The Harvard Crimson - Volume CL, No. 1

Page 7

NEWS

THE HARVARD CRIMSON JANUARY 27, 2023

YON G. LEE coached martial arts at Harvard for more than three decades, eventually becoming the University’s chief instructor of kung fu and tai chi. A beloved affiliate of Adams House, Lee died on Jan. 6 at the age of 74.

Yon Lee, 1948–2023

CRIMSON STAFF WRITER

­W

hen Mansfield, Massachusetts-based martial artist Deb A. Zion woke up one morning after a long and difficult night of kung fu, she said she found herself unable to move her arms. Feeling the soreness from her training and the toll of years of practicing martial arts on her body, Zion was unsure how much longer she would be able to meet kung fu’s physical demands. Searching for wisdom, she looked to her close friend Yon G. Lee for advice. Zion asked Lee, a master of kung fu and tai chi, when she would know that she was too old for the martial art. But Lee surprised Zion with reassurance, telling her that she would never be too old and advising her to adapt kung fu to herself. “That was a great piece of advice because I was at that point ready to step away from the arts because I’m like, ‘I’m too old. This is for young people. This is crazy for me to try to do this,’” Zion said. “But I adapted.” Lee first coached kung fu at Harvard in 1986, and he eventually became the University’s chief instructor of kung fu and tai chi. In all, he spent more than three decades at Harvard. Lee was also a beloved affiliate in Adams House, which he joined in 1997. Lee died from Parkinson’s disease on Jan. 6 at the age of 74. Former Adams House Faculty Deans Judith S. Palfrey ’67 and John G. “Sean” Palfrey ’67 described Lee as a generous and loving person who was always interested in the lives of his many friends in Adams House and beyond. “He did bring life to anything you did with him,” Sean Palfrey said.

Kim Kardashian Guest Lectures at HBS

OBITUARY

BY JOHN N. PEÑA

BY SAGE S. LATTMAN CRIMSON STAFF WRITER

Yon G. Lee, an Adams House affiliate who taught kung fu and tai chi classes at Harvard, died on Jan. 6. KRYSTAL K. PHU— CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER

‘One Short of a Great One’

Zion recalled making a “big mistake” the first time she trained in kung fu with Lee, whose small frame she described as “98 pounds soaking wet.” “I was trying to be gentle because I see this little guy,” she said. “Next thing I know, I am tied up in a knot and I didn’t even know what got me.” Lee was a master of kung fu and tai chi — a meditative form of kung fu that focuses on the proper flow of one’s energy, or chi, throughout their body, Zion said. Timothy J. LaVallee, a martial artist and longtime friend of Lee, remembered Lee as an exceptional teacher of tai chi who could explain its complex nature in ways that made sense to his students. “On the one hand, you’re learning how to defend yourself and you’re learning how to use your body as a weapon. But on the other hand, you’re also learning how to fix stuff,” he said. “And so he was constantly using math and physics as a way of trying to explain and understand both the martial art aspect of it and the healing aspect.” Andrew J. Green ’99 said he began taking Lee’s classes as refuge from the stress of life as a college student. He said the classes provided balance “intellectually, and emotionally, and interpersonally.” “It gives one a centering, where you can be in the middle of whatever chaos is going on around you and it’s okay,” he said. Former Adams resident Eboni C. White ’17 recalled the way that Lee would serendipitously teach others around him new skills. White, who had then just begun learning how to throw knives, recalled Lee approaching her to teach her a new technique after she had finished a practice. “He showed me these videos of tai chi masters throwing chopsticks through cement,” she said. “And so, long story short, he ended up teaching me how to throw my knives in a way that it looked like an accident.” “That’s part of the reason why I think he was so endearing,” she added. “He’s not gonna be like, ‘Oh, that’s dangerous.’ It’s more just like, ‘If you’re gonna do it, do

Lee, front, planned a Lunar New Year celebration in Adams House dining hall with a group of lion dancers from Boston’s Chinatown. COURTESY OF SEAN PALFREY

Lee demonstrates his form in Adams House’s Randolph Courtyard. COURTESY OF SEAN PALFREY

