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Glenn Matsumura
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A few years back, the students
producing Gaieties came up with the title “Being
John Hennessy”—a production (very) loosely
based on the movie Being John Malkovich. The
plot was a little thin, as is typical with Gaieties,
but even the casual observer would conclude that it
wasn’t much fun being me.
Certainly, there are days when one might make that
observation. The sheer size of the institution, the
ongoing challenge of enhancing academic excellence,
the vastly different constituencies, the competing interests
for limited dollars, the special demands posed by academic
medical centers, the pressures to maintain a first-rate
athletic program—all these can make for sleepless
nights.
Nonetheless, I can’t imagine a more exciting
and thought-provoking job—one that makes my life
a continual mind-stretching exercise. It can be stressful,
but there are great pleasures as well. And chief among
those pleasures is the opportunity to interact with
Stanford’s exceptional students. In fact, one
of my favorite experiences each year has been the two
weeks I spend teaching in Sophomore College before the
beginning of fall quarter. I’ve always said the
best job in the world is being a professor, and it is
the job that those of us serving in leadership posts
look forward to returning to.
Many of you who have had the opportunity to meet today’s
Stanford students have commented on how exceptional
they are. Your views were confirmed recently by the
action of the Rhodes scholarship selection committee,
which recently chose two Stanford students as American
Rhodes Scholars from a pool of 963 applicants. In those
two students—Tess Bridgeman and Jared Cohen—I
believe one can see the extraordinary talent and commitment
that we have come to appreciate in our students at Stanford.
Tess graduated from Stanford last June with majors
in human biology and international health and development.
A Truman Scholar, she now works at the World Bank as
a John Gardner Public Service Fellow, a one-year scholarship
sponsored by Stanford’s Haas Center for Public
Service. At Stanford, she won many departmental, University
and national awards and was president of Stanford Students
for Choice. She will pursue development studies at Oxford.
Tess has done extensive community work and research
addressing birth defects in Mexico. While at Stanford,
she co-founded Puente a la Salud Comunitaria, or Bridge
to Community Health, a nongovernmental organization
in Mexico that helped reduce birth defects by adding
folic acid to the diets of women.
Russell Fernald, the Benjamin Scott Crocker Professor
of Human Biology and hum bio’s former director,
says Tess has “wisdom beyond her years. She brings
a powerful intellect to complex social issues. And she
is a wonderful person.”
Jared is a senior who has worked and traveled in 21
African countries and is fluent in Swahili. At Stanford,
he founded Six Degrees: A Journal of Human Rights.
He plans to pursue a doctorate in African studies at
Oxford.
Jared will graduate this summer with bachelor’s
degrees in history and political science with a minor
in African studies. Last June, he received the Hines
Prize for the best senior honors thesis, which he wrote
as a junior. The Absence of Decision-Making: U.S.
Policy Towards Rwanda from the Arusha Process Through
the Genocide contains original scholarship focusing
on why the United States and the international community
did nothing to intervene in the 1994 Rwandan genocide
until 800,000 people were killed.
Hoover Senior Fellow Larry Diamond, Jared’s mentor,
said the thesis would be turned into a book. “Jared
has an intense curiosity and a very profound moral sense,”
Diamond told Stanford Report. “He was
so morally appalled [by the genocide], he was compelled
to understand it to try to prevent it from happening
again.”
What strikes me most powerfully about these two students
is that they share a passion for research and a deep
commitment to making a difference in the world. Their
scholarship and their life goals are imbued with a belief
that education is best used when it helps improve the
lives of others who have not benefited from the same
opportunities available to most Stanford students.
This theme of contributing to a better world has its
roots in the Stanfords, who wrote in the founding grant
that the University should seek to “qualify students
for personal success and direct usefulness in life,”
and should “promote the public welfare by exercising
an influence on behalf of humanity and civilization.”
Leland and Jane Stanford could not predict the future,
but by building this university they expressed their
profound hope for a better world. I imagine they would
be exceedingly proud of Tess, Jared and the thousands
of other Stanford students who dedicate themselves to
a similar vision. I hope you share in that pride, just
as I do.
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