By Donald H. Harrison
SAN DIEGO, Calif.—Professor
Lawrence Baron said today that he is relinquishing the job he has held for
18 years as director of the Jewish studies program at San
Diego State University, while remaining on SDSU's history faculty.
The
scholar said there were personal and professional reasons for his decision,
which will lead to the installation later this year of Professor Risa Levitt-Kohn
as the fifth director of SDSU's Jewish studies program, which has been known as
the Lipinsky Institute for Judaic Studies. Baron's three predecessors,
including now Congressman Bob
Filner (D-San Diego), each served one year in the position before Baron took
it over and gave the program its strong identity in San Diego's Jewish
community.
In an interview, Baron said both he and his wife, Bonnie, have
had some health concerns—his wife's problems in her digestive tract causing
four recent hospitalizations, including two surgeries, and Baron's own
pancreatitis landing him in the hospital one of the weeks when she also was
there. As a result, "I've had to cancel seven community speaking
engagements in the last three months."
Additionally, he said, San Diego State's administration had decided, with the
permission of the Lipinsky family, to drop their name from the title of
Lawrence Baron
the institute in order not to give potential donors the false impression that
the Lipinsky family is totally underwriting the expenses of both the on-campus
Jewish studies program and the department's extensive outreach efforts off
campus.
Henceforth, he said, classes simply will be identified as offerings in the
Jewish Studies Department, while off-campus Jewish-interest lectures and
symposiums will be identified as offerings of an "institute" with a
name still to be finalized, but which will not include any identification with
the Lipinsky family.
Baron said the children of the late philanthropists Bernard
and Dorris Lipinsky
remain committed to San Diego State University where a clock tower, hospitality
room, scholarships for financially disadvantaged students, and an endowed
lectureship in performing arts are named for one or both parents.
However, whereas the endowment donated by Lipinsky over two decades ago once
generated sufficient interest to pay expenses for both on-campus and
off-campus activities, it no longer does so today. The donation was made
when prudent investors commonly could earn between 8 and 9 percent interest on
their money, whereas today earnings below 5 percent are more common, he said.
As the proceeds have been diminishing, the institute's expenses—in salaries
for additional personnel, and for various expenses—have been increasing.
New fundraising efforts, involving new program naming opportunities, are
considered the best way to bridge the gap and to keep building for the future,
he said.
The Lipinsky Institute for Judaic Studies pioneered a visiting Israeli
professorship, which Baron said is a program now being copied by numerous
American universities. Much of the earnings from the Lipinsky family endowment
will be earmarked in support of that program, Baron said. SDSU is
hoping to find a donor who will be willing to combine names with the Lipinsky
family to give that fund a new name.
Because he has been associated for 18 years with the "Lipinsky"
Institute—even to the point that new acquaintances sometimes mistakenly call
him "Professor Lipinsky"— Baron said he believes the new directions
in fundraising can be better sold in the community by someone else. He
said that Prof. Levitt-Kohn, a specialist in biblical studies, is a perfect
choice to succeed him.
"She has done my job before, when I was on sabbatical," he noted.
Additionally, as the curator for the July-December 2007 exhibition of the Dead
Sea Scrolls planned at San Diego's Museum of Natural History, Levitt-Kohn
has made good connections in the community. Furthermore, she has
proven to be a popular speaker on the community lecture circuit, as well
as a participant in speakers programs sponsored by such communal organizations
as the Agency for Jewish Education. When the controversy raged over
Mel Gibson's movie The Passion of the Christ, for example, Levitt-Kohn
teamed with a professor of Christian studies and another historian in panels to
provide context about the times depicted in the movie.
Baron said as the director of the Lipinsky Institute for Judaic Studies, he
maintained a busy schedule of off-campus appearances, including serving as
commentator at Jewish movie nights at various synagogues, lecturing on the
Holocaust, and introducing numerous scholars brought to San Diego under the
auspices of numerous endowed lecture programs.
These lectureships, named in some cases for the benefactors and in other cases
for persons the donors wished to honor, reflect a variety of Jewish-interest
subjects attracting the attention of scholars from throughout the world.
Among these are the annual Galinson-Glickman
Symposium on Contemporary Israeli and Middle Eastern Issues; Robert
Siegel Memorial Lecture, which features a talk about some aspect of modern
Jewish life outside Israel; the Dorsha Wallman Lecture in Modern Torah
Interpretation; the Al and Norma Cooper Lecture in Modern Jewish
Politics; the Dorothy Stuzane Lecture in Women in Judaism; the Maurice
Friedman Lecture in Modern Jewish Thought; the Abraham
and Ida
Nasatir Lecture in American Jewish History, and a Dorris Lipinsky
Lecture on Jewish Performing Arts.
In addition to all that, Baron administers another fund—donated by Dorsha
Wallman in Baron's name—to bring focus on current-day ethical issues.
The fund has helped to underwrite lectures and panels by other scholars on
cloning, genocide reparations, and ethical issues facing presidential
candidates.
The Lipinksy Institute for Judaic Studies and the Jewish
Historical Society of San Diego jointly maintain an archive on local Jewish
history. Baron also serves as president of the Western Jewish Studies
Association, an academic group founded at a conference at San Diego State in
1994. In December of this year, SDSU will help host the national
convention of the Association of Jewish Studies when its members convene at the
Manchester Hyatt Hotel.
During Baron's tenure, Jewish Studies was elevated from a minor
subject with perhaps eight course offerings per semester to a full-fledge major
with 16 offerings per semester on the SDSU campus, and a tele-monitoring program
to allow students to participate remotely in Jewish studies courses offered at
state universities in Chico, Long Beach, Northridge and San Francisco.
Typically, a tenured professor like Baron is supposed to teach three courses per
semester. As director of the Lipinsky Institute, Baron earned "two course
releases"—meaning his Lipinsky Institute activities were counted as the
equivalent of teaching two courses. So he taught only one course per
semester. By taking over the position of adviser to the graduate
students in SDSU's history department, Baron will earn back one of those
releases, meaning he will be expected to teach two classes per semester
hereafter.
Baron said he really is looking forward to instructing students
in a variety of history topics, not just in Jewish topics, despite successes in
that field. Baron's recent book on Holocaust movies, Projecting the Holocaust
into the Present, won him an invitation to lecture later this month at
the Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum and Memorial in Jerusalem. Before he came
to San Diego State, he taught a course in modern German history.
"Think of it," he said, "the last time I taught that course,
there were two Germanys."
Not only that, but children born the year Baron took over as director of the
Lipinsky Institute for Judaic Studies are now preparing for their high school
graduations in a few weeks.
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