Lee, right, launched an annual exchange program between Harvard students and the Shaolin Temple in Dengfeng, China. COURTESY OF SEAN PALFREY

it right.’” Zion, who said Lee is part of her “kung fu family,” will remember Lee as a “great martial artist.” “The martial arts world is one short of a great one,” she said. ‘Ambassador’

An immigrant from China, Lee was dedicated to fostering cultural exchange between his birthplace and the United States. “He wanted the Chinese culture and the Chinese people to be seen by us in the United States. That was his passion,” said retired Adams House cook Edward B. Childs. Born in Taishan City, China in 1948, Lee moved to Boston when he was 10. He graduated from Brandeis in 1973, where he studied physics and went abroad to the Chinese University of Hong Kong. Lee later received a master’s degree in nuclear physics from Northeastern. Part of Lee’s effort to foster connections between the U.S. and China included setting up a scholarship program to fund an exchange program for students in Harvard and China. The program, led by Lee, provided groups of Harvard students the opportunity to learn about Chinese culture as emissaries in Beijing or Dengfeng.

Sean Palfrey, who made two trips to China, credits Lee’s friendliness for the warm welcome the delegations from Harvards received from their hosts. “He has, obviously, a lot of connections there, both friends and family and artists,” he said. “We were greeted everywhere. There were times that we literally would go into a small town and across the street at the entrance of the town, it said ‘Welcome, Yon Lee and Dr. Sean Palfrey from Harvard.’” Lee also brought students, educators, and artists from China to Adams. On one occasion, he welcomed the abbot of the Shaolin Temple, a renowned monastery recognized as the birthplace of Chan Buddhism and Shaolin kung fu. “He was a guy who made friends extremely easily and saw himself as really this ambassador, not just between Boston and Chinatown, but between this region and China,” Sean Palfrey said. “He would say, ‘coming with a bunch of my friends.’ That might be anywhere between 20 and 100. You never knew who would come,” he added. In Boston, Lee also served as Mayor’s Liaison to the Chinese Community under former mayor Raymond L. Flynn, who credited

Lee with progress in countering gang violence in the city’s Chinatown during the late ’80s and early ’90s. LaVallee said Lee was “always looking for an opportunity to bring folks together from different places.” “He wanted to make sure that the community at the University — the students — had an opportunity to experience this stuff from people from around the world, instead of just himself,” LaVallee said. ‘The Real Deal’

When the Palfreys began their tenure as Adams House faculty deans in 1999, they said they were impressed by the commitment that Lee brought to the house. “We sort of thought there was a building and there were some students, and we had no idea that there actually were these wonderful people who were committed to being part of the community,” Judith Palfrey said. “It was just a charming partnership with this man in every sort of setting,” Sean Palfrey added. Childs said he and the rest of the dining hall staff carried “tremendous” respect for Lee, who regularly invited them to his kung fu classes and house events.

7

Once, Lee trained the Adams dining staff to cook traditional Chinese food for a Lunar New Year celebration in the house, Childs said. “We had traditional foods, all traditional recipes, from scallion pancakes to the gravies, the sauces, how to cut the Chinese broccoli — everything,” Childs said. “The big thing was he trained us, and he did it with passion, and it was obviously excellent,” Childs added. Judith Palfrey said Lee had a “knee-jerk” reaction to help others, citing his help in organizing a vigil for Adams affiliates after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. “By noon that day, there were no candles anywhere in Cambridge and Boston, and Yon got wind of that,” Palfrey said. “He went to every suburban little town and place himself,” she said. “He came back just in time with exactly the right number of candles.” Green, one of Lee’s former kung fu students, called him “the real deal.” “He took each student as they were and helped give them, I think, the inner strength and the outer physical strength to grow and become who they needed to be at Harvard,” Green said. john.pena@thecrimson.com

