SF State News {University Communications}

Image: Photos of SF State students and scenes from around campus

News Release

 

A challenge issued to SF State Class of 2012: “The world needs your risk-taking”

San Francisco Mayor Edwin M. Lee gave keynote address

 

SAN FRANCISCO, May 19, 2012 -- At San Francisco State University’s 111th Commencement today, keynote speaker Edwin M. Lee, mayor of San Francisco, advised students to be bold and take risks to address the challenges of their generation.

“Now that you’re graduating, Class of 2012, the challenges and the problems of the world are your challenges and problems, too,” said Lee, who became San Francisco’s first Asian American mayor in 2011 and has served the city for 20 years. “And so your next assignment, your homework for the rest of your life -- I get to do this because I'm Mayor -- is to run the ball a little further down the field and help make the world and your community a better place.”

Lee, who called SF State the vanguard of the civil rights movements of his generation, said that graduates’ contributions to the world are needed now more than ever.

“In the Chinese zodiac, 2012 is the Year of the Dragon. The Year of the Dragon is fittingly the time for risk taking, bold decisions and innovation,” Lee said. “Class of 2012 of San Francisco, the world needs your risk-taking.”

SF State awarded diplomas to 7,928 graduates from 109 countries, including 105 veterans of the U.S. Armed Forces. A crowd of more than 20,000 guests filled Cox Stadium on a sunny Saturday as a number of students and faculty were acknowledged for their distinct contributions to the University.

The ceremony marked the 24th and final Commencement for President Robert A. Corrigan, who is retiring at the end of July after a 24-year tenure in which the University has been transformed into a diverse, vibrant and highly-respected urban research campus.

“We believe, and have always believed, that it is our responsibility to educate hearts as well as minds,” said Corrigan. “We are proud to be a university of activism, of personal responsibility, of concern about major issues and about determination of how to engage those issues.”

California State University awarded an honorary degree to renowned local philanthropist Barbro Osher, who is the Consul General of Sweden in San Francisco and Chairman of the Board of The Bernard Osher Foundation. Together with her husband, who started the eponymous foundation in 1977, she has overseen bountiful investment in educational and cultural institutions locally, nationally and in her native Sweden. She encouraged the graduating class to do as she learned to do  -- give away while alive. “And I hope many of you benefit from that and that you go out and build a legacy for yourself,” Osher said.

Corporate Finance major Aznaur Midov represented the Class of 2012 as its student speaker. Midov, a hood recipient from the College of Business, came to SF State from the Russian republic of Kabardino-Balkaria and quickly overcame the language barrier to establish himself as a leader on campus. He co-founded Financial Analysis and Management Education (FAME), a student-run investment group, and helped secure internships for his fellow students.

Midov praised the mentorship and support he received from his professors and the enthusiasm of his fellow students. “As students, we have experienced the many great strengths of this university,” he said. “Chief among them is its commitment to diversity. This is a place where unique backgrounds and personal differences are celebrated rather than ostracized.”

Also honored was 2012 Alumnus of the Year Jose Antonio Vargas, a renowned journalist and activist who won a Pulitzer Prize in 2008 as part of The Washington Post team that covered the 2007 Virginia Tech shootings. In a 2011 essay in The New York Times Magazine, Vargas revealed his status as an undocumented immigrant and has since founded a multimedia campaign called Define American to advocate for immigration reform.

“I don’t have the right papers to prove that I’m American, so I have to believe in my heart that I am American,” he said. “I thank the kind and generous people at San Francisco State for welcoming me.”

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SF State is the only master's-level public university serving the counties of San Francisco, San Mateo and Marin. The University enrolls more than 30,000 students each year and graduates about 8,000 annually. With nationally acclaimed programs in a range of fields -- from creative writing, cinema and biology to history, broadcast and electronic communication arts, theatre arts and ethnic studies -- the University’s more than 212,000 graduates have contributed to the economic, cultural and civic fabric of San Francisco and beyond.

 

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