Class of 1995 25th Reunion - Program & Schedule - 1995

June 2 - 5, 2022

Program & Schedule

  • Saturday 6/4/22

    • Newberry Organ Tour

      Jun 4
      9:00AM – 11:30AM
      Woolsey Hall — 500 College Street

      Thomas Murray, Professor Emeritus in the Practice in the Institute of Sacred Music

      With its 142 stops, 197 ranks, 12,641 pipes, 30,000 pneumatic valves, 1,000 pneumatic motors and 2 turbines, the Newberry Organ is one of the most magnificent orchestral organs in the world and a monument to the state-of-the-art technology of 1928! Come hear this "king of instruments" and take a walking tour behind the pipes, courtesy of Professor Murray and Organ Curators Joe Dzeda and Nicholas Thomson-Allen.

      Session runs continually to 11:30 am

      Add to Calendar 2022-06-04T09:00:00 2022-06-04T11:30:00 America/New_York Newberry Organ Tour

      Thomas Murray, Professor Emeritus in the Practice in the Institute of Sacred Music

      With its 142 stops, 197 ranks, 12,641 pipes, 30,000 pneumatic valves, 1,000 pneumatic motors and 2 turbines, the Newberry Organ is one of the most magnificent orchestral organs in the world and a monument to the state-of-the-art technology of 1928! Come hear this "king of instruments" and take a walking tour behind the pipes, courtesy of Professor Murray and Organ Curators Joe Dzeda and Nicholas Thomson-Allen.

      Session runs continually to 11:30 am

      Woolsey Hall — 500 College Street
    • A Conversation About Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging at Yale

      Jun 4
      10:30AM – 11:30AM
      Sterling Law Buildings | Room: 128 — 127 Wall Street

      Please join us for an update about Yale's work to advance diversity, equity, and inclusion. Our panelists are Larry Gladney, Phyllis A. Wallace Dean of Diversity and Faculty Development in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and Professor of Physics; Kimberly-Goff-Crews '83, '86 JD, Secretary and Vice President for University Life; and Weili Cheng '77, Executive Director, Yale Alumni Association. Questions are encouraged!

      Add to Calendar 2022-06-04T10:30:00 2022-06-04T11:30:00 America/New_York A Conversation About Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging at Yale

      Please join us for an update about Yale's work to advance diversity, equity, and inclusion. Our panelists are Larry Gladney, Phyllis A. Wallace Dean of Diversity and Faculty Development in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and Professor of Physics; Kimberly-Goff-Crews '83, '86 JD, Secretary and Vice President for University Life; and Weili Cheng '77, Executive Director, Yale Alumni Association. Questions are encouraged!

      Sterling Law Buildings | Room: 128 — 127 Wall Street
    • America's Constitution: How It Arose and How to Preserve It

      Jun 4
      10:30AM – 11:30AM
      Sterling Law Buildings | Room: Levinson Auditorium — 127 Wall Street

      Akhil Reed Amar '80, '84 JD, Sterling Professor of Law and Political Science

      In this lecture, based on his most recent book, The Words That Made Us: America's Constitutional Conversation, 1760-1840, Professor Amar will offer his audience an overview of the grand project of American constitutionalism, past, present, and future, with particular emphasis on the importance of free expression and on America's special place in the world.

      Add to Calendar 2022-06-04T10:30:00 2022-06-04T11:30:00 America/New_York America's Constitution: How It Arose and How to Preserve It

      Akhil Reed Amar '80, '84 JD, Sterling Professor of Law and Political Science

      In this lecture, based on his most recent book, The Words That Made Us: America's Constitutional Conversation, 1760-1840, Professor Amar will offer his audience an overview of the grand project of American constitutionalism, past, present, and future, with particular emphasis on the importance of free expression and on America's special place in the world.

      Sterling Law Buildings | Room: Levinson Auditorium — 127 Wall Street
    • CANCELLED: Mental Health in Times of Challenge: Examining Stress and Emotion Regulation

      Jun 4
      10:30AM – 11:30AM

      We regret that this lecture has been cancelled.

      Jutta Joormann, Professor of Psychology

      Add to Calendar 2022-06-04T10:30:00 2022-06-04T11:30:00 America/New_York CANCELLED: Mental Health in Times of Challenge: Examining Stress and Emotion Regulation

      We regret that this lecture has been cancelled.

      Jutta Joormann, Professor of Psychology

    • CANCELLED: Yale 2050: Imagining the Future

      Jun 4
      10:30AM – 11:30AM

      We regret that this lecture has been cancelled.

      Tamar Gendler '87, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Vincent J. Scully Professor of Philosophy, and Professor of Psychology and Cognitive Science

      Add to Calendar 2022-06-04T10:30:00 2022-06-04T11:30:00 America/New_York CANCELLED: Yale 2050: Imagining the Future

      We regret that this lecture has been cancelled.

      Tamar Gendler '87, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Vincent J. Scully Professor of Philosophy, and Professor of Psychology and Cognitive Science

    • Emotional Intelligence at Yale: From Theory to Practice to Systemic Change

      Jun 4
      10:30AM – 11:30AM
      Sheffield-Sterling-Strathcona Hall | Room: 114 — 1 Prospect Street

      Marc Brackett, Founding Director, Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence; Professor in the Child Study Center

      Emotions influence decision making, relationships, physical and mental health, creativity, and performance. Our wise use of emotion is especially important to our success. In this talk, Dr. Brackett will (1) describe recent large-scale studies on the emotional lives of children and adults, (2) unpack what it means to give oneself and others “permission to feel”, (3) share the model of emotional intelligence developed at Yale, (4) present the evidence-based approach to developing emotional intelligence in schools and workplaces which has reached over 3 million children and adults across the globe, and (5) teach participants tools to develop emotional intelligence to enhance personal and professional success.

