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Hello.
I hope you are all wearing sunscreen.
We
must be close to a very powerful transmitter for CNN,
right? Anybody know where it is? Anybody know where
Jane Fonda is?
In
the early days of radio, I remember, people living too
close to the transmitter of station KDKA in Pittsburgh
used to hear soap operas in their bridgework and mattress
springs.
And
now CNN News plays such a big part in the lives of so
many Americans, including mine, that we might as well
be hearing Wolfe Blitzer and Christiane Amanpour in
our bridgework and mattress springs.
And
I won't lie to you: The news from CNN can be really
bad these days.
But
I also give you my word of honor that you before me,
the Class of 1999 at Agnes Scott College, are near the
very top of the best news I can ever hear. By working
so hard at becoming wise and reasonable and well informed,
you have made our little planet, our precious little
moist, blue-green ball, a saner place than it was before
you got here.
God
bless you and the faculty of this college, and those
who made it possible for you to go from strength to
strength here. Thanks to all of you, the forces of ignorance
and brutality have lost again.
Not
that there hasn't been a lot of good news, along with
the bad, long before you got here. I am talking about
the birth of works of art, music, paintings, statues,
buildings, poems, stories, plays and essays, and movies,
(you bet), and humane ideas - which make us feel honored
to be member of the human race.
What
can you yourselves contribute? You've come this far
anyway, and it wasn't easy. And I now recite a famous
line by the poet Robert Browning, with one small change.
I have replaced his word ''man,'' which in his time
was taken to mean ''human being,'' with the word ''woman.''
May
I say, too, that his wife Elizabeth Barrett was as great
a poet as he was:
''How
do I love thee'' Let me count the ways
'' and so
on.
While
I'm at it, get a load of this: The atomic bomb which
we dropped on the people of Hiroshima, was first envisioned
by a woman, not a man. She was, of course, Mary Wollstoncraft
Shelley. She didn't call it an ''atomic bomb'' She called
it ''the monster of Frankenstein.''
But
back to Robert Browning, and what he said about anyone
who hopes to make the world better. Again, I've changed
his word ''man'' to ''woman'' for this occasion:
''A
woman's reach should exceed her grasp, or what's a heaven
for?''
And
of course the original ''A man's reach should exceed
his grasp, or what's a heaven for?''

Speaking
of women: Pollyanna is not your graduation orator here
today. Pollyanna is bound to be speaking somewhere -
irrespressibly optimistic, seeing good in everything.
So I will comment, as briefly and efficiently as possible,
on the perfectly horrible news CNN has been giving us
about the Balkans and that high school in Colorado.
I
won't go on and on about it. We're here for a good time
and we are darn well going to have one.
Others
with axes to grind are playing the blame game: blaming
the National Rifle Association, the movies, TV, pop
music, video games, no prayers in the public schools.
I
myself have an axe, which I have ground as sharp as
a razor. What would I like to do with it, if I could?
I would like to plant it in the forehead of the Babylonian
King Hammurabi, who lived almost four thousand years
ago.
Hammurabi
gave us a code which is honored to his very day by many
nations, including my own, and by all heroes in cowboy
and gangster films, and by far too many people who feel
they have been insulted or injured, however slightly.
However accidentally:
An
eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth.
Revenge is not only sweet - it is a must!
What
antidote can there be for an idea that popular and poisonous?
Revenge provides revenge, which is sure to provide revenge,
forming an endless chain of human misery.
Here's
the antidote:
Forgive
us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass
against us.
Amen.

Some
of you may know that I am a Humanist, not a Christian.
But I say of Jesus, as all Humanists do, ''If what he
said was good and so much of it is absolutely beautiful,
what can it matter if he was God or not?''
If
Christ hadn't delivered the Sermon on the Mount, with
its message of mercy and pity, I wouldn't want to be
a human being.
I
would just as soon be a rattlesnake.
OK,
now let's have some fun. Let's talk about sex. Let's
talk about women. Freud said he didn't know what women
wanted. I know what women want. They want a whole lot
of people to talk to. What do they want to talk about?
They want to talk about everything.
What
do men want? They want a lot of pals, and they wish
people wouldn't get so mad at them.
