The landscape below was one she first came to know during two years of elementary school in Ithaca, while her mother did postdoctoral work at Cornell. After the family moved to Long Island, she’d treasured memories of the university’s green campus, the subterranean Cornell Store and playing in Stewart Park on the shores of Cayuga Lake.
“It all came together for me, how important Cornell and Ithaca are to me and my family,” Khakh said of the scene. “It’s been such a pivotal place for us.”
On Dec. 21, Khakh added another indelible and slightly dizzying Cornell memory: graduation.
She was one of more than 540 graduates to participate in the university’s largest winter recognition ceremony yet, attended on the winter solstice by more than 2,000 guests in Barton Hall, according to the Office of University Commencement Events.
When their names were called – to cheers and shout-outs from family and friends – the graduates walked in caps and gowns across a stage decorated with red and white poinsettias and green ferns. Each received a certificate (to be replaced later by an official diploma) from the college or school dean, and shook hands with President Martha E. Pollack.
Pollack called the event one of her favorites each year, permitting individual recognition that is not possible during the much larger Commencement ceremonies in May. The same process then, she joked, would take more than nine hours.
In thinking about what pithy advice she could offer such a diverse audience, Pollack said, she concluded that the most memorable commencement speeches delivered the simplest messages.