2013 Academic Convocation and Gerstner Sloan Kettering Graduate School Commencement

Share

“Memorial Sloan Kettering is an extraordinary institution, and our biggest asset is the people who choose to work and to train here,” said Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center President and CEO Craig B. Thompson, welcoming graduates and guests to the 34th annual Academic Convocation and the second Commencement ceremony for students of the Louis V. Gerstner, Jr. Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences on May 10. “This day really belongs to them — to the award winners and trainees — as we recognize and reward their excellence and we honor the young men and women who will be the scientific and medical leaders of tomorrow.”

Academic Convocation honors students whose doctoral dissertation work was conducted in Memorial Sloan Kettering laboratories through a partnership between Weill Cornell Medical College and the Sloan Kettering Institute. Younger Memorial Sloan Kettering physicians, scientists, and postdoctoral research fellows, as well as established clinicians and investigators from Memorial Sloan Kettering and beyond, are also recognized. In addition, students of the Louis V. Gerstner, Jr. Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences receive their PhD degrees during a Commencement ceremony. This year, six students — representing the first, second, and third classes — received degrees, bringing the total number of graduates of the school to ten.

“Make the whole world better”: Convocation awards

Members of the Memorial Sloan Kettering community are presented each year at Convocation with awards that recognize outstanding research publications by graduate students, others that honor Memorial Sloan Kettering physicians and scientists under the age of 40 who have demonstrated special accomplishments in clinical and laboratory investigations, and still others that acknowledge the work of Sloan Kettering Institute postdoctoral fellows.

Memorial Sloan Kettering also honors veteran physicians and scientists. The Willet F. Whitmore Award for Clinical Excellence is presented each year to a clinician whose long service, talent, and dedication reflect the standards set by Dr. Whitmore during his more than 46 years at Memorial Sloan Kettering. This year, the award went to Larry Norton, Deputy Physician-in-Chief for Breast Cancer Programs, Medical Director of the Evelyn H. Lauder Breast Center, and the first incumbent of the Norna S. Sarofim Chair in Clinical Oncology. Memorial Hospital Physician-in-Chief José Baselga — who trained under Dr. Norton — presented the award, saying, “Larry is not only the ultimate clinician but an amazing teacher… . Our discussions were rich and productive and he made sure we learned the principles of taking care of patients with breast cancer.” He quoted another colleague who said of Dr. Norton, “Larry’s talent is immense … and his compassion is expressed not only in the bonds he forms with his patients and their families, but also in his desire to make the whole world better using any and all means he can.”

“Wise counsel, insight, and friendship”: Honorary degree conferred

An honorary Doctor of Science degree was conferred on Memorial Sloan Kettering President Emeritus Paul A. Marks by the Louis V. Gerstner, Jr. Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences. “Over his many years at Memorial Sloan Kettering, we have been blessed with Paul’s wise counsel, insight, and friendship,” said Dr. Thompson in his presentation of the degree. “His work and his leadership established the highest standards of research and patient care at MSKCC, and his commitment to mentoring generations of clinicians and scientists is well known.”

“Take the reins and lead”: Commencement student speaker

Nicholas Gauthier spoke on behalf of his fellow Gerstner Sloan Kettering School graduates, observing that the school’s unique approach — the integration of basic science, clinical research, and patient care — “gives us a strong lead in translating massive amounts of biological data into clinically relevant therapies.” He exhorted his fellow students to “take advantage of this amazing education, take the reins, and lead in the fight against cancer.”

“Tenderness and tension”: A Pulitzer Prize–winning author addresses the graduates

Physician-scientist Siddhartha Mukherjee, author of The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer, which won the 2011 Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction, spoke to graduates of the “tenderness and tension” inherent in scientific discovery.

Pictured: Nicholas Gauthier
Remarks of Graduate Nicholas Gauthier
Dr. Gauthier, a member of the second class of the Louis V. Gerstner, Jr. Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, reflects on how the school prepared him and his fellow graduates for a life in science.
Learn more

“Newspapers may bring us news of a scientific-industrial complex that is increasingly depersonalized … where terabytes of data are churned through supercomputers to generate gigabytes of information,” he said. “But ask a real scientist and you get a profoundly different image of how real science happens.”

