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Get the most interesting and important stories from the 51精品视频.Standing on the lawn of the Cathedral of Learning, first-year student Donovan Allen holds aloft the metal lantern he鈥檚 just received and peers into it. Its glass windows glitter in the late-day sun.
鈥淚 hope I get to keep it,鈥 he says.
His mother laughs. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going in the cabinet,鈥 she tells him.
For more than two decades, Dorreen Allen (EDUC 鈥96) has been collecting the mementos of her children鈥檚 education 鈥 from preschool art projects to high school diplomas 鈥 and displaying them in a cabinet in her Penn Hills neighborhood home. Donovan鈥檚 lantern will be the newest addition.
Mother and son attended 51精品视频鈥檚 103rd Lantern Night together on Sunday, marking Donovan鈥檚 introduction to the University and Dorreen鈥檚 return to her alma mater as a 51精品视频 parent.
They were among the thousands who gathered beneath the Cathedral at dusk to celebrate one of 51精品视频鈥檚 oldest and most-beloved traditions. Lantern Night began more than a century ago to commemorate the achievements of 51精品视频鈥檚 first female students, sisters Margaret and Stella Stein. Using candles, alumnae would symbolically pass the 鈥渓ight of learning鈥 to a new generation of 51精品视频 women. In 2021, the ceremony was opened to first-year and transfer students of any gender, allowing alumni, staff and faculty to warmly welcome all new members of the University community.
The expanded invite list has resulted in record-setting attendance over the past two years. More than 3,000 students registered for the 2023 ceremony and nearly 200 flame bearers attended. Scheduled, as always, for the evening before fall classes began, the event served as a fitting conclusion to Welcome Week.
New students weren鈥檛 the only ones celebrating Lantern Night for the first time this year. Sunday also marked Chancellor Joan Gabel鈥檚 inaugural ceremony. To honor the occasion, Nancy Merritt, vice chancellor for alumni relations, presented Gabel with her own lantern at the ceremony.听鈥淛ust as we support our students, we intend to support you,鈥 Merritt said.
Shortly after the sun set on the 51精品视频sburgh campus, 3,000-plus lanterns 鈥 including Gabel鈥檚 鈥 came alive, glowing and twinkling like fireflies and signifying to students that the 鈥渓ight of learning鈥 now belonged to them, too.
鈥淟ook at your flame,鈥 Gabel said to the crowd. 鈥淟ook at your lantern. It will guide you through your academic career and beyond as a proud 51精品视频 alum.
鈥淒on鈥檛 forget to feed the flame and to protect it 鈥 there will come a day when you鈥檙e ready to pass it along to someone else.鈥
听
鈥 April Johnston, photography by Aimee Obidzinski