Why
are so many people getting divorced today? It's because
most of us don't have extended families any more. It
used to be that when a man and women got married, the
bride got a lot more people to talk to about everything.
The groom got a lot more pals to tell dumb jokes to.
A
few Americans, but very few, still have extended families.
The Navahos. The Kennedys.
But
most of us, if we get married nowadays, are just one
more person for the other person. The groom gets one
more pal, but it's a woman. The woman gets one more
person to talk to about everything, but it's a man.
When
a couple has an argument nowadays, they may think it's
about money or power or sex, not how to raise the kids,
or whatever. What they're really saying to each other,
though, without realizing it, is this:
''You
are not enough people!''
I
met a man in Nigeria one time, an Ibo who had six hundred
relatives he knew quite well. His wife had just had
a baby, the best possible news in any extended family.
They
were going to take it to meet all its relatives, Ibos
of all ages and sizes and shapes. It would even meet
other babies, cousins not much older than it was. Everybody
who was big enough and steady enough was going to get
to hold it, cuddle it, gurgle to it, and say how pretty
is was, or handsome.
Wouldn't
you have loved to be that baby?
I
sure wish I could wave a wand, and give every one of
you an extended family - make you an Ibo or a Navaho
- or a Kennedy.
The
least I can do is give you health tips. I've already
mentioned sun screen. And don't smoke cigarettes, which
are as evil as Slobodan Milosovic.
But
cigars are good for you. They are so healthful that
there is even a magazine devoted to their enjoyment,
with cigar-smoking role models on its cover - athletes,
movie stars, rich guys. Why not the Surgeon General?
Cigars,
of course are made of trail mix, a blend of raisins,
cashews, and Granola, which has been soaked for a week
in maple syrup. To celebrate the end of your graduation
day, why not eat a cigar at bedtime?
No
cholesterol!
Guns
are also good for people. No nicotine and no cholesterol.
As your Congress person if that isn't so.
Incidentally,
if somebody asks you whether you are a Liberal or a
Conservative, tell'em this:
''Listen,
Buster - I'm a graduate of Agnes Scott College in Decatur,
Georgia, zipcode, 30030. They taught me to think for
myself there. You want to know if I'm a Liberal or a
Conservative? I'm both of those, and neither one.
''Go
jump in the lake. Go climb a tree.''
I
have so far quoted Robert and Elizabeth Barrett Browning,
and Hammurabi and Jesus Christ. I now give you Sir William
Gilbert, of the team of Gilbert and Sullivan:
I
often think it's comical
how
nature always does contrive
That every boy and every gal,
That's born into the world alive,
Is either a little Liberal,
Or else a little Conservative.
What
the heck. While I'm at it, why don't I give you Eugene
Victor Debs, the great labor leader who ran for President
three times on the Socialist ticket, and who died in
1926, when I was four.
''As
long as there is a lower class, I am in it. As long
as there is a criminal element, I am of it. As long
as there is a soul in prison, I am not free.''
That's
worth repeating: ''As long as there's a lower class,
I'm in it. As long as there is a criminal element, I
am of it. As long as there is a soul in prison, I am
not free.''
Wouldn't
you like to say that when you get out of bed every morning,
with the roosters crowing: ''As long as there is a lower
class, I am in it. As long as there is a criminal element,
I am of it. As long as there is a soul in prison, I
am not free.''
Excuse
me. I beg your pardon. I'm receiving signals from CNN
in my bridgework - Wolf Blitzer and Christiane Amanpour.
Wolf
Blitzer and Christiane Amanpour say CNN's military consultants
are unanimous in feeling that our revenge on the Serbs
for their revenge on the Kosovars has gone about as
well as could be expected.
The
Code of Hammurabi, revenge, an eye for an eye, a tooth
for a tooth, always works that way -- about as well
as could be expected.
Wait
a minute. Somebody else is speaking, not Wolf, not Christiane.
Whoever it is, and I'll bet she's blond - she's saying
I can lose thirty pounds in thirty days, and never once
feel hungry.
OK,
she's gone now, thank goodness. My bridgework has fallen
silent of its own accord. I thought for a minute there,
I was going to have to ask somebody for dental floss.
