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fall Address To The University Delivered By Albert C. Yates President, Colorado State University
Tuesday, September 23, 1997
Chancellor, Colorado State University System
September 23, 1997
Welcome! We begin this year unlike any other in memory. The July
flood brought an unwelcomed and unprecedented challenge to our campus.
We met the challenge; we passed the test. And in the process we learned
much about ourselves fl about our courage and perseverance, about our
resolve and capacity for community and compassion. We learned, too,
that there can be true unity in adversity. We did well and we can be
pleased.
And so the reason for our gathering today is simple: we are here
to celebrate our successes, to breathe a collective sigh of relief, and
to say flthanksfl to a community of friends and colleagues who refuse to
have their spirits dampened or their dreams crushed. And so to all of
you, I say, flthank youfl!
>
Through it all weflve kept our humor and our perspective.
Nonetheless I think Iflll forego calling this fla watershed yearfl or
>referring to flthe tide of public opinion.fl Perhaps, like everyone
else, Iflm ready for a break from the intensity of recent weeks. Itfls
>time to relax, to smile and pat each other on the back.
But, even so, we can never forget or diminish the impact of the
flood. Five women lost their lives in the flood. Many of our neighbors
lost their homes. Thirty campus buildings sustained damage. Tragically,
too many members of our faculty lost the work of a lifetime. Nearly 200
faculty, staff and students were displaced from offices that had long
been their campus homes. This was a devastating event - marked by acts
of courage and heroism. Who were the heroes? There are too many to
name: the ROTC students who pitched in to pack up waterlogged faculty
papers for drying; the associate dean who not only arranged to get
office dividers on loan from Hewlett Packard for the departments of
philosophy and foreign languages and literatures - but who then showed
up with his wife and spent an entire Sunday setting up every single one
of them; the staff members who struggled to salvage what they could on
the lower level of Morgan Library before the water became too high; the
students who helped stranded motorists escape from their flooded cars
and make it to safety; the bookstore workers who swallowed their own
sense of loss while racing to get a makeshift store ready in time for
fall semester; the facilities staff members and police officers and
environmental health workers and administrative staff in Business and
Financial Services, all of whom gave weeks without a break or a rest;
the people in enrollment services who scrambled to notify students and
relocate services in time for the start of classes; faculty from across
the University who pitched in, set aside their own grief, and made
sure classes would start on time and without disruption; and so many,
many more. To all of you: again, thanks!
There is one person who must be identified by name because his
work and sacrifice on the night of the flood single-handedly prevented
a far-worse disaster. Jim Abraham, a graduate student who works in
Environmental Health Services, was in the office that night and first
spotted water entering the building. He alerted the Environmental
Health Services staff and then, with a co-worker, spent the entire
night going to every campus building to move hazardous materials out of
the path of the flood. He waded through the pounding water to retrieve
and move all those materials that he knew were dangerous - and, as a
result, prevented them from becoming a danger to our entire campus and
community. At the end of the night, he went home to rest. But Jim lived
on the first floor of the International House - and while he was
working to save our campus, everything he owned was wiped out. Jim, you
have our compassion and our thanks - we are truly in your debt!
I also want to offer a special thank you this afternoon to the
food service workers, who not only managed to feed thousands of
conference visitors during the flood without any steam - but who also
are working today to serve and prepare lunch. Many others, too, who
deserve our thanks are unable to be here for a host of reasons. Please
know that weflre grateful and we hope to find other ways to express our
thanks in the future.
Together, we made the flood our common enemy, and pledged to make
the campus whole and safe again as quickly as possible. Even those of
us who vowed, immediately after the flood, that classes would start on
time with little disruption werenflt entirely convinced it could be
done. Well, we did it! We took on one of the toughest challenges this
University has ever faced and we prevailed - but only because you
cared. We have earned this time to relax and reflect - to laugh a
little and enjoy the moment. Thatfls why weflre here today.
This experience has, in so many ways, shown how closely our
behavior can mirror our rhetoric when circumstances demand. Our
character as a University and a community was tested in a very public
way, and we passed the test. Indeed, the response to the flood has
proved much of what has been said in recent years about the strength of
this community, about our resilience and commitment. We are challenged,
now, to demonstrate that same character in confronting the many other
critical issues that lie ahead.
The flood offered many lessons, not the least of which is that we
can be better than weflve been. We have the opportunity now to rebuild
and improve upon what we had before - to seize this chance to transform
Colorado State University into the kind of institution we all want it
to be. Letfls use what weflve learned and invented in these last several
weeks to ensure that the University that emerges from this crisis is a
better and stronger place -- in all of its dimensions -- than it was on
the 27th of July. And please hear this: Only if we do this -- only if
we are better in the end -- can we claim that our recovery efforts have
been successful.
As well, we cannot allow the flood to become an excuse for
neglecting the normal agenda of our University - to prevent us from
making progress in those areas we know are critical to our long-term
success as an institution. It would be easy to lapse into a state of
feeling like victims. We have to remind ourselves continually of the
opportunities to be addressed.
The spirit so evident here today, the spirit that got us through
the last two months, now must be directed to the pressing issues that
face our university. To do this, we must continue to question how our
words match our actions in our many areas of priority and emphasis.