“Science,” Dr. Mukherjee asserted, “is among the most profoundly human of our activities. Far from being subsumed by the dehumanizing effects of technology, science in fact remains our last stand against it.”  Invoking “the indelible image of Gregor Mendel, a monk in wire-rimmed glasses, tending his plants, stooping with paintbrush and forceps, to transfer the orange dust of pollen from one flower to the next,” he described a quality he called the “tenderness” of the scientific enterprise.

 “It’s not a word typically used to describe science or scientists,” Dr. Mukherjee acknowledged. “It describes a certain intimacy between human beings and nature, a nourishment that must happen before investigation can begin.”

Dr. Mukherjee framed his talk by asking how Mendel, working in the mid-1800s in the garden of his monastery, “stumbled upon what is arguably the most seminal discovery of modern biology: that hereditary information is transmitted from one generation to the next.

“His science began with tending,” noted Dr. Mukherjee. “The laborious cross-fertilization of seedlings … the markings of wrinkles on seeds [which] led him to findings that could not be explained by the traditional understanding of biology or inheritance. Tending generated tension until the old fulcrum of biology was snapped in two.”

“Tenderness and tension,” said Dr. Mukherjee, “the two qualities that I think define science. Tenderness has to do with the day-to-day life of a scientist… . When I witness science in action, I see this tenderness in abundance. On Monday morning, the graduate students and postdoctoral fellows in my laboratory rush in to see how their cells have grown over the weekend. The best of these researchers have a gardener’s instinct: Some cultures need nourishment; some need to be left alone to inhabit the corners of incubators; and yet others need to be coaxed with growth factors to flourish.”

And then, explained Dr. Mukherjee, “out of those years of tending comes tension — that spectacular crystallizing moment when all the pieces of a puzzle come together on the verge of making complete sense.”

At the conclusion of his address, Dr. Mukherjee received the Memorial Sloan Kettering Medal for Outstanding Contributions to Biomedical Research, which is awarded each year to the keynote speaker.

Recipient Lists

PhD Recipients
Louis V. Gerstner, Jr. Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences

Nicholas Paul Gauthier
Ellen H. Hukkelhoven
Karen Elizabeth Hunter
Yvonne Gruber Mica
Alexandria Nuesa Miller
Jeffrey Ryan Smith

Sloan Kettering Division / Weill Cornell Graduate school of Medical sciences

Yu-Hung Jeff Chen
Yu-Kang Cheng
Christina Jean Crump
Zehra Dincer
Xiaozhou Fan
Carolina B. Gabbai
Samuel Twining Globus
Ryo Hayama
Amanda Michelle Holland
Melissa Anita Kinnebrew
Ryan Kniewel
Fabien G. Lafaille
Steve Lianoglou
Da David Liu
Kirti Magudia
Evan John Molinelli
Julia Lousie Moore
Sudeep Prajapati
Stephanie M. Pyonteck
Asif M. Rizwan
Robert M. Samstein
Jessica S. Schneider
Aneesh A. Sheth
Tyler Roy Simpson
Christopher F. Stratton
Drew Fraser Thacker
Eleanor Mary Tyler
Rui Wang
Jason A. Willis
JR-Shiuan Yang

Awards

Frank Lappin Horsfall, Jr. Fellowship

Manu Setty

Dorris J. Hutchison Fellowship

Ushati Das

Louise and Allston Boyer Young Investigator awards

Song-Hai Shi, PhD
Richard D. Carvajal, MD
Brett S. Carver, MD

Postdoctoral Research Awards

Swarnali Acharyya, PhD
Celia Andreu Agulló, PhD
Jarrod Dudakov, PhD
Sarah Goetz, PhD

C. Chester Stock Award Lectureship

Malcolm A. S. Moore, DPhil

Willet F. Whitmore Award for Clinical Excellence

Larry Norton, MD

Katharine Berkan Judd Award

Titia de Lange, PhD

Doctor of Science, Honoris Causa

Paul A. Marks, MD

The Memorial Sloan Kettering Medal for Outstanding Contributions to BiomedicalResearch

Siddhartha Mukherjee, MD, DPhil