"Our human connections-with families and partners and friends-are
the most important connections any of us will ever make," said Xerox CEO
Anne Mulcahy in her address at the 158th commencement ceremony for the College
of Arts, Sciences, and Engineering today. "At the end of your life, you
will never regret not having passed one more test, not getting one more promotion,
not closing one more deal. These are all transitory victories."
Mulcahy's address to the 1,171 graduates and several thousand
of their families and friends also acknowledged the close relationship between
the University and two famed Xerox leaders, the late Joseph C. Wilson and David
Kearns. Both graduated from the University and were former University board
chairmen. In a surprise to the crowd, Mulcahy also announced a $1 million gift
to the James P. Wilmot Cancer Center at the University of Rochester Medical
Center. The audience applauded in appreciation.
"You hate the status quo," said Mulcachy of the University's
efforts, "and are always searching for new initiatives, new breakthroughs
and new discoveries-and always in the service of humanity." At the ceremony,
she received the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws.
Remarks from University President Joel Seligman resonated with
Mulcahy's message when he advised graduates: "Seek harmony in your lives.
I am convinced that the most successful individuals are those with mastery of
a specific field and the talent to balance a life that involves family and friends,
community, and an active and inquisitive mind."
The encouraging and congratulatory tone of the program also
reflected the importance of the awards bestowed. The University's Edward Peck
Curtis Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching was given to Professor
of Chemistry Thomas R. Krugh, who has taught at Rochester for 38 years.
Arthur R. Miller, an alumnus and noted legal scholar, said he
was "deeply touched" to receive an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws.
"When I came here," he told the graduates, "I was a kid from
Brooklyn, Brighton Beach, an ethnic ghetto. I was thrown together with people
from all walks of life." More than 50 years later, after decades as a professor,
author, and television commentator, he said, "My field of vision has been
made much wider by the University of Rochester."
G. Robert Witmer Jr., senior counsel at Nixon Peabody LLP and
longtime University trustee and retiring board chairman, received the Charles
Force Hutchison and Marjorie Smith Hutchison Medal-the highest alumni award
given by the University. "Look outside yourself," he told the graduates.
He encouraged them to reach out to help others, and to remember the value of
supporting their alma mater and the lasting role of universities in society.
Witmer's successor as chairman of the Board of Trustees, Edmund
"Ed" Hajim, welcomed the graduates with warm congratulations as well
as a short "formula" to follow from the famous Notre Dame football
coach Lou Holtz. "Find something to do; find someone to love; find something
to believe in; and find something to look forward to."
From the podium, Bobby Sanborn, who was president of the Senior
Class Council and is headed to South Dakota for Teach for America, focused his
remarks on the times spent outside class, the "dances, dinners . . . and,
of course, lots of parties. When you look at your diploma, think of the moments
and people who shaped who you are today," he said.
As the program neared its end, some graduates let loose with
yellow-and-white beach balls and batted them around as musicians played a Sousa
march. Even a few in the platform party followed the graduates' lead in doing
"the wave."
The number of degrees conferred by the University of Rochester
during commencement ceremonies this weekend and in June for the William E. Simon
Graduate School of Business Administration ceremony totals 2,553 bachelor's,
master's, and doctoral degrees.
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