To our readers:

Last winter, when the Bulletin staff began talking about devoting the fall issue to the approaching 25th anniversary of the construction of the Littauer building and the move to its current site, we were excited by the prospect. It would be enlightening to look back through 25 years of Kennedy School lore. As chroniclers of the school, we would finally have a chance to do what we always wanted to do, but never had time for, what with the ongoing demands of our jobs.

And we were right. It has been a fascinating look back. We conducted a score of interviews, both in person and by phone. Some of the people interviewed are still going strong here at the school. Others have retired. The fondness they feel toward the school was palpable. It was also interesting to look at the old photos. Styles really do change over a quarter of a century. Were those thick, black glasses actually considered attractive 25 years ago? There were poignant moments too, reading about people whose lives were cut short, but who have made lasting impressions on the school. There were also those “aha” moments when we discovered that some of today’s well-known public servants started their careers here. And then there was the Forum, which, during the last 25 years has hosted a dazzling stream of public figures and has become one of Harvard’s most remarkable institutions. Rededicated this month in honor of John F. Kennedy, Jr., the Forum is now one of the most popular destinations on campus for Harvard students.

But the biggest surprise of all was realizing the gamble that the people committed to moving the Kennedy School to the next level were taking back then. As you’ll read in the following pages, the idea of building a school for future public servants that was on par with Harvard’s graduate schools of medicine and business was unique. Whether the school could make a go of it, both financially and academically, was not certain. Twenty-five years later, few could argue about the amazing contributions that the school has made, both in the people it has trained, as well in the contributions it has made to public policy research.


We would also like to give a nod to the many photographers, writers, designers, and editors who have covered the school over the course of the last 25 years and who have made our jobs so much easier in uncovering the school’s history. As the current staff pored over old Bulletins and Updates, we grew increasingly impressed at the professionalism with which these publications were produced. We feel a renewed challenge to carry on with the same humor and style.

In the end, what these past few months have shown us is what we always suspected to be true, but now know for sure: that the Kennedy School is a one-of-a-kind institution. Happy Birthday Kennedy School! May the next 25 years be as successful.

Sarah Abrams, Editor, Bulletin
Jesús Mena, Director, Communications and Public Affairs

August 2003

 

 

 

 


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