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Gentian Ascension Scholarship Donor Statement

Art Kaufman at the spring 2015 commencement
Initiated by English alumnus Art Kaufman 鈥76, this scholarship is established to benefit an undergraduate student who has overcome significant academic obstacles and shows talent as a writer. The award amount is $1,000 to be applied to student tuition.

麻豆视频 Art Kaufman

Art Kaufman听鈥76 is a long-time contributor and friend to the English Department. After 33 years working in the investment trenches, Art traded his career for retirement in pursuit of the lifestyle he treasured as a CU English major. To bring it all full circle, he and his wife of 30 years moved to Boulder to be closer to his alma mater. He is currently 鈥渓iving the dream,鈥 reading the classics, writing for personal amusement and perhaps best of all, auditing English and art history classes at his favorite university. Off campus, he鈥檚 enjoying all the outdoor activities a life in Boulder affords. In the future he hopes to mentor late bloomers like himself, kids who hit the snooze button for a few years before waking up.

麻豆视频 the Scholarship

by fund initiator, Art Kaufman

Welcome fellow late-bloomers, slackers, snooze-alarm experts and those of you who took the long way to reach this webpage. Congratulations, you made it this far, and that鈥檚 saying something, am I right?

Yes, 鈥淚鈥檓 a lot like you,鈥 as the saying goes. Took me longer to graduate high school than it took Noah to build the Ark, than the Chinese to build the Big Wall, than it took David Foster Wallace to write Infinite Jest. And college, I don鈥檛 wanna even think about it. But somewhere along the line I got an academic toehold, found a little something inside that bled out onto those yellow legal pads we wrote on, back in the day. And now I鈥檓 here, in give-back mode, because I can and because CU鈥檚 English Department rescued me from a life of indifference. I can think of no worse fate.

Some debts you can never repay in full. In this case I鈥檓 hoping to square it with you folks, in increments. We start at the low end with a $1,000 scholarship.听The award may increase as time goes on, depending on the financial performance of the fund.

Do yourselves a favor: after you get up from your nap, walk the dog, and check the fridge,听apply for this scholarship. Write something from the heart, something that will piss you off or make you laugh out loud. I鈥檓 here to tell you that you鈥檝e got nothing to lose.

Peace,
Art Kaufman

Spring 2015 Commencement Address by Art Kaufman

English alumni commencement addresses are a relatively new thing at CU. The department hopes, of course, that in telling our stories, in this case, my story, you will find some modicum of encouragement, if not inspiration. What the department didn鈥檛 consider is how much my address might discourage them from offering this honor in the future. You鈥檒l let me know after, whether I succeeded, on either count.

I鈥檓 no corporate wig, no dot com coat-tailer, no patent holder and certainly no great American novelist (although I wrote restaurant reviews for the听Denver Business Journal听for a while). I flatter myself when I say I鈥檓 kind of like you, only older, balder, and maybe a little savvier. I鈥檝e audited classes with you for the past three spring terms. I鈥檝e got a sense of how nimble your minds are, how funny you can be. You guys are way, way ahead of where I was, when I was your age.

In 1969, late in my junior year in high school, I had that advisor meeting we鈥檝e all had about our future, as it pertains to higher ed 鈥 what colleges might want us on their campuses, the programs, the majors in which we might thrive. Here鈥檚 how mine went: I sat down across from my advisor, a wheezy oldster with tobacco stained fingers, and watched him thumb through my x-ray thin resume. He pushed back in his chair, removed his glasses, rubbed the bridge of his nose and said 鈥淢r. Kaufman, you鈥檙e the low man on the totem pole. Out of 593 students in your class, you鈥檙e the five-hundred-and-ninety-third.鈥 Dude was enjoying himself. He made some other cracks about attending a different school next year, that I wasn鈥檛 wanted, blah blah blah, but I was out the door before he finished his obsequies. Maybe I didn鈥檛 know that I had broken all my past records for failure, but I knew I wasn鈥檛 doing so great in school. No need to throw dirt on me.

Art speaking at spring 2015 commencement
How did it come to this? I鈥檒l tell you: Each day I rode the bus from West Philly to the El stop, juddered downtown on the train, transferred to the subway, and stared at my feet the entire way to North Philly to attend an all-boys school dedicated to math and science. I hated it. I had zero interest in the subjects, there were no girls, and it took all day to get back and forth. I stopped going, took the truant鈥檚 way out.

