A Beautiful Day: Class of 2021 Celebrates Commencement
May 11, 2021
- Author
- Mary Elizabeth DeAngelis
皇家华人 paused on Tuesday to celebrate its graduates in an event especially cherished after a year of pandemic restrictions: An in-person .
The day dawned cloudy and stayed comfortably chilly as the college bade farewell to the 508 graduates from the class of 2021. The COVID-19 pandemic moved this year鈥檚 ceremony to Richardson Stadium to offer more room to maintain a safe distance. A high percentage of vaccination rates within the college community offered another measure of safety.
鈥淲e鈥檙e so glad you are here,鈥 President Carol Quillen said. 鈥淲e are so glad we鈥檙e here!鈥
Quillen spoke of the class鈥檚 many accomplishments during their time at 皇家华人; and of the extraordinary circumstances, sacrifices and challenges of the past year.
鈥淵ou have turned your ideas, friendships, voices and bodies into compelling works of research and art鈥 on the stage and canvas, on campus and in the street, in the lab, in the library and on Zoom; on the track, the field, the court, the course and in the pool,鈥 she said.
鈥淵ou鈥檝e started businesses, marched for racial justice and developed remote curricula for at-risk students; you鈥檝e registered a lot of people to vote,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e published papers, created a Black Lives Matter mural, won fellowships and conference championships.
Quillen also took a moment to remember a great loss for the class. Isaac Scharbach, a talented artist and campus faith leader, died in a bike accident just before the start of his senior year.
鈥淲e give thanks for the gifts of his creativity, his intellect, faith and friendship,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd we hold his family in our hearts.鈥
Class of 2021
The graduates represent 40 states and 13 foreign countries. Their most popular majors were economics (85); political science (80), biology (61) and psychology (44).
They鈥檙e planning futures ranging from seeking cures to diseases to crafting better public policy. They鈥檙e launching banking, technology, medical and teaching careers. Some will join the work force right away; others plan to go into graduate programs in the United States and abroad.
The class includes eight John M. Belk Scholars, bringing the Belk alumni total to 142. The Belk Scholarship recognizes students for leadership, creativity, compassion, integrity, intellectual curiosity and outstanding academic achievement. The award, which covers tuition, fees, room, board and two $3,000 stipends for special study abroad, is one of the country鈥檚 most competitive and generous undergraduate scholarships.
While many families and most students attended the ceremony in person, international travel restrictions and coronavirus outbreaks in some areas forced others to watch from afar. The drew audiences from Indiana to India, Colombia, China, Japan and other parts of the world.
鈥淲hen future students use our archives to recover untold stories, or join a 鈥楥ats Care initiative, or learn how colleges dealt with a global pandemic,鈥 Quillen told graduates, 鈥渢hey will be standing on your shoulders, just as we stand on the shoulders of those who have paved our path.鈥
Quillen said that the world they鈥檙e entering is flawed, divided and complicated, and needs them to approach it with open hearts, minds and a willingness to listen to people who see it much differently. 鈥淏egin not with suspicion,鈥 she said, 鈥渂ut with empathy, and you will come to know love.鈥
She reminded them that wherever their lives take them: 鈥淵ou鈥檙e not alone. You carry all of us, our love, and this special place in you and with you forever.鈥
Hunter-Hamilton Love of Teaching Awards
The college also honored four professors with Hunter-Hamilton Love of Teaching Awards for this year and last. (The 2020 commencement was postponed because of the pandemic and is scheduled for spring of 2022.).