There are four imperatives that beg for special consideration in the
year ahead:
1) First among these is the need to foster a true learning
community, where our emphasis is shifted from what we teach
to what our students learn. A year ago, the leaders of our
University gathered for two days to talk about the
undergraduate curriculum. When the two days were over, we
congratulated one another and left, enthusiastic and full of
energy for all the great things we were going to do to renew
and revitalize undergraduate education. We agreed to redesign
and implement a new core curriculum; we agreed, as well, to
recast our structure for the delivery of instruction, hoping
to reduce our concerns about class size and faculty/student
relationships. Today, one could easily argue that we are no
closer to making these things happen than we were when we
left that leadership forum a year ago.
But please donflt misunderstand me. There are many good and
creative things happening in our teaching programs; and
pockets of real and sustained progress exist across the full
breadth of colleges. Now these pockets of success must be
made coherent and integrated into the whole of undergraduate
education.
I believe there is no greater imperative facing this -- or
any other university -- than to accept the challenge to
transform ourselves into a true learning community, an
environment that cares more about what students know and are
able to do than how many hours they spend sitting in a chair
in the Clark Building. If we fail to act, if we continue
simply to extend the debate, we will lose the opportunity to
join the vanguard of higher education institutions that are
beginning to find real and innovative ways to address these
same questions.
2) Second is the issue of diversity. If research universities
hope to lead society in important ways, one characteristic is
more essential to success than any other: Our culture must
reflect a wide range of perspectives and experiences. During
my first few years on campus, I used to say - as many of you
will remember - that CSU is a warm, inviting and friendly
place. But over time, Iflve learned thatfls not a true
statement for everyone on our campus. Sure, therefls much we
can brag about in the success of our diversity efforts, but
there are still far too many incidences of insensitivity
inside and outside the classroom for us to feel complacent
and proud. A few years ago, I started the Presidentfls
Minority Student Advisory Committee, a group of students with
whom I meet several times a year to talk about their
experiences and impressions. And persistently, they recount
experiences that reflect a general insensitivity to their
lives and their thinking - they talk about feeling singled
out in class, about others who question their abilities and
their right even to be here. And these students are voting
with their feet.
This year, let us do what we know we must do to make good on
our promise of a flwarm, inviting and friendly place,fl for
> everyone in our community.
3) In general -- despite my earlier comments -- we can feel good
about the success and progress made in our teaching and
research programs. But the third part of our mission --
outreach -- remains a point of concern. The interdependency
of these responsibilities of teaching, research and public
service is the hallmark of our land-grant mission - yet weflve
stood back and watched as other institutions have become
closer to our own constituents than we are. We continue to
have good ideas, to plan well and to create promising
strategies -- but too often weflve been unable to pull the
trigger. There is much we are asked and expected to do in
social and economic development and in meeting the needs of
our constituencies for a lifetime of learning. In the coming
year, we must re-commit ourselves to making progress in this
critical area, or we will continue to lose ground to other
institutions that provide the flexibility and range of
services our constituents demand.
4) That brings me to a fourth and final imperative. Over the
last several years, weflve made extraordinary progress in
raising the overall level of quality and responsiveness of
our institution. Weflve done this by worrying about operating
budgets, faculty salaries, the aesthetics of campus, state of
our facilities and the quality of the overall teaching and
research experience. We all ought to feel good and proud of
what has been accomplished to date. Our stature and influence
as a University are growing and we merit a bit of self-
congratulations.
But weflve done the easy part. To reach the next level of
> excellence and join the truly eminent national universities
will require tougher choices in the allocation of our
resources. It will mean that we must be more selective in our
investment in people and programs. In many cases, it will
mean setting aside our egalitarian instincts and investing in
efforts that have the real prospect of national distinction.
The undergraduate experience, for example, should grow to be
a flprogram of excellence,fl allowing us to boast increasingly
about the achievements of our graduates.
And most important, we must invest in people fl in individual
faculty efforts that enhance the potential of significant
contributions to our world and culture, but offer, as well,
the platform for individual honors and rewards. The past year
our entire institution was elevated greatly by the
achievements of our colleagues. Remember our joy and our
pride when:
* English Professor Mary Crow was named Coloradofls Poet
Laureate;
* Professor Patrick Brennan became a University
Distinguished Professor;
* Philosophy Professor Holmes Rolston was named this
yearfls Gifford Lecturer at the University of Edinburgh;
* Professional Veterinary Medicine was named a Program of
Excellence by the Colorado Commission on Higher
Education.
* And none of us can forget the shared glow of distinction
when Professor Mortimer Elkind was honored with the
Roentgen-Plakette Award in Germany in April and a few
months later President Clinton presented him with the
most prestigious Enrico Fermi Award, recognizing a
lifetime of achievement in the use of radiation to treat
cancer.
If our visions of a great university are to become reality,
then such extraordinary examples of achievement must become
an expected part of our annual record. In the months ahead, I
ask that we set our sights on this next level of achievement
and begin to make the difficult choices necessary to get
there.
Finally, I look forward to the year ahead. It is a year we begin
with an advantage fl the advantage of renewed institutional spirit and a
new-found sense of a common purpose. If we manage to sustain the sense
of unity and institutional spirit that have characterized the flood
recovery, I am confident this can be the best year ever for Colorado
State!
Thank you and best wishes!
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