What was I doing in the spring of 1969? I wasn鈥檛 going to demonstrations, wasn鈥檛 trying to levitate the Pentagon or planning a Woodstock vacation on Trip Advisor. That came later. No, I had taken an interest in the horses. I developed a fondness for pari-mutuel wagering. To a city kid, the sights and smells of the stables, horses parading in the paddock, the tote-board cipher, sitting in the grandstands with the strangest menagerie of citizens, aliens lifted right out of a Zola novel or a Bob Dylan lyric, was intoxicating. Racetracks are fascinating places. The racing form became my Rosetta Stone. I decoded the charts, studied bloodlines, examined the risk vs. reward and davined over the details.

Yes, I switched schools, repeated eleventh grade, got a toe hold, graduated, found a college that would accept anyone, avoided the draft, took all the electives I could, elevated my GPA to a lofty 2.47 and, unbelievably, was admitted to CU on a work/study scholarship in the fall of 1973 as a second-semester sophomore.

I worked throughout my scholastic career. I drove a fork lift on the east campus and waited tables at the Red Lion. But mostly I punched the clock at Liquor Mart, schlepping pony kegs, stocking shelves, working the register. It was there that I met my future ex-wife.

Let me step back and say a few words about CU, about our English department. Never had I met so many brilliant professors or been so motivated by a teacher鈥檚 insights, humor or exactitude. I took the hardest classes, taught by the most notorious graders. My Semiotics class 鈥 off the charts hard. Murphy鈥檚 Theory of Literary Criticism 鈥 forget about it. Greek Classics with Kopf and my favorite, Russian Lit with Dale Plank. Oh, man. I would鈥檝e walked across the steppes of Russia for that guy. I had some catching up to do. I鈥檇 spent a dissipated youth and now, once challenged, I determined to apply myself. I didn鈥檛 think about where this might take me, what type of career studying Dostoyevsky and Pope and Pynchon would afford me. I just needed to know what made these guys tick. I dug in, read and wrote, wrote and read.

And the Flatirons, everyday, the Flatirons鈥.Whoa.

It鈥檚 a couple years later, I鈥檓 married, still busting rocks at Liquor Mart and volunteering at the September School. I am unfulfilled and semi-poor, and, I鈥檝e got obligations. So one summer day I鈥檓 browsing the classifieds, and I see an ad for a coin and stamp store manager. I collected coins with my dad when I was little. What the heck, I鈥檒l go down to Denver and interview. But first, I bought a听Coin World Magazine听and proceeded to memorize it. I got to the interview, spit out what I could remember, told a few childhood coin collecting tales, and vo铆la! 鈥 I鈥檓 the new manager. This was 1978.

Within six months, this hobby shop job turned into a numismatic investment business. Gold and silver prices were skyrocketing, and folks were in a speculative mood. Check this out 鈥 I was filling empty five gallon paint drums full of gold and silver, coins, scrap, bullion, whatever, and听mailing them听to the main office in Houston, three times a week. It was pretty wild. Six months before, I鈥檓 working at the Mart, right?

This went on for another year until one day I got the 鈥渂rilliant鈥 idea to take this bullion business to a stock brokerage firm. My bosses thought it was stellar, the idea that I would move massive amounts of rare coins and stuff to the clients of Merrill Lynch and Smith Barney. Of course, those folks laughed me right off the premises. But I kept going down the food chain until I found a brokerage firm that said fine, as long as I鈥檓 properly licensed. I got my licenses, sat down in a real office with a real desk for the first time in my life and then, poof. The zillionaire Hunt Brothers were led away in chains, accused of cornering the silver markets. The whole collectible market collapsed onto itself. Prices vaporized. And my wife filed for divorce. This is late 鈥81, early 鈥82.

Art Kaufman speaking in front of student sat spring 2015 commencement
Having stepped in it, yet again, left with a Sony TV and eleven-hundred bucks, I bought an open-return plane ticket and went island hopping through Greece, alone, to sort things out. I chose Greece because of those classics courses I took at CU. Aristophanes, Aeschylus and Homer 鈥 Professor Kopf animated them so incredibly well. I thought I could see Greece through their eyes. I tutored myself in Greek for a few weeks and left in the spring of 鈥82.

Greece is a mystical place, I鈥檒l leave it to you to discover it on your own. While I was in Crete, I met and traveled with a South African couple. One day we were talking about my supposed career, when John looked over at me and said, 鈥淵ou have a stockbroker鈥檚 license; you should use it.鈥 And then he hit me with the best, maybe the only good advice I鈥檇 ever taken at this point in my life. He told me to, 鈥淟et my money do the hard work, the heavy lifting, not me.鈥 Build that kind of business successfully, and you鈥檒l be fine.

