Tufts 154th Commencement Sunday, May 23

Legendary Teacher Sol Gittleman Gives Tufts Commencement Address May 23

Tufts University legendary professor and former provost Sol Gittleman will deliver the commencement address and receive an honorary doctorate of humane letters at Tufts on Sunday, May 23, 2010.

The colorful and candid Gittleman, who came to Tufts 46 years ago as an assistant professor of German, exemplifies Tufts’ tradition of inspired teaching. He was provost from 1981 to August 2002 — at which time he was believed to be the longest-serving provost in the country — but never left the classroom. He was appointed the Alice and Nathan Gantcher University Professor in 2003 and continues to teach courses on the migration of East European Jewish literature to America and American baseball history. Gittleman’s lectures are embedded in Tufts lore. Students routinely refer to them as “spectacular” and “unforgettable.”

Born in Hoboken, N.J., to Eastern European Jewish immigrants, Gittleman was by his own admission an unlikely candidate for an academic career. He has received two Fulbright awards, the Harbison Prize of the Danforth Foundation for Outstanding Teaching, and a citation as Professor of the Year from the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education, and is the recipient of the Robert J. McKenna Award in 2009 from The New England Board of Higher Education. Gittleman holds a Ph.D. in comparative literature from the University of Michigan, an M.A. in the same field from Columbia University and a B.A. from Drew University.

More than 3,000 students from Tufts’ undergraduate, graduate, and professional schools will receive degrees.

In addition, several people will receive honorary degrees, including:

– Richard Dorsay, Tufts alumnus, retired chief of radiology at Kaiser Hospital South San Francisco, retired professor of radiology, volunteer in support of cancer prevention and education, founder of Tufts’ Leonard Carmichael Society, which serves as a vehicle for more than 1,000 students to do volunteer service in some 30 community programs; honorary doctorate of public service.

– Kristina M. Johnson, under secretary of energy, former provost and senior vice president for academic affairs at The Johns Hopkins University, former dean of Duke University’s Pratt School of Engineering; honorary doctorate of science.

– Ann Hobson Pilot, distinguished harpist, among the first African-American women to be appointed to a principal position with a major orchestra when she joined the Washington National Symphony, the first African-American principal in the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the first female principal harpist in the history of the BSO; honorary doctorate of music.

– Gordon S. Wood, Tufts alumnus, Pulitzer Prize winning historian, Alva O. Way University Professor and Professor of History Emeritus at Brown University; honorary doctorate of humane letters.

Information from Tufts University