President’s Address by Professor Paul Ching-Wu CHU tYzsm!m~~ms~
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Mr Philip N L CHEN, Doctor of Business Administration honoris causa LfTwJ?% ’ rEEBs%Etef
Dr LEE Shau Kee, Doctor of Business Administration honork causa T?&@ ’ rE@~Fs%@t@k
Professor Andrew Chi-Chih YAO, Doctor of Engineering honoris causn tikBB&B ’ SlE~%~i@~-
Professor YAU Shing-Tung, Doctor of Science honoris causa h&#BB~@S%%%f
Mr Ronnie C CHAN, Doctor of Social Sciences honon’s causa lR@e ’ ++wFeMm3f 4 8 12 16 20 24 Medal Citations !!tmm&ma1%8
Michael G Gale Medal for Distinguished Teaching
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Stephen Cheong Kam-chuen Medal for Distinguished Service to the Student Body
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Addresses by Graduate Representatives +%%RsmBR
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Congregation Programs !ilw.mFtss~Pg
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Graduates in the School of Business and Management IEEXTSE@KY%&
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President’s Address
Professor Paul Ching-Wu CHU
Graduates, friends, a very warm welcome to you all, and thank you for being here today:
This is the fourth time I have had the pleasure of addressing Congregation. Each year I feel a greater sense of satisfaction as thousands more of our students graduate into society, a transition for which UST has so thoroughly prepared them.
You, dear graduates, have already achieved so much that you can look back on and be proud of, and you have so much more to look forward to. Today is a seminal moment in your lives. Congregation marks that precious instant when you are formally liberated, to begin exploring the broadest lrmits of your potential.
But remember that even though you are leaving the University, there will always remain a bond between yourselves and your alma mater, which will link us forever as members of the great UST family.
As such, we are united by our mission to excel at every level we possibly can in life. Indeed, the word “excellence” is already synonymous with this institution, and in a large part that is down to the hard work of all of you graduates, and your families and professors gathered here today.
Take for instance this last academic year. It has been yet another of outstanding achievement. Among our faculty, Prof Nancy Ip blazed a trail and was named one of the year’s L’Orbal-UNESCO for Women in Science; Dr Hannah Xue discovered the fifth gene linked to the causes of schizophrenia, and her work will help develop drugs to treat the disease; while at School level, our EMBA was ranked number 6 in the world very recently by the Financial Times.
Among our students, UST teams won the
prestigious McGill Management International Case Competition, and the Hong Kong Joint Tertiary Institution Putonghua Debating Competition; Tsz- wing Leung was named champion in the China-Hong Kong Investment Simulation Competition.
These and many other plaudits serve to illustrate that the UST formula is a winning formula. And I have no doubt in saying to the Class of 2004 that you will achieve even more as you work hard, fulfill your destinies, and become the leaders and innovators of tomorrow.
As you do so, be sure to take inspiration from the initiatives of your fellow alumni. Although still young, they, like you, are the shining stars of UST, extending our fine reputation around the world.
Some, like members of the first class of our Global Business BBA program, are landing jobs with internationally renowned companies like Goldman Sachs -jobs that often previously went to overseas- educated students. Others, like last year’s computer science graduates, faced an industry in transition yet proved that a UST education is a prize worth having, with every single one of them finding work.
Be inspired too by Li Lin, a graduate in chemical engineering, who headed north to the Mainland in search of opportunity. Li Lin is now already a full professor at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, a quite marvelous achievement. We even have alumni, like Feiyu Kang, Bo Zhang, and Xia Li, who are now deputy deans in prestigious institutions, including Tsinghua and Renmin universities, and the Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business.
Their experience demonstrates that in this globalized world, the competition you face will not only come from other Hong Kong graduates. Many
of the Class of 2004 will want to set their sights on working in the Mainland and further afield.
In this regard, I am heartened that more than 540 of you have benefited from participating in overseas exchange and mainland internship programs. Through these, you have attended universities and worked in corporations in the Mainland and other countries, from Europe to the United States.
Many Mainland and overseas students have also come to UST, to learn with us and about us. Without a doubt, our campus is now the very essence of a living, breathing, multi-cultural hub. I trust that all this international exposure has helped you realize that your success need not know any boundaries.
Of course, you will undoubtedly face many challenges on the road ahead. But when they present themselves, remember your alma mater and what she has achieved in only 13 years, and be filled with optimism. Always remind yourselves that armed with the knowledge, integrity and respect for others that you learnt at UST, you will prevail as you strive to make the future a better place for us all.
I cannot reiterate enough how proud we are of your achievements, and I applaud you for them. As you go out into the world today, be just as proud as I am of who you are and where you graduated from. Above all, enjoy your lives and make them as fulfilling and meaningful as you possibly can. Our good thoughts and good wishes go with each and every one of you.
