The great launch of 2018
Six hundred students. More than 2,000 family, friends and supporters. One momentous day to Commence at ɬ.
By Keely Savoie
Uncertain weather didn’t dampen the spirits of the nearly 600 new graduates of ɬ as they gathered in the College’s Field House to celebrate Commencement 2018.
The students gathered in their academic regalia, each bearing a single stem of lilies in their class color, red. As proud families and friends looked on, the soon-to-be alumnae filed into their seats. Their mortarboards were bedecked in flowers and feathers, many with messages to friends and family.
Some thanked significant people in the graduates’ lives: “Thanks Mom & Dad,” read one. “For Bernice,” said another. Others looked to a bright future: “We have infinite potential,” one declared.
In her Commencement address, House minority leader and lifelong Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi echoed the graduates’ optimism and urged them to tackle the world’s issues fearlessly. But rather than pat aphorisms of presumed success, she offered a piece of practical advice: Identify what matters most to you, she told the assembled graduates. Identify your priorities and make a list of goals.
“I have confidence in the impatience of youth to work very hard to shorten the distance between what is inevitable to us and to you, and inconceivable to others,” said Pelosi who received an honorary Doctor of Laws during the ceremony.
The day’s speeches, biographies and citations are available as well as the full Commencement ceremony video, which can be downloaded.
Looking forward
Barbara M. Baumann ’77, the Board of Trustees chair, kicked off the ceremony by speaking of a chance encounter she had had that morning with an alumna who had returned for her from her native India, where she had become a senator.
Within moments the two had connected and exchanged contact information.
“That’s the next chapter in your ɬ experience,” Baumann said, encouraging the new grads to connect with the more than 37,000 ɬ alumnae.
“Join us beyond the gates of ɬ as we continue to open doors for one another,” she said. “Together, we will accomplish great things.”
Baumann also welcomed Acting President and President-elect Sonya Stephens, who will become the 19th president of ɬ on July 1. Stephens congratulated the graduates and thanked the thousands of gathered friends and family who supported them through their time.
Quoting ɬ founder Mary Lyon, she reminded the graduates that their education was “not for you only, but for the country and the world.”
“My hope is that … you will know great happiness as you progress in your endeavors and that you will continue to be a force for change within the world — this is the charge that comes with your diploma,” said Stephens. “Congratulations!”
Senior class speaker Aiza Amjad Malik ’18 stood to celebrate her classmates, thank the faculty and look into the future. “How do we enter this world?” she asked. “With intentionality and courage.”
Toward global engagement and social justice for all
In addition to Pelosi, ɬ awarded honorary degrees to Sonia Nieto, educator and activist, who received a Doctor of Humane Letters, and Shirley J. Wilcher ’73, a former Clinton administration official and expert on diversity and equity, who received a Doctor of Laws.
Nieto noted that she was the second Puerto Rican woman to receive an honorary degree from ɬ, the first being Felisa Rincón de Gautier, the first female mayor of San Juan, Puerto Rico. The connection doesn’t end there: In April, ɬ hosted a visit by San Juan’s current female mayor, Carmen Yulín Cruz.
Nieto’s advice: become mentors. Push, believe, provoke, support and challenge your peers to do better, to be the best.
“I wish you a consequential life and the courage to carry it forward,” she told them.
Wilcher advised graduates to bring an eye to social justice into their careers.
“Become a dedicated fighter for civil rights,” she said. “It will make you a better doctor, a better lawyer, a better teacher. Make a career of humanity. Commit yourself to the noble struggle for equal rights.”
Pelosi noted that with her honorary degree, she joins the ranks of U.S. representatives Nita Lowey ’59 and Richard O’Neill, a former trustee of the College, in their ɬ connection.
“It is my honor to bring congratulations to the ɬ class of 2018 from the U.S. Congress,” she said.
A history — and future —of fearless changemakers
Pelosi also spoke about her personal hero, Frances Perkins, who was a 1902 graduate of ɬ and became the nation’s first female Cabinet member when Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed her Secretary of Labor. Offered the job, however, Perkins came with her own priorities and ambitions: a list of demands that the president would have to back her on before she accepted the post.
That list went on to improve the lives of working Americans by ending child labor, implementing a 40-hour work week, establishing a minimum wage and rolling out Social Security.
“We are all indebted to Frances Perkins’ ɬ spirit of ‘go forward, attempt great things and accomplish great things,’” said Pelosi. “Frances Perkins was ready. And you must be ready too.”
It was that indomitable spirit that drove Pelosi forward, too, she said, when she was called to run for office. As the mother of five children, Pelosi could not bear the statistic that one in five children in the United States lives in poverty. She outlined her own goals based on her personal priorities: children, health, education, family and safety.
“I made my list. You can make yours,” she said. “Know your power, use it and make a list. You are our future.”
As the newly-minted graduates prepared to go out in the world, they had Pelosi’s words to propel them forward and the strength of those who came before them to give them courage.
“Mary Lyon, Frances Perkins — they gave us our purpose, our power, our list,” Pelosi told the new alumnae. “Like the Laurel chains we carried yesterday, you are now a proud link in the unbreakable chain of ɬ alumnae. Go forward with joy — you can never laugh or dance too much.”