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On June 14, the largest crowd of students in La Sierra
University’s 19-year history filed on stage to collect the
largest number of diplomas awarded since the school came into
its own.
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June 16, 2009
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By Darla Martin Tucker
For La Sierra University graduate Roberto Ayala, Sunday’s
commencement was particularly poignant. The exercise science
major is the first in his family to attend college.
“Today is wonderful,” Ayala said after posing for photos with a
friend following graduation. “It went smoothly. The speaker was
really good.” Ayala and about 378 other graduates, the
university’s largest contingent since its inception in 1990, had
just received their diplomas during a thankfully cool June
morning commencement.
Ayala’s La Sierra experience was a bumpy but grace-filled ride.
“It was hard, especially financially. I had to leave for a year.
But with the help of God I was able to come back and finish,” he
recounted. His continuance at the school hinged in large part on
the contributions of two La Sierra staff members, Gene Edelbach
and Sam Acosta. Edelbach served as La Sierra’s vice president
for enrollment through 2007 and Acosta holds the position of
ministry outreach manager. Edelbach and Acosta both personally
helped Ayala financially, as did his parents, Ayala said. The
two La Sierra employees walked the student through the maze of
necessary paperwork and Edelbach helped him secure a couple of
scholarships, said Ayala. He plans next to attend Loma Linda
University’s School of Public Health and study nutrition and
diatetics. Ayala is considering a health career that focuses on
issues related to diabetes and obesity.
On June 14, the largest crowd of students in La Sierra
University’s 19-year history filed on stage to collect the
largest number of diplomas awarded since the school came into
its own. La Sierra graduated about 379 undergraduate, graduate
and doctoral students who collectively earned 382 degrees. The
majority of graduates emanated from the College of Arts and
Sciences which sent off 162 students. The School of Business
followed closely with 148 graduates. The School of Education
graduated 53 and the School of Religion graduated 17 students.
The School of Business set its own milestone by enrolling more
than 400 students, a record for all Adventist business programs
in North America. Additionally this year the school graduated 84
Master of Business Administration students, more MBAs than
neighboring University of California, Riverside and more MBA
graduates than all North American Adventist business schools
combined.
La Sierra gave out its next largest batch of degrees in 2005
when it issued about 363. La Sierra University, once the
Riverside campus of Loma Linda University, separated from Loma
Linda in the summer of 1990. The newly organized school held its
first graduation in 1991 and awarded 281 academic degrees.
Sunday’s commencement took place under white canopies on the
university’s Founders’ Green, the main campus mall fronting the
Dining Commons and Administration building. While waiting in
line to file into the graduation ceremony, vocal performance
major Rrian Patterson praised La Sierra and her teacher, Raejin
Lee, the music department’s director of vocal studies.
“La Sierra taught me academically, but most of all it taught me
to grow as a person,” Patterson said. Of Lee, her voice teacher,
Patterson commented, “she’s a really wonderful woman, a great
person, a great teacher.” Patterson plans to launch into a
musical performance career and audition in Los Angeles for
singing and acting roles.
Graduates’ emotions ran high as they waited to receive their
hard-earned diplomas and degree titles.
“I’m definitely excited. I can’t believe it’s here,” said
graphic design major Brandon Grainger. La Sierra’s Brandstater
Gallery exhibited his work and that of several other senior
artists through graduation weekend. The young designer is also
looking forward to another milestone this September when he gets
married to a Loma Linda University dental hygienist graduate.
La Sierra’s art professors enriched Grainger’s four-year
experience at LSU, he said. “The professors made it the best,
and all the art majors. Just their knowledge and support of
projects.”
Senior fine art majors and Brandstater exhibiters Scott
Shakespeare and Amy Cronk have plans to move to Minnesota and
Chicago, respectively. Shakespeare, who completed degree
requirements last August, plans to go forward with an artistic
and teaching career. Cronk will enter The School of the Art
Institute of Chicago to pursue a Master’s of Art in Art Therapy.
“There’s a lot of really good people [at La Sierra], the faculty
especially,” Cronk said. “I don’t think I would be where I am
today without the art department faculty.”
“I really like my advisor, Rob Thomas. He’s really helpful,”
said exercise science graduate Ashley Anderson as she waited in
line with other students to march to “Pomp and Circumstance.”
“It’s [La Sierra] a really close, connected friendly place,”
added exercise science grad Leila Abufarie.
Krunal Patel, a biochemistry major, plans to attend pharmacy
school after taking a year off. “I’m kinda’ excited actually,”
he said about the pending commencement ceremony. Patel, who is
not Seventh-day Adventist, described his four years at the
Seventh-day Adventist institution as “fun. It was a good
experience, something new.”
Charles Sandefur, a La Sierra alumnus and president of the
Adventist Development and Relief Agency, or ADRA, gave a
graduation address titled “Stubborn Pilgrims.”
ADRA is based in Silver Spring, Md. It is an international
humanitarian organization of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
that seeks to identify and address social injustice and
deprivation in developing countries. ADRA has a presence in more
than 125 countries with more than 4,000 staff members worldwide
aiding millions of people. The organization’s primary directives
are individual and community development and disaster relief.