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, and congratulations to the Class of 2004 !
Doctor of Business Administration honor-k causu
Philip N L CHEN
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The Hong Kong aviation industry has come a long way, as has Mr Philip N L Chen. Today we honour this industry leader not only for his many achievements in aviation but for his many contributions to the community. Philip Chen has forged a reputation in both public and corporate arenas.
At the end of the year, Philip Chen will become the first ethnic Chinese chief executive of Cathay Pacific. Born in 1955, he graduated from the University of Hong Kong (HKU) in 1977 with an honours degree in Political Science and History. He also holds an MBA degree from HKU. He joined Cathay Pacific that year and subsequently moved to Beijing as Chief Representative and General Manager of Swire China in 1989.
By 1992 Philip Chen was Regional General Manager Southeast Asia for Cathay Pacific based in Singapore. Then in 1994, he moved into the hot seat at Hong Kong Dragon Airlines, as Chief Executive. Under his leadership Dragonair made major profits.
Returning to Cathay, he was appointed Deputy Managing Director in 1997 and Chief Operating Officer in 1998. Since 1998, the airline has gone through the turbulence of the Asian economic downturn, 911 and the SARS crisis.
Those then are the bare bones of Philip Chen’s impressive career. But there is more to this man than a straightforward corporate success story. Look at his many wide-ranging appointments and you will discern the hand of an innovator at work.
When Hong Kong was struggling under the effects of SARS, Philip played a leading role in the We Love HK campaign that encouraged us to “get out and spend”.
He also organised Cathay Pacific’s ‘The World’s Biggest Welcome’ campaign, offering ten thousand free tickets for Hong Kong residents to invite friends and relatives living overseas to visit Hong Kong after 911. More than l,OOO,OOO names went into the lucky draw.
Cathay Pacific Airways has gone on to link Hong Kong to the other parts of the world and has long been committed to strengthening the territory’s position as the leading aviation hub.
When questions were asked as to how to make Hong Kong a world city, Philip Chen spoke up for its position as an aviation center with a pragmatic aviation policy. His well known “Great Cities Theory” argues that all great cities today are air hubs. It is important for Hong Kong to continue to be a competitive global aviation hub and the predominant gateway to the Mainland if it has to develop itself as a “world city”, and a strong home carrier is required to build up an effective network for the hub.
Philip has been actively involved in industry affairs, and also in promoting tourism to Hong Kong but he has also assumed numerous public duties.
For instance, he is involved in the 5th East Asian Games Planning Committee, is active with the Community Chest Hong Kong and helps the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) frame its community relations work. He was Chairman of Ocean Park from 2001 to 2003, during which the company turned continued losses into profits. He is also an Investment Promotion Ambassador with Invest Hong Kong.
In recognition of his contributions to society he received the Silver Bauhinia Star in 2002 and was appointed a Justice of the Peace in 2000.
The call of higher learning has remained strong throughout Philip Chen’s career. He holds advisory or visiting positions at the Civil Aviation Administration of China’s Institute of Management, the Chinese University of Hong Kong, the Chinese Management Centre of the School of Business at HKU and at HKUST Business School. He serves on the
University Grants Committee and its Strategy Sub- committee. He was a Governor of the Singapore International School Hong Kong and remains a Director of their Foundation. He was a member of the Council of the Hong Kong Institute of Education (HKIEd) from April 1996 to April 2002. He is also a Beta Gamma Sigma Honoree of our own University. He has served on our own Council for nine years, and was once the Vice-Chairman of the Council, during which he has made invaluable contributions to HKUST.
Mr Pro-Chancellor, I have the honour to present to you, on behalf of the University, Philip N L Chen, industry leader and community supporter, for the degree of Doctor of Business Administration honon’s
Doctor of business Administration honor-is causa
Dr LEE Shau Kee
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Dr Lee Shau Kee, tycoon and philanthropist, is a towering figure in property development in Hong Kong and, indeed, in the region as a whole. His tremendous success marks him out, but it is his modesty, generosity and commitment to work and family which leave an impression. Dr Lee has a reputation for working long hours, keeping a low profile with his family, and plowing his wealth back into education and charitable groups, especially in his hometown of Shunde, Guangdong.
Dr Lee approaches his work with the intensity of someone who has not been given his success on a plate, but has had to construct it brick by brick. He arrived in Hong Kong in 1948, to build his fortune with less than a thousand dollars in his pocket. He worked in a variety of businesses - gold, money exchange, hardware and import-export ~~- before setting up Eternal Enterprise Company with several other investors in 1958, which marked the beginning of his self-made real estate legend. In 1963, he co- founded Sun Hung Kai with Messrs Kwok Tek Seng and Fung King Hey. In 1973, Dr Lee founded Henderson Land Development Co Ltd and focused on the property business. Ever since, he has combined his razor-sharp business acumen with a strong work ethic and become one of the richest people in the world.
