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MONDAY, MAY 10, 2004
MORNING CEREMONY: 9 a.m.
AFTERNOON CEREMONY: 1 p.m.
COLEMAN COLISEUM
Morning Ceremony: (bachelor’s, master’s and Ph.D.):
The Culverhouse College of Commerce and Business Administration, and Colleges of Communication
and Information Sciences, Education, and Nursing.
Afternoon Ceremony: (bachelor’s, master’s, educational
specialists, Ph.D. and Ed.D): Colleges of Arts and Sciences, Engineering, Human Environmental
Sciences, and the School of Social Work.
UA TO BROADCAST COMMENCEMENT LIVE VIA INTERNET -- For the first time,
The University of Alabama will broadcast its commencement ceremonies live over the
Internet on May 10. Both the 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. ceremonies will be available. Those
who wish to view the ceremonies on the Internet can go to the main UA web page at http://www.ua.edu/
to find the Webcast link. The Webcast will require the free Windows Media Player and
a broadband connection. The webcast will be archived on UA’s website and will
be available for viewing until May 30.
SPEAKER -- James P. Hayes Jr., president of the Economic Development Partnership
of Alabama. Hayes will also receive an honorary doctorate of humane letters.
Prior to joining the Partnership, Hayes held several key positions for the state of
Alabama, including senior adviser to Gov. Don Siegelman, director of the Alabama Development
Office, and revenue commissioner and land commissioner. He also served as director
of planning and acquisitions for The Louisiana Land & Exploration Co. A native
of Brewton and a UA alumnus, Hayes is active in several civic and community organizations
including serving on the boards of the Lakeshore Foundation, the Vulcan Park Foundation
and the Supporters Board of the University of Alabama at Birmingham Comprehensive Cancer
Center.
AWARDS (9 a.m. Ceremony Only) -- Dr. John Hicks, executive assistant
to the chancellor and secretary of the UA Board of Trustees, will be awarded an honorary
doctorate of humane letters. Hicks has served the board and the chancellor since 1979
and is nationally recognized for these accomplishments in higher education administration.
His responsibilities include oversight of the processes, activities and meetings of
the board, and he has been integrally involved in the boards’ recruitment of
senior leaders, resulting in the selection of 10 campus presidents and four chancellors.
NOTEWORTHY/INSPIRING GRADUATES
MELISSA ALLEN: Comfort Found Amid Childhood Pain Helps Lead Her to Nursing
Career -- Melissa Allen has never wanted her sometimes painful, incurable
disease to define her life, but the compassionate nursing care she received as a frightened,
hospitalized child helped crystallize her career choice. Within a week of receiving
her bachelor’s degree in nursing, this 22-year-old woman is scheduled to begin
her nursing career in the special care unit of Children’s Hospital in Birmingham.
Allen has coped with Crohn’s disease, which causes inflammation throughout the
entire digestive tract, since she was 11. “I was in and out of the hospital for
months at the time,” she recalled. “In the hospital, the nurses were the
ones that helped me out and gave me hope and helped me understand there was an end
to all the madness. They were the ones that made me realize that there are positive
sides to any disease. I hope that one day I can be the same kind of influence on a
child’s life.” Allen is scheduled to graduate alongside the classmates
she entered UA’s nursing college with in 2000, despite undergoing two major operations
since last summer. She adheres to a schedule that includes daily medications and diet
restrictions. Despite the challenges, the Snellville, Ga. native has not only succeeded,
but excelled, as a nursing student, being recently presented with the College’s
Most Outstanding Senior award. Sources: Melissa Allen, maallen@charter.net
or 770/490-9890; Dr. Angela Collins, 205/348-2707; Dr. Jena Barrett, associate professor
and Allen’s adviser, 205/348-6641.
KIM CROSS: Master’s Thesis Focuses on Changes in Oldest Order of Nuns
-- Cross, who will receive her master’s degree in journalism, has produced a
book on the lives of the Sacred Heart Order of Nuns, a vanishing but valiant group
of women who belie the notion that we all have succumbed to a “what’s-in-it-for-me”
lifestyle. The group, established in France in 1800, is now a modern group whose lives
of service are as exciting, modern and unconventional as they once were cloistered
and conventional. For her project, Cross traveled to San Diego, San Francisco, New
Orleans, New York and Rome. She explores how this Order has grown, changed and adapted
to new ideas in a changing world as their own numbers have dropped by 60 percent and
the median age has reached 70. Sources: Kim Cross, 205/394-3493 or kimhcross@yahoo.com.
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