17 April 2025
• Alums
Nancy Gibbs to Deliver 2025 Commencement Address, Receive Blackwell Award
Former Editor in Chief of TIME magazine, presidential historian and Harvard professor, Nancy Gibbs to offer the 2025 Commencement address on May 18.
Director of the Shorenstein Center and the Edward R. Murrow Professor of Practice at Harvard Kennedy School Nancy Gibbs
Hobart and William Smith Colleges is honored to welcome Nancy Gibbs as the keynote speaker for the 2025 Commencement ceremony on Sunday, May 18. A renowned journalist, presidential historian and Harvard professor, Gibbs made history as the first woman to serve as Editor in Chief of TIME magazine. In recognition of her influential contributions to media and public discourse, she will also receive the prestigious Elizabeth Blackwell Award at the Commencement exercises.
Gibbs currently serves as the Director of the Shorenstein Center and the Edward R. Murrow Professor of Practice at Harvard Kennedy School. Her teaching and research focus on the evolving media landscape and its impact on democracy and public policy. Gibbs spent more than three decades at TIME, covering presidential campaigns and writing more cover stories than any other journalist in the magazine’s history. A best-selling author and sought-after commentator, she has interviewed five U.S. presidents, world leaders and top industry executives, offering unparalleled insight into the forces shaping our world today.
“We are honored to welcome Nancy Gibbs as our 2025 Commencement speaker and Elizabeth Blackwell Award recipient,” says President Mark D. Gearan. “Her extraordinary career in journalism, public policy and academia embodies the values of critical inquiry, leadership and global engagement that we strive to instill in our students. As a trailblazer in media and a distinguished historian, her insights will undoubtedly inspire our graduates as they embark on their own journeys.”
The HWS Commencement ceremony for the Class of 2025 will begin at 9 a.m. on the Quad. In addition, the HWS Board of Trustees unanimously voted to recognize the achievements of Gibbs and five distinguished community advocates with honorary degrees. Along with Gibbs, Honorary Degree Recipients include:
Patrisha Blue ’77, director of the Martin Luther King Memorial Choir and a longtime Geneva community leader
Geoffrey Herd, world renowned musician and founder of the Geneva Music Festival
Mary Jane M. Poole P'91, steadfast supporter of Hobart and William Smith whose engagement and philanthropy has shaped our campus and the lives of HWS students
Stephen Wyckoff and Janet Wyckoff, dedicated philanthropists with a special focus on Geneva’s children
More about the 2025 Commencement speaker and Honorary Degree Recipients
As Editor in Chief from 2013 to 2017, Nancy Gibbs guided TIME through a rapidly changing media environment, expanding its digital presence and launching new initiatives such as Red Border Films, a documentary film unit and interactive digital platform. Under her leadership, the magazine built a global, 24/7 news operation and won a Primetime Emmy for the PBS documentary A Year in Space. Her tenure solidified TIME’s reputation for in-depth, high-impact journalism. She remains an Editor at Large.
Gibbs has also served as a consultant to CBS News and an essayist for the News Hour on PBS. A best-selling author, she co-wrote The President’s Club: Inside the World’s Most Exclusive Fraternity, which spent 30 weeks on The New York Times bestseller list, as well as The Preacher and the Presidents: Billy Graham in the White House. Recognized for her eloquent political analysis, Politico dubbed her “The Poet Laureate of Presidents.”
She has interviewed five U.S. presidents and multiple other world leaders, and lectured extensively on the American presidency, including at the Bush, Reagan, Carter, Johnson and Truman libraries, the Aspen Institute, the Dallas World Affairs Club, the Commonwealth Club and the National Archives. She is a Senior Fellow at the USC Annenberg Center on Communication Leadership and Policy.
Gibbs graduated from Yale summa cum laude, with honors in history, and has a degree in politics and philosophy from Oxford, where she was a Marshall scholar. She has twice served as the Ferris Professor at Princeton, where she taught a seminar on politics and the press. She has lectured at institutions such as Princeton, Yale and the Aspen Institute.
Patrisha Blue '77
Since graduating from HWS, Patrisha Blue ’77 has dedicated her life to community activism in Geneva. For nearly 40 years, as founder and director of the Geneva Martin Luther King Memorial Choir, an interdenominational group, she has delivered uplifting and energetic gospel music at annual events honoring the life and legacy of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Through this work, she unites singers and musicians from diverse backgrounds, fostering cultural connections through joyful and harmonious messages of hope and perseverance. For more than 30 years serving as Executive Director of Community Unified Today, Inc., she transformed several Geneva neighborhoods by developing subdivisions for first-time homebuyers and supportive housing for homeless families. With the Geneva City School District, Blue founded the LEAP program to support the academic performance and college readiness for at-risk students. Since 2022, Blue has continued her own passion for learning as a seminarian at Colgate Rochester Crozer Divinity School, pursuing a Master of Divinity degree with an emphasis on biblical languages. As a student at HWS, Blue earned a B.A. in modern languages.
