South Hadley, Mass.--National Book Award winner
and best-selling author Joyce Carol Oates will be the speaker at
Mount Holyoke’s 169th
commencement on Sunday, May 28, at which 590 seniors--including
50 Frances Perkins Scholars--will receive bachelor of arts degrees.
One
master’s degree and 21 certificates for international students
will also be awarded.
Oates will be joined by honorary
degree recipients Kitty Kyriacopoulos, mining entrepreneur
and philanthropist and
a 1945 Mount Holyoke graduate;
Eric Reeves, professor of English language and literature at Smith
College and an activist for human rights in Sudan; Eugenie C. Scott,
executive director of the National Center for Science Education,
a not-for-profit organization that advocates the teaching of evolution
in public schools; and Hilda Chen Apuy, a 1944 Mount Holyoke graduate
and Costa Rican-Chinese scholar who received Costa Rica’s
highest cultural award in 2004.
Chosen to speak for the graduating
class is Margaret “Mollie” McDermott,
a neuroscience major from Mandeville, Louisiana.
Commencement ceremonies will begin at 10:30 am in Gettell Amphitheater.
In the event of rain, the ceremony will be held in Kendall Field House.
Saturday, May 27, features two of the College's
most cherished and time-honored commencement traditions: the alumnae
parade and laurel
chain ceremony, and the canoe sing. At 9 am at Woolley Circle,
members of the class of 2006 will be led by alumnae "loyalty classes" in
a procession to Mary Lyon's grave, carrying a chain of garland that
they will place at the gravesite. They will join in singing "Bread
and Roses," a song that became the anthem of workers who went
on strike at a textile mill in Lawrence, Massachusetts, in 1912,
demanding reasonable hours and pay. The canoe sing begins at 10:30
pm, on Lower
Lake. Twelve canoes, each decorated with lanterns and seating three
seniors chosen by lottery, will illuminate the lake while changing
formations. Seniors on the banks of the lake will join those in
canoes in singing previously rehearsed songs.
About the Honorary Degree Recipients:
Joyce Carol Oates, one of the most prolific and highly regarded writers
of our time, has published to date 50 novels and novellas, 29 short
story collections, eight books of poetry, eight drama collections,
11 nonfiction volumes, 17 anthologies, six books for children and
young adults, as well as hundreds of uncollected stories, poems,
articles,
essays, and reviews. She won the National Book Award in 1970 for
her novel them, and the PEN/Malamud Award in 1996 for
Excellence in Short
Fiction. Brilliantly imaginative and erudite, Oates scrutinizes,
in work after work, the distinctive and often tumultuous nature
of American
character, culture, and literary tradition. She is an experimental
writer who, as John Barth has commented, “writes all over the
aesthetical map,” including fictionalized biography, postmodern
Gothic novels, and pseudonymous suspense thrillers. Several of
her novels, including Bellefleur, Black Water, We Were the Mulvaneys, and Blonde have
been national best sellers. In 2003 she received the Commonwealth
Award for Distinguished Service in Literature and the Kenyon
Review Award for Literary Achievement, and in 2005
she was honored with France's Prix Femina Award for The Falls, chosen
as best novel by a foreign
writer. Oates is the Roger S. Berlind Distinguished Professor of
the Humanities at Princeton University and has been a member of the
American
Academy of Arts and Letters since 1978.
Kitty Kyriacopoulos ’45
Kitty Kyriacopoulos
translated her liberal arts education into a remarkable career
as a leader in the mining industry. As a philanthropist, she
has been a powerful advocate for higher education and for Greek culture.
In 1999 she was named one of the 50 leading women entrepreneurs by
the Star Group and NFWBO, and in 2002 she was invited to join the
French Legion of Honor National Order.
Kyriacopoulos took over her family’s mining companies Bauxites
Parnasse and Silver and Baryte Ores after her father passed away in
1970, leaving her as his only heir. The companies prospered under Kyriacopoulos’s
leadership, which focused on building a culture based on family
ethical values and traditions.
Kyriacopoulos was born in Romania and received her basic education
in England and France. She graduated from Mount Holyoke College in
1945 with a concentration in physics and mathematics and did graduate
work at Columbia University.
Eric Reeves
Eric Reeves is a professor of English language and literature
at Smith College. He has spent the past seven years working full-time
as a Sudan
researcher and analyst, publishing extensively both in the U.S. and
internationally, and his essays on Sudan have appeared in papers
including the Washington Post and Los Angeles Times. He has testified
several
times before Congress, has served as a consultant to a number of
human rights and humanitarian organizations operating in Sudan,
and has raised
international awareness about human rights violations in Sudan.
Reeves received his undergraduate degree from Williams College and
his Ph.D. in Renaissance literature from the University of Pennsylvania
in 1981. He began teaching at Smith in 1979.
Eugenie Scott
Eugenie C. Scott is the executive director of the National
Center for Science Education, a not-for-profit membership organization
that works
to improve the teaching of evolution and advocates the teaching of
evolution in public schools. Scott has served on the board of directors
of the Biological Sciences Curriculum Study and the advisory counsels
of several church and state separation organizations and is the author
of Evolution vs. Creationism: An Introduction. She has held elective
offices in the American Anthropological Association and the American
Association for the Advancement of Science and has been awarded the
National Science Board Public Service Award, among other honors.
Scott holds a Ph.D. in biological anthropology from the University
of Missouri and has taught at the University of Kentucky and the University
of Colorado.
Hilda Chen Apuy ’44
Hilda Chen Apuy is a Costa Rican-Chinese
scholar and intellectual. She has been a pioneer in research and
the study of Asian cultures
and an advocate for education and cultural assimilation in Costa
Rica. In 2004 she was named winner of the Premio Nacional de Cultura
Magón,
the country’s highest cultural award. Chen Apuy taught at the
University of Costa Rica from 1948 to 1984 and was largely responsible
for the introduction of the university’s Asian studies program.
She taught Sanskrit, philosophy, Oriental thought, and Asian history.
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