Posted on 12/03/2003 5:15:10 AM PST by thesummerwind
NEW HAVEN Howard Dean came to Yale a year older than most of his colleagues, a little more worldly, better traveled and just generally ahead of the curve.
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With the turbulent 60s as a backdrop, what his friends remember most are the good times and Dean was at the center of that a fun guy, quick to organize a mixer and hang out for a card game.
"He was just somebody, and it remains true, that people liked to be around. You sort of feel good about yourself around Howard. I think it has something to do with his unpretentiousness," said David Berg of New Haven, his good friend from Yales Pierson College.
Dean was at Yale from 1967 to 1971, as the war escalated in Vietnam, the civil rights movement advanced, the National Guard patrolled New Haven on May Day and the first women came to the Ivy League campus.
"He was seldom, if ever, a loner. He was always the guy who was getting a group of people together, and he was very inclusive," said Bill Kerns, who is now a family physician in Virginia.
Dean was also the guy who invited you back to his room to finish off the keg that was left over from those socials he helped organize, said good friend Richard Willing, a national correspondent for USA Today.
Classmates, contacted across the country, remember his stamina and the intensity he brought to those late night bull sessions on Old Campus during freshman year and later at Pierson.
"Howard had a huge amount of energy and you would be coming back from lab, ticked off at the world, and Howard would go by singing and buzzed and you couldnt help but laugh," said Kerns.
His intramural gridiron feats Dean was an offensive lineman also came to mind, mainly because he was game enough to take on much bigger players.
"I was impressed that he dove in there and did it because you take a beating playing football like that," said Jeffrey Knight, 53, a marketing consultant in California.
There were oblique references to some "outrageous" things happening in the freshmen dorm, but no one was elaborating.
"He did some interesting things as a freshman Im not going to tell you about, but I mean, hell, didnt we all?" Kerns said.
Peter Brooks, 63, sterling professor of comparative literature and French and former master of Pierson, found Dean a "delightful person. Though he was very much of a bon vivant, he also had a serious side which came out a few years later" when he bailed out as a stockbroker and went to medical school.
Dean, the former governor of Vermont and a retired doctor, has surged ahead as the biggest fund-raiser in his grass-roots campaign for the Democratic nomination for president.
The election is to a large extent a Yale affair, with Dean slugging it out with Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts, class of 66 and Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman of Connecticut, who graduated in 1964 from Yale College and from the law school in 1967.
Holding up the opposition is President George W. Bush, class of 1968, and while he was a senior when Dean was a freshman, its unclear if their paths ever crossed.
Past generations of the families, however, traveled in the same circles. Bushs grandmother served as a bridesmaid to Deans grandmother.
As for politics, there were no indications the guy from the upper East Side in New York was headed for a career in government.
"He was political, but he certainly wasnt thinking about being a political office holder, let alone a president," said roommate Ralph Dawson, 54, a lawyer with Fulbright and Jaworski in New York.
While the Oval Office wasnt on his radar screen, Brooks, as the Pierson master, said Dean always had leadership qualities.
"He was a very, and Im not going to say charismatic, because he wasnt that, but a very powerful personality," Brooks said. "He had a great deal of curiosity about the world."
On some of the bigger social issues of the day, Dean, like his friends, was anti-war, but not in the vanguard of the movement.
"Id say that was characteristic of most of the students," said Knight.
"Although he certainly had his political opinions," remembered Larry Horn, who runs a patent business in the Washington, D.C., area.
In that regard, he was a bulldog in defending himself.
"He found amusement in people who pontificated and didnt have much patience with that sort of thing," said Knight.
"It was certainly interesting to see him in the middle of a heated discussion. That was a very cool thing," said Kerns.
And the verbal jousting went beyond politics.
"I can remember us spending three or four hours one night, totally destroying a bridge game we were part of because we were arguing about some sort of moral relativism," said Berg, a clinical professor of psychiatry at the Yale Medical School, who has remained close to Dean.
One of the other things that made Dean stand out was his request freshmen year to room with African Americans.
Dawson was one of those roommates.
"That was not something I knew at the time," Dawson said. "I think that its good that he did that. I learned a lot from him, and I think he might have learned a thing or two from me." He said Dean was never a "patronizer. If you happen to be a person of color, you dont feel that he is dealing with you in any special kid gloves kind of way," Dawson said.
"Race continues to be an issue in America that has not been resolved and the only way that one can contribute to its resolution is to be sensitive to people of different points of views and races and thats something that Howard always had," said Dawson, who is helping Deans campaign when he can.
Willing said Dean "was aware that there was a world beyond the (Phelps) gate," while Berg remembers him talking to the gardeners on campus the same way he would talk to Yale President Kingman Brewster.
"He was able to cut across those distinctions and just talk to folks," Kerns said.
One year older than most freshmen, Dean was comfortable with the academic demands of Yale.
While Willing struggled to prepare his first paper well in advance of the due date, Dean pulled his off the night before, while four other roommates smoked and played cards, listening to the stereo in the same small room.
He remembered "Howard typing with one hand and having a fan of about three books all open along his left arm taking the quotes right in the middle of it all, completely non-pulsed."
"He looked like Little Richard up there, you know, playing with one hand," Willing said. "I think we got the same grade." Willing, who talks to his friend about once a month these days, said Dean was a "preppy in spite of himself in a very unself-conscious way."
