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Marking Time
"Hey,
thats the year I was born!"
The speaker was a beaming
member of the Class of 1999, and he was pointing at the flag held by the
representative of the Class of 1978 standing next to me. With other alumni,
who, like us, were dressed in academic regalia and held the flags of their
respective classes, we had lined Locust Walk to honor and welcome this
years graduates as they paraded by on their way to Commencement
at Franklin Field.
The student didnt pausein fact, he may have
hurried on, disturbed by our stunned expressionsand was soon lost
in the flowing stream of caps and gowns. We looked at each other, calculating
the numbers. Yes, it was possible. "That wasnt funny," he said.
"No, not a bit," I agreed, thinking of all the Penn freshmen and sophomores
born in 1980and it became even less so each of the several more
times it occurred. (Later, we learned that the guy from the Class of 1977,
who was on the other side of the Walk, had had an even harder time of
it. One student had even asked to touch his flag.)
But well have our revenge, eventually. As my
companion pointed out, with the wisdom of his advanced years, "There are
people being born right now, and someday theyll be graduating
from college."
Time and its passage, a staple subject at rites of
transition such as Commencement, seemed to figure especially prominently
this year. Several allusions were made to the fact that this class would
be the last to graduate in this century and, depending on where you
stand on the January 1, 2000 vs. January 1, 2001 question, the final one
of the current millennium as well.
Our Commencement coverage, including a summary of Treasury
Secretary Robert Rubins speech, photos and descriptions of this
years honorary-degree recipients begins on page 16 in "Gazetteer."
Also, as a reminder to the 5,000 or so alumni who made it back to campus
this year for Alumni Weekend and a taste of what they missed for those
who didnt, we offer our annual photo essay
on the festivities, starting on page 46.
To hear some Phillies fans talk, you would think it
had been a millenniumor at least a centurysince Philadelphia
fielded a winning baseball team. That impatience is just one of the pressures
on Phillies president and CEO David Montgomery C68 WG70, who
is profiled in our cover story by senior editor
Samuel Hughes. Sam, an ardent fan whose opinion of the teams prospects
did several dozen about-faces during the writing, pursued this story from
the executive box to the "nose-bleed" 700-level seats in the teams
unloved and, Montgomery and the Phils hope, soon to be ex-home, Veterans
Stadium.
On a considerably darker note, also in this issue,
Peter Nichols CGS93 reports on a seminar
offered in the spring that delved into the experience of war in the 20th
century through firsthand accounts of front-line combat from the First
World War through Vietnam. And Derek Davis C61 writes of a life
tragically cut short and how that tragedy was compounded. While researching
a history of the Penn Law School, Davis stumbled on the story of Roy
Wilson White, an 1898 graduate and lecturer of high promise, whose
murder sparked a massive manhunt that led to the arrest and apparently
unjust execution of three black men.
Finally, another annual ritual is the alumni magazine
awards given out by the Council for Advancement and Support of Education
(CASE). This year the Gazette was honored with a Grand Gold Medal
in the Best Articles of the Year category for "Through
a Glass Darkly," by Samuel Hughes, which appeared in our Nov/Dec 1998
issue. That piece and four others written by Sam or Susan Lonkevich, our
assistant editor, also received a Silver Medal for Periodical Staff Writing.
(All five articles are available on our Web site: www.upenn.edu/
gazette.) The cover of our Nov/Dec 1998 issue also won a Bronze Medal
for Visual Design in Print.
-- John Prendergast C'80
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Pennsylvania Gazette | Last modified 6/23/99
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