Known for working 12-hour days, Dr Lee is keen to participate in any property deal that comes his way, and coined the motto “never waste an inch” in reference to his insistence on making the most of all usable space. He also pursued the idea of never wasting a minute, developing a reputation for closing deals in record time. But of course, it is his uncanny ability to see value in the deals he pursues that has been the foundation of his success. Many have tried to follow in his footsteps, but the golden touch has eluded them. Dr Lee has it in abundance.
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The Chairman and Managing Director of Henderson Land Development Co Ltd since 1976, Dr Lee is also the Chairman of Henderson Investment Ltd and Henderson Cyber Ltd, the Director of Henderson China Holdings Ltd, the Chairman of The Hong Kong and China Gas Co Ltd and Miramar Hotel and Investment Co Ltd, and the Vice-Chairman of Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd. He is the Director of the Hong Kong Ferry (Holdings) Co Ltd and The Bank of East Asia, Ltd.
While building up his business empire, Dr Lee has never forgotten his roots. His extended family is closely involved in his businesses and his children are being groomed to take over the reins.
Ever the filial son, Dr Lee has extended his good fortune not only to his family, but to his native home of Shunde and elsewhere in China, generously endowing schools, hospitals and sports centers. He has been made an Honorary Citizen of Shunde, Guangzhou, Foshan and Beijing in recognition of these contributions.
Education has been a particular focus of his philanthropy. He set up Pei Hua Education Foundation in 1982 with friends, and has been the Chairman and Governor of the Board of Trustees since then. The foundation has played a significant role in promoting professional education in China.
And as for Hong Kong where he built his reputation, Dr Lee has given generously of his time and money. In the education field, he has established scholarships at Wadham College, Oxford University, to enable outstanding students from Hong Kong to study there, and he endowed the Yale-Chinese University Program for Chinese Studies to promote greater understanding of Southern China. He also lent his wisdom at the time of Hong Kong’s handover,
as a Hong Kong Affairs Advisor and a member of the Preparatory Committee for the Hong Kong SAR, as well as the First Selection Committee of the Hong Kong SAR Government.
For someone who would prefer to lie low and keep a modest appearance-fashioned with the help of an inexpensive barber and tailor - Dr Lee has inevitably attracted attention and become a household name through his many achievements. He has accumulated a long list of honors-Honorary Fellow of Wadham College, Oxford, and of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, and Honorary Doctorates from the University of East Asia, Macau, the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Polytechnic University and the University of Hong Kong -- to which this University now adds its name. Dr Lee has made significant contributions to the economic development of Hong Kong and China, and his legacy will continue to have a wide-reaching impact around the world.
Mr Pro-Chancellor, I have the honor to present to you, on behalf of the University, Dr Lee Shau Kee, global business leader, real property baron and philanthropist, for the degree of Doctor of Business Administration honoris TULLSLZ.
Doctor of Engineering honon’s causa
Professor Andrew Chi-Chih YAO
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Professor Andrew Chi-Chih Yao is a rare mathematical scientist; he not only solves the most trying of problems, but he creates new challenges as well. Over the last 30 years he has put his technical genius and great vision to work, opening up new vistas for others to follow and, in the process, endowing the entire discipline of theoretical computer science with the fruits of his research.
The breadth of Prof Yao’s scholarship encompasses the development of some of the key fields of computer science, extending from his crucial early work on pseudorandom number generation - a problem that lies at the heart of cryptography - through his development of communication complexity, and culminating in his present cutting- edge studies into the power of quantum computation.
Physicists have been interested in quantum computation for many years, but it is only comparatively recently that pioneering computer scientists, such as Prof Yao, have assumed the initiative in this arena and begun to use quantum physics, and the unique properties of atoms and nuclei, with a view to developing computer processors and memory.
Prof Yao views quantum computation as a radically different, futuristic kind of computing --~ one that possesses huge potential. Whilst recognizing that the discipline is embryonic in nature at present, and acknowledging that only time will tell its future, it is clear that this is exactly the kind of challenge relished by the man we are honoring today.
Such a pioneering spirit could not fail but to be universally acknowledged, and Prof Yao has gained the overwhelming acclaim of his peers. Most notably in 2000, he became the first and only Chinese to
receive the Association of Computing Machinery’s A M Turing Award, considered the Nobel Prize of computer science.
