Hitting the books
Jacquelyn Beauregard Dillman sleeps with her books.
Her husband isn’t far away either, but her books are always within
arm’s reach.
“I can’t live long enough to read all the books I want to read,”
she said. “They’re like babies to me.”
Dillman is involved in the right volunteer business to serve one
of her greatest passions, foremost of which is her co-chairing of the
Distinguished Speakers Lecture Series at Newport Beach Central
Library along with Walt Howald. When she isn’t working on landing a
lecturer or preparing for an upcoming one, she still finds excuses to
show up at the library -- she and a small group of women lead a free
book discussion group at 9:15 a.m. every second Wednesday of the
month.
This year’s series is in midseason, with two speakers down and two
to go, the next being Gen. Anthony Zinni’s “The American Military:
Readiness, War and Peacekeeping” on April 16 and 17.
A veteran of the academic life -- having attended 13 schools in 18 years -- Dillman helped start the Distinguished Speakers Lecture
Series seven years ago, and it’s showing no signs of slowing down.
She spent an afternoon talking about the series’ past, present and
future with Pilot Assistant City Editor Mike Swanson. She had a
canvas bag full of books by her side, or “my security blanket,” as
she called it.
Did it take a while to get the ball rolling when the series
started, or were people really into it right from the get-go?
We started off with quite a bang. In our first year, the big
speaker was George Plimpton -- he was the big headliner, and the next
year we had Andy Rooney. We’ve had some really outstanding speakers
in the sciences as well as the cultural realm, and, of course,
literature and foreign policy. This year, we’re mostly concentrating
on things that will be more applicable in an election year. The
economy was our first lecture, with Lori Wallach, and she talked
about the World Trade Organization. We didn’t have the attendance we
would have liked, because it’s a heavy subject, but people who did
come really liked it, because they’d known nothing about it. This
month we had Bruce Babbitt on the environment, and in April we’ll
have Gen. Anthony Zinni, and he’ll talk on the American military,
war, peacekeeping, and military preparedness, readiness, which
obviously is a crucial topic today. And then the last speaker is
Nancy Soderberg, a former U.N. ambassador, and she’ll talk on the
United Nations. It’s very exciting. It’s exciting to find the topics
and then see who we can get as speakers.
How do you go about selecting the speakers each season?
Generally, I look at getting the speakers from a topic viewpoint
first, and then seeing who I can find that will fit the bill. It
would be, ‘Are they available, can we afford them, and then what is
their real expertise?
How do you decide upon the theme to be used each season?
We discuss it all as a committee and try to keep our finger on the
pulse of what’s going on. The key thing is to be timely and to
engender debate. We try to make the thing lively and turn the library
into an intellectual hub, but really to bring debate among people in
the room. Sometimes we get questions that are so good we can see the
sparks flying in the room, and that’s always fun.
Which speaker over the last seven years has drawn the largest
attendance?
Oh, Tom Brokaw. Then Steven Jay Gould, people really came out for
him. My bonus is that I get to spend time with the speakers because
I’m also their date for the weekend. After the first couple years of
doing the lecture series, at [founding underwriter] Jene Witte’s
suggestion, I approached the high school and asked if they would
volunteer to bring the speaker over to mentor the students, and it
was wonderful because I got all these great people from the library
to Newport Harbor High School. At noon on Saturday, when everybody
could be at the beach, we’ve got kids sitting in the classroom. The
students come for free, I drive them over there for free, the speaker
talks for free and the teachers set it up for free, so it’s win-win
all the way around.
How do you go about convincing some of the higher-profile speakers
like Brokaw and Plimpton to participate?
Well, Brokaw actually came because a person who originally worked
on the committee, Jim Wood, was a personal friend, and also, Brokaw’s
mom lives down here. When I’m trying to get the speakers, the first
thing I do is look at the topic, and then I think about the budget
and what ballpark we can afford. I mean, obviously, I know I can’t
get Margaret Thatcher to come. I can’t afford her, so then I try to
decide who we can afford. Then I try to make personal contact.
Usually they have an agent. Sometimes, they’ll do it outside the
agency -- which they’re really not supposed to do -- but sometimes
they will. They’ll say, ‘Oh well, it’s the library, it’s nonprofit,
why not? If it’s a corporation, it might be different, but why not?’