Geoffrey Herd
Dr. Geoffrey Herd leads a dynamic career as a violinist, chamber musician, artistic director and educator. He has performed across the U.S., Latin America and Asia, appearing at venues such as the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum and Carnegie Hall's Weill Recital Hall. As founder, CEO, and Artistic Director of the Geneva Music Festival, Herd developed the organization into a nationally recognized presenter of classical chamber music, jazz and other genres. The Festival is at the forefront of innovative programming and receives support from the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York State Council on the Arts and other competitive granting programs. Herd is also the CEO and Co-Artistic Director of ATX Chamber Music and Jazz, a prominent chamber music and jazz presenter based in Austin, Texas, that features an innovative presentation format synergistically combining social experiences with performances by acclaimed chamber music and jazz artists. He is also the Co-Director of the Knoxville Suzuki Academy. An avid chamber musician, Herd has collaborated with renowned artists such as Clive Greensmith, Jean-Yves Thibaudet, Ettore Causa, Jinjoo Cho and Ani Kavafian. He has performed concertos with orchestras ranging from the Rochester Philharmonic to the Thailand Philharmonic. Herd is the Assistant Professor of Violin at the University of Louisville School of Music, attracting students worldwide. He earned a D.M.A. from Rice University and previously studied at the Yale School of Music and the Cleveland Institute of Music.
Mary Jane Poole P'91
A philanthropic leader of the Poole Family Foundation, Mary Jane Poole P'91 has dedicated years of engaged volunteer service to her community and to Hobart and William Smith, her husband’s alma mater. Her contributions at HWS have been instrumental in major campus projects, including the renovation and design of the Poole Family Admissions Center, where her design acumen has informed every aspect of this flagship building. She has been involved in the creation of the Tom Poole ’61 Soccer Team Room, construction of the Thomas B. Poole ’61 and Family Sports Dome, and the endowment of the Hobart Head Soccer Coach position. She is a founding member of Hobart and William Smith’s Seneca Society. Beyond HWS, Poole has supported her alma mater, Adelphi University, where she earned a bachelor’s degree in English. She founded and endowed the Poole Family Broadway Series at the Adelphi University Performing Arts Center, which brings both renowned and rising Broadway artists to its Concert Hall, and is a founding member of the Nassau County Museum of Art Board of Trustees. Through the Poole Family Foundation, her philanthropic efforts extend to healthcare and community initiatives. The Peconic Bay Medical Center Foundation honored Poole for her longstanding support of the hospital including adding 6,000-square-feet to the medical facility’s emergency department. After graduating from Adelphi, Poole worked as a teacher Norfolk, Va.
Stephen Wyckoff
Active and engaged community members, Stephen Wyckoff and Janet Wyckoff have dedicated their time and resources to supporting children in Geneva through initiatives in health, education and the arts for more than three decades. The Wyckoff Family Foundation Inc. established by Stephen’s mother, Margaret Humphrey Wyckoff, is committed to early childhood education and the well-being of Geneva’s children. Stephen serves as the Foundation’s president, while Janet holds the roles of treasurer and board member. Through their care, attention and philanthropy, they have provided critical resources for children in Geneva, continuing Margaret’s legacy by supporting innovative and creative initiatives that enhance young lives. Many of their grants have directly benefited programs also supported by Hobart and William Smith, including Geneva 2030—a collective impact initiative that leverages resources from the entire Geneva community, such as nonprofit organizations, businesses and individuals, to enhance educational opportunities for children. The Wyckoffs also fund programs connecting Geneva Middle and High School students with HWS resources at the Finger Lakes Institute and the Environmental Studies Summer Youth Institute. The Foundation has been a key supporter of Geneva
Janet Wykcoff
Reads, a community-wide literacy initiative launched in 2007.
Stephen, a Geneva native, earned a B.A. from Dartmouth College and a B.E. in mechanical engineering from its Thayer School of Engineering. He is secretary and treasurer of Datu, Inc., a scientific instruments company, and holds three U.S. patents. He has volunteered with organizations including the Boys & Girls Club and the Geneva Board of Education.
Janet, originally from New York City, attended the Brearley School and graduated cum laude from Dartmouth. In the Chicago area, Janet worked in commercial leasing and municipal finance before the couple moved to Geneva in 1995. She has held many volunteer positions in the community, including as tutor and mentor for the Teamswork Program. In the Geneva City School District, she has served as a substitute teaching assistant at North Street School and West Street Elementary School.
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