Students were abuzz last Friday following a guest lecture from Kim Kardashian at Harvard Business School. Kardashian, an entrepreneur and media personality who rose to fame after starring in the reality television show “Keeping Up with the Kardashians,” delivered a lecture to students in an HBS short intensive course “Moving Beyond Direct to Consumer.” Kardashian spoke about her clothing brand SKIMS for the course, which examines companies that sell directly to customers without a traditional retail middleman. After an investor told HBS Professor Leonard A. Schlesinger — who teaches the class — that SKIMS would be “an amazing case” for students to study, he set up a meeting with SKIMS’s co-founder Jens Grede. Schlesinger said the meeting “reaffirmed, quite honestly, my own excitement about the learning opportunities for students.” Part of what interested Schlesinger about SKIMS was its growth and revenue numbers, which he said are “at a pace that are virtually unheard of in the world. Though the company was started just three years ago, Schlesinger said it was recently valued at $3.2 billion. Last year, he added, 140 million users visited SKIMS’s website. For Schlesinger, SKIMS’s meteoric rise gets at the core of his course’s message, which reiterates how businesses are able to acquire customers at a lower cost than their competitors through social media. Palis Pisuttisarun ’24, an undergraduate technology innovation fellow at HBS, was thrilled to see Kardashian — one of his “top three role models” — in person. “The morning of her visit, I was picking out my best look because I knew Kim Kardashian was going to see me, and I had to look my finest,” said Pisuttisarun. Pisuttisarun said he admires Kardashian’s business acumen and persona. “I think people have this notion of Kim being dumb or she doesn’t deserve the success that she has. I think that woman knows what she’s doing,” Pisuttisarun said. “She’s very strategic, and she definitely is an entrepreneur at heart.” Izumi H. Vazquez ’25 waited for 45 minutes in the rain with a pack of HBS students to see the reality television star set foot on campus. “It was a surreal moment,” Vazquez said. “I did not expect to wake up and see Kim Kardashian that day.” Students weren’t the only

She’s very strategic, and she definitely is an entrepreneur at heart. Palis Pisuttisarun ’24 HBS Technology Innovation Fellow

ones thrilled to have Kardashian on campus. In a tweet thanking Schlesinger, Kardashian said her visit was a “#BucketListDream.” After Kardashian’s lecture about SKIMS, the students chatted with Kardashian more freely. “Folks loved her and how she was really kind of approachable,” Pisuttisarun said. “She took a copious number of selfies with the folks in the class.”

sage.lattman@thecrimson.com

THC Read more at THECRIMSON.COM


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

O’Donnell to Oakland

6min
page 17

Harvard Keeps Pace in ECAC

6min
page 16

No. 10 Harvard Enters Key Stretch

6min
page 15

FIFTEEN QUESTIONS 14 FIFTEEN QUESTIONS: GLENDA CARPIO ON HUMOR, HUM 10, AND THE FAILURE OF “SUCCESS” STORIES

4min
pages 14-15

‘The Recruit’ Review: Confusion, Captivation, and Centineo

4min
pages 13-14

As it turns out, the elephant is ultimately used as a distraction for guests when the staff needs to carry out the body of an actress who died during the party. “Babylon” is clearly not afraid to thrust the audience into the boisterous reality it imagines, and once it brings on the noise, it refuses to quiet down.

2min
page 13

Editors’ Note: To Our Friends

9min
pages 12-13

Café Lights Up the Square

3min
page 11

Charter Commitee Discusses Elections

2min
page 11

Councilors Debate Body Cameras and Regulations

2min
page 11

Let the Tourists be Tourists

4min
page 10

Announcing The Crimson Editorial Board’s Spring 2023 Columnists

7min
pages 9-10

Students Walk Out of Professor Comaroff’s First Class of Semester

3min
page 8

Vigil Held for Mass Shootings Victims

2min
page 8

Yon Lee, 1948–2023

4min
page 7

Claudine Gay: Harvard’s Next President

14min
pages 6-7

HLS Pledges $500k Gift to Royall House and Slave Quarters

4min
page 5

‘A Little Bit Like Being at Home’: Harvard Student Groups Celebrate Lunar New Year

1min
page 5

Family Appeals Dismissal of Wrongful Death Lawsuit

2min
page 5

The Week in Photos

3min
pages 2-3

LAST WEEK 2

2min
page 2

Judge Releases Parts of Sidebar Transcripts

1min
page 1

Over 100 Students Walk Out of Comaroff Class

2min
page 1

Protesters March Into City Hall to Demand Justice for Sayed Faisal

1min
page 1

The Scholar Everyone Sought

0
page 1
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.