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Harpur College of Arts and Sciences

May 23, 2003
Special Graduation Issue

Harpur Alumni Awarded for Service

 

Dean Mileur with award winners Jim Ludwig `81, Joel Kellman `63 and Keith Hurd `88.

Dean Jean-Pierre Mileur recognized three alumni for their outstanding service to Harpur College at the Recognition Ceremonies in the West Gym on Saturday, May 17 (see related story). These awards are presented each Spring to alumni for outstanding achievement in their careers and service to the community. This year's winners, Jim Ludwig `81, Joel Kellman `63 and Keith Hurd `88 were commended for both their successful careers and continued dedication to Harpur College.

At the Recognition Ceremony for Fine Arts and Humanities, Dean Mileur recognized Keith Hurd `88, who received a B.A. in Music and Romance Languages and Literature. In addition, he received the 1988 Music Faculty Award. In 1988 and 1989, he was the operations manager for the Binghamton Summer Musical. Hurd is vice president of promotions and marketing for The Marketing Group and is currently working on the Broadway productions of Billy Joel and Twyla Tharp's Movin Out, and Take Me Out. He is the executive producer of Nights on Broadway playing at Caesar's in Atlantic City and is a partner Maria Pia, a theatre district restaurant. Previous Broadway shows that Hurd marketed include Proof, The Producers, Kiss Me Kate, Tale of the Allergist's Wife, The Goat, Tuesdays with Morrie, Noises Off, The Sweet Smell of Success, Swing!, Jekyll & Hyde, Victor/Victoria, and Damn Yankees.

Joel Kellman `63 received the Alumni Award at the Science and Mathematics Recognition Ceremony. After earning his BA in Political Science, he received a J.D. from St. John's Law School in 1966 and an L.L.M. in Foreign and Comparative Law from New York University in 1968. After working with the federal War on Poverty under President Lyndon Johnson and as an associate with the Wall Street law firm of Cleary, Gottleib, Steen & Hamilton, Kellman was a founding partner at Fenwick & West in Silicon Valley. He remained there for 28 years as a leading specialist in representing high technology startup companies and venture capital investment firms. After acting as a senior advisor to the Singapore government for several years, he co-founded a new venture capital firm, Granite Global Ventures, in 2000. Kellman serves on the Harpur College Dean's Advisory Council. He and his wife, Joy, established the Kellman Family Scholarship in 1999 in memory of his mother.

James Ludwig `81 was recognized at the Recognition Ceremony for Social Sciences. After receiving a B.S. in biochemistry, he went on to Columbia University to study accounting and finance and graduated in 1986. Ludwig joined the investment banking department at Salomon Brothers and shortly thereafter, joined fellow Harpur College alumnus `78 to Susquehanna Partners, a subsidiary of Susquehanna International Group. Ludwig's career brought him from New York to Chicago to London and eventually back home again. He retired in 2001 as company president and recently started the trading Box Canyon Partners and is a member of the American Stock Exchange. He continues to be active with many volunteer projects, including membership of the Binghamton University Foundation Board. Ludwig and his wife, Cindi, established the Dr. Joseph J. Eron `80 Undergraduate Research Grant in 2000.

Harpur College is proud to recognize Ludwig, Kellman and Hurd for giving so much of their time, knowledge and support to their alma mater. Congratulations to our recipients!

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Najla Aswad `86 congratulates Samantha Osunsanmi, the recipient of the Aswad Family Award to a Graduating Senior Going to Medical School.

Harpur Seniors Shine at Recognition Ceremonies

Happy families, proud professors, and excited grads-to-be packed the West Gym for Harpur College's 2003 Recognition Ceremonies on May 17. To give the students more personal recognition and a more intimate ceremony, Harpur College held separate events for the divisions of Fine Arts and Humanities, Science and Mathematics, and Social Sciences throughout the day.

Dean Mileur told Harpur College's class of 2003, "I know I speak for the faculty and staff of the College when I say that we are, every one of us, very proud of you as the latest of Harpur's 53 graduating classes. For more than half a century, Harpur has dedicated itself to providing a high-quality, public, liberal arts education to some of New York's most promising young people. And I know that we will all continue to do credit to that tradition and to each other in the years ahead."

In recogntion of high grades, leadership in campus activities, and service to the community, sixty-nine seniors received awards from the Binghamton University Foundation. Each senior had the chance to walk across the stage and shake hands with Dean Mileur and other University Vice Presidents, accept a congratulatory message signed by President DeFleur, and receive a pin from the Alumni Association.

Three alumni also received awards for their continued dedication to Harpur College and accomplishments in their careers (see related story).

The next day, Harpur College's graduating class, in caps and gowns, walked up the aisle at the Broome County Arena and said farewell to Binghamton.

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Happy Graduation, Class of 2003!

In its largest graduating class ever, Binghamton University conferred approximately 3,351 degrees for bachelor's master's and doctoral candidates during the the 2003 Commencement ceremonies Sunday, May 18 in the Broome County Veteran's Memorial Arena. The ceremonies marked the University's 57th commencement.

At Harpur College's ceremony, Nobel Prize-winning chemist Dr. Alan MacDiarmid received the honorary Doctor of Science and director and producer Sydney Pollack received the honorary Doctor of Human Letters.

Chemist MacDiarmid was honored with the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2000, which he shared with fellow researchers Dr. Alan Heeger of the University of California and Dr. Hideki Shirakawa of the University of Tsukuba in Japan. The award was based on their 1977 discovery of a polymer that could conduct electricity like a metal while retaining the properties of a plastic. Today, thousands of scientists around the world are working on new materials and applications based on the work of MacDiarmid and his collaborators. The technology derived from their studies is being used to make anti-static coating on photographic film and is expected to find its way to energy-saving light devices, LED displays and flexible "plastic" transistors and electrodes in the next few years.

MacDiarmid told Harpur College's class of 2003 that with the explosion of new knowledge, today's graduates will have to keep up or be left behind. "Nothing in life that is worthwhile is easy," he said. "I have a saying on my study wall to remind me. It says, 'I am a very lucky person, and the harder I work, the luckier I seem to be.'"

As the award-winning director of such films as They Shoot Horses Don't They?, Out of Africa, Tootsie, The Way We Were and The Firm, Polack has explored human conduct, human ethics and values, all while featuring such outstanding performers as Robert Redford, Meryl Streep, Dustin Hoffman, Barbara Streisand, Paul Newman and Burt Lancaster. Winner of Oscars for both directing and producing Out of Africa, Pollack has in recent years acted in Woody Allen's Husbands and Wives, Robert Altman's The Player and Robert Zemckis' Death Becomes Her.

In his speech, he said he couldn't think of a more difficult and complex time to move into the world, but the new graduates are needed to interpret the world through their compassion. "How do you get ready for that, to deal with it, to understand it?" he asked. "I'm someone who has spent my life avoiding jobs and spent my life in an imaginary world. There are fictional worlds in the liberal arts, which is the gymnasium for your emotional muscles. As graduates, you've equipped yourself to be our interpreters and we've been waiting for you."

Harpur College's student speaker, History major Ariella Duker, joked that she had never before seen so many of her classmates "happy to be awake and somewhat functioning at 8:30 in the morning." She asked her classmates to reflect on their personal and academic achievements. "Some of us have soared academically far beyond what we thought were our limits. Others have undertaken social action projects that have changed the lives of people in our community and will continue to do so even after we leave."

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