The A M Turing Award was granted “ in recognition of Prof Yao’s fundamental contributions to the theory of computation” and the fact that he “has helped shape the theory of computation” and “established new paradigms and effective techniques in many areas” of theoretical computer science.
Among his many other distinguished accolades, Prof Yao is the recipient of the George Polya Prize from the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, and in 1996 he became the first winner of the Donald E Knuth prize for outstanding contributions to the foundations of computer science.
He is a member of the US National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Academia Sinica, and the Chinese Academy of Sciences. Last year Prof Yao was also the recipient of an honorary Doctor of Science from the City University of Hong Kong.
Prof Yao has held academic positions in the United States at MIT, Stanford, Berkeley, and most recently as the William and Edna Macaleer Professor of Engineering and Applied Science at Princeton University. Only two months ago, he proceeded from Princeton to take up the post of Professor in the Centre for Advanced Study at Tsinghua University.
Prof Yao considers Tsinghua an ideal place for theoretical computer science and algorithms to take root in China. It is fitting that he should now be returning to China to nurture students and world- class researchers, and the entire country will benefit from his scientific and technological expertise.
Deeply attached to China, Prof Yao was born in 1946 in Shanghai and spent the early years of his childhood in Hong Kong, studying at a local elementary school where his first-year teacher commented that he was “a little weak in math”. He later moved to Taiwan with his family.
There he entered university in 1963, at a time when computer science was still a very new discipline. His focus even then was on the theoretical side of science, with physics his chosen field and an academic career his goal.
After graduating from Taiwan University, Prof Yao went to the US and took a PhD in physics from Harvard in 1972. Soon after, his academic career burgeoned when he discovered the fascinating new discipline of algorithms and complexity. He took up graduate study in computer science at the University of Illinois and received his second PhD in a record time of two years. Since then, there has been no looking back for this giant of computer science.
Mr Pro-Chancellor, I have the honor to present to you, on behalf of the University, Prof Andrew Chi- Chih Yao, winner of the A M Turing award and Professor of the Centre for Advanced Study at Tsinghua University, for the degree of Doctor of Engineering honoris cuusa.
Doctor of Science honons cuusa
Professor YAU Shing-Tung
Citation
Professor Yau Shing-Tung’s work has led us to a better understanding of theoretical physics and mathematics, and indeed of life itself. He has been driven by a fascination for the beauty of nature, which is expressed not only in his famous mathematical equations but also his deep appreciation of poetry and philosophy. That such talent and drive have emerged from a childhood marked by sadness and hardship only adds to the astonishment at his achievements.
Prof Yau was born in Shantou, China in 1949, the same year his family moved to Hong Kong. His father was a professor, but his limited income was stretched by the demands of feeding eight children. Food was scarce and there was no electricity or running water. Prof Yau ran in the streets with the village children and, in his early years, did not display any great academic skill. It was not until he attended Pui Ching Middle School that he even showed an interest in mathematics. But it was there that the pin dropped. Prof Yau became fascinated with the subject, particularly plane geometry. He saw great beauty in the simplicity and rigor of mathematics and hungered for more information than his school could provide. He read mathematics books in bookstores, the family being too poor to buy them, and admits he did not understand all he read. So he would re-read them several times. Some texts he did not fully understand until he was in university. Nonetheless, he was inspired to start creating his own problems.
The catalyst for his studies was closely linked to events at home. Prof Yau’s father and his students would hold long discussions on philosophy. This exposure made him feel at home with the axiomatic approaches that he later realized were central to mathematics. Sadly, however, his father died when he was 14. It was the greatest shock of his life and
created additional financial hardship for the family. But Prof Yau’s mother was determined that he continue his studies, and his father’s friends and students helped out.
Prof Yau delved deeper into the complexities of his beloved geometry throughout the rest of his high school years, largely through self-study. At the Chinese University of Hong Kong, he began to meet the teachers, and ideas, that would propel him towards becoming a world-renowned mathematician. He was recommended for graduate studies at Berkeley before even finishing his degree in Hong Kong. There, he came under the wing of the brilliant mathematician, Prof Shiing Shen Chern.
Prof Yau next went to Stanford, where his research ultimately led him to make an astounding discovery. He had become interested in the relationship between geometry and general relativity and, at a conference on geometry, he presented some of his preliminary ideas disproving the Calabi Conjecture regarding curvature of space. These ideas were accepted by his peers, but two months later Prof Calabi himself contacted Prof Yau seeking clarification. Prof Yau realized to his horror that there were serious gaps in his analysis. The rest, as they say, is history: His subsequent work on the problem led him to solve the Calabi Conjecture. The Calabi-Yau Manifold has proved to be vital in theoretical physics and mathematics.
