OSU graduates largest class in history
This is a press release courtesy of Oregon State University Oregon
The class of 2008 will include a record 4,365 students receiving 4,586 degrees, according to OSU Registrar Kent Kuo.
Several special awards and degrees also will be presented by OSU President Ed Ray and others during the ceremony. The commencement speaker will be Helen Diggs, an
Twenty-three other former
Many of these former students since have died. But at least five will return to campus and many others – both living and deceased – will be represented by family members during the OSU ceremony, where they will receive their long-overdue honorary degrees. OSU President Ray says public recognition of the sacrifices these students made is overdue.
“It is a great privilege for all of us at
Two OSU students – Joel Fischer and Andy Kiyuna – provided the impetus for recognizing the former students and helped turn it into a law signed by Oregon Gov. Ted Kulongoski. For more information on that process, see: http://oregonstate.edu/dept/ncs/newsarch/2008/May08/internee.html
Also scheduled for special recognition is Weixing Cao, vice president of
After returning to , he worked with OSU and the Oregon Seed Council to test and promote
OSU’s commencement speaker also made good use of her
Lori Chen, from Clackamas, is graduating after just three years with a 4.00 grade point average and a degree in human development and family science and a minor in Mandarin Chinese. Last summer she participated in a study abroad program in
Colby Mangini is a U.S. Navy officer serving as an instructor in the
“One of the courses that I teach our enlisted sailors is radiation protection, which in my opinion is the most important course that any nuclear operator takes,” Mangini said. “My course work in radiation health physics has proven invaluable as a radiation protection instructor. I am now able to go above and beyond my duty, and impart a wealth on knowledge onto my students as a result of my distance education experience at OSU.”
Taralyn “Tari” Tan, from
Trevor Thompson, from
Gail J. Woodside has earned an honors degree in natural resources, specializing in traditional ecological knowledge and arid-land research. Of Native American and German descent, she is the first person in her family to attend college. A single mother, she raised four daughters, all of whom are in college or are college-bound. At OSU, Woodside was president of both the Native American Student Association and the American Indian Sciences and Engineering Society. She has been the head woman dancer for regional pow-wows and has taught self-esteem workshops for young Native Americans. She served on the White House Commission on Indian Education with George H.W. Bush and on the California Native American Heritage Commission. Woodside has survived domestic violence, debilitating diseases, spinal reconstruction surgery and a stroke, but is determined to continue toward her dream of earning a Ph.D.
The state’s first branch campus will hold its commencement ceremony on Saturday, June 14, at
OSU-Cascades typically attracts an older or returning student, according to Diana Sloane, the campus executive officer, and 40 percent of the 2008 graduates fall in the 25-29 age group. Since its inception, OSU-Cascades has awarded more than 1,200 undergraduate and graduate degrees (including this year).
Commencement speaker for OSU-Cascades will be Clara Pratt, an emeritus faculty member in OSU’s Department of Human Development and Family Sciences, who was the first member of her family to go to college. She held the Barbara E. Knudson Endowed Chair in Family Policy at OSU, a position dedicated to increasing the well-being of families. |
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