries, and we are proud of
our national ranking of thirty-eighth for academic reputation and
proud as well that thirty-nine percent of our student population
are people of color-proving that through diversity excellence is
achieved.
Our faculty are at the heart of Pitzer College. They are nationally
and internationally recognized scholars, artists, filmmakers, activists,
writers, and teachers. They are probing the molecular mechanisms
of cancer and AIDS, they are exploring the boundaries of the universe,
and they are searching the limits of the human mind. Since joining
the Pitzer community, I have traveled across the country meeting
alumni who time and again tell me how our faculty have changed their
lives, their intellect, and their souls. Yet even such an extraordinary
faculty as ours is not enough to account for the success of this
institution. Our students who select Pitzer because they want to
build meaning through their liberal arts education, our staff and
administration who understand and seek to facilitate the uniqueness
of our mission, our community partners who teach and learn with
us, and our deeply loyal alumni and trustees-everyone who is part
of our community who has dedicated themselves to preserving and
building on our character, has created a treasure within higher
education. All my life I have been taught by my family, my teachers,
my students, and my colleagues to believe what Plutarch knew: "The
mind is a fire to be kindled, not a vessel to be filled." That fire
has burned at Pitzer College for forty years.
We have come of age. Pitzer College has never been stronger.
We must continue to provide our students with the intellectual
tools to understand and to be agents for change in local and global
communities. We must increase our funding for faculty so they may
continue our tradition of creating an innovative, fearless, interdisciplinary
curriculum, and we must increase opportunities for students to work
collaboratively with the faculty in their scholarship. Currently
sixty percent of our students study abroad in thirty-two countries
on every continent in the world. It is my goal to increase participation
to one hundred percent. All Pitzer students should have the experience
of immersing themselves in cultures that are not their own so that
they may gain deeper understanding of themselves and their native
communities. One of our seniors wrote to me this year from abroad:
"It is here, as a teacher, that I have discovered what to be a student
means, what is learning, what is education. As a first-year student,
I thought I knew the world. Now I find myself knowing less and less
everyday and understanding a little more-to what end do I seek to
teach? To inform my students' minds or to inform their person? If
we inform their person, then perhaps they will be able to walk more
clearly through their world."I believe that serving the community
is not a charity, but a reciprocal process where partners derive
equal benefit. What our students learn in their studies around the
world -- and closer to home in our external studies site in Ontario,
California or through the Center for California Cultural and Social
Issues community partnerships -- is one of the College's most distinctive
educational objectives: concern with social responsibility and the
ethical implications of knowledge and action. If we are not profoundly
connected to our community then we have lost our connection to ourselves,
and it is my goal to increase our social engagement through helping
to grow and strengthen the community-based programming at Pitzer-both
at home and abroad.
Pitzer's iconoclasm is a founding principle and we have always
been a step ahead in our purpose. In order to support our mission,
we must continue to solidify our financial base. Our future is only
as secure as the support we bring to it. Building the endowment
will guarantee our ability not only to continue expanding upon the
distinctive intellectual landscape we have created for ourselves
these past forty years, but also the physical. Upon completion of
our master housing plan, we will be one of the few liberal arts
colleges in the nation to raze and completely rebuild our student
housing. Our aim is nothing less than to re-envision and reinvent
the student residential housing experience. This new housing will
be designed so that our students will enjoy a wholly integrated
living and learning environment, and working together we will complete
this next phase in the history of the College.
We are still young, yet we have proven that a college doesn't have
to be old to be effective. How many of our peer institutions can
make the claim that their founding faculty still contribute to the
intellectual life of the College? And how many can claim that members
of their first graduating classes still visit campus to meet with
faculty and engage in meaningful dialogue with current students?
We are privileged as an institution to still encounter our founding
faculty in the halls, to still work together with them on our research,
and to still teach with them in our classrooms. And we are privileged
as an institution to still learn from our founding alumni.
I am proud and honored to see so many of you gathered here today,
and I would like to pay special thanks to Russell and John Pitzer,
representatives of the Pitzer College founding family, and to founding
President John Atherton's wife, Ginny, and grandson, John, who share
the stage with me now. I would like to thank every member of the
Pitzer community for the role they have played in shaping our institution,
and I am grateful to those founding members of the College present
at this ceremony today who, working together, crafted our curriculum,
established our system of shared governance, and articulated our
mission. We are deeply indebted to you. I would also like to express
my appreciation to the inauguration committee, consisting of faculty,
staff, students, alumni, and trustees, who over the past six months
planned such a wonderful week of events. To our facilities, maintainance,
and food services staff, we appreciate all your wonderful efforts
today.
Finally, I would be terribly remiss if I did not recognize Professor
Stephen Glass who after forty years still teaches at Pitzer full-time,
still serves actively on faculty committees, and still participates
regularly in College Council, where he reminds us of our founding
principles when we begin to stray. Fittingly, Professor Glass is
the historian of Pitzer College's motto: Provida Futuri. Mindful
of the Future. Mindful of the future, mindful of the past, the two
are fused together in a precious constancy. Together we will walk
into the next moment. In Life on the Mississippi, Mark Twain commented
on the promise of the new communities he encountered during his
travels:
Such a people, and such achievements as theirs, compel homage.
. . . This region is new; so new that it may be said to be still
in its, baby hood. By what it has accomplished while still teething,
one may forecast what marvels it will do in the strength of its
maturity.
To my parents and family, thank you for the constancy of your love.
To Nelson, when we met, I was a graduate student, then professor,
mother, dean and now President. Clearly you possess some superior
mentoring skills and I love you dearly. To my Sparkey, you now say,
"This is our College," and in 12 years you had better make it your
own. Pitzer College's mandate is to change the universe and we have
come of age!
And so to all of you here today who have believed in the possible,
thank you for the treasure of Pitzer College, thank you for this
place of beauty unique within higher education, and thank you for
being here on one of the happiest days of my life.
Given by President Laura Skandera Trombley, Feburary 15th 2003
(Pitzer's 40th Anniversary)
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