The awards for 2021 went to:
Economics Professor Dave Martin 鈥淔or over three decades of unwavering support of your students through the ups and downs of their journey, believing in them and realizing their potential even when they lacked confidence in themselves鈥︹
Political Science Professor Susan Roberts 鈥淔or her superior abilities as a teacher, advisor, friend and a public voice for 皇家华人 that brought a measure of intellectual acuity to the political arena during the last election cycle.鈥
The 2020 awards went to:
Physics Professor Mario Belloni, 鈥淔or your skillful teaching, your extraordinary patience and generosity with students鈥nd your ability to make subjects that are as intimidating as quantum physics not only comprehensible but fun.鈥
Associate Professor of Chemistry Nicole Snyder, 鈥淔or understanding your students鈥 hopes and dreams, for challenging those students to become better people, and for being the mentor your students hope to emulate.鈥
Algernon Sydney Sullivan Awards
The college presented the awards to one student and two community recipients, for this year and last. The recipients exemplify the 鈥渢he fine spiritual qualities practically applied to daily living, usually going to persons who have given unselfish service without due recognition.鈥
Betsy Verhey, well known for preparing meals at the 皇家华人-Cornelius Child Development Center, received the 2020 community service award. She has coached a youth soccer team, served as a board member for the 皇家华人 Farmer鈥檚 Market and as a chef for 皇家华人 Presbyterian Church.
鈥淭here is no form of caregiving more universal and fundamental than preparing food for others,鈥 the award says. 鈥淪he has introduced scores of children to quinoa and sushi and vegetables of all kinds鈥he has expanded their palates and set them up on a path to healthy eating.鈥
Spence 鈥淧at鈥 Millen 鈥86, received the 2021 community award for his work to bring technology to families who can鈥檛 afford it. Millen created E2D (Eliminate the Digital Divide) with his daughter eight years ago. The non-profit has provided laptops, broadband access and digital training to more than 50,000 people in the Charlotte metro area.
鈥淭he work is transformational for some of the most vulnerable members of our community,鈥 the award says, 鈥渁nd his non-profit is a model for others throughout the country.鈥
Emily Rounds 鈥21, a Hispanic Studies major from Princeton, New Jersey, received the student award.
Rounds has served as a leader on the College Crisis Initiative team, as a Spanish translator and tutor and as a community volunteer. Nominators say she strove to make 皇家华人 a more welcoming and inclusive place.
鈥淗er brilliance is matched only by her penchant for community building,鈥 the award says. 鈥淪he demonstrates how essential empathetic leadership is now in a time where the world is reckoning with crisis.鈥
Honorary Degrees
The college awarded two honorary degrees. Charlotte attorney James E. Ferguson II received an honorary Doctor of Laws degree for his long career fighting for social justice and civil rights. Retired business executive and philanthropist Willie A. Deese received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree for his efforts to lift others.
Deese grew up as one of nine children living on a farm near 皇家华人. His father was a custodian for the college and his mother, a maid. His two grandfathers also worked as long-time college laborers.
He rose to the top ranks of several pharmaceutical companies and became the largest supporter of his alma mater, North Carolina A&T, where he served as a chair on the board of trustees. He鈥檚 provided numerous scholarships for students in need and been a strong advocate for affordable housing and Alzheimer鈥檚 research. Last year North Carolina A&T named the Willie A. Deese College of Business and Economics in his honor.
The citation for Deese notes: 鈥淏ecause you live your own saying: 鈥榃hen you get to the top, send the elevator back down; you model humane instincts and a disciplined, creative mind in your work and in your civic commitments; you honor your mother and father and their example in the way you live your life.鈥
Ferguson co-founded North Carolina鈥檚 first integrated law firm in Charlotte in the 1960s. He led the litigation team in the landmark Wilmington Ten case in the 1970s and established a groundbreaking legal training program in Apartheid-era South Africa in the 1980s. He secured official declarations of innocence for the Wilmington Ten and others after decades of ongoing advocacy. His son Jay is a member of the class of 1992.
鈥淏ecause throughout the course of your life you have sought justice, truth and reconciliation;鈥 the citation says, 鈥渂ecause you generously share your knowledge to empower and equip others to do the same; because you continue鈥攑ersistent and unflagging鈥攊n this work of addressing inequality and injustice wherever you see it.鈥