Learning English from News
Learning English from News
Resource: May 29, 2014 http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2014/05/snapshots-of-a-sun-splashed-day/
By Corydon Ireland, Christina Pazzanese, Alvin Powell, Colleen Walsh, Harvard Staff Writers
By Corydon Ireland, Christina Pazzanese, Alvin Powell, Colleen Walsh, Harvard Staff Writers
Begone cold. Begone rain. This was Harvard’s
Commencement Day, where the annual outdoor ceremony depends on……… (cooperation from the heavens
to run pleasantly, smoothly, effortlessly).
The 363rd Commencement Day got………( that assist, and then some). The unusually sunny and warm
conditions were……….( pitch perfect for the vast Harvard Yard
celebration, with dapples of light piercing the verdant tree canopy of
Tercentenary Theatre).
Soon-to-be graduates beamed with bittersweet joy as they passed into the Yard, the joy that comes with
reaching a goal hard-won, but also with knowing that the achievement
means something deeply meaningful will be left behind.
In
the arriving throng, mothers, fathers, sisters, and brothers mastered the art
of walking sideways, shouldering
through the packed crowds, polite but determined to reach their seats
because Commencement is a
triumph for families too.
As
the echoes faded from the high sheriff’s thrice-tapped staff and his loud, top-hatted declaration that
the “meeting will be in ordeeeeer!” the crowd was asked to stand for the national anthem and
first gasped, then cheered when the singer was announced: Aretha Franklin, the “queen of
soul,” on hand to receive an
honorary degree.
The
morning held Aretha
and more: dignitaries in
black robes and colorful hoods, replete with pomp and tradition as only a centuries-old
institution can muster. There was held a former president and a former
mayor, and the august treasure of some of society’s most accomplished individuals.
But
the morning was most pointed
at the future, as a
new generation of leaders, artists, teachers, scientists, designers,
chaplains, doctors and many others received their degrees and prepared to make their
marks in the wide world. The story of Harvard’s Commencement Day is woven from the treads
of hundreds of individual stories, a sampling of which follow.
— Alvin Powell
Warm
welcome for former president
Just before
Commencement began,
a crowd gathered on the
grass just east of Harvard and Massachusetts halls to watch this
year’s honorary degree recipients line up for the traditional procession. They were
difficult to see from the back. With images of glamour dancing and no idea who
the honorands were, one young woman asked another: “Who’s that chick everyone
is taking pictures of?”
Well, the cameras were flashing and graduates in robes were leaning back smiling for selfies with an
honored guest, but it was no chick. It was George H.W. Bush, 41st
president of the United States, smiling up from his wheelchair. He looked much like his old self, an impression enhanced by
his now-signature colorful socks, visible between his hiked-up pants and brown
loafers. (For the ceremony, he wore zigzag stripes in a rainbow of hues.)
“My only disappointment,” said Richard Griffin ’51, watching the
hubbub around Bush, “was that he didn’t arrive by parachute. That would have been
something.”
— Corydon
Ireland
Back-row
seat, front-row day
Sitting as far from the stage
as you could get in the
last row, tucked on a muddy patch of grass wedged between Widener
Library and Boylston Hall, it was hard to see the massive video screens stationed around Tercentenary
Theatre. But Debra Mendoza and her mom, Anita Hernandez, of East
Chicago, Ind., didn’t mind. While they didn’t have an ideal vantage point to
watch Mendoza’s son Manny graduate
from Harvard College, they were grateful that the weather on this
Commencement morning was sunny and warm, unlike the Class Day celebration. “It
was cold, rainy. I’ll take this any day,” Mendoza said. The women were most
eager to see Manny get his diploma later at Leverett House. Manny Mendoza, 22,
won’t have much time to celebrate, however. Next week, he heads to Oklahoma as a
chemistry instructor for two years as part of Teach for America.
—
Christina Pazzanese
Say cheese
for the smartphones
Smartphones
were the item du jour during the first official ceremony on Commencement morning,
a service at Memorial Church that included songs and a brief sermon. Seniors
texted family and friends to see if they had secured seats in Tercentenary Theatre, and snapped photos of their
classmates in their caps and gowns. And even with classes long over, one
Kirkland House resident took notes.
