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Graduates Urged To Seize Modern Day Sputnik Challenge and Take Chances at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute 206th Commencement
Bart Gordon, Former U.S. House of
Representatives Committee on Science and Technology Chairman
and U.S. Secretary of Energy and Nobel Prize Recipient Steven
Chu Address 1,613 Graduates; Rensselaer President Shirley Ann
Jackson Advises a “Triple Helix” of Excellence, Leadership, and
Community
Former U.S. House of Representative Committee on Science and
Technology Chairman Bart Gordon told graduates to use their
education to answer today’s “Sputnik challenge,” while U.S.
Secretary of Energy Steven Chu spoke to the value of individual
conviction at the 206th Commencement at Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute Saturday.
“Today I ask you to pause and truly reflect because I
believe that you are graduating at a momentous, even pivotal,
time in the history of this planet and of humanity and that
you, the Class of 2012, are especially well-suited to be a part
of what comes next – for this country and the world,” Gordon
said.
Chu advised the students to take chances, reminding them
that “your time and energy are the most valuable resources you
will ever have.”
Gordon and Chu addressed 1,613 graduates, their families,
and friends at the 206th Rensselaer Commencement
today, held in the East Campus Athletic Village Stadium. During
the ceremony, Rensselaer awarded a total of 1,742 degrees. They
include: 357 master’s degrees, 136 doctoral degrees, and 1,249
bachelor’s degrees. Some graduates have earned more than one
degree.
Gordon recalled that, as a child, he searched the night sky
for Sputnik because its launch had “shocked me, my family, and
Americans everywhere.” Gordon said that President John F.
Kennedy’s response to the threat to American national security
and economic security was the challenge that, 12 years later,
led Americans to the Apollo 11 lunar landing, and astronaut
Neil Armstrong’s historic steps on the surface of the moon.
“I tell you that because America and the whole planet are in
desperate need of another Sputnik to Apollo kind of step
forward,” Gordon said. Meeting the energy and other critical
needs of a global a population of seven billion and rising is
“the Sputnik challenge of today.”
“On your graduation day, we are at a point in human history
where we need a leap forward in innovation and technology –
because the failure to meet the needs and desires of those 10
billion people will put free economies, political systems, and
the well-being of this planet at risk,” Gordon said.
Chu began his address by recalling that many great technical
inventions — the steam engine, automobile, telephone – have
been greeted by society with doubt and discouragement.
“You may hear doubters and naysayers; don’t be discouraged —
all these pioneers had their doubters,” Chu said. He advised
the graduates to take risks, to maintain confidence in the face
of false starts and mistakes, and to accept failure as the
currency of effort.
“Your biggest failure would occur if you never fail; if you
never do that in your life, you will never know what you could
have done,” Chu.
Discussing the power of teachers to inspire, Rensselaer
alumnus and digital camera inventor Steven Sasson said, “My
experience at RPI prepared me well for the challenges I found
at the Eastman Kodak company where my initial work in the area
of solid-state imaging and digital technology allowed me to
participate in the technical revolution that has transformed
photography. I remember teachers like Dr. Sohrab Gandhi
and Dr. Robert Resnick, both of whom challenged and inspired me
to do things that I thought were beyond my reach.”
Speaking of the capacity of computation to change the world,
artificial intelligence pioneer Edward Feigenbaum said, “The IT
exponentials can power America’s competitiveness. Information
and knowledge processed by computers, stored in networks, and
applied across the full spectrum of human activity is the new
wealth of nations. Here America is second to none, by a wide
margin, especially in software…So, RPI graduates, join the ride
up the IT exponentials. Prosper and have fun like we
did. Or, better still, invent the next great
thing!”
Honorable Antonin Scalia, Associate Justice, Supreme
Court of the United States, speaks to the value of
virtue
Antonin Scalia, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of
the United States, reminded the graduates of the value of
virtue.
“You have been awarded degrees for excellence of the mind,
for knowledge,” Scalia said. Our society, he continued,
worships knowledge. But those who consider education paramount
forget the “principal lesson” learned by the rise of Nazism
amid the intellect and education of 20th century Germany.
“Knowledge is not virtue. When you leave here, I assume you
will continue to acquire knowledge ... but you also have to
continue to acquire virtue,” Scalia said. Recalling the advice
of his father, Scalia said “he told me once, ‘son, brains are
like muscles, you can hire them by the hour. The only thing
that is not for sale is character.’ Try to have both.”
Rensselaer President Shirley Ann Jackson counsels a
“triple helix” of excellence, leadership, and
community
Using the example of the first powered airplane flight in
Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, Rensselaer President Shirley Ann
Jackson spoke to the graduates about their responsibility as
the next generation of innovators. Until the Wright brothers’
59-second flight, Jackson said, powered flight had been
considered the “standard of impossibility.”
“You, and your generation, enter a world — indeed, were born
into a world — which has been molded by technology into a
vastly different place than was the world of the Wright
brothers,” Jackson said. “And yet, all that has changed,
actually, is that there are, now, new ‘frontiers of
impossibility’ to reach, along with new tools to unravel those
mysteries, and to make those discoveries which will take us
there.”
