St. Marys College of Maryland seniors listen to a speech during graduation Saturday. (Photo by Lee Capristo)
ST. MARYS CITY, Md. (May 14, 2011) Today, St. Marys College of Maryland graduated one of its largest senior classes of 466 students on the campus Townhouse Green. To emphasize the colleges reputation for volunteerism and to acknowledge the 50th anniversary of the Peace Corps, the Commencement speaker was Peace Corps Deputy Director Carrie Hessler-Radelet. Also, honorary degrees were awarded posthumously to Sargent Shriver, the first Peace Corps director, accepted by Joe Kennedy III, Shrivers great nephew, and to the current director, Aaron Williams.
The agency has more than 8,600 volunteers helping in developing countries around the world right now. Eighteen of them are St. Marys alumni, putting the college once again into the Top Ten ranking of small colleges with graduates volunteering. The Corps is just one option the college provides to develop students as international stewards.
As college President Joseph Urgo told the seniors in his Commencement charge: Help your communities, your coworkers, and complete strangers to create a world that is more just, more inclusive, and saner.
Youve spent time in and around this river, our small waterway that leads to expansive vistas, Urgo continued. And now you are about to enter those vaster seas (to continue the metaphor): oceanic experiences await you. To this day, oysters have been your world: and now...well, to quote Shakespeare, and now 'the world is your oyster.'
To emphasize the vaster seas and opportunities awaiting students, Hessler-Radelet, who has been with the Peace Corps much of her life, listed three lessons she has learned: We grow by challenging ourselves, by stepping out of our comfort zones, she told the students. Relationships are the most important thing in life, whether we are talking about family or diplomacy or business. And finally, Service is not just about a moment. Service is a mindset. You dont have to go halfway around the world to make a difference in someones life. Whatever field you choose, whatever line of work, you can find ways to help others.
Hessler-Radelet and her husband served together as Peace Corps volunteers in Western Samoa from 1981 to 1983. In fact, four generations of her family have served as volunteers, including her aunt, her grandmother, and her nephew.
Board of Trustees Chair Molly Mahoney Matthews took a moment during the ceremony to remember Maryland governor and trustee emeritus William Donald Schaefer for his legacy to the college as well as other campuses in Maryland. He will always be remembered for his contributions to education and in particular to the education we provide at St. Marys, she said.
The valedictorian was Allison Marie Conner, of Frederick, Maryland, who majored in anthropology and history. She is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Lambda Alpha, and Phi Alpha Theta honor societies, is a St. Marys Senior Scholar, a Sullivan Scholar, and is on the Deans List. Conner will be attending graduate school at the University of Massachusetts (Boston) for a degree in archaeology.
This year, for the first time, seniors chose a quintessential student to represent the class and also speak at graduation. He was Ian Simpson-Shelton, of Upper Marlboro, Maryland, and is a biochemistry major.