Prof Yau’s many accomplishments have been well recognized. In 1982 he became the first and only ethnic Chinese to receive the Fields Medal, regarded as the Nobel Prize of mathematics. Among his many other awards are the Crafoord Prize, presented by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1994, and the National Medal of Science, the highest award
given in science in the United States, which he won in 1997. He is Chair Professor of Mathematics at Harvard University and Director of the Institute of Mathematical Sciences at Chinese University.
His fascination with the links between geometry and physics has led Prof Yau to be very active in fostering interdisciplinary research, especially in the domains of physics, biotechnology and business and industry. His efforts were recognized in 200.3 when he received the International Scientific and Technological Cooperation Award from the State Council for his contributions to science and technology in China.
Prof Yau also nurtures young mathematicians, organizing an annual enrichment program for high school students to work with great masters. As he has himself said: “Meeting great scientists is a necessary step towards becoming a first-class scientist.” The young people in his program must consider themselves very fortunate indeed 10 meet not only a great scientist, but one of the greatest.
Mr Pro-Chancellor, I have the honor to present to you, on behalf of the University, Prof Yau Shing-Tung, renowned mathematician and winner of the 1982 Fields Prize, for the degree of Doctor of Science
honoris causa.
Doctor of Social Sciences honoris causa
Ronnie C CHAN
Citation
In this era of globalization, society needs people capable of transcending national cultures and boundaries. The world needs individuals who are capable of using their knowledge to facilitate and augment understanding of the issues that are important to both East and West. The man we now honor, Mr Ronnie C Char-r, is such an individual,
Born in Hong Kong in 1949, Mr Chan is known first as a very successful and vocal businessman. For the past 14 years, he has been at the helm of the Hang Lung Group, a company founded in 1960 by his late father, Mr Chan Tseng-Hsi. Under his leadership, Hang Lung has become a dvnamic corporation, responsible for many key property projects in Hong Kong and Mainland China. He also co-founded the Morningside group, a privately held enterprise with successful operations in a wide variety of sectors in different parts of the world.
It says much about his character that Mr Chan is as concerned with the bricks and mortar above the land as with the foundations of our society. Throughout his impressive career, he has given tirelessly of himself to causes and issues he strongly believes in. Geopolitics and geo-economics fascinate him and he is extensively published on international affairs. He is also deeply committed to ensuring that our system of governance remains stable and equitable. For over a decade, he has worked unswervingly to inform the West about Hong Kong’s return to the Motherland and China’s accession to the World Trade Organization. He is someone who is never afraid to speak his mind.
Mr Chan’s incredible breadth of interests spans the political, economic, cultural, and philanthropic arenas. He serves on the governing boards of major business corporations and not-for-profit institutions in Hong Kong and overseas. Locally, he chairs the
executive committees of the One Country Two Systems Research Institute and the Better Hong Kong Foundation. He serves as the Convenor of the Hong Kong Development Forum and as a board member of the China Development Research Foundation of the State Council of the People’s Republic of China. He also chairs the China Heritage Fund, which restores important cultural sites in China. The Fund is the first and only entity since 1869 to build a Qing dynasty Imperial Garden in the authentic way inside the Forbidden City in Beijing.
Internationally, Mr Chan is a Vice Chairman of the Asia Society and Chairman of its Hong Kong Center, a Trustee of the University of Southern California, a Governing Board member of the Indian School of Business, and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and Committee of 100. In 1998, Mr Chan became the first ever - and remains the only ---- Chinese to co-chair the Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. These activities highlight the extent to which he is a citizen of the world.
Quietly and largely unsung, Mr Chan has also worked behind the scenes to ensure Hong Kong’s youth has a more level playing field. His involvement with Youth Outreach since 1991 finds him combing the streets of Hong Kong with social workers in the early hours of the morning looking for teenagers needing guidance. At this University, Mr Chan has broadened the world view of students admitted through the Early Admissions Scheme. He has taken his students to dinner, knows each of them by name, and has persuaded many eminent speakers to share their wisdom with these young talents. In turn, they have flourished.
Education remains a priority for him. Together with Prof Yau Shing-Tung, another of today’s
honorees, he established the Morningside Medal of Mathematics to honor world-class mathematicians of Chinese descent. This year, the two paired up again to establish the Hang Lung Mathematics Awards for local high school students.
Mr Chan was a valued member of the HKUST Council from 1994 to 2004 and is currently a serving member of the University Court. He has also funded two research centers at the University -the Hang Lung Center for Organizational Research, and the Center on China’s Transnational Relations.
Mr Pro-Chancellor, I have the honor to present to you, on behalf of the University, Mr Ronnie C Chan, a business leader, a bridge between the East and the West, an educator, and a man with a deep social conscience, for the degree of Doctor of Social Sciences,
honoris cam-a.
