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On the Ball
Special-events programming is a big hit among
alumni in the field. One recent gathering touched all the bases
for fans of the rawhide sphere. "Baseball as America,"
the first major exhibition exploring baseball and American culture,
brought National Baseball Hall of Fame treasures to the American
Museum of Natural History in New York City. On April 17, a reception,
program, and private viewing, sponsored by the Duke Alumni Association
and DUMAA (Duke University Metropolitan Alumni Association), was
arranged for local alumni and friends.
This is the first time these Hall of Fame artifacts have left
their legendary home in Cooperstown, New York. "Through the
exploration of a broad range of themes, including immigration, nationalism,
integration, technology, and popular culture," according to
the museum's website (www.amnh.org/exhibitions/baseball), the exhibit
reveals "how baseball has served as both a reflection and a
shaper of American society." Some of the treasures on view
are the original cornerstone of Ebbets Field, home of the Brooklyn
Dodgers until 1958; seats from the Polo Grounds, the home of the
New York Giants that was razed in 1964; Yogi Berra's glove and Don
Larsen's ball, used in the only perfect World Series game in 1956;
and Jackie Robinson's jersey. Dick Groat '53 was guest speaker for
the evening event, and DUMAA president Susan Callahan '86 was host.
As for other sporting spheres, Blue Devil basketball still rules,
on campus and off. Former Duke star Shane Battier '01 has lent his
time and talent to several local alumni clubs while traveling with
his team, the Memphis Grizzlies. On November 21, when the Grizzlies
played the Cleveland Cavaliers, Battier spoke to nearly seventy
alumni and friends at a postgame reception at Gund Arena, arranged
by the Duke Club of Northeast Ohio. The club there has had a string
of Blue Devil courtmen in the past: Danny Ferry '89 appeared for
seven years at club events until he left the Cavaliers in 2000,
says club member Tom Cirincione M.B.A. '90, and Trajan Langdon '99
has spoken to the group two years in a row. Carol L. Smith '87 is
the club's president.
Battier was the speaker at a reception held by the Duke Club of
South Florida when the Grizzlies played the Miami Heat on December
28. Club president Nelson Bellido '89 reports that Battier thanked
alumni for the particularly warm reception he received when he was
introduced at the beginning of the game. Battier said he is usually
booed when brought on an opposing team's court. He even signed autographs
and posed for pictures at the event, attended by about sixty.
Julie Hilton Calkins '90, president of the Duke Club of Memphis,
reports that the local club's alumni board threw Battier a "Welcome
to Memphis" dinner party on January 7, a night when he was
between home games. "The other cool part of our event,"
she writes, "was that it happened to be held during the two
days that MTV was filming Shane for an upcoming show called 'How
to Live Like a Sports Star.' They did film during our dinner. It
was clearly part of 'living as a sports star' to be invited to a
catered dinner in your honor by your alumni group." The show
was to air in February during the NBA All-Star game weekend.
Another popular Duke "star" is the university's president,
Nannerl O. Keohane, who seems to be on the road almost as much as
some athletic teams. She attends dinners for alumni, to give them
a Duke update and present the video "Outrageous Ambitions"
about the Campaign for Duke. On December 12, she was a guest of
the Duke Club of Philadelphia, whose president is Kimberly Hendrix
'92, J.D. '95. She was accompanied by Gary Melchionni '73, J.D.
'81, Duke Alumni Association president, and Spike Yoh B.S.E. '58,
who chairs Duke's board of trustees.
On January 15, Colby Walton '94, president of the Duke Club of
North Texas, was host at a dinner for Keohane in Dallas. She was
joined by Peter Denker B.S.E. '59, who chairs the North Texas Regional
Campaign Council, and Duke trustee Nancy Nasher J.D. '79.
Keohane spoke to alumni and friends at a dinner in Washington,
D.C., on March 5, where her host was Douglas M. Firstenberg '82,
president of the Duke Club of Washington. Sharing the podium was
Judy Woodruff '68, Duke trustee emerita; Dennis I. Meyer, the father
of four Duke graduates; and DAA president Melchionni. Keohane had
made an appearance earlier that day with the Duke Club of Baltimore,
whose president is Stephen Yang '80.
May's schedule for Duke's president will take her from Texas to
South Carolina. On May 2, she is slated to be the principal speaker
at a dinner with the Duke Club of Houston, whose president is John
Tobin J.D. '99. Other planned speakers are Roswell F. Vaughan III
'60, a Duke parent who chairs Houston's Regional Campaign Council,
and Rebecca Trent Kirkland '64, M.D. '68, a Duke trustee. Keohane
is scheduled to appear on May 6 at a luncheon held by the Duke Club
of Charleston, whose president is Sandi Feaster B.S.E. '94, and
will be honored that evening by the Duke Club of Hilton Head. Torrey
Glass '74 is the club's president. London looms for the president
on May 30.
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