-Caveat Lector- http://www.yalesuccession.blogspot.com/ ----- The Yale Succession
The Yale Succession THE YALE SUCCESSION IS BUSH '48/CLINTON '67JD/BUSH '68: THE THREE YALE-TRAINED PRESIDENTS WHO HAVE LED THE U.S. SINCE 1988. Happy New Year! This blog is for anyone interested in the issues of the day and in Yale University's surprising influence on them. In the weeks to come, it will become a place of dialogue on these issues and the roles of Yale and the Yale presidents in dealing with them. Its outcome will be a book that I'm writing with Bob Back (MA '60 International Relations) entitled Yale and the Modern World: the Yale Succession, the 2004 Presidential Election and the Future of Politics. I'm Steve Sewall, a writer and educator originally from New Haven and now living in Glenview, IL after 20 years in Chicago, working mostly in the fields of education and media. Although my undergraduate degree was from Harvard ('64) and my Ph.D. from U. C. Berkeley, I have a degree in high school teaching from Yale (M.A.T. '66). My two brothers, Rick ('65) and Dave ('69) both attended Yale. In coming weeks, this blog will link to a second blog where you can download the thirteen chapters of an as yet unpublished book about teaching at Yale written by my father, Richard B. Sewall, a Yale English professor from the mid 30's to the mid 70's. He's now 94 and living with my brother Rick in the Boston area. Comments and recollections of past students will be welcome. Concerning the Yale succession, the opinion piece below gives an overview of concerns to be discussed at this blog. The piece has been submitted to the Yale Daily News, Yale's campus paper. Comments can emailed to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Enjoy! posted by Steve @ 5:23 PM 1.7.2003 Reflecting on the Yale Succession by Steve Sewall Text 851 words In 1949, Yale Daily News Editor William F. Buckley ('50) and my father, Yale English professor Richard B. Sewall, had a memorable exchange at Woolsey Hall. They were there to advise freshmen members of the class of '53 on how to make the most of their years at Yale. But they disagreed passionately as to whether the best use of these years was active (Buckley) or contemplative (Sewall). Buckley, the big man on campus, urged the freshmen to join, heel, compete and succeed. Yale, he said, is your chance to build the networks that will sustain you throughout life. Sewall, the teacher and scholar, urged the freshmen to read, write, discuss and understand. Yale, he said, is your chance to reflect on life itself. Years later, '53 alumnus Jim Thompson summed up the presentation: "We all knew Sewall was right," he said, "but we wanted to be like Buckley." Since 1988, three Yale-educated presidents have led America and, increasingly, the world (Bush '48, Clinton '67JD, Bush '68). This Yale succession is historic. Never before have three successive U.S. presidents studied at the same university. During its tercentenary year, mother Yale effectively codified it as a lineage by bringing all three presidents back to Yale. (At graduation, President George W. Bush likened himself to the Prodigal Son.) The Yale succession is a mixed blessing. Although Yale uses it to attract students, raise money and extend the university's global presence, no one studies it. This oversight is alarming, for a community of scholars loses its perspective on history when it falls silent on something historic happening in its own back yard. The same is true of the stunning silence of America's political press on something as significant as Yale's four-term lock on the White House. So what's being neglected? For starters, there's the sheer size of Yale's team of presidential hopefuls, which includes Senators Hillary Clinton ('67JD), Joe Lieberman ('64), John Kerry ('66) and Vermont Governor Howard Dean ('71), plus seven other Yale trained U.S. Senators who can look into a mirror and see a future president. Under scrutiny, the Yale succession is a key to recent history and a gateway to leadership issues that concern Yale as a "laboratory for future leaders", in President Richard Levin's phrase. All three Yale presidents owe their White House tenures to the Big Money that has alienated citizens and tightened its stranglehold on government at all levels since the advent of televised attack ads in the 1960's. The Yale presidents have jointly led America's post-Cold War drive for economic and military empire. And it was on their watch that systemic corruptions spread throughout corporate and political America until the bubble burst in 2000, plunging America and the world into a recession that economists say could last for years to come. No economy, however strong, can stand forever on a corrupt political base. Healthy societies, like healthy families, require trust. The convergence, or rather collision, of ethics and economics that sank Japanese markets in 1991 and American markets in 2000 is now a global phenomenon and the primary obstruction to the growth of a viable global economy. The restoration of trust at home and abroad is the task of a generation. It calls for a sea change in our ways doing business and politics and for a new generation of leaders. Does America have the will to produce such leaders? The need for them will become apparent as market rally after market rally fizzles for reasons baffling to those who cannot see the economic consequences of the loss of faith in institutions that marks the modern world - or the ruthless venality that pervades most institutions, including university schools of business and law. It will fall on America, as the world's superpower, to reconcile ethics and economics in ways that restore integrity to markets worldwide. Will Yale, as a torchbearing laboratory for leaders and a global university, lead the way in preparing America for this task? The unwillingness of Japan's elite universities to train a generation of tough-minded reform leaders helps explain why that once seemingly insuperable economic superpower is now in its fourteenth year of depression. Interestingly, the Ivy League aura that has shielded the Yale succession from scrutiny is fading fast. In Secrets of the Tomb, a recently published history of Skull and Bones, Yale graduate Alexandra Robbins ('98) shows how four generations of Bonesmen built the Bush dynasty that comprises two thirds of Yale's triple whammy. Looking ahead to 2004, Robbins observes that a Bush/Kerry contest would be "the first Bones versus Bones presidential race". In this pairing, Yale comes off more as a club for oligarchs than a laboratory for leaders. In 1949, Yale, in its wisdom, sent Bonesman Buckley and "barbarian" Sewall to Woolsey Hall to encourage the class of '53 to pursue success and understanding. Today, Yale's unreflective handling of the Yale succession suggests that Yale, to its peril, is pursuing success alone. The cure for non-reflection is thoughtful dialogue: among faculty, students, administrators, and alumni, including the Yale presidents and the Yale Corporation. Much is at stake. Let the dialogue begin. Steve Sewall (M.A.T.'66) is a Chicago based educator. With Robert Back (MA '60 International Relations) he is writing a book, Yale and the Modern World: the Yale Succession, the 2004 Presidential Election and the Future of Leadership. posted by Steve @ 3:58 PM ----- Aloha, He'Ping, Om, Shalom, Salaam. Em Hotep, Peace Be, All My Relations. Omnia Bona Bonis, Adieu, Adios, Aloha. Amen. Roads End <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A> DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis- directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply. 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