Institute Honors MIIS Founder Gaspard Weiss
| by Jason Warburg
As we look forward with excitement for the future, the Institute took a moment recently to remember and honor its past.
Gaspard Weiss, in collaboration with his wife Louise Weiss and cofounders Frank Elton and Sybil Fearnley, the InstiĀtute quickly attracted the attention of early supporters like Remsen Bird, the CountĀess of Kinnoull, Dwight Morrow Jr., and Noel Sullivan. Weiss and his colleagues envisioned a graduate school that would promote international understanding through the study of language and culture. And while the Instituteās name and curricĀulum have evolved over time, its emphasis on language as a critical component of an international professional graduate educaĀtion has never wavered.
Gaspard Weiss also served as the InstiĀtuteās president from 1955 through 1968, the longest time in office of any leader in the schoolās history. And while his name has always been well known to Institute historians, no memorial to his vision and early leadership existed on campus.
On November 19th, Institute adminĀistration and faculty leaders welcomed Gaspardās son Daniel Weiss and seven other members of the Weiss family to a reception in the Samson Student Center Reading Room where President Sunder Ramaswamy unveiled a plaque honoring Gaspard Weiss, which will be installed in the lobby of the Segal Building.
The Segal Building was the first buildĀing acquired by the Institute in 1961, and has housed the office of every leader of the Institute in its history. The image of GasĀpard Weiss on the plaque is modeled on a photo found in the Instituteās archives from the early 1960s. As President Ramaswamy commented at the reception: āItās a very fitting remembrance of the man whose viĀsion and hard work launched us all down this path almost 60 years ago.ā
For More Information
Eva Gudbergsdottir
evag@middlebury.edu
831-647-6606