An email from Joe Wishcamper '64, event organizer

Reminder to register for the Yale ’64 Zoom
on Re-evaluating Civil Rights

Thursday, December 1, 4:00pm – 5:30pm

Click here to register

November 18, 2022

Classmates and friends:

There is still time to sign up for the Zoom event on Thursday, Decermber 1, at 4:00pm. The topic is “Re-evaluating Civil Rights in Contemporary America” So far, almost 90 classmates and family members have registered, but there is still time to sign up if you haven’t already. A description of the event is in the postscript to this email. You can register by clicking on the following link:

Register by clicking here.

You can share the registration link with anyone you know such as a relative or friend that might have an interest. Feel free to forward this invitation and registration link. Registrants will be sent a reminder with the Zoom link on the morning of the event.

We look forward to a timely and interesting discussion.

Best wishes,


Joe Wishcamper


Postscript: Here's a description of the event, copied from the October 23 email that you received.

We have organized a Class of 1964 Zoom meeting to discuss evolving attitudes towards civil rights. The background is a pending case before the U.S. Supreme Court where lawyers representing Harvard and the anti-affirmative-action group Students for Fair Admissions will argue on October 31 in a case that could bar the consideration of race in college admissions.

Using that pending Supreme Court case as a marker, we will hear from classmates Jim Duderstadt '64, former president of the University of Michigan, Joe Lieberman '64, former U.S. Senator, and Joe Rich '64, civil rights lawyer.

They will be joined by civil rights lawyer John Brittain and Rutgers University President and former Yale College dean Jonathan Holloway.

Discussion topics will include:

  • What would be the impact of a decision overturning affirmative rights on college campuses?  
  • What else has happened on college campuses and elsewhere to undercut the belief that the experience of Black Americans requires special treatment under the law, whether for access to education, voting, housing, or employment?

The discussion will be moderated by Howard Gillette '64, author of Class Divide: Yale ’64 and the Conflicted Legacy of the Sixties. Howard will also facilitate Q&A

You can register by clicking on the following link:

Register by clicking here.

Classmates may share the registration link with anyone you know such as relatives or friends who might have an interest. Feel free to forward this invitation and its registration link. Registrants will be sent a reminder with the Zoom link on the morning of the event.