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Friday, May 16, 2003, Coleman Coliseum
- Morning Ceremony: 9 a.m.
- Afternoon Ceremony: 1 p.m.
- Law School Ceremony: 5 p.m.
Ceremonies | Speakers
| Awards | Noteworthy/Inspiring
Graduates
CEREMONIES
Morning Ceremony (9 a.m.) — (bachelor's, master's
and Ph.D.): colleges of Arts and Sciences, Engineering and Human
Environmental Sciences; and the School of Social Work.
Afternoon Ceremony (1 p.m.) — (bachelor's, master's,
educational specialists, Ph.D. and Ed.D): The Culverhouse College
of Commerce and Business Administration, and colleges of Communication
and Information Sciences, Education, and Nursing.
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SPEAKERS
MAIN — Ransom Wilson, Flutist and Conductor
A native of Tuscaloosa, Wilson has long been recognized as one
of the world's leading instrumentalists and is equally esteemed
as an outstanding conductor of orchestral and operatic repertoire.
He has accompanied many internationally renowned artists from the
podium, including Itzhak Perlman, André Watts, Frederica
von Stade, Nadja Salerno Sonnenberg, Joshua Bell, Garrick Ohlsson,
Jeffrey Kahane and Robin Sutherland. He is an Artist Member of the
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, and he is professor of
flute at Yale University. He has recorded 30 albums as both flutist
and conductor and was three times nominated for the "Grammy"
award. Other awards he has received include the Alabama Prize from
the New York Times Foundation, and the Award of Merit in Gold, from
the Republic of Austria.
LAW — David Bronner, CEO of Retirement Systems of Alabama
Bronner, who heads the largest financial organization in the state,
has been featured in numerous business periodicals including The
Wall Street Journal, Business Week, Forbes Magazine, and The Money
Manager. He holds both a law degree and a Ph.D. from the Capstone
and served as assistant dean of UA's School of Law from 1972-73.
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AWARDS (9 a.m. Ceremony Only)
Hugo Black Award: Wayne Flynt
Flynt is a Distinguished University Professor at Auburn University
and a renowned expert on Southern history, politics and religion.
An outspoken advocate, Flynt has traveled the state of Alabama giving
countless lectures on the plight faced by all Alabamians, particularly
its poor citizens. In part, the interest grew from the federal war
on poverty and his own Appalachian years in the mountains of northeast
Alabama. His research led to his acclaimed book, "Poor But
Proud: Alabama's Poor Whites," which was nominated for a Pulitzer
Prize and won the coveted Lillian Smith Award for Non-Fiction in
1990. The Black Award, named in honor of the late Supreme Court
Justice and UA alumnus Hugo Black, recognizes distinguished service
to the people of Alabama and the nation and is the highest award
given by the University.
Julia and Henry Tutwiler Award: H. Pettus Randall III (Posthumous)
Randall, who served as chair of Randall Publishing before his
death in 2002, will be the posthumous recipient of the Julia and
Henry Tutwiler Award, UA's most prestigious award for volunteer
service to UA and the people of Alabama. A native Alabamian, Randall
earned his bachelor's in history and English from UA and his Juris
Doctor from the UA School of Law in 1971. He became president of
the family-owned Randall Publishing in 1976 and chairman and CEO
in 1984. He remained active until his death on Sept. 7, 2002, following
a lengthy battle with pancreatic cancer. Randall's involvement in
civic, fraternal and religious organizations included the Tuscaloosa
Chamber of Commerce, the Tuscaloosa Arts Council, the Boys and Girls
Club of Tuscaloosa, the Episcopal Church, the March of Dimes, the
United Way and the Tuscaloosa Association of Retarded Citizens and
more. In 2002, he received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the
Chamber of Commerce of West Alabama and was named Tuscaloosa County's
Citizen of the Year for 2002 by the Tuscaloosa Civitan Club.
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NOTEWORTHY/INSPIRING GRADUATES
For more information on these graduates and other graduate story
ideas, contact Suzanne Dowling in Media Relations at 205/348-8324
or sdowling@ur.ua.edu.
DAVID KIMANI: Wife to Accept UA Track Star's Posthumous Degree
— The wife of UA track star David Kimani will accept her late
husband's degree in commerce and business. Kimani had completed
all degree requirements, and his wife, Chamis, will accept the degree
during the May 16 ceremony. Widely regarded as the greatest distance
runner in UA track and field history, the 25-year-old Kimani died
of unknown causes April 17 after collapsing while eating lunch.
