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Class Notes
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James Nabrit '52
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Paul Savello '66
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Valerie Smith '75
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Five and Time
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Digging for the Story
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Semper Fidelity
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Semper Fidelity
An overwhelming election victory
By H. Jay Burns

Semper Fidelity How does a lowly first-year law student cruise to the presidency of Michigan Law School

Jay Surdukowski  for president.
Student Senate?

 A little humility, a little humor, a lot of political savvy — tactics familiar to anyone who remembers how Jay Surdukowski '02 ran the Representative Assembly during his Bates days. 

Surdukowski pulled down 59 percent of the Michigan Law student vote in a three-way senate election that saw vitriolic debates over big issues (affirmative action, faculty hiring) and small ones (drinkers' rights). "Fortunately I have stayed above the nastiness," he said prior to the election.

Surdukowski, whose achievement as a 1L senate president is rare, if not unique, was the only candidate to use a campaign tactic familiar at Bates: humorous, pop-culture posters (his posters parodied High Fidelity, Fight Club, and Ferris Bueller's Day Off ). In sort of a Carly Simon, "where-you-should-be-allthe- time" moment, Surdukowski left the U.S. in June for The Hague for his summer job at the International Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia in the United Nations Office of the Prosecutor (the office handling the Slobodan Milosevic war-crimes trial).

He was scheduled to arrive just as the former Yugoslavia leader was to begin his defense. "It's perhaps the most significant trial of a world leader since Nuremberg," Surdukowski says.

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Days of Honor: From a Lewiston pool Hall to Carnegie Science Hall, Bates seniors experience the "crucible" of the honors thesis.
Art in the Balance: Going global. Staying local. Can Mark Bessire, director of the Bates College Museum of Art, do both?
The John Show: A string of choreography successes for John Carrafa '76 puts him on Broadway's center stage.
Me and Jesus: In a dazzling Perry Atrium installation, artist K-Fai Steele '04 asks: "What if Jesus got the girl?"
'Keep in Touch': Commencement 2004 offered a nifty twist on tradition - all four honorary degree recipients offered remarks - but it was a Bates institution, Milton Lindholm '35 who helped color the day "Bates."



Preamble: Don't cry for me, says the editor
Open Forum: Lindholm's honorary degree; remembering the man they knew as "Hank" Stred '53; and a chippy letter about athletics.
Quad Angles: Dance of a Lifetime
Bates Matters: An Unmistakable Lesson
Scene Again: Poetry in motion
Sports Notes: Equipment manager Jim Taylor
Class Notes: Find out what fellow Bates alums are doing
Your Page: Grounded
Vital Stats: First comes love, then comes marriage...
Deaths: The stories of alumni lives
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