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Glenn Matsumura |
every year, four seniors
are elected to serve as the social leaders of their
class. Each slate vehemently promises during the campaign
to make their final year at Stanford the best ever.
The position, separate from the ASSU, holds in its history
some of the most energetic quartets you’re likely
to meet. This year’s regime (clockwise from top)—Spencer
Porter, Steve Myrick, Jen Graham and Paola Worsley—discusses
the other Oval office.
Much more than social butterflies.
Each of the 2005 presidents simply added responsibilities
to an already busy life. Graham, a history major, spent
part of winter quarter in Egypt working on her honors
thesis. Porter, an American studies major, is a member
of Kappa Sigma fraternity and goalie on the University’s
soccer team. He and Graham both work for the Stanford
Daily.
Excuse me, I’m having a senior moment.
“We want to bring the high school idea
that seniors own the place,” says Myrick, an economics
major. Porter holds regular “chill sessions,“
claiming White Plaza with his boom box and tossing a
Frisbee with anyone who shows up. So many classmates
attend their weekly pub nights that only a handful of
venues in Palo Alto can accommodate the crowd. But they
also take time to get serious. Worsley, a communications
major, serves on the Stanford Alumni Association board
of directors. All four presidents help select speakers
for Commencement and Senior Class Day, and work with
campus offices on such issues as ensuring student safety
during events.
Four heads are better than one—and necessary,
too.
The presidents plan or assist with some 55 events during
their nine months of active duty, including everything
from those pub nights to the senior formal (held at
SBC Park this year—major score), to career and
community service events, to helping raise funds for
the senior gift, to weekly meetings, to representing
the senior class at campus events, to . . . Each of
them spends 20 to 30 hours per week on executive duties.
They also have a cabinet of six classmates who assist
with specific projects, and an adviser at the Stanford
Alumni Association who keeps them on track.
But they must get serious props from their classmates.
The job has notable perks, like having dinner with Commencement
speaker Steve Jobs. But many classmates don’t
even know the presidents are behind so many senior traditions.
Occasionally they get a thank-you, mostly from “our
friends who see us stressed out before a big event,”
Worsley says.
There are some things you just don’t consider
when you’re campaigning.
Indeed, there are low points. Porter and Worsley spent
a late post-event evening picking shards of glass off
the floor of Tresidder so that it would be spotless
for Parents’ Weekend the next morning. “I
spent one night standing outside with a plastic sign
over my head watching people get on the bus [for a pub
night],” Graham recalls.
Love the ones you’re with.
The presidents interact more like siblings than business
partners, whether it’s gently chiding Myrick for
being late to weekly meetings or laughing about Graham’s
getting them back on topic when there’s, well,
too much laughter. “Anyone who wants to try this
job and doesn’t really know the people they’re
with is just going to fail,” Porter says. “So
many times we’ve been in seven-hour meetings .
. . if you didn’t fundamentally like these people,
you’d say, ‘You know, I’m out.’”
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