“I wrote it down,” said social studies concentrator Jasmine Omeke,
who used her smartphone to
capture the line “for no vision and we will perish” from Pusey Minister Jonathan
Walton’s address. “It’s very humbling to hear that at the end of these four years,” added
Omeke. “We just have to have a goal in mind, and we can reach it and achieve
it.”
Walton used his own phone for perhaps the most important purpose
of all: a selfie. “Let me
begin by getting the most important thing taken care of: Everybody say
cheese,” he said, proceeding to raise his arm for a shot of himself with the
seniors jammed into the pews behind him.
On a more serious note, Walton urged his young audience to use
their educations to help combat rising inequality and unequal access, saying,
“Our planet cannot afford another generation of those who place profits over people and who embrace the ‘greed is
good’ ideology over global sustainability. Your class gets this.”
— Colleen
Walsh
And over
there, Turkey’s president
With all the visiting dignitaries and VIPs swirling around Harvard
Yard, including former President George H.W. Bush, former New York City Mayor
Michael Bloomberg, and singer Aretha Franklin, security, police, and the Secret
Service had little to do, and calmly stood in the background. But shortly
before Commencement began, one graduate’s father arrived at Morgan Gate with a grander flourish. A motorcade of state
police motorcycles, black SUVs, vans, and a limousine pulled up, slipping into
the Yard, and out came Turkish President Abdullah Gül, whose son Mehmet Emre
Gül was graduating from the College.
—
Christina Pazzanese
Cute
puppy: 1, Yard procession: 0
As students from Leverett House, the last College graduates
to enter Tercentenary Theatre, made their way up the walkway, a well-meaning interloper
threatened to derail their procession. A cute and spirited golden retriever
puppy, sporting a jaunty scarf bearing the words “Future Leader Dog,” proved
irresistible to a crush of students who hopped out of line to greet and pat the
fuzzy yellow pooch, causing temporary disarray.
—
Christina Pazzanese
Representing
Classes of ’39, ’40
It was late morning when George V. Kaplan ’40, M.B.A.
’47, sat down on a folding
chair in front of Stoughton Hall. Across Harvard Yard and past
University Hall, the crowds thickened toward the stage where Morning Exercises
were underway. But a chair
was free next to Kaplan, a trim man wearing a narrow-brimmed straw hat.
“The Yard hasn’t changed,” he said, looking back
on his own time there, starting 78 years ago. “That’s one of the few things.”
When Kaplan graduated with a degree in political science in 1940, for one
thing, there were no women in Harvard classrooms. (That would change in 1943.) “They didn’t
think of it,” he said.
By 1941, Kaplan had been drafted into the U.S. Army, where he
spent the next 39 months as
an enlisted man, much
of it in combat in the Pacific theater. After the attack on Pearl
Harbor, he was aboard a troopship heading through the Panama Canal. The first
stop was Australia, where Kaplan said all the beer and Coca Cola was offloaded
and replaced with ammunition. He and his ship continued on to Guadalcanal, where his unit went into the fighting in support of U.S.
Marines.
After the war, Kaplan enrolled at Harvard Business School. He graduated in 1947 and went into the insurance
business.
Kaplan doffed his straw hat. Inside, the hatband
revealed that it was a souvenir from his 25th Harvard College reunion, “49
years ago!” Kaplan had
spent part of the morning scanning the crowd for old classmates. So far,
there weren’t any. “I read the obituaries every morning,” he said, “to see if
I’m there.”
Representing the oldest College class was Robert
Rothschild ’39. He studied physics as an undergraduate, and during World War II
instructed radar officers and worked on some of the first early-warning systems. Returning
after that to the family
furniture business, he continued to cultivate his passions for mathematics, art,
and saltwater sailing.
The traditional alumni procession formed up near
the John Harvard Statue. Rothschild — sporting a crimson Class of 1939 ball cap, a green
tie, and bright violet socks — was seemingly being interviewed by Ann Grace
’39. She held a
small electronic device up
to him as they talked. “You’re young,” said Rothschild, who is 97.
