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of the behind-the-scenes traditions of graduation weekend is a
dinner for honorary-degree recipients. This year's gathering had
a certain familiarity--and a certain poignancy, with the impending
retirement of the host, President Nannerl O. Keohane.
The evening, as is customary, featured a kind of call-and-response
routine. The president said a few words about the honorees. They
made some observations about their lives and works. The president
reflected briefly on those observations.
One of the speakers mentioned having borrowed materials from the
Duke library system for his research program. Keohane then described
the collaborative arrangements between Duke and the libraries of
neighboring universities. Another mentioned her student experiences
at a women's college. Keohane, in turn, talked about the Duke Woman's
College as emblematic of a commitment to the education of women.
A third speaker prompted Keohane's musings on the faculty as the
spark plug of intellectual activity.
The full range of Keohane's qualities were on display: her depth
of knowledge about Duke and higher education, her passion for service
and learning, her ease and effectiveness in communicating. This was
an intellectually adroit leader in her element.
And that suggests a question: Might Keohane have been a leader in
a different context? In an interview with Duke Magazine, she said
that an alternative path might have been politics. She enjoys "making
the case" to different audiences, after all. "I've always
thought it would be great to be in the Senate," she said. "If
I were ten years younger, I might still be seriously considering
it."
But she wasn't about to second-guess her career choices. "People
should not think administration is easy or intellectually a vacation," she
said. Needless to say, she's done well at it. But what she called "the
purer life of the mind" is what has long engaged her. "It's
what, at least in the past, I have been best-suited for and have
enjoyed the most. And I hope I can get back to it."
--Robert J. Bliwise, Editor
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