In reaching for that future, and grappling with the
complexities they introduce, Jackson advised a “triple helix”
of excellence, leadership, and community. Excellence, said
Jackson, requires continual renewal and an embrace of “lifelong
learning by asking questions, exploring, discovering, pushing
boundaries.” Leadership “is a fundamental responsibility which
all of us own.” And community, which, she said, might also be
termed “inclusiveness,” is key “to the melding of diverse
thought born of varied life experiences which can lead to a
superior result in any endeavor.”
Class president tells classmates to retain their
ties to their alma mater and to one another
Class of 2012 President Rob Sobkowich reminded graduates
that, during their four years together, they had grown into a
tight-knit group, and that their ties to Rensselaer would
always bind them together. He asked them to remember that bond
in the years to come, and maintain their allegiance to the
school.
“We have finally made it to the culmination of four years of
coursework, exams, and late nights. While we all come from
different backgrounds and entered Rensselaer as one of the most
diverse classes in the Institute’s history, today we graduate
as a unified body,” Sobkowich said. “This ceremony does not
represent the end of our relationship with Rensselaer, but
rather the beginning of the next chapter.”
Celebrated guests awarded honorary
degrees
The Honorable Bart J. Gordon received an
honorary Doctor of Laws degree during the ceremony. Congressman
Gordon is a leader in U.S. science, technology, energy, and
health policy, and champion of the America COMPETES Act, which
authorizes federal investments in innovation and innovators.
Currently a partner at K&L Gates law firm, he served for 26
years in the U.S. House of Representatives, from Tennessee. As
Chairman of the House Committee on Science and Technology and a
senior member of the Energy and Commerce Committee, Congressman
Gordon built bipartisan support for enactment of the America
COMPETES Act, helped craft the 21st Century Nanotechnology
Research and Development Act, and was a leading proponent of
America’s space program, and of enhancing science, technology,
engineering, and math (STEM) education.
The Honorable Antonin Scalia, J.D.,
Associate Justice, Supreme Court of the United States, received
an honorary Doctor of Laws degree. He is the longest-sitting
member of the U.S. Supreme Court, and a self-described
“originalist,” interpreting the U.S. Constitution by beginning
with the text, and giving that text the meaning that it bore
when it was adopted. The Associate Justice was nominated by
President Reagan and confirmed unanimously by the U.S. Senate
in 1986. His experience spans the private, academic, and public
sectors, having practiced law in Cleveland, Ohio, taught law at
the Universities of Virginia and Chicago, and applied the law,
working in the Administrations of Presidents Nixon (Office of
Telecommunications Policy) and Ford (U.S. Department of
Justice), before being appointed to the U.S. Court of Appeals
by President Reagan in 1982.
The Honorable Steven Chu, Ph.D., United
States Secretary of Energy, distinguished scientist, and
co-winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics (1997), received an
honorary Doctor of Science degree. Charged with implementing
key components of President Obama’s energy agenda since 2009,
he has devoted his recent scientific career to the search for
new solutions to energy challenges and stopping global climate
change. Previously he was Director of the Department of
Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, Professor of Physics
and of Molecular and Cell Biology at the University of
California, Berkeley, and held positions at Stanford University
and AT&T Bell Laboratories. The holder of 10 patents and
author of nearly 250 published scientific and technical papers,
he is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the Chinese
Academy of Sciences, and numerous other civic and professional
organizations.
Edward A. Feigenbaum, Ph.D., pioneer in
artificial intelligence and renowned computer scientist,
received an honorary Doctor of Engineering degree. He is a
recipient (1994) of the “Nobel Prize of computing,” the ACM
Turing Award of the Association for Computing Machinery, for
pioneering the design and construction of large-scale
artificial intelligence (AI) systems, demonstrating the
practical importance and potential commercial impact of
artificial intelligence technology. Dr. Feigenbaum is the
Kumagai Professor of Computer Science Emeritus at Stanford
University. He was Chief Scientist of the U.S. Air Force
(1994-97). He is a member of the National Academy of
Engineering, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the
Intelligent Systems/Artificial Intelligence Hall of Fame of the
IEEE, and the Hall of Fellows of the Computer History Museum.
In his honor, the Association for the Advancement of
Artificial Intelligence awards the Feigenbaum Prize for
outstanding AI research advances made by using experimental
methods of computer science.
Steven J. Sasson ’72, M.S. ’73, inventor of
the digital camera and related imaging technologies that have
transformed the industry and the world, received an honorary
Doctor of Engineering degree. An electrical engineer, now
retired from the Eastman Kodak Company, he revolutionized the
way images are captured, stored, and shared. Sasson was awarded
the National Medal of Technology and Innovation (2010), the
highest honor for technological achievement bestowed by the
President of the United States. In 2011 he was inducted in the
Inventors Hall of Fame. He holds more than 10 key digital
imaging patents. He was awarded the 2011 Davies Medal, the
highest honor awarded to an alumnus of the Rensselaer School of
Engineering.
For more information about the Commencement speaker and
honorands, visit: http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=3034
For a full text of Bart J. Gordon's Commencement address,
visit: http://www.rpi.edu/colloquy/2012/gordon.html
For information regarding Commencement, visit: http://www.rpi.edu/academics/commencement/
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Published
May 26,
2012 |
Contact: Mary L. Martialay
Phone: (518) 276-2146
E-mail: martim12@rpi.edu |
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