(Grace is 95.)
The device turned out to
be part of her hearing aid system. “But the best hearing aid I have is my
daughter, Ann,” said Grace, gesturing
to a woman on her left. Someone nearby said, “I thought you were
interviewing Mr. Rothschild for an oral history.” Grace’s daughter spoke up,
saying of her mother: “She is oral history.”
— Corydon
Ireland
Recalling
when tuition was $400 a year
Lillian Sugarman ’37, snow-haired and lively at
98, represented the oldest
Harvard-Radcliffe class during Commencement. “You can’t imagine all the
eras I’ve lived through,” she said, since she was born in 1915. “When I grew
up, there wasn’t even radio, much
less television.”
Sugarman, the daughter of Lithuanian immigrants,
was Lillian Sher at college. She had applied only to Radcliffe, encouraged by a high
school Latin teacher in her native Lynn, Mass. “We had our own campus,”
Sugarman said of those happy undergraduate years, which started in 1933. “We
had our own library.” (She could not recall being in Harvard Yard, which was
then closed to women.)
First, she majored in mathematics (not a good profession
for a woman, someone at the time advised), then music (but Radcliffe’s program
was “not well developed,” said Sugarman), and finally German literature, made
easier by her parents speaking Yiddish at home. “I was glad,” she said. “It
opened up worlds to me.”
Tuition
was $400 a year; a shared room on
Sacramento Street cost $2.50 a week. Breakfast at a drugstore was 15 cents; dinner at a coffee shop
on Shepard Street cost half a dollar. “Fifty cents was a lot of money,” said
Sugarman of those Depression-era college years. “I felt like Mrs. Vanderbilt.”
She still does Zumba four times a week and started using a
wheelchair only last year. As for probably being the oldest graduate on hand at
Commencement, she quipped, “I’m trying for 100. After that I don’t care.”
—
Corydon Ireland
Khurana
bids departing Cabot students adieu
Led by bagpiper Bob Cameron, the procession of 105 graduating seniors
from Cabot House made the long but joyful walk across the grassy quadrangle this afternoon to
collect their diplomas and bid
farewell to a place they’ve called home for the last three years.
Rakesh Khurana, the Marvin Bower Professor of Leadership
Development atHarvard Business School (HBS) and professor of sociology in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS), presided over the intimate celebration as
co-master ofCabot House along with his wife, Stephanie. They were joined onstage by Emily
Stokes-Rees, the Allston Burr resident dean and Benjamin Solomon-Schwartz, one
of the resident House tutors. Although well familiar with Harvard’s many charms, first as
a grad student at Faculty of Arts and Sciences and then later, as member of the
HBS faculty, Khurana said that for year, he never quite grasped what people
meant when they described the College as “the crown jewel of the University.”
“I enjoyed being a graduate student and a [teaching fellow] and a
professor, but it was not until I got a chance to be co-master at Cabot House
that I understood what it was like to love a community,” he told the assembly of students,
parents, friends and loved ones. “We’ve learned so much from you.”
The couple is wrapping
up their fourth year as House Masters, a role they will continue to hold even after Khurana assumes his
new post as dean of Harvard
College July 1.
Invoking Cabot’s rich
history as part of Radcliffe College, where the women who lived there a century ago
demanded suffrage and later full integration into the University, Khurana spoke of honoring the
trust that society has placed in them as Harvard graduates and coming together during this
period of great change on campus and in the world.
“I would contend that there’s never been a time
when the demand for what you have… — your talents, your passions, your sense of optimism and
understanding of each other — has been more needed,” he said. “We need
people who bring strong
values to work, people who are committed to lives of integrity, who care about other people
and want to do things that make the lives of people they don’t even know, or
will know, better.”
Harvard “has its flaws, it has its problems,”
Khurana said, “But I do believe that it is one of the greatest places in the
world because it’s never been simply about bringing people together who are the
best in the world, but rather about bringing people together who want to be the best for the world.”
