More than 1,600 students are eligible to graduate from Eastern Illinois University this spring, and the majority of those plan to participate in formal commencement ceremonies Saturday, May 9.
Graduation ceremonies will take place at 9 a.m., noon, 3 and 6 p.m. in Lantz Arena. Guest tickets are required for admission into the ceremonies.
Students from the College of Sciences will march in the morning ceremony; the College of Arts and Humanities and the School of Continuing Education (Bachelor of Arts in General Studies program) at noon; the College of Education and Professional Studies at 3 p.m.; and the Lumpkin College of Business and Applied Sciences at 6.
Graduate students will walk with their respective colleges.
EIU President Bill Perry will preside over the ceremonies. Levi Bulgar, student body president, and John Henry Pommier, chair, EIU Faculty Senate, will also address the graduates.
Representing Eastern's Board of Trustees will be Julie Nimmons and Eric Wilber (9 a.m.), Leo Welch (noon), Robert Webb (3 p.m.) and Don Yost (6 p.m.).
Each ceremony will feature a special guest speaker who will present the official commencement address. Marc Miller, director of the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, will speak at 9 a.m., while James Johnson, dean of Eastern's College of Arts and Humanities, plans to speak at noon. Morrie Reece and Rudy Hlavek, two of this year's honorary degree recipients, will speak at 3 and 6 p.m., respectively.
Robert "Morrie" Reece's education career began when he was a member of the U.S. Navy, where his responsibilities included teaching math and nuclear reactor courses in the Naval Nuclear Power Academy. He later attended Eastern, where he earned his bachelor's degree in physical education. After teaching for a time at the University of Illinois and at University High School in Urbana, Reece worked in Washington, D.C., designing computer training and education projects for many Fortune 500 companies and 18 federal agencies. He joined Apple Inc. more than 25 years ago and now, as a higher education development executive, travels throughout the country teaching how to incorporate new technologies in the classroom.
After earning his bachelor's degree in business from EIU, Rudolph "Rudy" G. Hlavek joined H. Hentz and Co., which later became Smith Barney, a leader in the U.S. securities industry. He rose through the ranks before retiring in 2001 as senior executive vice president and director of the Midwest and Southern divisions. His continued association with Eastern has been extensive. During his tenure on the EIU Foundation Board of Directors, he was instrumental in the creation of a program that allows EIU finance students to manage $100,000 of the board's portfolio.
Other honorary degree recipients include Robert W. "Bob" Sterling and Matthew Polenzani. Both will receive their honors at Saturday's noon ceremony.
Sterling, who received his bachelor's and master's degrees from EIU, has distinguished himself on local and national levels in two simultaneous careers. He started his work as a historian and educator teaching in public schools before joining Eastern's history department in 1956. Since 1946, he has also covered auto racing for National Speed Sport News, and has spent many years covering racing for national television networks. He and his ABC Sports colleagues won Emmy Awards for coverage of the Indianapolis 500 in 1989 and 1990.
Polenzani's remarkable talent for opera was evident during his days as a music student at EIU, and shortly after he earned his bachelor's degree in 1990, he embarked on a career that has led him to becoming one of the world's most prominent opera singers. The lyric tenor, who went on to receive his Master of Music degree from Yale University, joined the world-renowned Metropolitan Opera of New York in 1997. He has sung in some of the most celebrated opera companies in the world, and he frequently makes guest appearances with the Chicago Lyric Opera, Los Angeles Opera and the Opera Company of Philadelphia.
Also at noon, David Allen Radavich, professor of English at Eastern, will formally receive the 2009 Distinguished Faculty Award. This award is presented annually to a full-time faculty member who has excelled in teaching, professional research/creative activity and service.
Commencement marshals lead the procession while carrying the university mace inscribed with past marshals' names:
Faculty marshals are given the honor of carrying the college banner for their respective colleges:
Stefan Aydt, a mathematics and computer science major from Paris, will serve as the Honors College banner marshal during all four ceremonies.
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