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CSI/CUNY News Release |
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For Immediate Release -
Thursday, October 23, 2003 |
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Convocation 2003
Going above and beyond
CSI President
celebrates some of the college’s best
and brightest at the 2003
Convocation
Staten Island -- College of
Staten Island President Marlene Springer treated the 375 attendees
at the college’s 2003 Convocation in the Center for the Arts
Williamson Theatre to a showcase of some of the college’s
achievements, and profiles of some members of the CSI community who
have gone above and beyond over the past year.
 Dr. Springer began
her 10th annual Convocation address on a light note by turning the spotlight on Bud, the
College’s goose chasing dog, with a humorous video showing the
canine in action, while receiving some “coaching” tips from her own
dog, Eliot. The two pups even made a guest appearance on stage.
President
Springer highlighted some of the College’s many accomplishments over
the past year, such as the approval of the CUNY Institute for
Macromolecular Assemblies and the inauguration of the CSI Staten
Island Project, as well as some things to come, such as the opening
of a small high school on campus, which is scheduled for fall 2004.
The President also
profiled the accomplishments of five CSI students, who are examples of
dedication to their studies, and to the community: Elie Jarrouge,
Vanessa Leigh DeBello, Dana Flores, Kristine Gansico, and
Emmanuel Fallah. The Convocation turned sombre, as Fallah, a CSI nursing
student and Registered Nurse, who is originally from Liberia,
recalled his struggles in his native country during the Liberian
civil war, which included the arrest of a nurse who, in her last
words to him, urged him to become a nurse so that he might take her
place in the profession.
After Fallah’s moving
speech, the audience also had the opportunity to preview a CSI
video segment that will air on the National College Review program on the E! Entertainment channel.
Summing up the state
of the College, President Springer told the story of a people who
live in Ladakh in North India. According to Dr. Springer, the
Ladakhis live with a high level of co-existence and spiritual
enlightenment by experiencing the world through a fusion of ‘heart'
and 'mind', focusing on wisdom and compassion as inseparable
components of human existence.
Dr. Springer closed
on a personal note. While in Cambodia, she told the audience
of the cellular phone call she made to her daughter on her birthday,
saying that technology let her do that -- but it was the heart and
mind that made her want to do it.
Before exiting the
theater to conversations and refreshments, Dr. Springer urged the
attendees to celebrate their “hearts and minds” in this increasingly
technological age.
The College of Staten Island (CSI) is a senior college of The City
University of New York (CUNY), the nation’s leading urban
university. CSI offers 35 academic programs, 15 graduate degree
programs, and challenging doctoral programs to 12,000 students.
The 204-acre landscaped campus of CSI, the largest in NYC, is fully
accessible and contains an advanced, networked infrastructure to
support technology-based teaching, learning, and research. For more
information, visit www.csi.cuny.edu
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