
J.F. Maxwell Zuccarini, son of Joseph and Nancy Zuccarini of Charlestown, graduated from Saint Michael's College with a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration at the college's 106th commencement exercises held on the college campus May 12.
The commencement speaker was political commentator Mark Shields, who addressed 470 students earning bachelor's degrees, 43 earning master's degrees and 4,000-plus in the assembly. Shields, who has a storied career in American politics, has written a column for the Washington Post since 1979 and appeared as a regular commentator on The PBS NewsHour. He offered the 2013 graduates advice for life and a powerful endorsement of the value of politics.
"Call your mother ... not text, not e-mail, call her," he said during the Mother's Day ceremony. "She wants to hear how you sound."
Find out what's happening in Charlestownfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
He also said that "no one in recorded history on his or her death bed has ever said, "Gee, I wish I had spent more time at the office."
And he advised graduates to pay off their student loans so later generations will have adequate funds to attend college too.
Find out what's happening in Charlestownfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Shields told them not to worry about what others think of them "because believe me, other people are not thinking about you ... they are worrying about what you think of them."
Shields said he believes in the value of politics, "the peaceable resolution of conflict between legitimate competing interests, adding, "I don't know how else we can resolve our public differences and live together."
At its best, politics "can help to make ours a world where the powerful can be made more just and where the weak can become more secure," he said.
And Shields said, "I value the politics that wrote the GI Bill, the politics which passed the Marshall Plan to rebuild a war-devastated Europe-politics that wrote the Clean Air act which has taken 99 percent of the lead out of the air and that save the Great Lakes through the Clear Water Act—the kind of politics that took want and fear out of old age through Social Security."
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.