This is a mast year for sugar maples, when they produce an overabundance of seeds. Here on campus, we’ve had our own banner spring, with a crop of inspiring speakers reminding this Dean of what being part of a university is all about—a community of learners where students and faculty gather together for stimulating exploration of ideas and attempt to identify solutions.
I discovered that my phone is on the verge of being able to perform spectacular feats through cloud computing from Dr. Victor Bahl '97 PhD, Director of the Mobile Computing Research Center (MCRC) in Microsoft Research, and recipient of the 2012 UMass Distinguished Alumni Award. I am a little worried that I might never be quite as smart as my smart phone.
From environmental business leader and advocate Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., the keynote speaker for the campus’ action-packed two-day Earth Day celebration, I learned we face some hard decisions about how we use energy. Kennedy was named one of Time magazine's “Heroes for the Planet” for spearheading a series of successful legal actions that helped Riverkeeper lead the fight to restore the Hudson River, motivating the creation of more than 160 Waterkeeper organizations across the globe.
With urgency laced with humor, Charles Mann, writer of the best-selling 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus and1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created, sparked a dialogue that got everyone thinking hard about putting the notion of sustainability into cultural settings. For Mann sustainability is a forward-looking concept, not a backward looking concept.
I’ve had the opportunity to learn what we do and don’t know about preventing Alzheimer’s Disease from award-winning neuropsychologist Dr. Mary Sano '74 (Psychology). There’s clearly a lot we don’t know, but Sano, a 2012 Eleanor Bateman Alumni Scholar and the Director of Alzheimer's Research at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, is on the forefront of discovery.
Participating in these events is truly the best part of my job. And I’m sure that just as the profusion of sugar maple saplings will (eventually) lead to more brilliant leaf-peeping and sugaring seasons, these inspiring messages will take root in the fertile brains of our outstanding students. In a nutshell (to mix my metaphors), I’ve been reminded over the past few weeks that the solutions to our most pressing problems will require all of us to be engaged in conversations that are at once cultural and political and technological and scientific. And that is what makes it so interesting.