Eastern Kentucky University honored 1,116 degree candidates Saturday at its annual fall commencement.
A morning ceremony recognized graduates from the Colleges of Education, Health Sciences and Justice & Safety. The afternoon ceremony honored degree candidates from the Colleges of Arts & Sciences and Business & Technology.
Brad Loar, Mitigation Division Director for FEMA Region IV and a member of EKU's Hall of Distinguished Alumni, addressed the morning graduates and received an honorary doctor of humanities degree.
Loar has worked on the front lines in the wake of many weather-related disasters throughout the southeastern U.S.
He helps agencies, communities and citizens prepare for emergencies, offered the degree candidates several simple secrets for success.
“You need to develop relationships,” he said, “not ones to just get ahead, but ones that will help your program succeed.”
Loar also urged the degree candidates to "stay grounded in your principles, but be willing to compromise and not necessarily treat everything as a war. You’ve got to pick and choose your battles.î
He also urged the candidates to seek a mentor and be willing to step outside their "comfort zone.”
The afternoon ceremony featured remarks from Dr. Akunuri Ramayya, professor of physics at Vanderbilt University and a world leader in nuclear physics research, who received an honorary doctor of science degree.
“Life is full of difficult choices,” Ramayya told the degree candidates, “and the decisions you make now will really impact where you will be five, 10, 25 years down the road. As you enter the work force, further your education, or try to figure out what to do next, there will be several difficult choices ahead of you.”
Likewise, Ramayya said the United States must face difficult decisions regarding energy sources in the coming years.
“Nuclear reactors are being built everywhere and every year, except in the United States,” Ramayya said. “We cannot exclude nuclear energy from the equation.
“Just because something is published in newspapers, or even in scientific journals, it does not mean it is always correct,” he added. “We have to make our own choice by separating fact from fiction and hype. Knowledge and critical analysis is the best answer.”
Speaking as representatives of their graduating class in the morning and afternoon ceremonies, respectively, were Kelli Hogue, an environmental health science major from Richmond; and Ashley Hutchinson, a communications major from Ashland.
The honorees included 819 bachelor’s degree candidates, 190 master's degree candidates and 107 associate degree candidates.
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Celebration day
- Local News
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Opening day of Paradise Cove Family Aquatic Center coincided with a spike in temperatures Friday which reached 90 degrees. The facility, located in Richmond’s Lake Reba Park, will be open through Sept. 3. Regular hours are 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 1 to 6 p.m. Sunday.
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Paradise Cove open through Labor Day
Opening day of Paradise Cove Family Aquatic Center coincided with a spike in temperatures Friday which reached 90 degrees. The facility, located in Richmond’s Lake Reba Park, will be open through Sept. 3. Regular hours are 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 1 to 6 p.m. Sunday.
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Dump of the Day
An old mattress, a car seat and other debris sit Friday afternoon on North Street between Fourth and Fifth Streets where it was first spotted Thursday. The “Dump of the Day” is a recurring series the Richmond Register publishes to highlight illegal trash piles and push local governments to cite perpetrators and get illegal dumps cleaned up. See Sunday’s Richmond Register to read a copy of the city’s ordinance related to trash pickup.
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Undefeated academic team brings pride to Madison Middle School
Madison Middle School 6th and 7th grade academic teams have been undefeated for the last two years.
The 8th grade team also has done well, having some students qualify to compete at the state level. -
Woman fends off burglar with knife
A Berea woman used a kitchen knife to fend off an alleged burglar early Wednesday morning, and police say they were able to catch the man in the act.
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Man is indicted on additional sex charge involving teen in 1998
A man already accused of sex abuse in November 2011 has been indicted on a charge of first-degree rape involving a child in 1998.
Charles W. Peyton, 63, of East Irvine Street, was indicted Wednesday by a Madison grand jury. He used “forcible compulsion” to have sexual intercourse with a 14-year-old girl between March 1 and May 1 in 1998, according to the indictment.
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Paradise Cove open through Labor Day
- Sports
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11th REGION SOFTBALL: Central set to face Henry Clay again
The last time the Lady Indians faced Henry Clay, they suffered a heartbreaking, season-ending extra-inning setback.
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H.S. SOFTBALL: Wilder throws one-hitter, Central blanks Southern 4-0
Mackenzie Wilder took a no-hitter into the seventh-inning and Madison Central picked up its fourth straight softball district championship, beating Madison Southern 4-0 Wednesday night at Gertrude Hood Field at Eastern Kentucky University.
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H.S. BASEBALL: Indians roll to sixth straight title
The Indians delivered the knockout punch early against Model Laboratory Wednesday in the championship game of the 44th District Tournament at EKU’s Turkey Hughes.
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11th REGION SOFTBALL: Central set to face Henry Clay again
- Lifestyles & Community
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Happy are they who finish what they start
Happy is that people, that is in such a case: yea, happy is that people, whose God is the Lord.
— Psalm 144:15 - Looking at various things
- Things are different than when we were young
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- Viewpoints
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Why would anyone not vote?
Should those of us who vote be disturbed that so few people voted in this past Tuesday’s election?
Only 17 percent of Madison County’s registered voters went to the polls. And, not everyone who’s eligible is registered to vote. - Republicans are making some noise
- Taking our Sunday night baths
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