TERRE HAUTE — More than 1,800 students graduated from Indiana State University on Saturday, many of whom took part in a two-hour graduation ceremony at Hulman Center
“You are now and forever a Sycamore,” ISU president Lloyd W. Benjamin told the assembled graduates after all the degrees had been awarded. He asked the approximately 900 students who took part in the 136th ISU graduation ceremony to continue to support their university as alumni.
“Our association with the university does not end today,” said Jenna Schnieders, president of the ISU Student Alumni Association.
In all, ISU awarded 1,380 undergraduate degrees, 446 master’s degrees, 10 educational specialist degrees and 41 doctoral degrees, according to ISU media spokeswoman Paula Meyer.
Most students taking part in the graduation were from Indiana; however, several other states and countries were represented, including England, France, Ivory Coast, United Arab Emirates and South Korea.
One student who traveled thousands of miles to take part in the graduation ceremony was Daniel Lucky, a nontraditional nursing student from Modesto, Calif. Lucky, one of two men graduating from the school of nursing this spring, took all of his ISU core nursing courses online and had never been to Indiana prior to coming here this weekend with his wife, Dianna, he said.
“They really take good, good care of you,” Lucky said of the College of Nursing faculty he worked with as a student. Apart from his online courses, Lucky and other online students in the nursing program are required to take their clinical studies courses at accredited health care facilities, ISU officials said.
Lucky, 37, is already a registered nurse and started his own vocational college, Abrams College, in 1994 and serves as its president. The college started with Lucky teaching students very basic nursing skills out of the waiting room in a doctor’s office, he said. The college now graduates around 2,000 students each year, Lucky said.
“I like the holistic side of [nursing],” Lucky said. “I like to spend a lot of time with patients.”
Lucky, who begins an ISU master’s program later this month, also surprised ISU officials by donating $25,000 to the school to set up a scholarship program to assist male nursing students, ISU officials said.
“I want to help men in nursing stay in the field and continue their education,” Lucky said. Fewer than 7 percent of nurses are men, Lucky said. Encouraging more men in the nursing profession would help alleviate a critical nursing shortage in the U.S., he said.
ISU also awarded two honorary degrees Saturday.
The university awarded an honorary Doctor of Science degree to nursing pioneer Loretta C. Ford and an honorary Doctor of Laws degree to outgoing Ivy Tech Community College president Gerald Lamkin.
“Intelligence is not enough,” said Jonathan Clark, a finance major and the commencement’s student speaker. He encouraged his fellow graduates to continue their education and to always “temper knowledge with wisdom and character.”
ISU awarded six students, each of whom maintained a perfect 4.0 grade-point average during their time at the university, the Hines Memorial Medal. These students were Megan Rochelle Anderson, an English major from Knox; Sarah L. Engle, a political science and legal studies major from Terre Haute; Gabrielle M. Gerhardt, a psychology major from Marshall, Ill.; Linda R. Kemper, a mathematics education major from Valparaiso; Kaitlin A. Korosi, an accounting major from Batesville; and Kristin L. Leistner, a speech-pathology major from Holland.
The university also granted four Rankin Memorial Distinguished Senior Awards to Megan Rochelle Anderson of Knox, Rachael Chase of Terre Haute, Andrea Nicole Clifford of Hillsdale and Brent Allan Pulliam of Robinson, Ill.
In addition to the granting of ISU degrees, one Michigan State University doctoral degree was also awarded during the ceremony. ISU President Benjamin conferred the MSU doctoral degree on Doug Keiser, the associate director of bands at ISU. Keiser missed his commencement ceremony in Michigan to help direct the ISU Commencement Band during Saturday’s ceremony, Meyer said.
ISU officials estimated that about 7,500 people filled Hulman Center to watch the ceremony. Benjamin asked parents, friends and family of graduates to be as quiet as possible when students’ names were read; however, by the end of the two-hour ceremony, many cheering friends and families were having trouble containing their enthusiasm.
Finally, at around 4:15 p.m., two hours after the ceremony began, Benjamin told the assembled graduates they could shift the tassels on their graduation caps from the right side to the left. Cheers and camera flashes filled the arena.
After the ceremony, the crowd of thousands stood in small groups all around the outside of Hulman Center. Graduates posed for pictures while friends and relatives looked on.
“I made it,” was written in glittery letters on the top of one happy graduate’s cap. And on the cap next to hers another message read simply, “see ya!”
Arthur Foulkes can be contacted at (812) 231-4232 or arthur.foulkes@tribstar.com.
Local & Bistate
More than 1,800 graduate from Indiana State
- Local & Bistate
-
-
Montford Point Marine
In 1943, 19-year-old Ezell Odom was on the sandy beach of a tiny South Pacific island about 7,000 miles from his parent’s home in Terre Haute.
-
K-9 officer Shadow honored as a hero
A Terre Haute K-9 officer injured in the line of duty has been honored as a hero by the Indiana Veterinary Medical Association.
-
Freezin’ for a Reason
Hundreds lined up outside Hulman Center amid frigid air to participate in a warm-hearted cause.
