Ram Sundaram Visits His Boss
July 3, 2000
Web posted at: 12:11 p.m. EDT (1611 GMT)
WASHINGTON (AllPolitics, July 3) -- More than most graduate students,
Ram Sundaram, a student at Mississippi State University,
takes the mentoring process seriously.
Chat: President Clinton's first online conversation
with an MS State graduate student, Thursday at 4:50 p.m. EDT.
|
Sundaram has been receiving special mentoring from his
advisor as part of a special program conducted in his
research group at MS State.
When Ram Sundaram was told by his faculty advisor,
during a lunch time conversation, that
he should make an extra effort to meet
his boss
he took the advice seriously. So he hopped in his car,
and headed east on Highway 82, destined to meet the
President of the United States. Ram, unlike most students,
takes the advice from his professor very seriously, and understands
the importance of the self-improvement process during graduate school.
Early on, his colleagues were skeptical that he could, in fact,
meet the President. However, Ram is known for his ingenuity and
perseverance, so he fearlessly embarked upon his trip to meet his boss.
It seems during this fateful lunchtime conversation, his advisor,
Professor Joe Picone,
had impressed upon him the importance of knowing your upper-level management,
and urged him to take an proactive interest in his workplace.
Later in this conversation, Wayne Bennett, the Dean of Engineering at MS State,
stopped by and commented how he personally believed that the mentoring
process was a vital component of university education.
Dean Bennett also pointed out that MS State has excellent
contacts in Washington, and anything was possible.
|
Clinton Meets Sundaram
| |
---|
So off Sundaram went, maps in hand, to visit the President
of the United State. He completed the trip from the heartland of the USA in
approximately 18 hours - his first trip to the Washington D.C. area.
Sundaram, speaking to CNN reporter Christine Amandpur, noted
that finding the White House was really easy.
He said that he and his Indian colleagues, looking
a little worn out from the long drive in their modest 1991 Honda
Accord, simply stopped at Pennsylvania Avenue, and asked
a policeman where that "big white house" was.
The policeman, noting the carload of foreign graduate students,
directed them to the nearest police station, where, after
intense questioning about the nature of their visit, and an
inspection of the trunk of their car, provided them with maps
and easy to follow directions.
After circumventing a long line by
entering the White House through a side door,
and again explaining "We just want to meet the President
on the advice of my boss at MS State." to security guards,
they were escorted to meet the President.
During the brief meeting, Sundaram asked the President
if he really was the "Big Boss" as his advisor had stated.
The President responded that only his closest female friends
refer to him that way. The President commented that mentoring
at Mississippi State University seems to be a little
different than at most schools. Sundaram proudly exclaimed
"Yes, it is. We have a lot of fun like this at MS State. And the
best part about it is that I am funded by the
National Science Foundation to go to graduate school
and do these things."
Sundaram returned home the next day a little bewildered
at all the commotion over his visit to the White House.
On the long drive home, he contemplated how different
graduate school in the U.S. was from his native India.
When he got home, his answering machine was filled
with messages from various offices of the university,
including the President, Provost, and Vice-President for
Research. Sundaram still wasn't sure why meeting the President was so
important to his graduate research, but he did
appreciate the fact that he know seemed to be very popular
on campus. At the end of his whirlwind experience,
he was quoted as saying "Only in America can
such a thing happen."
 |
 |
|