HONORAR” OFGREE CI- AT’ONS 25
Michael G Gale Medal for Distinguished Teaching
Professor Ben Young
Citation
The Michael G Gale Medal for Distinguished Teaching at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology was established by the University Council in 1994 to commemorate the distinguished service of Founding Council Member Mr Michael G Gale.
It is awarded to the faculty member who best exemplifies continued pursuit of excellence, devotion to teaching, and the ability to inspire and motivate others.
This year, the University is pleased to present the Michael G Gale Medal for Distinguished Teaching award to Prof Ben Young, Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering.
Prof Young received his PhD in civil engineering from the University of Sydney in 1998, and came to HKUST in 2001 after serving with distinction for several years at Nanyang Technical University, Singapore. He is renowned for his dedication to teaching, his ability to make complex concepts easier to understand, and his availability and willingness to help students outside the classroom. He also conducts extensive studies on innovations and tools that can improve the effectiveness of his teaching.
Prof Young summarizes his approach to imparting knowledge in what he calls the “Seven-Musts” philosophy:
Must have a heart for students
Must spend time preparing for lectures Must present well in lectures
Must always make students think in lectures Must have two-way communication and interaction in lectures
Must get feedback from students Must always think of ways to improve
28 1 MEDAL CIIATIONS
In discussing the “heart” of the matter, Prof Young refers to “understanding, enthusiasm, patience, and kindness.” He stresses that “the teacher must put himself into the student’s position, try to understand how the student thinks, and be able to teach according to their level of understanding.”
His “Seven Musts” principle has won him unanimous support from undergraduates, postgraduates and his peers. He is highly regarded for his preparedness in class, the clarity of his presentation of difficult concepts, and his superbly organized lecture notes. Twice Prof Young has been recognized by the School of Engineering for his teaching contributions: first in 2001/02 when he was a recipient of the School’s Teaching Excellence Appreciation award, and again in 2002/03 when he won the Bechtel Foundation Engineering Teaching Excellence Award. It is fitting that the University now accords him the Michael G Gale Medal for Distinguished Teaching, the highest honor that can be bestowed upon a faculty member.
~$t%+zt%Jlf~ 29
Stephen Cheong Kam-chuen Medal for Distinguished Service to the Student Body
Raymond CHOW Yuk Kei
Computer Engineering Program, Year 3 (2003-2004)
The Stephen Cheong Kam-chuen Medal for Distinguished Service to the Student Body of the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology was established by the University Council in 1993 in memory of the Honorable Stephen Cheong Kam- chuen, founding Council Member and distinguished public servant.
Executive Committee of the Students’ Union from March to May 2004 when the Union was looking for strong and consistent leadership.
Raymond has served with determination and foresight in the position and, under his guidance, the Union has flourished on every level.
It is awarded to the student who best exemplifies the qualities of caring, constructive and dedicated leadership for which our late colleague is remembered.
We are pleased to present the Stephen Cheong Kam-chuen Medal for Distinguished Service to the Student Body to Raymond Chow Yuk Kei.
Raymond is held in the highest regard by his fellow students for his ceaseless and constructive contributions to student governance.
As University Affairs Secretary of the Students’ Union, a student representative of various university committees and user groups, as well as a popularly elected member of the Students Union Council, Raymond has for a long time been actively involved in formulating policies and offering services for the benefit and welfare of HKUST’s student body.
He has worked on issues as fundamental as student catering and as strategic as the once mooted merger between this University and the Chinese University of Hong Kong. The breadth of his involvement in student affairs has allowed him to accumulate a rich variety of experiences in student governance, making him the ideal person to assume the role of Person-in-charge of the Provisional
Address by the Graduate Representative of the School of Engineering
Victor CHEUNG
BEng in Computer Science
Dr Cheung, President Chu, Dean Chan, professors, parents and fellow graduates:
Good afternoon! It is my great honor to say a few words on behalf of my fellow graduates. First of all we would like to thank you all for being here to share our happiness on this wonderful day.
Today is the day of our graduation. Our presence here is the result of the tremendous efforts made by various parties, and we would like to pay tribute to them now.
First we would like to thank our devoted teachers both within and outside the School of Engineering. Not only did they generously pass on their expertise and knowledge to us, but they also provided us with valuable insights and guidance for our personal growth and development. Albert Einstein once said: “ It is the supreme art of the teacher to awaken joy in creative expression and knowledge.” With their high level of dedication, the professors of HKUST are certainly masters of such an art and have enlightened us during our years of study here.
We should thank all HKUST’s support staff too, for their valuable help in providing us with a pleasant and convenient environment to live and study in.