-
Even as law, right-to-work dominates crackerbarrel
The flames of the right-to-work debate were gone, but the coals still seemed to smolder.
-
Vigo School Board to give OK on bonds for DeVaney project
The Vigo County School Board will meet at 6 p.m. Monday in the administration building, 686 Wabash Ave.
-
Bridging the gap to ‘forever’
They can be taken from their homes by strangers for reasons they may not understand, with no possessions other than the clothes they are wearing.
-
Students showcase keen problem-solving skills at Rose-Hulman
For the 16th straight year, Honey Creek Middle School students came out on top in the Wabash Valley MATHCOUNTS competition at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology.
-
Ivy Tech to celebrate Black History Month
Ivy Tech Community College will celebrate Black History Month with a series of events at its campuses statewide.
-
Whitney Houston, superstar of records, films, dies
Whitney Houston, who ruled as pop music's queen until her majestic voice and regal image were ravaged by drug use, erratic behavior and a tumultuous marriage to singer Bobby Brown, has died. She was 48.
-
Giant welcome home for Steve
Terre Haute was suddenly home to thousands of cheering New York Giants fans Friday as residents welcomed Super Bowl champion Steve Weatherford back home for a parade.
-
‘One for Terre Haute,’ Steve tells crowd at North
“This one was for Terre Haute,” native son Steve Weatherford proclaimed Friday as he shared his Super Bowl victory with the community that helped send him on the path to a world championship.
-
Hometown support vital to success, Weatherford says
Steve Weatherford said Friday he wouldn’t be celebrating a Giants’ Super Bowl victory if not for the support he’s received from his hometown, his parents and mentors in his life.
-
Craning for a rare glimpse
A visitor from the Far East has naturalists flying to Linton, hoping some good comes from one bird’s bad directions.
-
Vigo’s primary election filings complete
The slate is set for the May 8 primary election, with the race for three at-large seats on the Vigo County Council drawing the largest pool of candidates at the county level.
-
Documentary on electric vehicles plays Sunday at Rose
The rising popularity of electric vehicles and their impact on the world eco-system is the focus of a documentary, “Revenge of the Electric Car,” being presented at 3 p.m. Sunday in Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology’s Hatfield Hall Theater.
-
Man gets 10-year sentence in battery case
A West Terre Haute man received a 10-year prison sentence Friday after pleading guilty to aggravated battery for beating a friend caught in bed with the man’s wife.
-
Asian hooded crane lands in Greene County wildlife area
Bird watchers are flocking to a southwestern Indiana wildlife area to try to catch a glimpse of a crane usually spotted only in Asia.
-
Slow drips: It’s maple syrup season in Indiana
More seasonal, colder temperatures will hit the Wabash Valley this weekend, which is ideal weather for maple syrup production, said Keith Ruble, superintendent of the Vigo County Parks and Recreation Department.
However, Ruble voices concern that this year’s maple syrup season may be short.
-
Downtown restaurant celebrates expansion
The streets of Terre Haute were chilly Thursday night, but for the glow of hot pasta inside Louise’s Pizzeria and Cafe.
-
Contract signed for new Y
Papers are signed and the ink is in place for a new YMCA to operate in Terre Haute.
-
City to impose $30 release fee on towed vehicles
The Terre Haute City Council voted without opposition Thursday to impose a new $30 release fee on vehicles towed and impounded by the police as part of a criminal investigation.
-
Valley educators cautious on Indiana’s ‘No Child’ waiver
Indiana is one of 10 states to receive a waiver from federal No Child Left Behind requirements.
-
Driver dies after Illinois school bus crash
“Brace yourself. Brace yourself,” Fay Pickering shouted to her students just before the school bus she was driving crossed U.S. 40 and landed in a ditch Thursday morning.
-
Trial date set for former WTH police chief
A July 23 trial date has been set for a former police chief of West Terre Haute accused of theft.
-
Motorcycle gang member pleads guilty in federal court
A member of an Indianapolis motorcycle gang who delivered methamphetamine to a Terre Haute dealer has pleaded guilty to drug charges in federal court.
-
July trial date set for mother charged with child neglect
A July 30 trial date has been set for a Terre Haute mother charged with neglecting and battering her toddler.
-
Business hosting SPPRAK fundraiser
Java Haute is hosting the latest fundraiser sponsored by SPPRAK — Special People Performing Random Acts of Kindness.
-
Valley high school cooking competition under way today
Clabber Girl Corp. and Gordon Food Services will host the fourth-annual High School Chef Competition, beginning today through Saturday, and again Feb. 18, in the Culinary Classroom at Clabber Girl.
- UPDATE: Marshall, Ill., school bus driver involved in accident dies; cause appears to be cardiac-related
-
Terre Haute road name game
What used to be called U.S. 40 from the Wabash River west through West Terre Haute to Interstate 70 needs to be renamed and, probably, get new street addresses, a Vigo County planner recommends.
- More Local & Bistate Headlines
-








