KILPATRICK RULES
By Gail Taylor CWRU, May 1992
Picture St. Patrick’s
Day, 1986. Patricia Baldwin Kilpatrick—five feet eight
inches tall, substantially built, with steel-gray hair and the
gaze of a woman who means business—is seated at the front
of Adelbert Hall’s Toepfer Room as secretary of Case Western
Reserve’s Faculty Senate. She’s wearing a green
a party hat.
Robert N. Baird,
associate professor of economics and then-chair of the senate,
had arranged for hates and Irish beer unbeknownst to Mrs. Kilpatrick,
senate secretary, University marshal, and—since 1987—vice-president.
“She’s
such a good sport,” Prof. Baird says of the University’s
first woman vice-president. “I had talked to her secretaries
and said, ‘You don’t mind if I bring some beer, do
you? Don’t tell Pat.’ She wore her green
hat throughout the entire meeting.”
If the anecdote evokes
a person playing a prank on a sometimes stern mom, Prof. Baird
isn’t the only one who thinks of Mrs. Kilpatrick I those
terms. “She’s the mother of us all and a leprechaun,” says
the theater-arts department’s Kathryn Karipides (GRS ’59,
physical education), and the Knight Professor in the Humanities
and Mrs. Kilpatrick’s oldest friend on campus.
This forceful but
fun-loving leader—who waves her arms and shouts out orders
at commencements, yet whose greatest impact on CWRU arguably has
been as a mediator, advisor, and confidante—will retire this
June. Her official functions, gathered over thirty years
and so diverse that President Agnar Pytte dubs her position the “Kilpatrick
of the University,” will be divided among other offices.
Besides acting as
Faculty Senate secretary, her jobs include staffing visiting committees;
running commencements, convocations, inaugurations, and the annual
University ball; maintaining plaques; overseeing the operation
of Squire Valleevue Farm; and supervising University Archives and
the binding and microfilming of theses. She’s the custodian
of the silverware from Flora Stone Mather College for Women. She
represents CWRU in its athletic conferences.
“When I think
of Case Western Reserve University, I think of her first,” says
Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Stephanie Tubbs Jones (WRC ’71,
LAW ’74), an active alumna who first met her friend the vice-president
when Mrs. Kilpatrick was a dean of student affairs and Mrs. Jones
was a student activist.
Indelibly identified
as Mrs. Kilpatrick is with the University, she has made her mark
on another institution as well. She has somehow had energy
and enthusiasm left over from her work at CWRU to be a leader in
the Episcopal Church, where she has held the highest lay office
in her diocese and serves on the board of the church’s oldest
seminary. “In some ways, when one thinks about the
Diocese of Ohio, one thinks about Pat Kilpatrick,” says her
friend, the Rt. Rev. Arthur B. Williams, who holds the diocese’s
second-highest clergyman’s office, suffragan bishop.
Her church and University
styles are parallel. As with so many at CWRU, Bishop Williams
and the Tr. Rev. James R. Moodey, bishop of the diocese, count
Mrs. Kilpatrick as more than a workplace colleague. “Pat
has been exceptionally helpful to me as a wise listener and counselor
and as a friend,” Bishop Moodey says. |