By Ashley Sidebottom, staff writer
CAMPBELLSVILLE, Ky. - 鈥淢y prayer is that Dec. 14, 2007, be a day you will look back on as a day of achievement, and one where you felt a blessed sense of appreciation for all those who have helped make this day possible for you,鈥 said Dr. Michael V. Carter, 青瓜视频 president, at the first-ever December commencement ceremony in the Ransdell Chapel.
The traditional senior walk morphed into an evening candlelight walk before the 7 p.m. ceremony beginning at the E. Bruce Heilman Student Complex and ending at the chapel.
Degrees were conferred to 82 students, one being given posthumously.
Doris Wefwafwa, a student and assistant volleyball coach from Kenya who died suddenly Monday, Dec. 10, was to receive her bachelor of social work degree. Wefwafwa's degree was given to family representative Ruth Nyongesa along with photographs collected for the family.
Other degrees awarded included: three associate of science; nine bachelor of social work; nine bachelor of science in business administration; 28 bachelor of science; one bachelor of arts; four master of theology; one master of music in music education; one master of music in church music; 14 master of arts in special education; eight master of business administration; and four master of arts in music.
An honorary doctorate of public service was presented to J.B. Crawley of Campbellsville, who is a former chairman of the 青瓜视频 Board of Trustees and served as a capital campaign chairman under former president Dr. W.R. among involvement in numerous other community organizations.
Carter discussed the university's theme 鈥淔ind Your Calling,鈥 and said, 鈥淭his phrase expresses the very essence of who we are as a community of learners as we are seeking to provide quality Christian higher education to women and men of all ages with a significant emphasis on servant leadership.鈥
鈥淲e seek people of all ages not only to find their calling in an academic major and career path, but we are also placed here to help them find their spiritual gifts and reach out and touch others through the love of Jesus Christ,鈥 Carter said.
Dr. Skip Alexander, senior pastor of Campbellsville Baptist Church, was the guest speaker.
鈥淚t is an honor for me to participate at the first December graduation for Campbellsville University, and ironically very appropriate (as he is Crawley's pastor),鈥 Alexander said.
鈥淩ita Creason (director of student records) has been busy keeping a list and checking it twice, and she knows who's been naughty and who's been nice. Those who have been nice are here today, but some have been naughty and hopefully we'll see them next semester or they will be asking, 鈥楶ick up or delivery.'鈥
With yuletide humor aside, Alexander urged the graduates to 鈥渂e the bridge between generational divisions.鈥
He referenced Tom Brokaw's latest book 鈥淏oom,鈥 that outlines the baby boomer generation, those who were born between 1946 and 1964.
鈥淎mong this class of graduates I see several generations represented. There are non-traditional students who are graduating this evening. They were the older men and women who sat up front, actually did their assignments and never missed a class, unless there was a sick child at home.鈥
鈥溾楤usters,' are the forgotten step-children of the Boomers. We are children born between 1965 and 1983. We are not boomers and reject much of their priorities. We are the children that experienced stepdads and stepmoms. Our generation has been slow to move up and move out of the house. Some called us the silent generation,鈥 Alexander said.
鈥淚f the title for the Boomers is 鈥榖oom,' then the title for the Busters would be 鈥榖ust,' meaning: break, ruin completely; raid, search without warning; or flop, a complete failure. It was, after all, my generation that gave the world Milli Vanilli, New Coke and Michael Jackson.鈥
鈥淢r. Brokaw's next book may well focus on Busters and it will be called 鈥楤ust.' This will most likely be a pamphlet instead of a book,鈥 he said.
鈥淭he generation that follows has been labeled the 鈥榖ridger' generation because they are coming of age in two different centuries. Your name like your generation is difficult to define,鈥 Alexander said.
鈥淲e must consider another name for you, the class of 2007. There is no name that captures you. You are more than a name. You reject labels and institutional identification鈥 Perhaps we should call your generation 鈥榖ridge' since you are the connecting and linking generation,鈥 he said.
