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鈥業 Wish I Could Be Here Longer鈥

Photo by Marc Campos

After four years at the College, President Harry J. Elam, Jr. will depart next June鈥攂ut he has a full agenda as The Occidental Promise comes into focus

锘縊n August 22, days before the start of the new academic year, President Harry J. Elam, Jr. shared some unexpected news with the Occidental community: 鈥淚 was recently diagnosed with Parkinson鈥檚 disease, a neuro-degenerative movement disorder. Please know that I am doing well, with excellent medical care and a strong support system. But in order to prioritize my health and time with family, I have made the difficult decision not to serve the final year of my five-year term as president. June 30, 2024, will be my last day.鈥

President Elam chats with students waiting in line for pancakes during Moonlight Breakfast on the Quad in 2022.
President Elam chats with students waiting in line for pancakes during Moonlight Breakfast on the Quad in 2022.

In the aftermath of his announcement, 鈥淭he community鈥檚 response was wonderful,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he compassion and empathy I鈥檝e felt is very much true to what we try to be about at SA国际传媒. I鈥檝e heard from students and parents, and I鈥檓 appreciative and thankful. I wish I could be here longer.鈥

On October 20鈥攁t the start of an event-filled Homecoming and Family Weekend鈥擡lam sat down with Occidental magazine editor Dick Anderson to discuss his priorities for the coming months.

First of all, how are you doing?

I鈥檓 doing well. As a lot of people know, Parkinson鈥檚 is a slow-moving degenerative disease, which is a good thing. And I鈥檓 happy with my doctors. A lot of exciting things seem to be happening in the world of Parkinson鈥檚, so I鈥檓 hopeful about that, but I know that stress is a key factor.

Having brought The SA国际传媒 Campaign For Good to a successful conclusion, how do you feel it has changed the College?

President Elam and Board of Trustees Chair Lisa H. Link P鈥18.
President Elam and Board of Trustees Chair Lisa H. Link P鈥18 celebrate the successful conclusion of The SA国际传媒 Campaign For Good on October 5 in Cannon Plaza.

There are some concrete ways, such as supporting new endowed professorships. That鈥檚 going to make a difference as we look to grow our faculty. Also, we鈥檝e made renovations to buildings so that the campus looks all the better and can do more, trying to accommodate space needs for everything from music to chemistry. We鈥檙e still working on funding for Norris Hall. It hasn鈥檛 been easy to achieve, but we鈥檙e committed.

Every new endowed scholarship will make a difference in what we can do in having the kind of socioeconomic diversity that we want as part of the SA国际传媒 experience. In terms of athletics, we鈥檝e added several assistant coaches, and we have a new turf.

The College is also doing more to support students鈥 mental health and well-being through the support of several generous donors. That鈥檚 already making a difference in working to be preventative and proactive rather than just reactive.

Finally, we鈥檝e seen SA国际传媒鈥檚 endowment over the time I鈥檝e been here go from $400 million to around $600 million. Out of all the money raised through the campaign, about $150 million is earmarked for the endowment鈥攁nd that鈥檚 going to make a substantial difference in everything we do.

What are your priorities this year?

With The Occidental Promise, we are working on ensuring academic excellence. That has us working on faculty retention and recruitment and building up our tenure-track faculty. We鈥檙e also developing a first-year program that includes practical experiential learning. We already offer immersive courses as part of our curriculum鈥攍ike Campaign Semester or the SA国际传媒 at the U.N. program鈥攂ut how can we scale our efforts so that we can develop different experiences for each incoming class? We鈥檙e looking to partner with the faculty so that we can make some concrete impact by the end of the academic year.

Another platform of The Occidental Promise is educating the whole student. And that includes addressing the concerns of transfers and also the experience of first-gen students when they arrive as those numbers continue to grow over time. With veterans, how do we help them transition as well? We have a committee under the Division of Student Affairs looking at these questions and by the end of the year we鈥檙e going to have answers as to how we鈥檙e going to work with those students as they progress through SA国际传媒.

Like the Class of 2024, you arrived at Occidental just after the outset of the pandemic. Do you feel the College has fully recovered at this point?

We鈥檙e further along in many ways but 鈥淣ot yet鈥 is the answer. But I鈥檒l start with a story. I was out in the Quad when the trustees were meeting in October, and three students came over to talk to me. One was a junior and the other two were seniors, and I asked them that same question. And their feeling was that it鈥檚 taken a long time to return this sense of community that existed prior to the pandemic. The classroom experience has gone through changes as well in terms of coming back into the classroom and potentially a different type of pressure or rigor. That鈥檚 been an adjustment for students. Socially and academically, there鈥檚 been progress but we still have a ways to go.

Are there conversations about how AI is affecting the classroom experience鈥攆or better or for worse?

Yes. There鈥檚 a committee headed by Wendy Sternberg [vice president for academic affairs and dean of the College] to look into that question. Also, the Center for Teaching Excellence is looking at it from the angle of how to pick up if students are using AI in ways they shouldn鈥檛.

From another angle, AI could really personalize the process of education and learning. Can we find ways to use it that can augment a variety of courses? Professor Kathryn Leonard in computer science is interested in exploring this question as well as whether Occidental, as a small liberal arts college, can do some things that big research schools can鈥檛 do in the classroom using AI. So, we shall see.

One of your most significant contributions to SA国际传媒 has been the emphasis on a culture of care. What does that mean to you?