Finally, we should take this opportunity to express our gratitude to our parents, relatives and friends. Their support and encouragement kept us striving for the best all these years.
Life at HKUST is a blend of joy and challenges. We enjoyed the time we studied together, worked together, shared ideas and dreams with each other. On the other hand, being engineering students, we had a rather tough workload. There were times when
we needed to burn the midnight oil: completing assignments, practicing presentations, or preparing for tests and examinations. Though sometimes frustrated, we were lucky enough to have the support of fellow students in overcoming the hurdles.
I remember there was a time when six of us worked continuously for 27 hours on a group project. We were almost exhausted after so many hours of work but the project still seemed far from complete. However, we did not give up and instead helped and encouraged each other, and eventually we managed, just, to beat the deadline. How well the project was done is another story. But the important things are that the team members all supported and trusted each other, and we all shared the joy of finishing the project on time.
Today’s occasion marks the end of one stage of our lives and the start of another, more challenging one. I strongly believe that the knowledge and experience we have gained at HKUST will remain with us for the rest of our lives, becoming a source of inspiration and strength that will guide us to contribute meaningfully to society.
On behalf of my fellow graduates, let me once again express our deepest gratitude to all the teaching and supporting staff of our University, and to our beloved parents, relatives and friends. And to my fellow graduates, may I wish each of you a happy and prosperous future.
Thank you very much.
“DDRCSS BY SRACUP7~ F,FPEESCIJI< ‘L’iS 33
Address by the Graduate Representative of the School of Business and Management
Sarah TAM Chit Wa
BBA in Global Business and Management of Organizations
Dr Chan, President Chu, Dean Chan, Honorable guests, parents and fellow students:
It is my honor to represent the HKUST Business School’s Class of 2004, and to address you on this
most splendid and memorable occasion. It is also a pleasure for me to see my fellow schoolmates, my mentors and the staff on our beloved campus once more. I use the words ‘once more’ because most of us have experienced tremendous changes in the past few months. While many of us have successfully launched our careers, others are continuing to pursue new heights in the academic realm. Whichever direction we choose, over the last three years HKUST has prepared us well for the future, and today’s Congregation marks the official start of a new stage in all of our lives.
The Class of 2004 has indeed been blessed. As the market gradually recovers, graduates like us, equipped with brilliant ideas and sound skills, are in great demand. Having received every advantage by attending the HKUST Business School, this is a golden time for us to spread our wings and soar. We followed a high quality curriculum, and were encouraged by the School to pursue a range of excellent self- enhancement opportunities, including exchange programs, internships and international business case competitions. With such good exposure to the competitive business world, many of us have been fortunate enough to set foot and bloom in multinational corporations, where openings used to be exclusively for overseas students. The School deserves our heartfelt thanks, and I hope that in a small way the efforts of the Class of 2004 have contributed to making HKUST the powerhouse that it is among world-class academic institutions.
Now that we are moving forward in our lives, remember we should always strive to achieve more each day, to improve ourselves and to contribute to society with the skills and knowledge that the School has provided us with. Not only should we live up to the good name of HKUST, we should also show the world that HKUST lives on in us. Not only should we make our teachers and families proud by trying our best in everything we do, but through our efforts we should make our successors proud of being part of this great School. As graduates and soon to be alumni, it is time for us to pay our tribute to the University by making the world a better place for everybody, and letting the HKUST spirit soar through our endeavors.
PCWt35 BY (;Ri;3’JM FCPFESt‘J ! ‘#‘,/ES 35
Address by the Graduate Representative of the School of Science
Jeffrey LEE Chi Wai
BSV in Physics and Mathematics
Pro-Chancellor, Chairman, President Chu, professors, guests, parents and fellow students:
Good afternoon and a very warm welcome to all of you. It is a great pleasure to be here and to speak on behalf of the graduates of the School of Science. Thanks to the School for giving me this opportunity, and to all of you for coming along to this ceremony to share our happiness.
It is a popular belief that life at HKUST is very stressful. Indeed the past three years have been a most busy and eventful period in our lives. We have grown used to meeting deadlines for assignments and projects, working overnight sometimes, and studying for examinations. And on top of all this, many of us found time to take part in a multitude oi student activities. Looking back, though it was tough, HKUST has provided us with a firm foundation to face whatever challenges come our way in the future.
The University has offered us not only its world- class facilities, but also a flexible curriculum and the opportunity to study overseas. During the semester that I studied at UC Berkeley on exchange, 1 learnt a lot both in my major subject as well as from the different cultures of the students, who came from all over the world.
