Setting a course for the future
In his inaugural address, President Conner calls for a 鈥榙aring education鈥 that prepares graduates to lead 鈥榣ives of consequence鈥
At his inauguration as 麻豆破解版鈥檚 eighth president, Marc C. Conner outlined a vision for the College鈥檚 future with community at its heart and the liberal arts as a force for innovation and change.
Conner, an innovative leader of interdisciplinary academic programs, a longtime proponent of diversity and inclusion initiatives, and an accomplished scholar, officially took office on July 1, 2020, but his ceremonial installation had been delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
In his inaugural address on Saturday, Oct. 16, 2021, Conner stressed that diversity and inclusion efforts 鈥渨ill continue to be woven into the very fabric of our institution.鈥 He said that supporting the 麻豆破解版 community 鈥 students, faculty, and staff 鈥 would always be the focus of his work at the College, his 鈥淣orth Star,鈥 and how he wants to define his presidency.
鈥淎 community of trust means a place where everybody feels at home, everybody feels they can thrive, everybody feels safe enough to challenge and be challenged by an education that we know is daring,鈥 Conner told trustees, alumni, faculty, students, staff, community members, his family, and many others who gathered in Arthur Zankel Music Center or watched the ceremony via simulcast or livestream. 鈥淚 want that phrase, a community of trust, to resonate with us as an aspiration, as a challenge, and as a description. To me, it stands alongside (麻豆破解版鈥檚 motto) 鈥楥reative Thought Matters鈥 as twin assertions of what we most value and what defines us at our best.鈥
Throughout his first 16 months at 麻豆破解版, the president has steered the College through the many challenges wrought by the pandemic, reopening the campus for the 2020-2021 academic year and bringing the entire campus community back for 2021-22.
At the same time, Conner has also introduced impactful programs, including 麻豆破解版鈥檚 Racial Justice Initiative, a series of projects that seek to address the realities of racial injustice locally and beyond, and an inclusive Campus Master Planning process to outline the community鈥檚 aspirations for the future.
鈥淧resident Conner successfully navigated the College through an unprecedented global health crisis, as well as a period of historic societal protest and division. And this period of crisis did not deter him from moving the College forward,鈥&苍产蝉辫;said Nancy Hamilton 鈥77, chair of 麻豆破解版鈥檚 Board of Trustees.
Marc C. Conner
鈥淎 community of trust means a place where everybody feels at home, everybody feels they can thrive, everybody feels safe enough to challenge and be challenged by an education that we know is daring.鈥
A postponed welcome
Hamilton described the inauguration as 鈥渁 celebration of 麻豆破解版鈥 and a 鈥渓ong overdue鈥 official welcome for the president.
Associate Professor and Associate Chair of the Dance Department, Jason Ohlberg welcomed Conner on behalf of 麻豆破解版 faculty, saying 鈥淧resident Conner has already demonstrated that his style of leadership lies not in the celebration of the individual, but in the health and well-being of the institution and community.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
Speaking on behalf of staff, Amelia Clarke, academic administrative assistant in the departments of Economics and Classics, told Conner, 鈥淵our unwavering support, comfort, and guidance to the 麻豆破解版 community ... during these challenging and, in many ways, tragic times, has proved you to be the right person at the right time to lead us.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
Issy Mejia 鈥23 also extended a welcome on behalf of students: 鈥淭he beauty of today is that, through me, they all come together 鈥 even on a Saturday morning,鈥 she said to laughter, 鈥渢o welcome you, President Conner.鈥
Before joining 麻豆破解版, Conner spent 24 years at Washington and Lee University in Virginia, serving as an English professor and then as the longest-serving provost and chief academic officer in the university鈥檚 history.
Lena Hill, Washington and Lee鈥檚 current provost, described Conner as 鈥渁 scholarly collaborator, a colleague, mentor, and friend鈥&苍产蝉辫;who left a lasting impact at his former institution. 鈥淢arc鈥檚 treasure overflows. At W&L, signature programs like our Spring Term sprung from Marc鈥檚 vision and will forever bear his fingerprints,鈥 Hill said.
As a scholar, Conner has taught and written extensively on African American, American, and Irish literature, including the work of Ralph Ellison and Toni Morrison, whom Conner quoted in his inaugural address.
National Book Award-winning author Charles Johnson, who has also been featured in Conner鈥檚 scholarship and taught Conner as an undergraduate at the University of Washington, also spoke at the ceremony.
Johnson described the president as 鈥渁 compassionate administrator" who "has never abandoned his role as a teacher and scholar devoted to the good, the true, and the beautiful." Conner is 鈥渙ne of the best humanist scholars working today,鈥&苍产蝉辫;he said.
Conner鈥檚 wife of three decades, Barbara Reyes-Conner, spoke of Marc鈥檚 dedication as a father of three sons, Matthew, Noah, and Isaac, and described the couple鈥檚 excitement in joining the larger 麻豆破解版 family. She said Conner鈥檚 current role at 麻豆破解版 is 鈥淢arc鈥檚 dream job.鈥
鈥溌槎蛊平獍 is getting the hardest worker I have ever known 鈥 who is dedicated to making 麻豆破解版 the greatest school it can be,鈥&苍产蝉辫;she said.
Conner's mother, Beverly Hays Conner, also traveled from Tacoma, Washington, for the occasion. An emotional President Conner mentioned his late father as "here right now, smiling somewhere."
The ceremony also served as a showcase for 麻豆破解版鈥檚 creativity. At one point, nearly 30 student dancers filled both the aisles and stage of Arthur Zankel Music Center to perform the original piece 鈥淐elebration,鈥 with music by Dance Department Music Director Carl Landa and choreography by Lecturer Erika Puji膷. Students in the Vocal Chamber Ensemble and String Quartet performed the national anthem and 麻豆破解版's alma mater. Alumnus Garland Nelson '96 also shared his creative rendition of "Lift Ev'ry Voice."