Sandefur asked graduates to become “pilgrims” and to be
committed to bringing justice to the poor. “It is not swine flu,
it is not HIV/AIDS, it is poverty and injustice” that comprises
the world’s greatest crisis, he said. Sandefur told graduates
they are better educated than most of the world, better educated
than King David, than Ellen G. White, than Jesus. “What will you
do with this privileged life God has given you?” he asked.
“Life is complicated and we cannot just retreat to a pious,
righteous place, to our sentimentality and emotions,” he said.
While the world is full of dread and despair there is a victory,
he said. He asked graduates not for their sadness or pity over
the world’s suffering masses. “I am asking you to be angry, I am
asking you to be stubborn,” Sandefur said.
He cited the sacrifice the work of ADRA sometimes requires in
its efforts to aid the illness, deprivation and repression of
millions around the world. Over the past seven years, 19 ADRA
workers have lost their lives through accidents, illness,
executions, murders. They worked in Honduras, Bolivia, Sudan,
Liberia and other countries, he said.
“…You and I are asked to live out” the Second Coming right now.
“If in the New Jerusalem there is clean water, we dig wells now.
…We need no more of the imperialism of sincerity and good
intentions,” he said. “I am asking you to give your life to
this. It is an acquired taste. …Some of you will walk out of
here and drive Mercedes, but some of you will walk out of here
and drive the devil crazy” with your vision of hope, Sandefur
said.
During the commencement ceremony, La Sierra University presented
Sandefur with an honorary Doctor of Humanitarian Service.
Sandefur has headed ADRA since 2002. He earned a Bachelor of
Arts degree in 1968 from Loma Linda University-La Sierra campus.
He earned a Master of Divinity degree from Andrews University in
Berrien Springs, Mich. Before taking ADRA’s helm, Sandefur led
the Mid-America Union of Seventh-day Adventists in Lincoln,
Neb., spearheading the church’s efforts in nine mid-western
states.
During commencement the university also presented an honorary
Doctor of Science to renowned sports medicine doctor and La
Sierra alumnus Frank W. Jobe. He is known around the world for
his practice and research of orthopaedics and sports medicine.
Jobe graduated from La Sierra College (now University) in 1949
and from the Loma Linda University School of Medicine in 1956.
While at La Sierra, Jobe edited the college paper, the
Criterion. In 1964 he and Robert Kerlan co-founded the
Kerlan-Jobe Orthopaedic Clinic in Los Angeles.
In 1968, Jobe became the team orthopaedic doctor for the Los
Angeles Dodgers. In 1974 he made his mark in baseball history by
performing a new surgical procedure on the ruptured medial
collateral ligament in the left throwing elbow of pitcher Tommy
John. By removing a tendon from John’s forearm and repairing the
elbow, Jobe fixed a previously incurable injury and changed the
game of baseball forever. Over the years he performed more than
1,000 ‘Tommy John’ surgeries on pitchers of every level, helping
to resurrect the careers of countless big leaguers.
Jobe worked as team doctor for the Dodgers for 43 years. He is
now special advisor to the Dodger’s chairman. Jobe has served as
orthopaedic consultant for the Los Angeles Lakers basketball
team, the Los Angeles Kings hockey team and the California
Angels baseball team. He currently serves as orthopaedic
consultant for the PGA Tour and Senior PGA Tour. He is a
clinical professor in the Department of Orthopaedics at the
University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine in Los
Angeles. Jobe has written more than 140 medical publications and
seven books and has received numerous awards and recognitions.
During commencement La Sierra presented to
management/pre-medicine major Juliana Muchinyi its 2009
President’s Award for Outstanding Undergraduate Student.
Muchinyi, a native of Nairobi, Kenya, combined business and
medicine because she wants to understand and influence
healthcare delivery systems.
The university awarded student Ron Williams, recipient of an
Ed.D. in administration and leadership, with the 2009
President’s Award for Outstanding Graduate Student. Williams is
curriculum coordinator for secondary school reform and support
for the San Bernardino County Superintendent of Schools. In that
role, Williams supports roughly 420,000 students in ways that
help the district increase academic achievement, reduce drop out
rates and close achievement gaps.
Williams’ wide-ranging community service includes supporting a
homeless community and volunteering for youth events. At La
Sierra he has assisted doctoral students and lectured on current
educational issues.
The university awarded psychology Professor Adeny Schmidt the
Distinguished Service Award. During her 35 years at La Sierra,
Schmidt has received numerous awards for teaching, research and
service. She variously served as department chair, dean of the
College of Arts and Science and University Provost. In 2003 she
implemented the Office of Service-Learning, a program that
currently involves more than 800 students and has been
instrumental in securing La Sierra’s recognition on the
President’s Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll in
2007 and 2008.
Theology Professor V. Bailey Gillespie received the Anees A.
Haddad Faculty Award for Excellence in Advancing the
Effectiveness of Faculty Governance at La Sierra University.
Gillespie has taught at La Sierra since 1975 when it was part of
the Loma Linda University system. His various campus governance
positions have included serving as faculty moderator following
La Sierra’s separation from Loma Linda, representing the faculty
on multiple university committees and chairing the Faculty
Senate. He currently chairs the Senate Task Force on Faculty
Governance.
Graduation 2009 Photos
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PR Contact: Larry Becker
Executive Director of University Relations
La Sierra University
Riverside, California
951.785.2460 (voice) |
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