Do you ever feel intimidated being around some of the finest minds
in their respective fields?
Not at all. You realize that all these people have foibles too,
and there’s nothing to be intimidated by. I certainly don’t feel
intimidated by people of their stature, and there’s really no reason
for anybody to be.
If you have a topic all set for the season, do you ever make an
exception because you have a speaker that serves as too good an
opportunity to miss?
Of course. If somebody drops in our lap, we change the topic,
absolutely. With Mr. Brokaw, we didn’t pick the topic, we picked him.
But I like to try to balance it out, to have a scientific lecture
every year or two. We’ve had some very interesting lectures on
virology and the transmitting of infectious diseases around the world
by various viruses, and it was two years before SARS. And then we’ve
had Sylvia Earle, who was the top-notch oceanographer. Her adventures
in the sea floor were remarkable.
Any ideas on what you’d like to do next year?
I think it’d be great if we had somebody to speak on
Constitutional law. I tried to get Justice Robert Bork for several
years, because I think that, especially now, when we have the
potential for a gay marriage amendment, it’d be really good to really
review the Constitution, look at it, and discuss the process within
it and the various elements that relate to state Constitutions as
well.
Of all the lectures you’ve heard, which have you personally
enjoyed the most?
Oh, that’s tough, because I go to all of them. Friday night’s
often sort of like a rehearsal for the speaker, then by Saturday
afternoon, after they’ve gone to the high school, where they’ve
mentored students, the speaker’s been jazzed up by interacting with
them -- their egos really get stroked when you do that -- and then
they’re fired up for the lecture. But my favorite speaker, oh gosh,
that’s like asking me about my favorite book. Steven Jay Gould was
really very good, on evolution, [former White House advisor] David
Gergen was real good -- he worked the room like a professional. He
went around and shook every hand there. I’ve never seen anybody work
the room better than David Gergen. I would say [Pulitzer
Prize-winning author] David Halberstam was probably my favorite,
though. He was probably my favorite because he actually relaxed and
enjoyed being here. When he left, he said, ‘I had such a good time,’
and I could tell he really meant it. He stayed in the library till
after 11 o’clock on Friday night. A lot of the speakers, you know,
they’re ready to go back to their hotel room, but he just had a
wonderful time and didn’t want it to end ... He was so relaxed,
sincere and interested in everyone.
Speaking of favorite books, care to name some favorites?
I love “Correlli’s Mandolin” by Louis De Bernieres, fiction about
life on the Greek island of Cephallonia during World War II. Also,
anything by Vladimir Nabokov, especially his memoir, “Speak Memory”
-- his words are so beautiful that one wants to read him aloud.
Whenever I read him, I learn new words. I’m a very well-read woman,
but I always learn new words when I read Nabokov.... But I read more
nonfiction than I do fiction.
Have you had any speakers that surprised you from a negative
standpoint, that maybe didn’t work out how you would have liked?
Well, I would have liked to have more people at our first lecture
this year. We suffered from a lack of publicity, I think, for Lori
Wallach this year. Her lecture was really a highly significant one,
and maybe it was dry as dust, I don’t know, but we didn’t get the
turnout I would have liked for that. The people who did come,
however, were stunned by what they learned about global governance
and other important World Trade Organization issues.
What did you do for a living before taking on so many volunteer
duties?
I coordinated clinical research trials using biotherapy. I worked
at UCSD and Scripps Clinic. It was exciting. It was all high-end, on
the cutting edge, experimental clinical therapy. I was one of the few
people in the nursing profession who had any knowledge of immunology,
because I’d worked in a lab at Scripps Clinic while I was in nursing
school. So I went around the country teaching immunology to people
through lecturing. I love immunology. I think it’s one of the most
fascinating sciences in the world, to really understand how your body
protects itself on all these different levels and how the cells
behave.
What’s the most important thing about the series for you?
That it provides real public dialogue, which I believe is missing
from American society today. Our news is canned and in sound bites;
talking heads on TV. I would love to have actual debates, like
Lincoln-Douglas debates, two people with opposing views and let them
create great discussion.
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