If you’re an Undergraduate Council candidate, you are, in all
likelihood, afraid of Steve Y. Lee ’06. As one of the co-moderators of
last week’s debate, he added his own sardonic flourishes to the script.
“It’s kind of cool that I came off as the bad cop,” Lee says. “The only
instruction I had was to be obnoxious and to get answers.”
Haddock, Voith, and Grimeland would hardly recognize the
mild-mannered student who sits nursing the last of his dinner in the
Currier dining hall. Unscripted, Lee remains sarcastic and
sharp-witted, but when talking about his thesis on heroin policy and
methadone research, his just-finished presidential term at the Harvard
Independent, and especially his volunteer work with teens, he sounds,
of all things, earnest. Well, almost: “I have tons of fun at PBHA,” he
says, “You get to meet everyone twice. First [it’s] ‘Hi, I’m Steve Lee’
and then a week later, when they discover that I’m not a fan of a
certain political stance of theirs, it’s ‘Hi, I’m Steve Lee, the
conservative.’ It’s fun, because it has never gone badly for me. Not
counting what people say behind my back.”
If they are talking about him, Lee doesn’t seem to care.
Roommate Saviz Sepah ’06, who has known him since junior high, says
that while he disagrees “vehemently” with Lee’s views, the two enjoy
heated political conversations. “He’s not afraid to speak his mind, for
better or for worse,” Sepah says. But while Lee’s views may not mesh
with those of the typical Phillips Brooks-ite, he is popular with the
do-gooder crowd. “People don’t think of him as someone who would be
great working with kids,” says Techrosette Leng ’07, who worked closely
with Lee at the Summer Urban Program (SUP). “You’d be surprised at how
easy he is to work with.”
Although Lee spent the past summer in the Boston area working
with the program, his room is a testament to his desire to roam. Its
walls are lined with maps of everywhere from Mars to his native
California. He enjoys exploring its highways, armed with his makeshift
GPS—a laptop balanced on the dashboard. He acknowledges that he could
get a car with a built-in system, “but then it wouldn’t be a ’91
Volvo.” This summer, before med school, he wants to drive the entire
length of Interstate 80.
When he’s not on the road, Lee’s diversions include shooting
staples off his balcony, tempting the wrath of the eco-friendly in
winter by heating his bedding with a 1400-watt blow dryer, decorating
with Audrey Hepburn posters (Sepah attributes the obsession to Lee’s
“puritanical perceptions of beauty”), and justifying his
weather-inappropriate clothing (shorts, sometimes accessorized with a
safari hat) to any and all who will listen.
Encountering Lee and his opinions on the page, in a debate, or
in one of his provocative comments is not the same as knowing him,
friends attest. In daily life, and in nightlife, he is somewhat more
subdued. “He doesn’t come out to a lot of parties,” observes Leng, who
recalls that Lee arrived at a party called Skankfest wearing shorts, a
button-down, and a tie. “He prefers to just sit back in his room and
sip whiskey, alone.”