FOR RELEASE: Dec. 6, 2012
EDITORIAL CONTACT: Office
of News and Media Relations, 615-898-2919
MURFREESBORO
— An estimated 1,919 degree
candidates are expected to graduate during MTSU’s fall 2012 commencement
ceremonies on Saturday, Dec. 15, according to a report from the university’s
Registrar’s Office.
MTSU’s
dual ceremonies will begin at 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. Dec. 15 inside Murphy Center.
The
Honorable Beth Harwell of Nashville, speaker of the Tennessee House of
Representatives, will address graduates and guests at the morning ceremony. Mark
Emkes, commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Finance and Administration,
will speak at the afternoon celebration.
Of the
1,919 students set to graduate on Dec. 15, 1,637 are undergraduates and 282 are
graduate students, including 261 master’s candidates, 19 education-specialist
recipients and two doctoral candidates. Three graduate students also will
receive graduate certificates.
Candidates
from the College of Graduate Studies, Basic and Applied Sciences, Jennings A.
Jones College of Business and the College of Education will receive their
degrees in the morning ceremony. That afternoon, degrees will be conferred on
candidates in the College of Behavioral and Health Sciences, College of Liberal
Arts, College of Mass Communication and the University College.
Harwell is currently serving her 12th term in the state
House from District 56, which includes a part of Davidson County. A dedicated
community volunteer and an award-winning legislator, Harwell has also served as
an assistant professor of political science at Belmont University.
First elected in 1988, she has been a strong
advocate for tougher sexual abuse laws, victims’ rights, welfare reform,
children’s issues and, most notably, education. She has sponsored and passed
legislation clarifying and toughening the penalties against stalkers, requiring
more time behind bars for rapists, strengthening Tennessee’s child rape laws
and building crime-prevention cooperation among the states.
In 2009, Harwell’s work for education reform led to
the passage of landmark charter school legislation. She also pushed passage of
legislation to direct additional funds for improvement of training for day care
workers.
Emkes
began his career in 1976 at the Firestone
Tire and Rubber Company as an international trainee. Following his first job
changing tires at a Firestone store near Houston, Texas, he was promoted to
store manager and quickly moved into management positions in the United Arab
Emirates, Spain, Brazil and Mexico. In 2000, he returned to the United States
and was named president of Bridgestone Firestone Latin America.
Just two years later, he became chairman,
CEO and president of Bridgestone Firestone North American Tire LLC and also
served on the board of directors of the parent company, Bridgestone Americas
Holding Inc. Emkes was promoted to chairman and CEO of Bridgestone Americas
Holding in 2004, where his direct responsibilities included the development,
manufacture, distribution and sales of products throughout North, Central, and
South America and his 50,000 teammates helped the company achieve annual sales
of $12 billion.
Emkes retired from Bridgestone in 2010 and
was appointed to Gov. Bill Haslam's Cabinet to lead the Department of Finance
and Administration. In addition to his community service work, Emkes
was the 2011 recipient of MTSU’s Jennings A. Jones Champion of Free Enterprise
Award, and in October 2012 he was inducted into the Nashville Business Hall of
Fame.
On
commencement day, MTSU’s graduation committee emphasized that graduating
students are required to stay for the entire ceremony. The ceremony should last
about two hours, so students planning celebrations should be aware of this time
commitment.
Graduation
information — including maps and driving directions to Murphy Center,
instructions on watching the ceremonies via streaming video on commencement
day, cap-and-gown information and contacts for the Registrar’s Office — is
available online at www.mtsunews.com/graduation-info.
Live
streaming video of the fall 2012 commencement ceremonies will start about 15
minutes before each ceremony begins on Dec. 15.
MTSU Fall 2012 Commencement at a
Glance
Who: A projected 1,919 graduates* (1,637
undergraduates, 282 graduate students)
What: 2012 MTSU Fall Commencement
ceremonies
When: Saturday, Dec. 15
9 a.m.: Colleges of Graduate Studies (includes all
master’s, education specialist and doctoral degree candidates), Basic and
Applied Sciences, Business and Education;
2 p.m.: Colleges of Behavioral and Health Sciences,
Liberal Arts, Mass Communication and University College (includes Regents
Online Degree Program and Bachelor of University Studies degree candidates).
Where: Murphy Center on the MTSU campus
Commencement speakers:
· The Honorable Beth Harwell of
Nashville, speaker of the Tennessee House of Representatives, 9 a.m. ceremony.
· Mark Emkes, commissioner of the Tennessee
Department of Finance and Administration, 2 p.m. ceremony.
*— Approximate numbers as of Dec. 5,
2012.
—30—
MTSU is committed to developing a
community devoted to learning, growth and service. We hold these values dear,
and there’s a simple phrase that conveys them:
“I am True Blue.” Learn more at www.mtsu.edu/trueblue. For MTSU news
anytime, visit www.MTSUNews.com.
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