      Add to Calendar 2022-06-04T10:30:00 2022-06-04T11:30:00 America/New_York Emotional Intelligence at Yale: From Theory to Practice to Systemic Change

      Marc Brackett, Founding Director, Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence; Professor in the Child Study Center

      Emotions influence decision making, relationships, physical and mental health, creativity, and performance. Our wise use of emotion is especially important to our success. In this talk, Dr. Brackett will (1) describe recent large-scale studies on the emotional lives of children and adults, (2) unpack what it means to give oneself and others “permission to feel”, (3) share the model of emotional intelligence developed at Yale, (4) present the evidence-based approach to developing emotional intelligence in schools and workplaces which has reached over 3 million children and adults across the globe, and (5) teach participants tools to develop emotional intelligence to enhance personal and professional success.

      Sheffield-Sterling-Strathcona Hall | Room: 114 — 1 Prospect Street
    • Global Objects: Towards a Connected Art History

      Jun 4
      10:30AM – 11:30AM
      Loria Center | Room: 351 — 190 York St.

      Edward S. Cooke, Jr. '77, Charles F. Montgomery Professor of American Decorative Arts

      Avoiding traditional binaries such as East versus West or fine art versus decorative art and prioritizing transregional flow over stylistic categorization, this lecture sketches in the principles of a new art history survey course. The principles of this object-driven approach draw on in-depth analysis of the materials, process of realization, function, social lives, and experienced meaning of clay, fiber, wood, and base metals. Transcending nation state and temporal boundaries, this conceptualization points the way to a fresh interconnected global history of art.

      Add to Calendar 2022-06-04T10:30:00 2022-06-04T11:30:00 America/New_York Global Objects: Towards a Connected Art History

      Edward S. Cooke, Jr. '77, Charles F. Montgomery Professor of American Decorative Arts

      Avoiding traditional binaries such as East versus West or fine art versus decorative art and prioritizing transregional flow over stylistic categorization, this lecture sketches in the principles of a new art history survey course. The principles of this object-driven approach draw on in-depth analysis of the materials, process of realization, function, social lives, and experienced meaning of clay, fiber, wood, and base metals. Transcending nation state and temporal boundaries, this conceptualization points the way to a fresh interconnected global history of art.

      Loria Center | Room: 351 — 190 York St.
    • NEW LECTURE: Some Dance to Remember: Jewish Perspectives of Memory

      Jun 4
      10:30AM – 11:30AM
      Yale University Art Gallery | Room: McNeil Lecture Hall — 1111 Chapel Street

      Rabbi Jason Rubenstein, Howard M. Holtzmann Jewish Chaplain at Yale
      This session will explore the tensions surrounding the present day embrace of Ukrainian nationalism, from the vantage point of Jewish memory and persecution - moving beyond the simple command to "remember" to a dialectical approach that encompasses the value both of holding fast to the past, and being able to move beyond it. This lecture is presented by Slifka Center for Jewish Life at Yale.

      Add to Calendar 2022-06-04T10:30:00 2022-06-04T11:30:00 America/New_York NEW LECTURE: Some Dance to Remember: Jewish Perspectives of Memory

      Rabbi Jason Rubenstein, Howard M. Holtzmann Jewish Chaplain at Yale
      This session will explore the tensions surrounding the present day embrace of Ukrainian nationalism, from the vantage point of Jewish memory and persecution - moving beyond the simple command to "remember" to a dialectical approach that encompasses the value both of holding fast to the past, and being able to move beyond it. This lecture is presented by Slifka Center for Jewish Life at Yale.

      Yale University Art Gallery | Room: McNeil Lecture Hall — 1111 Chapel Street
    • The Second Quantum Revolution and the Race to Build "Impossible" Computers

      Jun 4
      10:30AM – 11:30AM
      Loria Center | Room: 250 — 190 York St.

      Steven Girvin, Eugene Higgins Professor of Physics & Professor of Applied Physics

      The first quantum revolution began a century ago and brought us the technological revolution of the 20th century through the invention of the transistor, the laser, and the atomic clock. We now understand that these 20th century devices do not take full advantage of the mysterious power of quantum machines to process information. This new understanding has triggered a second quantum revolution whose consequences for computing, communication and measurement have the potential to be as great a revolution for the 21st century as the tech revolution was for the 20th century.

      Add to Calendar 2022-06-04T10:30:00 2022-06-04T11:30:00 America/New_York The Second Quantum Revolution and the Race to Build "Impossible" Computers

      Steven Girvin, Eugene Higgins Professor of Physics & Professor of Applied Physics

      The first quantum revolution began a century ago and brought us the technological revolution of the 20th century through the invention of the transistor, the laser, and the atomic clock. We now understand that these 20th century devices do not take full advantage of the mysterious power of quantum machines to process information. This new understanding has triggered a second quantum revolution whose consequences for computing, communication and measurement have the potential to be as great a revolution for the 21st century as the tech revolution was for the 20th century.

      Loria Center | Room: 250 — 190 York St.

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