Turns out he was right. When my dough ran out, I came back to that office and started calling people. I called a lot of my ex-father-in-law鈥檚 friends. They liked me. I showed up, good markets or bad (there were lots of bad), and started handicapping equites like they were thoroughbreds. That these 鈥減rofessions鈥 can be thought of as analogous isn鈥檛 news. I began to get a sense about things 鈥 a sense honed by听this听education 鈥 and as I did, I began to see the advantages. If I could figure this out, I鈥檇 have time and money. Which I did. I also met the love of my life, got remarried and raised two fine daughters. You might say I鈥檝e lived a nags to riches kind of life. (By 鈥渘ags鈥 I mean horses, not wives and daughters!)

Twenty-five years later I sold my business to a guy not too much different than you. Young guy, CU grad, early thirties, someone I鈥檇 known for a while. I saw myself in him, and so I mentored him for a few years until I thought he was ready to take over. We agreed on a price and shook hands. No contracts, no lawyers, no accountants. Just a handshake.

In that first interview, I asked him what was on his nightstand, what was on his e-reader. A Peter Matthiessen novel and some short stories he was trying to read in Spanish, owing to some time spent in Ecuador, traveling. I didn鈥檛 care about his business background. I wanted to know whether or not a handshake would be good enough someday to seal the deal. Had he told me that he was too busy to read, or that there was no time in his life for books, he wouldn鈥檛 be running the show. Had I majored in accounting or business, I would have asked the wrong questions.听

Look. A time will come when you鈥檒l be asking the questions, not sweating the answers. When my biz matured, I found myself asking the managements of companies in whose shares I might one day recommend what they were all about, what was on their nightstand. I made more decisions that way than I鈥檇 care to count.

So when you鈥檙e in an interview, 鈥 and take as many as you can; it鈥檚 all about the interview for us 鈥 especially for that job to which you really aspire, don鈥檛 be surprised when the interviewer asks you a similar question. And when they do, stick the landing.听Do not say听you鈥檙e too busy to read.

A couple more things: I chafe at the question we鈥檝e all gotten about the value of our liberal arts degree, but more specifically, our degree in English. Instead of defending yourself to folks who don鈥檛 know Dickens from Dickinson, reverse the question: What can鈥檛 I do with an English degree? Ceremonies like these are taking place all over campus. Graduates are restless in the audience wondering what鈥檚 next, just like you. Sure there are those who know, students who鈥檝e been doing laps around the same academic track the past four years. But mostly they鈥檙e like you, except they were reading textbooks, PDFs and online excursus while you were reading those books that are the freaking foundation of our civilization. The Greeks, the Brits, the Poets, the Americans. You鈥檝e been disinterring those tomes which hold humankind鈥檚 mysteries, under the klieg lights of professors who held you to a higher standard. That鈥檚 some tough stuff.

You want symbolism? Ask yourself as a community, right here, in the most soulful, intimate spot on campus, where Shakespeare and Chekov and Ionesco come alive, where your comrades are. In windowless Math 100, decrepit Chem 245, in a rented tent. Seriously鈥.

Auditing classes these last few years, I鈥檝e heard a lot of talk about 鈥渟ustainability.鈥 It鈥檚 definitely trending. Sustainable resource development, sustainable management, sustainable psychology. Hey great, I applaud those students for working towards a better future, no doubt. But hello, you want sustainable? How about Sophocles, Mary Shelley, Marquez and Bellow? This sounds outlandish I know, but we听invented听sustainability as a major.

Art being applauded after his speech
I can鈥檛 leave this stage without sharing an idea and a quote with you. Ralph Ellison said that we share our personal stories with each other to better understand the collective self. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 past is prologue鈥 a wise playwright once wrote. It certainly was for me.

Somni-451, the proto-deity in David Mitchell鈥檚 鈥淐loud Atlas,鈥 speaks these words as the world crumbles around her: 鈥淥ur lives are bound together, past and present. With every crime, every kindness, we give birth to our future.鈥

We, CU English alumni, we are bound together. I need you, just like you will need the English majors of the future. This is what sustains us, this sense of continuum. Shoulder to shoulder, right?

Our careers will never define us. We are much more than our net worth. Infinitely so. Keep a journal and a book nearby to remind yourself when you need to.

A couple of years ago I was asked to sit in on a career-development roundtable and talk to English majors like you about my life in sales as a stockbroker. Gag. When I was through, the only question I fielded was from a student who asked if I was sorry I hadn鈥檛 written the Great American Novel. I don鈥檛 remember my answer. I鈥檓 sure it was BS. Now I want a do-over. Hell yes, I am sorry. But hey, like you, I鈥檓 young. I got a little time, so鈥ho knows?

Congratulations, graduates! This was awesome. Go Buffs!

Audience during commencement speech