Harvard Portrait: Jason Luke

Harvard’s behind-the-scenes Commencement hero

Jason Luke

Photograph by Stu Rosner

After graduation, Jason Luke ’94 supervised Dorm Crew—the trash-disposing, bathroom-cleaning student employment program he’d worked for in college—as a stopgap before graduate school. Soon he was offered a full-time position in “Special Services.” “What that really meant was doing anything anyone else did not want to do,” he says. He cleaned carpets, refinished floors, and moved furniture, often overnight—assembling teams from nothing. Graduate school would wait. When former Commencement superintendent Allan Powers asked him to take over another team, Luke said sure, unclear on the expectations. The job: supervising 250 staffers and setting up for more than 1,000 events during Commencement week, Harvard’s busiest of the year. No written instructions existed; the responsibilities, to be met alongside his regular duties, were merely explained to him. “I’d be at meetings with people about things that I was supposed to be doing, and I had no idea what they were referring to,” he recalls. More than two decades later, Luke, now associate director of campus services, approaches his Commencement role with both excitement and exacting standards. “The students who are there, they’re only going to graduate once. People only have one fiftieth reunion, one twenty-fifth reunion, one tenth reunion,” he says. For Luke, life is all about relationships. In his office, a class of 1994 photo sits beside a shot of his daughter’s basketball team—which he coaches—and souvenirs his staff have brought him from their home countries. Relationships are why he’s co-chaired all his class reunions, and how he became one of nine classmates nominated for this year’s Commencement chief marshal. “You can have bad days, you can have good days, you can have things that go well, don’t go well,” he says. But relationships, “that’s the one thing that can be a constant in your life.” 

Read more articles by Jacob Sweet

You might also like

Introductions: Dan Cnossen

A conversation with the former Navy SEAL and gold-medal-winning Paralympic skier

Yesterday’s News

A co-ed experiment that changed dorm life forever

A Congenial Voice in Japanese-American Relations

Takashi Komatsu spent his life building bridges. 

Most popular

Why Men Are Falling Behind in Education, Employment, and Health

Can new approaches to education address a growing gender gap?

Teen "Grind" Culture and Mental Health

Teens need better strategies to cope with lives lived partly online.

Harvard art historian Jennifer Roberts teaches the value of immersive attention

Teaching students the value of deceleration and immersive attention

Explore More From Current Issue

A man skiing intensely in the snow, with two spectators in the background.

Introductions: Dan Cnossen

A conversation with the former Navy SEAL and gold-medal-winning Paralympic skier

Evolutionary progression from primates to humans in a colorful illustration.

Why Humans Walk on Two Legs

Research highlights our evolutionary ancestors’ unique pelvis.

A busy hallway with diverse people carrying items, engaging in conversation and activities.

Yesterday’s News

A co-ed experiment that changed dorm life forever