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Speakers Chosen To Address Graduates

Senior to speak about civility in public debate

Eric B. Hart ’03 will urge graduating seniors to be civil in public debate in a speech chosen Friday to be delivered on Commencement Day.

Hart is one of three students selected to speak at Commencement exercises on June 5.

Hart will deliver the English oration, Charles B. Watson Jr. ’03 will give the Latin oration and Harvard Business School (HBS) student Elizabeth Carpenter will present the graduate student oration.

Hart said his speech, entitled “Respecting the Future,” was motivated by the bitter debates that have occurred on campus in recent memory.

“My speech talks about maintaining civility irrespective of what our differences are,” he said.

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Hart, an Eliot House resident and former House Committee co-chair, cited the controversy over the use of the word “slut” on the Eliot House open e-mail list and conversations about the war in Iraq as examples of uncivil debates.

“It’s sort of a conglomeration of seeing talented Harvard kids reduce themselves to dialogue like ‘Bush is a cold-blooded murderer’ and [the controversy over] last year’s graduation speech,” he said. “I’m challenging the senior class to think about how we conduct our public discourse.”

Hart said the public debate sparked by the original title of last year’s English oration, “American Jihad,” is another example of the disrespectfulness he hopes to target in his address.

Last year, Zayed M. Yasin ’02 was selected as the undergraduate English orator. Some students and national media decried the use of the word “jihad” in the title of his speech.

In a compromise Yasin renamed his speech “Of Faith and Citizenship: My American Jihad,” moving the disputed word to the subtitle of his address.

Watson, who is in his ninth year of studying Latin, said he has wanted to give this oration since he first heard it existed.

“Since I was in high school, I thought if I go to Harvard I wanted to do that,” Watson said. “I’ve always wanted to do it if I had a chance.”

The Latin oration is one of Harvard’s oldest traditions and was delivered during the first commencement exercises in 1642.

Graduating seniors receive an English translation to the speech so they can understand the address.

Watson said that his speech, “De Ignotis,” which translates as “On the Forgotten,” is about how history often forgets the people who were vital for the successes of today.

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