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Saturday, November 16, 2024

Commencement 2020 celebrates space, purpose and possibility

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https://news.tulane.edu/news/commencement-2020-explores-space-purpose-and-possibilityAgainst the backdrop of a beautiful spring sunset over Yulman  Stadium, almost 1,200 members of the Class of 2020 gathered for their  “official” Tulane Commencement ceremony, held Friday night.

President Michael Fitts presided over the ceremony, which featured  Tulane’s traditions of jazz, provided by Dr. Michael White and his  Original Liberty Jazz Band featuring Yolanda Windsay, and gonfalons in  procession.

President Fitts welcomed the audience of more than 5,000 by recalling  the path — marked by crisis and uncertainty — that brought the Class of  2020 to this day.

“The world needs people who have stared down a crisis ... The world needs leaders based in compassion and possibility.”

President Michael Fitts

“You’ve demonstrated resilience, flexibility, persistence, and — this  is key — a good sense of humor,” he said. “You’ve faced a crisis. And  you’re not only still standing — you’re moving forward. Each of you  learned the most important lesson you can carry with you every day for  the rest of your life: The knowledge that you can do hard things.”

Reminding the graduates that many of the world’s “easy” problems have  been solved already, Fitts encouraged them to accept their challenge to  solve more difficult issues.

“The world needs people who have stared down a crisis — and you’ve  already stared down several. The world needs leaders based in compassion  and possibility.”

Solving problems and tenacity are appropriate messages for any  graduating class, but they seemed especially appropriate for the Class  of 2020, whose original Commencement ceremony was postponed from two  years ago due to COVID-19 restrictions.

Then Fitts turned the podium over to Col. Douglas G. Hurley, the keynote speaker. Hurley, a 1988 engineering graduate of Tulane and a former member of Tulane ROTC, is a NASA astronaut, space shuttle pilot and commander of the SpaceX Crew Dragon.

Two years ago, when the Class of 2020 was likely reflecting on what  should have been their successful departure from university life, Hurley  was sitting atop a rocket, reflecting as well.

“I thought a lot about the thousands of people that built, designed  and drove this spaceship onto the launchpad. You think about every one  of them and all the work that went into it, which was countless years,  to get us to that point. I also thought about, it’s the first flight  with a human space vehicle in 30 years. So, I felt a little bit of  pressure.”

Hurley recalled his road to Tulane University, as well as his road to  the launchpad. He noted that along the way, he framed obstacles as  challenges, whereas others might have called them failures or  disappointments. His college career was sometimes marked by challenges,  as was his professional career.

“The real difference you're going to make will be a function of those  challenges you go through and what you do to work on them,” he told the  graduates.

“Don't ever give up. It's not going to be easy, but just like today, it'll be worth it.”

President Fitts presented Hurley with the President’s Medal.

As nighttime fell, graduates crossed the stage for almost 90 minutes, high-fiving and punching the air as they did.

In this Unified Commencement Ceremony, 2020 graduates from all 10  schools, at all levels — from PhD to bachelor’s degrees — walked,  shaking hands with President Fitts and the dean of their respective  school. Graduates sported decorated mortarboards and carried spangled  and fringed second-line umbrellas. And proud friends and family  presented them with bouquets, balloons and plenty of hugs.

At the end of the night President Fitts invoked a space exploration  quote — “Let’s light this candle” — as fireworks lit up the sky above  the Angry Wave, and graduates were sent forth to enjoy New Orleans,  Crawfest and the great beyond.

         

2020-Commencement-pbc-7729.jpg

          

    Tulane Commencement 2020  

   

 Gonfalons  process into Yulman Stadium on Friday, April 22, for the Class of 2020’s  Commencement. (Photo by Paula Burch-Celentano)

         

2020-Commencement-pbc-6636.jpg

          

    Tulane Commencement 2020  

   

A crowd of  more than 5,000 individuals, including more than 1,200 members of the  Class of 2020, attends Friday’s ceremony. (Photo by Paula  Burch-Celentano)

         

2020_Graduation_RC1_7466.jpg

          

    Tulane Commencement 2020  

   

Graduates watch fireworks explode over Yulman Stadium at the end of the ceremony. (Photo by Rusty Costanza)

Original source can be found here.

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