| Remarks
for Phi Beta Kappa Induction
May 17, 2003
Every year, just before commencement, we take the time to celebrate
the achievements of the students who have been elected to Phi
Beta Kappa, the most distinguished of all of the academic honor
societies. We do this because Phi Beta Kappa is the ultimate
expression of the values that Trinity holds dear at the moment
of commencement: high scholarly and academic achievement, devotion
to excellence, unabashed exaltation of performance standards
that make no excuses.
We need these kinds of reminders of the ultimate values of
higher learning in an age that often diminishes the importance
of high academic attainment. Popular culture is notoriously
anti-intellectual, and too many children grow up thinking that
there's something un cool about getting good grades. This is
particularly true for girls, who sometimes repress their academic
potential in a misguided effort to be more attractive, or, at
least, to avoid embarrassing the boys whose attention they desire.
When boys and girls grow up with such mythologies, the repression
of women's potential for academic excellence becomes so ingrained
that women's lifelong achievements and earning capacity are
seriously impaired.
Women's colleges continue to exist because women still need
these places that celebrate their achievements, that expect
them to excel, that hold out the best role models of women who
were absolutely delighted to get A's and show them around, including
to their male friends. Places like Trinity that educate women
of high ambition who go off to run the Congress and take possession
of governor's mansions and win Pulitzer Prizes and preside over
corporate empires and blaze pathways in urban and rural communities
of great need.
Trinity College has long expected women to excel. Today and
this weekend, as we send forth the 100th class ever to take
Trinity degrees into the world, we are particularly proud of
you, our newest members of Phi Beta Kappa, because the lamp
of learning that you replenish today with your achievements
shines brightly for all of us.
May your light never diminish, may your example always be as
clear and as strong as it is this afternoon. May your academic
achievement here at Trinity ensure your lifelong satisfaction
and fulfillment in high intellectual pursuits. Thank you for
setting an example that is thrilling for all to behold.
Congratulations!
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