HIGH TECHNOLOGY AT GRADUATION CEREMONY
PHILADELPHIA - Students graduating from the University of
Pennsylvania's School of Engineering and Applied Science next
week will have a much more advanced means of communicating
their sentiments than the traditional masking tape atop mortarboards:
As each one passes onto the stage to receive a diploma, the
scan of a personalized bar code will bring onto a giant overhead
screen a web site displaying the student's name, hometown
and personal comments.
The technology, developed by SEAS undergraduate David Badler,
is distantly related to that found in grocery store checkout
aisles - but sufficiently novel that the university has applied
for a patent.
The 25-foot-by-65-foot screen on which students' comments
will be projected is expected to allow for somewhat more expansive
remarks than the average mortarboard. Sentiments that have
already been submitted by graduating seniors include "Querida
familia: Gracias por todo," "Thanks Mum, for always
pushing me!" and, in a reference to the building where
many SEAS classes are held, "I am no longer a Towne potato.
Thanks!"
Roughly 450 to 500 students will receive undergraduate and
masters degrees at the ceremony, which will take place Monday,
May 21, at 3 p.m. at Penn's Franklin Field. The students and
their professors, family and friends will hear remarks from
Oliver C. Boileau Jr., an alumnus and former president and
chief operating officer of the Northrop Grumman Corporation.
|