Commencement to be ON CAMPUS: More information

Commencement to be ON CAMPUS : Originally Posted: Sunday, May 19, 2013

Alert Good morning.

Commencement will be held on Page Terrace as scheduled this morning at 10 a.m.

In making the decision to hold the ceremony outdoors on campus despite the iffy weather, President Fox kept in mind the strong preference of the Class of 2013.

Family and friends attending today's ceremony should use their best judgment regarding rain gear. Since the grassy hillside could be slippery should it become wet, we encourage guests to wear appropriate footwear and as always exercise appropriate caution.

Congratulations to all those who will receive their degrees today, and deepest thanks to all the family and friends whose support helped them along the way.
Boldly Baldwin word mark

Photo of English Rose Garden Garners Professor Prize

Mottisfont

Sara James, professor of art history, captured the intriguing beauty of garden paths in “Mottisfont,” a photograph that won first place in a competition sponsored by the Garden Club of America. The category in which she won called for a monochrome photograph of a garden path that “your grandmother may have walked and your granddaughter would love to explore.”

James chose “Mottisfont” from photos she took while visiting and researching estates dating from the Tudor era and earlier in England.

“I came up with this one at Mottisfont Abbey, as I could imagine either an adult or child being drawn by the bench at the end of the garden path here,” she said.

Mottisfont Abbey, located in Hampshire, England, was founded as an Augustinian abbey in 1201 and was desecrated during Henry VIII’s dissolution of the monasteries in the 1530s, James explained. The abbey church was then converted into a home for Lord Sandys after 1537.

“The garden where I took the photograph is on the site of the former walled kitchen garden that would have served the monks at the abbey, but [it] in no way resembles what was there originally,” said James.

The present-day garden was designed in the 1970s and conserves more than 300 varieties of roses, particularly varieties from 19th-century France.

Published Jan 12, 2012 by - Comments? None yet

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