—
Christina Pazzanese
Intimate
moments in the Houses
The morning Commencement exercises in
Tercentenary Theatre are partially a pageant, complete with top hats, tails,
black robes, Latin speeches, famous
honorands, and conferring of degrees. But the afternoon brings smaller ceremonies at the
Houses, where the newly minted graduates receive their diplomas, and
where tears and hugs flow
freely among family and friends.
In a
corner of the Winthrop House
courtyard, Bo Han, a computer science concentrator, and his mother gazed at his
diploma, sheathed in a crimson folder. “I am very excited,” said Han who will
head to San Francisco shortly for a job at Google. His parents, who made the trip from Hong Kong
for graduation, beamed. Han’s father summed up his feelings about the day, saying
simply: “It’s great.”
Nearby, senior and Marine Corps 2nd Lt. Taylor
Bruce Evans, his year-old son Connor in his arms, reflected on his time in Cambridge as a student and husband
and father of two. “Everything becomes much more deliberate. You have to be
very cognizant of how you spend your time, what your priorities are. You always
have to-do lists,” said Evans, who heads to the Basic School in Quantico, Va.,
next month.
Sociology concentrator Michelle Matsuba’s
family, who had traveled from Hawaii and California, swarmed the new graduate
as she stepped off the stage in the Winthrop House courtyard. The party’s
matriarch, Sue Matsuba, 93, wore a new crimson fleece and hat with Harvard in
white letters across the front. Next to her, the graduate’s mother, Jo-Anne
Prophete Matsuba, struggled
to take it all in. “It’s just amazing. It’s just so phenomenal. I just can’t even get wrapped around it. We’ve always been very
proud of her. She’s always been a smart child, and we knew that she was going to do great things, and
she is.”
“Harvard has given me an opportunity to encounter people and learn
perspectives that I never could have otherwise,” said Jasmine Park, a
history and East Asian studies concentrator who posed for pictures with her proud mother and aunt.
“I am super, super excited
to see what my classmates are going to do and how they are going to
change the world,” said Park, who hopes to work for a nonprofit in
international development and then head to graduate school.
—
Colleen Walsh
Courtesy
of Chicago, a refurbished gate
What was likely the last official Commencement event in Harvard
Yard late this afternoon
had some swing to it, not like Aretha Franklin’s singing in the morning, but
the kind of swing you might find, say, at Johnston Gate.
Harvard’s main portal, on the west side of the
Yard facing Massachusetts Avenue, will be 125 years old in December. Its
filigreed wrought iron gates were built to accommodate the width of a carriage.
A crowd of donors gathered at
the gate to celebrate the spot’s recent facelift, including two new trees, soil, mulch, and
groundcover (liriope) that
will soon spread and bloom in season with violet flowers. Landscape
architect Michael Van Valkenburgh provided the design pro bono. He is the Charles Eliot Professor in Practice
of Landscape Architecture at Harvard’s Graduate School of Design.
The $5,000 landscaping
project was funded largely
by the Harvard Club of Chicago and was inspired by 2012-13 Nieman Fellow Blair Kamin, the Chicago Tribune’s Pulitzer Prize-winning architecture
critic. Without Kamin’s acumen and eye, said club spokesman Richard W. Shepro ’75, J.D. ’79, Harvard’s often-used but
little-noticed gates might just be something “which many of us pass by.” (In early 2013,
Kamin led a January Arts Intensive on the gates and edited an e-book about them.)
It was Samuel Johnston, Class of 1855, who
bequeathed $10,000 to build Harvard’s first formal gate. His idea not only
inspired 25 other gates, said Kamin, “but changed the course of Harvard
architecture for the next century” by returning the aesthetically eclectic Yard to the classical Georgian
style once established by Harvard and Massachusetts halls.
Surveying the donors and
friends, Philip W. Lovejoy, the Harvard Alumni Association’s new executive
director, quipped, “This is proof it takes a village to take care of a gate.”
—
Corydon Ireland
Resource: May 29, 2014 http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2014/05/snapshots-of-a-sun-splashed-day/
By Corydon Ireland, Christina Pazzanese, Alvin Powell, Colleen Walsh, Harvard Staff Writers
By Corydon Ireland, Christina Pazzanese, Alvin Powell, Colleen Walsh, Harvard Staff Writers
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