During their time at Yale, the college had a good football team, although the quarterback in their senior year was shaky.
At one game he overshot a wide open receiver by about 10 yards, and while everyone else just groaned, Willing said Dean stood up and pointed to the guy from atop the bleachers. "Thats inexcusable," he declared.
"It just struck me as such an endearing and extremely blue chip kind of thing to say and indeed, it was inexcusable," Willing said.
"That was Howard in those days."
"And in the naked light I saw ten thousand people, maybe more. People talking without speaking, people hearing without listening." -- Simon and Garfunkel
Maybe one of you has it backwards.
the guy who gets sucker-uppers to follow him around is the one I'd be suspicious of.
That was then, and this is now.
The man has evolved, poorly. ;)
Maybe that old nagging "back injury" he conveniently used to bail out of the military is making Howie irritable, you know? You know what that chronic pain can do to the personality ;)
I hear you, he has a short fuse TODAY. Btw, I wanted Chris Matthews to drill him about the eight months of "skiing" the other night on TV, so Howie's fuse would explode. But Matthews punked out and avoided it. Bummer. That may have been a great TV moment!
Since you say that, maybe you can fill me in here.
I saw him on Leno a while back, and I am having a hard time remembering exactly all that he said. (Btw, he's very thrifty, once way back he wanted to save this old favorite suit he had, so to clean it, he threw it in the washing machine!) But what I got from the appearance was that he actually practiced medicine for a very, very short time. Do you have anyhing on that? That part of his bio is conveniently missing from all the sites I'v gone to to find out.
Btw, did you know that he took a fling at being a stockbroker first, then blew that off quickly and went to medical school.
You're right, he does have all the markings of a spoiled upbringing. But in my own life, some of those very spoiled kids, could be good people too.
If you know anywhere I can learn about his very brief medical practice, I would appreciate it.
Btw again, he started his medical practice in 1982 in Shelburne, and then won election to the Vermont House in 1982 (what he and his wife referred to as "a part time job, more like community sevice"). In 1986 he became Lieutenant Governor, and in 1991 Gov. Snelling died, and voila, Gov. Deano!
But as I said before, if you have more to fill in the holes, that would be appreciated. Somehow, I think he's getting over on America by promulgating the impression that he was a practicing medical doctor for some extended time. I think not!!!
I must ask you. Where did you learn this?
Who may they be - following him around?
LOL! I was thinking along the lines of a youger Bette Midler, or, Paul Simon when he had hair! ;)
By the way, do you think his locks were that long when he went, x-rays under his arm, into the physical examination to squirm out of the military?
I'll bet he begrudgingly trimmed them for that event. What do you think?
Yeh, come to think of it, that was pretty stupid.
"Howard Dean came to Yale a year older than most of his colleagues, a little more worldly, better traveled and just generally ahead of the curve." Maybe he HAD travelled more than most, or not. ;)
Oh well, there are some things in the article that I can relate to, like finishing off that keg early in the morning! ;)
... "He was seldom, if ever, a loner. He was always the guy who was getting a group of people together, and he was very inclusive,"
Answer: Watch what he does, not what he says. His speeches, his body language and his contact with his opponents in debates is especially revealing of what I said. In addition, watch for his general lifestyle over decades--it is of an upwardly climbing person whose principles and policies are in constant flux as demanded by the conditions he faces. For example, he has recently sealed all his papers as governor for 10 years!
I don't think he is difficult to understand at all. He is the Sammy Glick of politics and his opponents are aware of that, but don't know how to address it.
Ipso facto. When I read your very analytical artical from such a prestigous publication, I knew you into being intellectual and thoughtful! So I thought I would give you something to tickle your exquisite brain and make you really think about your buddy "How ee'"!
ite, missa est
Answer: Let us see he had four years of college, four years of medical school and three years of residency to practice only a few years. After 11 years of training being a Lt. Gov of Vermont (all 600 thousand of them) appealed to him. Not only that he was a man of the people where in Vermont 96% are white, 51% are women and the only noteworthy minority are Gays are proportionately more common in Vermont (second highest proportion for states).
This man took a cynical chance to win the brass ring by claiming the anti-war Democrats (20% of the population). Now he is faced with expanding his base --I note he is now wearing a sport coat with an American Flag in the lapel. Nice try, but he is leading his party over a political cliff to some short-term state of oblivion. Couldn't happen to a nicer guy and party!
You might like this from Ann Coulter about Doctor Howie Dean;
Howard Dean talks about his brother Charlie's murder at the hands of North Vietnamese communists. Bizarrely, after working on the failed George McGovern campaign, Charlie Dean went to Indochina in 1974 to witness the ravages of the war he had opposed. Not long after he arrived, the apparently ungrateful communists captured and killed him. Hey fellas! I'm on your s-- CLUNK!
Howard Dean wears his brother's battered 1960s belt every day. (By contrast, Ted Kennedy honors the memory of his deceased family members with several belts every day.)
Is that a sentence, TB9?
"artical".......hmmm!
"I knew you into being".......have another drink, TB9.
You're a freeper, so I love you. But spelling ("artical") and sentence structure ("I knew you into being") indicates something about you.
Back to school for you perhaps. ;)
YEP - I'm bored silly! That is why I opened your thread - boredom! Still Bored! FR does not have one interesting or exciting thread at the moment!
Allow me to edit: "I knew you were into being intellectual...."
aut disce aut discede Did I spell that right?
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