Students making worldly changes
JOSEPH N. BELL
I spent the weekend with 58 college students. Only 14 were in person.
The rest I met through their writings. Although, as in any segment
this large, there were peaks and valleys, but the total impact was to
marvel at the depth, determination and passion of our young people --
at least in this group -- to address social, educational and public
service problems with remarkable creative energy.
All this came about because I was invited several months ago to
fill a vacancy on the board of trustees of the Donald A. Strauss
Scholarship Foundation. It was a very special opportunity to me
because Don Strauss became my first, longest and best friend after I
moved my family to Newport Beach in 1959. He died in 1995 after a
lifetime of public service to this community as a longtime member --
just for starters -- of the Newport-Mesa school board and the Newport
Beach City Council, including a term as mayor.
There is a local myth that Newport Beach has never had a Democrat
mayor. Don Strauss was both a Democrat and a mayor. He was also an
executive at Beckman Instruments in Fullerton for more than 30 years,
the father of two sons and a daughter, and the stronger half of a
doubles team with me in local tennis tournaments in which we
inevitably expired early but with our pride intact.
Don Strauss began early on to put his wealth where his convictions
were by funding summer internships and college scholarships for needy
students -- seven of them still ongoing -- always with the strong
support and input of his wife, Dorothy, whose passion and spirited
opinions complemented exactly her husband’s pragmatism and quiet
assurance. The culmination of this team effort was the scholarship
founded in the family name by Dorothy two years after her husband
died -- and only months before her own death. It was designed to
carry on the vision and ideals Don Strauss expressed in his lifetime
of public service. And that’s what I saw reflected last weekend.
The Strauss scholarships -- usually 15 of them annually, each for
$10,000 -- are unique because they are structured around proposals
the applicants must present to the board of trustees that reflect an
innovative approach to a current public issue. The foundation is
looking for students with leadership potential and a passion for
public service who have demonstrated an ability to carry out their
proposals.
Last weekend was devoted to two such groups. On Friday, last
year’s Strauss-scholarship recipients reported how well they achieved
the goals they had set out a year earlier. And on Saturday, trustees
convened to choose this year’s winners -- selected from 36 proposals
submitted by the 15 California colleges and universities currently
participating in the Strauss program. I was an interested observer on
Friday and an active participant on Saturday. In the process, I got
acquainted with some impressive young people.
Among last year’s recipients, we heard from a UC Santa Cruz
student who brought together a symposium of farm workers, owners,
union and governmental representatives and academics to explore
policy changes and statewide initiatives that could lead to social
and environmental justice for the farm worker. A UC Berkeley student
created a street outreach project in which student volunteers
distribute food, hygiene supplies and service referrals to the
homeless -- a program he hopes to take to New York City next year
when he enrolls in Columbia University. A Stanford student mounted an
effort to educate South Asian immigrants -- especially in the urban
areas of New York -- about their special susceptibility to heart
disease and how to prevent it.
Closer to home, two UC Irvine students offered programs: one to
provide SAT counseling to high school students who couldn’t afford
private mentoring, the other -- called “Technology Tutors” -- to
teach underprivileged high school students how to assemble discarded
parts into functional computers and use them to help achieve a
college education or a job in a technology-related field.
On Saturday, we faced great piles of applications to select the
group we would be hearing a year hence. We’d done our homework, made
our choices, and were prepared to defend them as we discussed each
group of applicants. There are no bad decisions. Only -- hopefully --
better ones. Somewhere late in the process, I wrote in my notes: “So
here we are. Trying to choose between feeding the kids in a Mexican
orphanage and giving them hope for a life or trying to save the world
from AIDS. The small focused vision or the grandiose -- that just
might work?”
Some examples from the new batch of applicants include a Loyola
Marymount student offering a program to provide peer mentoring,
career-development support and community outreach that would help
kids released from juvenile detention centers to avoid going down the
wrong path.
A Berkeley student would create a program for educating diabetics,
a staggering problem in and around Bethlehem, where he proposes
forming a series of micro-clinics composed of small groups of
diabetics who could share the prohibitive cost of a glucose
monitoring device and serve as a model for the rest of the world. A
UC Davis student has a plan in which UC campus student associations
would work with the secretary of state and local elections offices to
establish an online voter registration process in which long-term
voter registration of college students would hopefully greatly
increase the present abysmal percentage of student voters.
These examples only skim the surface of the prospects we discussed
Saturday and are offered as typical. It is personally sobering to
read them since they leave me trying rather desperately to recall any
specific selfless example -- beyond military service -- of civic or
social virtue I can point to. Maybe serving as a Strauss trustee will
enhance that dismal record at least slightly.
One of our current candidates caught the spirit of the whole
weekend when he ended his proposal by writing: “I truly believe that
even one person, with one voice, can make all the difference in the
world.”
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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