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Alumni
Profiles: Award Winners
The
winners of the Alumni Distinguished Service Award and the Inspirational
Young Alumni Award were announced at Alumni Weekend 2003 in May.
Alumni Distinguished Service Award
Eleanor
Forbes Pierson 41 was honored during Alumni Weekend with the
2003 Alumni Distinguished Service Award. This award is bestowed annually
in recognition of selfless commitment and ongoing volunteer service to
the College. The following is from her acceptance speech given at the
Through the Gates ceremony:
My connection with Pomona actually goes back before I was born. My grandfather,
John James Forbes, became the financial secretary for President James
Arnold Blaisdell. The construction of Little Bridges was under way at
that time. Dr. Blaisdell ... put him in charge of the interior furnishings,
where he was responsible for the exquisite ceiling we still admire. It
was in Little Bridges that Lenn and I were married by Dr. Blaisdell. Many
years later, much to our delight, one of our daughters was married in
the same building.
I became acquainted with Alumni Day as a child accompanying my two aunts...both
of the Class of 1917. So it was only natural that my volunteering involved
planning class reunions on Alumni Day. We have had 11 memorable gatherings
of the Class of 41, otherwise known as the Arakarans. This started
when we sprang our banner at the halftime of the 1937 Caltech football
game. What sounded like bombs bursting near Big Bridges was the alert
for one of our classmates to come galloping onto the field on a white
horse, carrying our banner. It was a dramatic and exciting momentso
exciting, I have no idea which was the victorious team.
The opportunity to participate, even if on the outer rim, in a college
growing stronger every year, has made volunteering not only worthwhile,
but a most rewarding experience. In one way, volunteering has been my
answer to Blaisdells words on the College Gates. Living in Claremont
made it easy for me to become involved, early on planning programs for
the Pomona Valley Alumni Club. This led to serving on the Alumni Council
with the presidency in 1972. Here, over the years, I served in a number
of capacities, helped with many phonathons, served as Alumna representative
on the Pomona College Admissions Committee and worked on the Symposium
honoring the World War II generation.
Becoming acquainted with alumni of different eras has been an added benefit
for me. I encourage all alumni to become involved, even if you live a
distance from the College, as you will find there are things you can do.
Believe me, it will add a remarkable dimension to your life.
Inspirational Young Alumni Award
Cuc
Vu 92 of Washington, DC, was on campus during Alumni Weekend
to receive the 2003 Inspirational Young Alumni Award. Vu, who immigrated
to the United States as troops were evacuating Vietnam, directs the national
immigration program for the Service Employees International Union (SEIU).
At the award ceremony, she spoke of her life, work and inspiration:
I started with a simple ideal: to follow my heart and connect my work
to social and economic justice. As a student, my heart led me to study
art history and public policy, which led me to grad school to study policy.
My union work led me to SEIU, and the rest of that narrative is still
unfolding.
My experience as an immigrant and a refugee from a war-torn country makes
me feel a great sense of urgency about immigrant rights. Being raised
in a single-parent household and knowing firsthand how low-wage workers
struggle for dignity and a chance to achieve the American Dream also makes
me sympathetic to workers joining together to change their workplace and
communities.
Growing up in Washington, before I was legally old enough to hold a job,
my brothers and sisters and I would get up at 5 a.m. during the summers
and pick strawberries until 3 p.m. (We earned about $1.75 an hour.) I
remember standing up one day to stretch my backnot an easy thing
to do after being hunched over all day and breathing in the pesticides
the growers sprayedand I suddenly noticed that almost everyone in
that strawberry field was Vietnamese. That moment changed me. I had no
words for it then, but I knew in my heart that I didnt like what
I saw and experienced and would work to change it.
Not many people get paid to change peoples lives, so I feel an incredible
sense of responsibility and urgency about our mission. Justice is indivisible.
Justice for immigrants is the next civil rights issue, and we are at a
moment to make history.
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