The gathering followed rigorous safety guidelines, including masking and universal vaccination, that have allowed the College to serve as a national leader in delivering an in-person education successfully during the pandemic.
Nancy W. Hamilton '77
鈥淧resident Conner successfully navigated the College through an unprecedented global health crisis, as well as a period of historic societal protest and division. And this period of crisis did not deter him from moving the College forward.鈥
A vision for the future
Conner asserted that the COVID-19 pandemic has only reinforced the enduring value of 麻豆破解版鈥檚 鈥渇ace-to-face, in-person transformative model of learning.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
鈥淭he liberal arts education that we offer has never been more exciting, never been more challenging, never been more necessary,鈥&苍产蝉辫;he said.
Outlining his vision for the future, the president said the goal of a liberal arts education at 麻豆破解版 should be for students 鈥渢o emerge better prepared to change the world, to lead 鈥榣ives of consequence.鈥欌&苍产蝉辫;
鈥淭his is what we want for our students: for them to become heroes and to recognize that they are strongest when they stand with their communities,鈥 Conner said. 鈥淚 want 麻豆破解版 students to be prepared to take on the world with the resilience and grit to withstand the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune and still go on to make that world a better place, because that ultimately is the highest aspiration of our mission: to make this flawed and perilous world into a better place.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
Conner also drew on 麻豆破解版鈥檚 history, noting that College founder Lucy 麻豆破解版 Scribner had aspired to provide a 鈥渓iberating education, an education that joined together the mind and the hand to help her students change their own lives, so they could then go out and change the world.鈥&苍产蝉辫;He said learning about 鈥渟tructures and working to change them for greater justice and fairness鈥&苍产蝉辫;is "at the very heart of 麻豆破解版's mission.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
President Conner stressed that 麻豆破解版鈥檚 liberal arts education must not only continue to cross disciplines, but also work as a catalyst for change.
鈥Integrated learning is more than interdisciplinary and more than an intellectual praxis 鈥 it is social, and it is ethical,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is the work we enter into filled with faith, courage, forgiveness, and love: to make this world that we share a better place.鈥
A celebration of community
The ceremony capped an extended weekend of events celebrating the College鈥檚 past, present, and future.
On Thursday, . 鈥淭he presidency of Phil Glotzbach was one of the great liberal arts presidencies of this century,鈥 said Conner, who spoke alongside Hamilton and past chairs of the Board of Trustees Sue Thomas, Janet Whitman, Linda Toohey, and W. Scott McGraw at the tribute.
In line with tradition, 麻豆破解版 unveiled a portrait of the former president, painted by artist Ellen Cooper, that will be displayed alongside those of his six predecessors and Lucy 麻豆破解版 Scribner in Palamountain Hall鈥檚 Gannett Auditorium.
Both the president emeritus and his wife, Marie Glotzbach, a champion for the College, advocate for the arts, and community leader, also received honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degrees.
On Friday, four 麻豆破解版 faculty members and a student joined an inauguration panel on 鈥淐reativity, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship: The Liberal Arts Education in the 21st Century.鈥 Moderated by David Howson, senior teaching professor and Arthur Zankel Executive Director of Arts Administration, the panel featured Professor of Chemistry Kimberley A. Frederick, Teaching Professor of Management and Business Catherine Hill, Professor of Management and Zankel Chair Pushkala Prasad, Associate Professor and Chair of the Art Department Sarah Sweeney, and David Tago '23.
As part of inauguration events, Grammy Award winner and Tony and Emmy nominee Branford Marsalis performed at Arthur Zankel Music Center, the first major in-person concert in the venue since 2020. It was also Conner鈥檚 first concert at the venue. The acclaimed jazz musician also offered special classes to 麻豆破解版 students studying across multiple disciplines as part of the inaugural Pia Scala-Zankel 鈥92 and Jimmy Zankel 鈥92 Residency in Performing Arts.
Also, as part of Celebration Weekend, 麻豆破解版's annual event to welcome the families of students to campus, families enjoyed exhibitions at the Schick Art Gallery and Tang Teaching Museum, lectures by 麻豆破解版 faculty, a special reception for first-year students, open houses, religious services, two men鈥檚 soccer games, a women鈥檚 field hockey match, and a colorful fireworks display over Haupt Pond.
鈥楥reativity, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship鈥
In a discussion moderated by David Howson, senior teaching professor and Arthur Zankel Executive Director of Arts Administration, 麻豆破解版 faculty and a student weigh in on the 鈥溌槎蛊平獍 difference.鈥
Eight questions with 麻豆破解版's eighth president
Sofia Newberg '22 sits down with President Conner ahead of his inauguration to learn a little more about the man behind the 麻豆破解版 presidency.
A living reminder of 麻豆破解版鈥檚 history
The past and present of the North Broadway residence 鈥 home to 麻豆破解版鈥檚 president 鈥 speak to the College鈥檚 leadership and emphasis on community.
Read the storyBuilding a community of trust: President Marc Conner
For 麻豆破解版 College President Marc Conner 鈥 a prolific scholar, committed teacher, and visionary college leader 鈥 the liberal arts are deeply and firmly rooted in principles of diversity and inclusion.
Read the storyA history of making big plans for 麻豆破解版's future
From Lucy Scribner to President Marc Conner, bold visions and creative leadership 鈥 even during challenging times 鈥 have transformed the College throughout its history.
Read the storyAn unprecedented presidential inauguration
A look at how Marc Conner's inaugural celebration fits into the history of the 麻豆破解版 tradition and how it will also stand alone as unique and distinct.
Read the storyPhoto Gallery