A six-time national champion and 14-time All-American, Kimani helped
lead Alabama to a second-place finish in the 2002 NCAA Indoor Championships
and was considered a future Olympic contender. (1 p.m. Ceremony)
ADDITIONAL UA ATHLETIC GRADUATES — Some of the UA
athletes scheduled to receive their degrees: Baseball: Brent Boyd
(Fort Worth, Texas), Beau Hearod (Jennings, La.), Jeffrey Norris
(Vestavia Hills); Men's Basketball: Erwin Dudley (Uniontown), Terrance
Meade (Scottsboro); Football: Waine Bacon (Ft. Washington, Md.),
Lane Bearden (Helena), Hirchel Bolden (Dothan), Marico Portis (Mobile),
Theodus Sanders (Bessemer); Gymnastics: Natalie Barrington (Mississauga,
Canada), Andree Pickens (Houston, Texas), Raegan Tomasek (Mastic
Beach, N.Y.)
NATALIE FLEMING: She Finds the Courage to Complete Her Degree
After Her Mother's Death — Although Natalie Fleming of
Piedmont will receive her master of arts in journalism, the road
to this graduation took more strength than she ever imagined. After
an extended battle with diabetes and renal failure, her mother,
Susan Fleming, died March 10. Natalie says her mother went through
more than 60 surgeries and was taking more than 60 pills a day after
her kidney transplant. "She was such an inspiration to me,
and she wanted me to complete my master's more than anything,"
Fleming says. "She was sick for so long and in so much pain,
but she never complained." She says her mother's strength kept
her going when she wanted to leave school to help care for her.
"I'm only here because of her," she says. "She was
in a coma at the end, and I missed four weeks of school. It seemed
impossible to come back and finish, but I did it because I knew
that's what she wanted me to do." To reach Natalie Fleming
at her Gadsden home from May 6-8 call 256/492-0111. For all other
times, call her mobile 205/242-6177. (1 p.m. Ceremony)
TERRY COLBURN AND LEROY GANT: B.F. Goodrich workers earn degrees
— Over the past few years Terry Colburn of Tuscaloosa and
Leroy Gant of Fayette have shared a few things in common: they both
work at Tuscaloosa's Uniroyal Goodrich Tire Manufacturing, raising
kids as single parents, and have been full-time students at UA.
Now they can add UA alumni to their common traits. On May 16, Colburn
will receive his bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering; and
Gant has earned a bachelor's degree in health studies. And despite
all the pressures they faced, they will both graduate with honors.
Colburn can be reached at 205/344-6649 or tcolburn10566@charter.net.
Gant can be reached through Dr. Judy Taylor, Rural Alabama Health
Education Center, 205/348-1017.
BLOUNT INITIATIVE: First Graduating Class — Four years
ago, UA began its ambitious Blount Undergraduate Initiative that
was to create a community of undergraduate scholars and be a benchmark
for academic excellence at the Capstone. On May 16, UA will graduate
the Initiative's first class with 25 percent of the class being
accepted to either medical school or law school and 35 percent planning
to enter graduate school. Blount students have been accepted by
some of the nation's top graduate institutions including Yale, University
of Virginia, Georgetown, Columbia, and New York University. The
ranks of Blount seniors includes a member of the 2002 and 2003 USA
Today All-Academic Team, two nominees for the prestigious national
Rhodes Scholarship, and 12 members of the Phi Beta Kappa honor society.
The four year Blount program, established with a $14 million dollar
private endowment provided by 27 Alabamians, including the late
Winton Blount of Montgomery, his wife, Carolyn Blount, and the Blount
Foundation, includes a residential freshmen year, a study abroad
option, a public service component, and a senior Capstone Course.
For more information, contact Becky Florence at 205/348-8663.
EMILY SMITH: Around the World in Four Years — In her
four years as a UA student, Emily Smith, who has studied five languages
and is fluent in Spanish, has spent time in Brazil, Spain, Portugal,
Germany, India, Mexico, England and Colombia. Smith, a Hoover resident,
managed to work in the trips during holiday breaks from school and
during the summers, all while keeping a 4.0 GPA, with a double major
of journalism and Spanish. But her international lifestyle is not
limited to off-campus activities. Smith was elected president of
UA's International Student Association, a first for an American
and a first for any woman. Her post-graduate work will involve travel
also. She'll move to Caracas, Venezuela where she'll begin work
on a master's degree in international relations at La Universidad
Central, in Caracas, using her $25,000 Rotary Ambassadorial Scholarship.
During her stay, she'll serve as a good will ambassador, visiting
Rotary Clubs in Venezuela to make presentations on Alabama, its
people and its top issues. Smith may be reached at 205/344-5756
or via zapato81@aol.com. Additional
UA sources most familiar with Smith include: Dr. Jane Stanfield,
executive director of Capstone International, (205) 348-5256 or
jstanfie@bama.ua.edu and
Dr. Ed Mullins, professor and chair of journalism, 205/348-8592
or mullins@jn.ua.edu. (1
p.m. Ceremony)
ELIZABETH WATSON: Six consecutive generations of UA graduates
— When Mobile native Elizabeth Watson accepts her degree in
communicative disorders on May 16, she continues a family tradition
dating back to the 1920's. Since then, the Watson family has had
six straight generations enrolled at UA. Contact Watson at 205/292-7144
(cell). (9 a.m. ceremony)
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