Sam Chauncey
Henry "Sam" Chauncey, Jr. was a longtime administrator at Yale University. He has been credited in part with management of the volatile atmosphere on campus and in New Haven, Connecticut associated with the New Haven Black Panther trials.[1]
Chauncey was appointed in 1963 as a special assistant to then Yale President Kingman Brewster, 1963–1977. He had been a student at Groton School before Yale. Senior year he had worked in the University Secretary's office. He graduated with the Yale Class of 1957 and was a member of Wolf's Head Society.
Chauncey is a descendant of Yale College's first graduate,[2] and his father, Henry Chauncey, was founder and head of the Educational Testing Service, and an important aide to James Bryant Conant, Harvard's president, 1933–1953, when that school expanded its admissions net. Chauncey did likewise for Brewster, with R. Inslee Clark, Jr., much as his father did for Conant in recruiting and admitting incoming classes more diverse and academically able than their predecessors.[3]
Rather than the apocalyptic student riot that consumed Kent State University on May 4, 1970, Yale, under the leadership of Kingman Brewster on behalf of the faculty and Kurt Schmoke on behalf of the undergraduates, embraced and then managed the spirit of the protest.[4] The protest lasted two days, May 1 and 2. Brewster and Chauncey met with Archibald Cox of Harvard to discuss what went awry April 15, 1970 in Cambridge, Massachusetts at a protest organized by an offshoot of the white radical group Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). The consensus was locking the gates to the university incited the violence, and it had done likewise at Columbia University. Abbie Hoffman vowed that Yale would burn May 1 after the experience at Harvard.[4]
The transition to a co-ed from all-male Yale undergraduate student body was managed by Chauncey. "I wanted straight coeducation. I thought the Vassar thing, frankly, was stupid," he remarked about the plan to bring Vassar College to New Haven as a coordinate campus to Yale, akin to Radcliffe's relation to Harvard or Pembroke College to Brown or Barnard College to Columbia. The idea was dubbed "the Vassar flirtation" in the press.[5] The Yale Corporation voted to accept women to Yale College on a full coeducational basis beginning in the fall of 1969.[6]
Sam Chauncey also served as founder of the Yale Health Management Program at the Yale School of Public Health, a division of the Yale School of Medicine. Taking a select group of experienced professionals and some recent but accomplished college as inaugural students, Mr. Chauncey created the first health management program of its kind at Yale, and some argue the first of its kind at any major university. Students took classes with MBA and MPH students as if one of them, sharing in the experiences of both school seamlessly, with working internships in relevant fields. Most students have become noted healthcare professionals, administrators, consultants, physicians, and educators. Noted professors include Elizabeth Bradley who succeeded Sam Chauncey after his retirement. Professor Bradley is now the master of Branford, one of Yale's undergraduate colleges, and the director of Yale's international health educators' program which has campuses all over the world including Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Americas. David Katz, M.D., professor of preventive medicine, appears regularly on television as a celebrity medical expert (Dr. Oz, Good Morning America). Other notable former students include the Leader of the Global FDA Compliance group at IBM; administrators at the United Nations, pharmaceutical companies, the World Bank, and the Central Intelligence Agency.
Sam Chauncey retired from Yale in 2000 but is often called upon in an advisory capacity.
Sam was and is an avid squash player, never missing more than two days between sessions (he was often seen at Payne Whitney Gymnasium), and is often seen taking on students 1/4th his age.
References
- ↑ Murder in the Model City:The Black Panthers, Yale and the Redemption of a Killer, Basic Books, Paul Bass and Douglas W. Rae, 2006
- ↑ Warch, Richard. School of the Prophets: Yale College, 1701 - 1740, Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 1973, p.46.ISBN 978-0-300-01605-5
- ↑ Kabaservice, Geoffrey. The Guardians: Kingman Brewster, His Circle, and the Rise of the Liberal Establishment, Henry Holt and Company, New York, 2004,p. 195.ISBN 0805067620
- 1 2 see 1
- ↑
- ↑ Kabaservice, Geoffrey. The Guardians: Kingman Brewster, His Circle, and the Rise of the Liberal Establishment, Henry Holt and Company, New York, pp. 298, 293 and 368.