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SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013

Giving Their Regards To TC Way
By Joe Levine

Never mind the marching band, the double-decker bus full of VIPs, the mayoral proclamation or the converging crowds of TC students from the 2013 incoming class.

The real showstopper on the first day of the new semester was the broad, seamless expanse of gleaming black tar that stretched from Amsterdam Ave. to Broadway and from the sidewalk in front of TC’s Zankel Hall to Columbia’s north gate.

No potholes. No cracks. No two-inch-thick metal plates that bang up and down with each passing car.

The city had repaved the street – and permanently co-named it “Teachers College Way.

“Today is the high point in our 125th anniversary celebration year,” TC President Susan Fuhrman said from atop the bus in front of Zankel Hall. “The new sign co-naming our street says it all: Teachers College Way. So many big thinkers and doers have walked this street, and we all walk in their footsteps. And now we’re all working together with our neighbors toward a brighter future. And that really is the TC way.”

The celebration began with the sound of drumbeats in the distance as The New York Stars Twirling and Marching Band decked out in their blue-and-white uniforms burst into view at the corner of 120th and Broadway. Behind them were students from the newest TC class streaming up Broadway from orientation at Lerner Hall on the Columbia campus. As the students gathered with faculty, staff, alumni and neighbors, a red double-decker New York City tour bus cruised to a stop in front of the crowd.

“Look at all our amazing students,” said Tom Rock, Executive Director of Enrollment Services and master of ceremonies for the morning’s events. “We are taking over 120th Street, and you’re here to help us do it. It was exactly 125 years ago this week that we welcomed our first class, 18 members strong. Now we’re welcoming our 125th class, 1,800 strong.”

Fuhrman and Rock were joined on the bus by faculty representatives as well as New York City Deputy Mayor Linda Gibbs; District 9 City Councilwoman Inez Dickens; and William Rueckert, Co-Chair of TC’s Board of Trustees.

Gibbs put the legacy of TC into historical perspective. “New York City had not yet incorporated as a city of five boroughs when Teachers College was founded – so you’ve been leading for a long time,” she said.

Rueckert, the great-great nephew of TC’s founder, Grace Hoadley Dodge, called the College’s 125th anniversary “a celebration not only of TC’s success, but also of the vision and generosity of its founders.”

“Grace and others recognized that education was the path to a better life for immigrant families, especially young women,” Rueckert said. “If she were here today, she’d be proud to see that her vision has been surpassed in every possible way.”#

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