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a conversation that inspired you。 made art and music。 of looking to the future with hope while saying farewell with both joy and, perhaps, nostalgia. It is a jumble of emotions for all of us – and a fieldday for a psychologist! Enjoy all those feelings: it’s hard to imagine you’ll have an experience quite like this again. So, there is a wonderful Yale tradition that I would like to honor right now: So, may I ask all of the families and friends here who are today to rise and recognize the outstanding – and graduating – members of the Class of 20xx? And now, may I ask the Class of 20xx to consider all those who have supported your arrival at this milestone, and to please rise and recognize them? Thank you! 英語演講稿2 In September 1974, Kingman Brewster, then president of Yale, spoke to members of the Class of 1978, seated right where you are now. He told them, “Many of us have just been on a tenyear trip of moral outrage: antiWallace, antiWar, and antiWatergate. We have been so sure about what we were against that we have almost forgotten how difficult it is to know what we are for and how to achieve it.” Does this sound familiar? Today, perhaps more than ever, it is easy to know what you’re against. And it’s far more difficult to say what you’re for. What we’re against is going to be different for each of us. Maybe you’re against border walls and I’m against guns。此資料由網(wǎng)絡(luò)收集而來,如有侵權(quán)請告知上傳者立即刪除。 your neighbor is against trade wars and your cousin is against abortion. For some, capita