High tech! How would that have been for high tech: tuning
out CNN with dental floss?
How
I love high tech! Forbes Magazine asked a bunch of us
a while back to name our
favorite technologies. I said the Encyclopedia Britannica
on a shelf, because it's alphatetical, my address book,
also alphabetical, and the mailbox on the corner. Putting
a letter in that mailbox is like feeding a great big
bullfrog painted blue. You know what its lid says to
me when I close it? ''Ribbit,'' it says.
Don't
give up on books. They feel so good - their friendly
heft, the sweet reluctance of their pages when you turn
them with your sensitive fingertips. A large part of
our brains is devoted to deciding whether what our hands
are touching is good or bad for us. Any brain worth
a nickel knows books are good for us.
Computers
are insincere. Books are sincere.
And
don't try to make yourself an extended family out of
ghosts
on the Internet.
Get
yourself a Harley, and join Hell's Angels instead.

All
right - let's stop kidding around, and get down to the
nitty-gritty.
You
know what you are, Class of 1999? You are a bunch of
Eves, and this is Eden, and now that you've eaten the
apple of knowledge you're getting kicked out of here.
Many
of you intend to become teachers, which is the noblest
of all professions in a democracy. Teachers can be so
good for this country, but only if their classes can
be cut to eighteen. Teaching is friendship, and nobody
can deal intelligently with more than eighteen friends
at any one time.
And
only well-informed, warm-hearted people can teach others
things they'll always remember and love. Computers and
TV's can never do that.
A
computer teaches a child what a computer can become.
An
educated human being teaches a child what a child can
become.
Some
of you will be mothers. These things happen. If you
should find yourselves sidelined in that fashion, remind
yourself of these lines by the nineteenth century white
male poet William Ross Wallace: ''The hand that rocks
the cradle rules the world.''
That
being the case, you might teach the kid a couple of
things it should say every day. ''Forgive us our trespasses
as we forgive those who trespass against us,'' and,
''As long as there is a soul in prison, I am not free.''
Ideas
too unattainable? Class of 1999, let me impress on you
that ideas, by their very definition, can never be too
high - for children or anyone.
A
child's reach should exceed its grasp, or what's a heaven
for?
This
wonderful speech is already nearly twice as long as
the most efficient, effective oration in American history,
Abraham Lincoln's address on the battlefield at Gettysburg.
Lincoln was killed by a two-bit actor exercising his
right to bear arms, but his truth goes marching on.
Up
to now, most of what I've said has been a custom job
for this Dixieland rite of passage. But every graduation
pep talk I've ever given has ended with words about
my father's kid brother, Alex Vonnegut, a Harvard educated
insurance agent in Indianapolis, who was well-read and
wise.
The
first
graduation at which I spoke, incidentally, was also
at what was then a women's college - Bennington, in
Vermont. The Vietnam War was going on, and the graduates
wore no make-up, to show how ashamed and sad they were.
But
about my Uncle Alex, who is up in Heaven now.
One
of the things he found objectionable about human beings
was that they so rarely noticed it when they were happy;
He himself did his best to acknowledge it when times
were sweet. We could be drinking lemonade in the shade
of an apple tree in the summertime and Uncle Alex would
interrupt the conversation to say, ''If this isn't nice,
what is?''
So
I hope that you adorable women before me will do the
same for the rest of your lives. When things are going
sweetly and peacefully, please pause a moment, and then
say out loud, ''If this isn't nice, what is?''
Let
that be the motto of the Agnes Scott College Class of
1999: ''If this isn't nice, what is?''
That's
one favor I've asked of you. Now I ask for another one.
I ask it not only of the graduates, but of everyone
here, including President Mary Brown Bullock. I'll want
a show of hands after I ask this questions, and keep
your eyes on Dr. Bullock:
How
many of you have had a teacher at any level of your
education who made you more excited to be alive, proud
to be alive, than you had previously believed possible?
Hold
up your hands, please.
Now
take down your hands and say the name of that teacher
to someone sitting or standing near you.
All
done?
If
this isn't nice, what is?
I
thank you for your attention.
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