鈥淕od can use you to overcome the cynicism of our day where differences are magnified. Your generation can remind us all that we are Americans first and (political) party members second. Be the bridge between the 鈥榳ell-to-do' and the 鈥榥othing to do with' groups in our world,鈥 Alexander said.
鈥淲hatever you call your generation, whatever label is given your group, we are all the same. What is true of every generation is true for your generation and future generations. We are a lost and strayed people who need a Savior. With this Immanuel you can be the bridge.鈥
Alexander has been with Campbellsville Baptist Church since 2002 and has served as an adjunct professor in the CU School of Theology and chairman of the Church Relations Council of 青瓜视频.
Carter gave the charge to the graduates after the degrees were conferred, which included the traditional discussion of the three corners of the university seal: leadership, fellowship and scholarship.
Heather Campbell, a bachelor of science in public relations graduate from Graysville, Pa., gave the response to the charge.
鈥淥n behalf of the class of 2007, I would like to thank all of our family and friends for the love, support and encouragement you have provided through our years in college and for celebrating this day with us,鈥 Campbell said.
鈥淢ay we take the charge that President Carter has challenged us with and use it as we embark on the next chapter of our lives. We have been taught, since our first time on this campus, to trust in the Lord and lean on his understandings, and everything will fall into place,鈥 she said.
鈥淢ay we, as the first class to participate in a fall commencement ceremony in the history of the university, apply these principles of fellowship, leadership and scholarship in our lives as we take the degrees we have earned and embrace the 鈥榬eal world,'鈥 Campbell said.
鈥淚 urge you all to live an upstanding life knowing and proclaiming all the while what Christ has done for you.鈥
青瓜视频 is a private, comprehensive institution located in South Central Kentucky. Founded in 1906, 青瓜视频 is affiliated with the Kentucky Baptist Convention and has an enrollment of 2,405 students who represent 98 Kentucky counties, 25 states and 29 foreign nations. Listed in U.S.News & World Report's 2008 鈥淎merica's Best Colleges,鈥 CU is ranked 22nd in 鈥淏est Baccalaureate Colleges鈥 in the South and eighth in the South for 鈥淕reat Schools, Great Prices.鈥 CU has been ranked 15 consecutive years with U.S.News & World Report. The university has also been named to America's Best Christian Colleges庐. 青瓜视频 is located 82 miles southwest of Lexington, Ky., and 80 miles southeast of Louisville, Ky. Dr. Michael V. Carter is in his ninth year as president.
CONGRATULATIONS GRADUATES!
MASTER OF ARTS IN MUSIC:
Li-Hao Chiang, Taiwan; Chi-Wen Lu, Taiwan; Hana Park, Korea; Nilzeth do Amaral Galvao Santos, Brazil.
MASTER OF ARTS IN SPECIAL EDUCATION:
(Learning and Behavior Disorders)
Joel Daryl Boggs, Whitesburg, KY; Teresa Gail Burns, Greensburg, KY; Shannon Dale Charles, Pikeville, KY; Kimberly Michele Cress, Waynesburg, KY; Lora Morgeson Dye, Lebanon, KY; Stephanie Ann Johnson, Russell Springs, KY; Shannon Chambers Fox, Summer Shade, KY; Tina Sue Hadley, Columbia, KY; Jeffrie Allen Parson, Campbellsville, KY; Mica Richelle O'Quinn, Belcher, KY; Elizabeth Mattingly Osborn, Lebanon, KY; Laura Lynette Scobee, Guston, KY; Kristy Lynn Sullivan, Greensburg, KY.
MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION:
Tiffany Nicole Cox, Elk Horn, KY; Gerald Lane Foster II, Greensburg, KY; Melissa Lee Knight, Lebanon, KY; Jennifer Leigh Murphy, Tompkinsville, KY; Jamie Glenn Walker, Williamsburg, KY; Margie Lee Walker, Magnolia, KY; Gary Lee Williams, Finland; Nora Karolina Williams, Finland.
MASTER OF MUSIC IN CHURCH MUSIC:
Tanya Renee Copher, Elk Horn, KY.
MASTER OF MUSIC IN MUSIC EDUCATION:
Shannon Gail Kelty Morris, Campbellsville, KY.