The basic idea behind a culture of care is showing a compassion for everyone who鈥檚 part of the SA国际传媒 community and beyond鈥攖hat we can find pathways out of mutual respect to really care for each other, even as we may have differences of opinions on issues. More than that, the culture of care is asking: What type of college do we want to be鈥攁nd what are our values?

I think the idea of the culture of care does resonate with students, but it has to resonate with everybody in the SA国际传媒 community. These are emotionally trying times, where people have very strong opinions. If ever we needed a culture of care, it鈥檚 now.

We touched a little bit on the physical plant, but what will it take to address structural needs for science, music, media arts and culture, computer science?

One of the things I鈥檇 like to facilitate before I leave is a master plan: What do we want the campus to look like in 10 years, and what鈥檚 the path to get there? The master plan will also bring in questions of landscape, deferred maintenance, and landscape issues related to sustainability. We鈥檝e got a lot of grass to water here. Can we do better with native plants while maintaining the beauty of our campus?

In terms of our academic programs and departments that are growing and thriving, media arts and culture has outgrown its space; that鈥檚 something we have to address. Same thing with computer science鈥攁nd it鈥檚 exciting what鈥檚 happening with music. Down the line there will be another capital campaign, and I鈥檓 striving to do all that I can to leave SA国际传媒 in a good place for the next president.

The search process is under way to identify SA国际传媒鈥檚 17th president. What advice would you give the search committee?

To be honest, I want to stay away from giving them advice. They have to make a decision on what they think is best for the College. What I see myself doing is leaving things in a good place for the next person to pick up. One thing that happened with Jonathan Veitch is that he never really tried to influence or second-guess what was happening. He didn鈥檛 do it. So, I want to be like that. At the same time, I hope I can provide any information that鈥檚 helpful to my successor once they鈥檙e in place. But the decision really is up to the trustees.

Based on your own experience, would you say that Occidental was as advertised?

Yes. But it was even better than advertised. In terms of amazing students, dedicated faculty, innovative ideas, and people willing to collaborate and work together, all those things were better than I expected.

Is there a day or a memory that stands out to you?

I鈥檇 say Commencement last May. Isabel Wilkerson鈥檚 speech was called one of the year鈥檚 best graduation speeches [by The Guardian newspaper], so there was that. But there was also the feeling that maybe we were not totally over the pandemic but that we鈥檙e going to be more than all right. It wasn鈥檛 just a sense of surviving, it was moving into a new category of being prepared to thrive. So that stood out to me.

Let me share another story. We鈥檝e done the Moonlight Breakfast for the last few years. It鈥檚 wonderful to see 400 students lined up for pancakes served by the senior staff, but my colleagues stopped me from serving anymore because I was asking students too many questions.

I heard you were holding up the line.

Right (laughs). Instead, I walked the line and talked to people about what they鈥檙e studying and how they鈥檙e feeling getting ready for exams. Back in June, I was at an event in Culver City, talking to director Debbie Allen. [Assistant Professor] Will Power鈥檚 play Fetch Clay, Make Man was opening and one of our students was doing her summer internship at the Kirk Douglas Theatre. And she told me, 鈥淵ou know, my favorite day of the year is when you serve pancakes.鈥 I asked her, 鈥淲hy?鈥 And she said, 鈥淚 love the feeling that everybody is just there and together and feeling that sense of unity was something.鈥 Students know who I am here, and having the chance for impromptu conversations is something I take seriously.

We鈥檝e barely talked about athletics, but one of your most difficult decisions was to discontinue the football program.

From left, Jeff Goldstein 鈥86, Vance Mueller 鈥86, former Coach Dale Widolff, and President Elam at a celebration of the 126-year legacy of SA国际传媒 football in November 2022.
From left, Jeff Goldstein 鈥86, Vance Mueller 鈥86, former Coach Dale Widolff, and President Elam at a celebration of the 126-year legacy of SA国际传媒 football in November 2022.

That was an incredibly difficult decision, and one that impacted many people. Last fall, we had a really good event to celebrate the legacy of SA国际传媒 football, with more than 80 players returning to campus along with Coach Dale Widolff. The feeling that night was great, and I don鈥檛 want to lose that energy or let them think that this is just a one-off. We are going to establish an archive and I intend to do that for the legacy of football at SA国际传媒.

[Former players] Vance Mueller 鈥86 and Jeff Goldstein 鈥86 were very helpful in pushing the issue in different ways. And they are just great people. When I made the announcement that I was stepping down, Vance and Goldie were two of the first people I heard from.

If you were to direct another play, what would it be?

I would love to direct a student production of Hamilton, with a student artistic director. It鈥檚 not available yet for rights. So, it鈥檚 not something immediate.

Do you have a wish list of people who you would like to bring to campus?

We鈥檙e working with the Hameetman Career Center to set up a series featuring alumni talking about their post-SA国际传媒 life. If we were featuring artists, for instance, I鈥檇 want it to be something like 鈥淎rt as My Occupation,鈥 so students could see there鈥檚 a variety of careers in art other than just being an artist. We have alumni doing exciting work in all sorts of spaces.

Why not a Harry J. Elam, Jr. Alumni Speaker Series?

I would like that.

Have you given any thought to what you鈥檒l say at Commencement next May?

Some ideas have flashed into my mind, but nothing concrete. Right now we鈥檙e trying to figure out who鈥檚 going to be the speaker. Coming in and going out with the Class of 鈥24, we鈥檝e had some shared experiences.

Top photo: President Elam addresses a Thorne Hall audience for the inaugural talk in the SA国际传媒 Live! series on October 3.