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VINCENT J. D'ANDREA, 1930-2001
He Helped Students Help Each Other
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| BUILDING BRIDGES: D'Andrea guided countless
students through tough times. |
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Courtesy Brent Lockspeiser
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VINCE D'ANDREA'S daughter Claudia remembers
an afternoon when her father came home saying hed had an interesting
day. A student, apparently on drugs, had come to Stanfords longtime
staff psychiatrist convinced he was stuck to the ceiling. DAndrea
was unfazed. He went up there with him, says Claudia, 88,
and asked about the view.
DAndrea had a gift for seeing things from different perspectives.
From his psychiatric work in the Peace Corps to his founding of the Bridge,
a prototypical peer-counseling center run by Stanford students, he offered
young people gentle support. Vince was incredibly warm and fatherly,
says former student Peter Salovey, 80, MA 80, who wrote the
book Peer Counseling (1983, revised 1997) with him and is now chief
of psychiatry at Yale. He was a wonderful mentor with whom you could
talk about anything.
DAndrea died of lung cancer on June 20 in his Atherton home. He
was 70.
The son of Italian immigrants, he was born and raised in Philadelphia.
He dreamed of becoming a novelist (and later published poetry) but followed
his fathers wishes, earning an MD at Temple University and completing
his psychiatry residency at Stanford. For five years, he served as the
Peace Corps chief psychiatrist, preparing groups of volunteers for
the culture shock they would encounter abroad. He returned to Stanford
in 1967 as a partner in the Palo Alto Medical Clinic, which provided campus
health services at the time.
It suited him perfectly, remembers Shirley DAndrea,
his wife of 43 years. He had all this experience with young people,
and he just loved working with students. In addition to counseling
students, he became an affiliate of the psychology department and a clinical
professor of psychiatry.
In 1971, DAndrea launched the Bridge. At a time when drugs permeated
U.S. campuses and students were not trusting of those over 30,
says Shirley, he encouraged students to help each other. He was
very interested in empowering people, in students building a strong community
among themselves, she recalls. He never told them what to
do.
The drop-in center, operated until recently under DAndreas
continuous guidance, is unusual in that its run on a 24-hour, confidential
basis by a core group of specially trained students who live there, along
with others who come in to cover day shifts. An early model for similar
centers on other campuses, virtually all of which have since been dropped,
the Bridge stands today as the first 24-hour peer-counseling center
in the country and probably the last, says Tai Lockspeiser, 01,
a former peer counselor. DAndrea very clearly made the Bridge
his life at Stanford, she adds. Lockspeiser is compiling a book
of student recollections about the center, in which one contributor comments:
My favorite memories include Vinces chuckle and the smell
of his pipe on his waistcoat when you hugged him.
DAndrea is survived by his wife; two daughters, Daria Gantley and
Claudia; two sons, Stephen and Christopher; five grandchildren; his sister,
Consiglia; and his brother, Joseph.
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