MASTER OF THEOLOGY:
Christopher Lee Copher, Elk Horn, KY; Matthew Alan Howe, Williamstown, KY
BACHELOR OF ARTS:
Autumn Faith Perkins, Magna Cum Laude, English, Greensburg, KY.
BACHELOR OF SCIENCE:
Adriane Rose Allen, Magna Cum Laude, Psychology, Somerset, KY: Travis Scott Altman, Organizational Management, Louisville, KY; Amanda Ann Humphress, Organizational Management, Elk Horn, KY; Heather Marie Campbell, Award Recipient, Magna Sum Laude, Communications/Public Relations, Graysville, PA; Andrew Kyle Carroll, Criminal Justice Administration, Louisville, KY; Michael Todd Cecil, Social Studies, Bardstown KY; Amy Leigh Coombs, Educational Ministries, Madisonville, KY; Amber Kathleen Davis, Magna Cum Laude, Educational Ministries, Owensboro, KY; Kelly Covington Few, Organizational Management, Louisville, KY; William Troy Gast, Jr, Criminal Justice Administration, Lexington, KY; Ricky Wayne Green, Christian Social Ministries, Campbellsville, KY; Cora Elizabeth Hancock, History, Columbia, KY; Bryant O. Jackson, Criminal Justice Administration, Hamilton, OH; James Anthony Jones, Organizational Management, Louisville, KY; Shin-Hye (Grace) Kim, Cum Laude Exercise Science/Sports Medicine, Thailand; Earl Lord, Organization Management, LaGrange, KY; Jessica Hope Mullins, Magna Cum Laude, Exercise Science/Sports Medicine, Biology, Lawrenceburg, KY; Elizabeth Suzanne Page, Cum Laude, Psychology, Elizabethtown, KY; Rouchelle Laverne Peterson, Cum Laude, Physical Education, Campbellsville, KY; Matthew Jason Ritchey, Criminal Justice Administration, Lexington, KY; Kristin Erin Rucker, Cum Laude, Biology, Campbellsville, KY; Eric Douglas Thomas, Magna Cum Laude, Calhoun, KY; Tiffany Faith Ann Thompson, Educational Ministries, Campbellsville, KY; Ashley Lyn Turpin, Criminal Justice Administration, Psychology, Waynesburg, KY; Tracy Danielle Vanover, Psychology, Campbellsville, KY.
BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION:
Sedrick Jajuan Andrews, Management, Lexington, KY; Aaron Glenn Ball, Marketing, Bedford, KY; Nathanael A. Clark, Mangement, Greensburg, KY; William Lawrence Griffin, Management, Franklin, KY; Tara Danielle Lawson, Cum Laude, Accounting, Campbellsville, KY; Kachel Candice Byrne Manners, Accounting, Greensburg, KY; Christy Denise Spurling, Office Management, Campbellsville, KY; Kyle Lee Stearman, Accounting, Greensburg, KY.
BACHELOR OF SOCIAL WORK:
Sara Beth Crockett, Social Work, Somerset, KY; Phoebe Ann Dewar, Social Work, Frederick, MD; Leann Nicole Hafley, Social Work, Campbellsville, KY;Regina McMahan Hardin, Magna Cum Laude, Social Work, Campbellsville, KY; Jennifer Hope Johnson, Cum Laude, Columbia, KY; Lori Ann Morrison, Social Work, Cum Laude, Greensboro, NC; Sara K. Murphy, Social Work, Elk Horn, KY; Amanda Kay DeWeese, Social Work, Campbellsville, KY; Doris Nandako Wefwafwa, Social Work, Kenya.
ASSOCIATE OF SCIENCE:
Connie Lee Hagy, Early Childhood Education, Campbellsville, KY; LeAnne Carol Parrish, Administrative Technology, Campbellsville, KY; Betty Marilyn Albertson Stover, Early Childhood Education, Albany, KY.
Three students are recognized in Who's Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges: Heather Marie Campbell, Uzias Segura Gonzalez, and Shin-Hye (Grace) Kim.