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Moms and Grads
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| May’s day:
New graduates |
| Photo:
Chris Hildreth |
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Former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright urged Duke graduates to be "doers ... able to chart
your own course and unafraid, when necessary, to set sail against
the strongest wind."
"Today is a day of joy and for approaching the future with
optimism, yet in our high spirits we cannot but be conscious of
shadows," said Albright, who in 1997 became the United States'
first female secretary of state. "These include the shock
of terror; the sorrow of innocent lives lost to war, disease, and
other plagues; the insecurity and injustice resulting from the
gap between rich and poor around the world; and the uncertainty
caused by confusion, terrible mistakes, and ongoing violence in
Iraq. There is a temptation to withdraw mentally from such perils,
as if focusing our thoughts elsewhere might cause them to vanish.
But avoidance is no way to live life."
Albright made her remarks before a crowd of some 15,000 people
who had gathered on May 9, a warm, sunny Mother's Day, in Wallace
Wade Stadium to see more than 3,700 undergraduate, graduate, and
professional degrees awarded.
Albright was one of four who received honorary degrees. In the
citation, President Nannerl O. Keohane called her "a shaper
of the post-Cold War world who understood that effective diplomacy
flowed from ethical understanding." The other honorary-degree
recipients were South African jurist and human-rights activist
Richard J. Goldstone ("As a judge in South Africa in the waning
years of apartheid, you led an inquiry into violence that helped
that country take its first steps toward truth and healing");
mathematician and former Duke provost Phillip A. Griffiths, who
recently retired as director of the Institute for Advanced Study
in Princeton, New Jersey ("Through energetic efforts at faculty
recruiting, you created intellectual excitement across the academic
spectrum. You always saw a strong faculty as the core of a great
university"); and genetics researcher Oliver Smithies of the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill ("During your
career, you have pioneered techniques advancing the study of ailments
as diverse as jet lag, inflammation, cystic fibrosis, sickle cell
anemia, high blood pressure, and heart disease").
Student speaker Paul William Downs told graduates that the emotions
they feel upon leaving Duke resemble those they felt when they
entered the university. "We are once again fearful and eager," he
said in a speech that ranged from dentistry and caffeine to difficult
roommates and the legacy of a Duke education. "In the end,
the most beautiful part of this school is all of you, each and
every one," said Downs, a graduating senior from Sussex, New
Jersey, elected by his classmates to give the address. "Your
passion is the only thing more stunning than this campus."
In her address, Albright urged graduates "to have faith, because
perhaps someday one of you will write a poem that elevates the
mind; another a song that engenders love; and a third a book shedding
new light upon the mysteries of life.... Perhaps one of you will
devise a new foreign-policy doctrine that spells out the right
role for America in the world--somewhere between isolationism that
shuns global problems and neo-imperialism that leaves us grappling
with the hardest problems virtually alone," Albright said,
to applause. "Or, perhaps, one of you will become president
of the United States and thereby make her alma mater very, very
proud," she said, to more applause.
During her commencement address, Albright congratulated Keohane,
who is retiring after eleven years as the university's leader. "This
is, as you all know, Nan Keohane's final commencement as president
of Duke," Albright said. "Her record as an educator and
innovator will set the standard for those who follow. She has prepared
this university for the new century by strengthening community
ties, opening the door to international education, improving the
status of women, and further burnishing Duke's reputation for excellence
in all fields."
For Albright's speech:www.dukenews.duke.edu/news/Albright_0504.html
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