Back at HKUST, our professors did not just give us academic knowledge but also shared their experiences with us. I would like to thank them for their dedication and hard work. The teaching assistants, technicians, librarians and other supporting staff also contributed enormously to our education, and our gratitude goes to them too.
am very grateful for the guidance of Prof C T Chan, my supervisor since I was a first year student. He gave me the opportunity to conduct research under his supervision, thus enabling me to apply what I had learnt in my lectures.
There are also many other happy memories that we share from our time at HKUST. From the first days of O’Camp through the years of study, we made many great friends. I am sure that the friendships we built will be treasured and endure forever.
Last but not least, we are deeply grateful for the support, care and love of our parents, who have been such sources of strength. Without your encouragement, we would not have made it to this wonderful day. I would personally like to thank my own mother and father for their support, especially when I decided to swap from the civil engineering program to the physics program. Without their faith in me, I would not be standing here talking to you at this ceremony.
I believe that all of you who proudly receive your degrees on this great stage today will agree with me when I say that, with our excellent HKUST training and with the encouragement we have received, as we go out into the world we are as well-equipped as we could possibly be to face the challenges of the future.
May God bless all of you, and thank you.
HKUST is a research university and what I think is most special about it is that even undergraduates can take part in some of that cutting edge research. I
Address by the Graduate Representative of the School of Humanities and Social Science
LAM Wing-keung
PhD in Humanities
Mr Pro-Chancellor, Honorable Chairman and Vice- Chairman of the University Council, President Chu, distinguished guests, dear teachers and fellow graduates, ladies and gentlemen, it is a great honor for me to be here today to express my deepest gratitude to my alma mater, the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.
Throughout my years of study in the Division of Humanities at HKUST, people both inside and outside the University have kept asking me why I chose to study the humanities at a university most famous for its strengths in science and technology. My usual answer was that I wanted to accept a challenge, a challenge to see how the subject of humanities works and thrives in a university whose emphasis is on science and technology.
Such innocence, or stubbornness, has somewhat ironically made my academic adventure at HKUST more fruitful and fascinating. Owing to conceptions about our strengths in the Division of Humanities at HKUST, people are actually intrigued to know more about what is going on here in the field of humanities and social science. Indeed, throughout my graduate studies, I was fortunate enough to be awarded a number of scholarships in Japan and Korea to undergo training in their languages and to conduct my personal research. I have never felt, therefore, that I was overlooked or had fewer opportunities because 1 was pursuing a PhD in Humanities at HKUST.
Of course, frustrations, setbacks and tears were there as well. Throughout the doctoral program, I kept wondering whether I could really succeed in completing my coursework, my third language requirement, qualifying examinations and dissertation. I still clearly remember one night when I was studying in Korea and I could not get to sleep because I was worried about completrng my
dissertation by the deadline. In the course of pursuing a PhD, it seems to me that one’s difficulties are not merely confined to the academic side, but also to the spiritual realm.
Spiritual elements like patience, purpose and confidence weigh more important in the pursuit of a PhD. Thanks go to my study of philosophy, which reminds me that contemplation embraces a positive meaning, that is, the desire of attaining the truth.
My academic adventure at HKUST sounds like rather a long one. The completion of a doctoral program is, however, absolutely not an end but rather another start in respect of a lifelong academic journey. A Chinese philosopher, Zhuangzi, once mentioned that using the limited to approach the limitless is dangerous. I wish, therefore, that I can live like an enlightened Buddhist, detached from everything and able to survive in the pursuit of the limitless.
Finally, but by no means least importantly, I here would like to express my heartfelt thanks to HKUST, and the professors in the Division of Humanities in particular. Without their academic advice and personal encouragement, I for sure would not be standing on this stage today. And, of course, 1 am forever grateful to my family for their unflagging support and patience.
Dear fellow graduates:
t&3/$ \ r”gg$&Tk -j ;‘$\l$a 0
(Mmasan, gosotsugyo omedetogozaimasu.)
oj2-(+
gL2 g+jos qs’tgqct.
(YuruLboon chorup chinsimuro chookhahamnida.)
May I wish you every success for your future!
ADDfitSS B’Y :;FNCUAIt REPRESEN” rl‘:ES 39
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10 November 2004
ORDER OF PROCEEDINGS
SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING
10 November 2004
1. The Council Vice-Chairman declares the Congregation open
2. The President addresses the Congregation
3. The Dean of Engineering presents candidates for the Degree of BACHELOR OF ENGINEERING
4. The Dean of Engineering presents candidates for the Degrees of MASTER OF TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT, MASTER OF SCIENCE, and MASTER OF PHILOSOPHY
5. The Dean of Engineering presents candidates for the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY
6. The Graduate Representative addresses the Congregation
7. The Council Vice-Chairman declares the Congregation closed
Mace cameo by Professor Mounir Hamdi
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