- I would like to travel the world and to explore different cultures. I’d mainly love to see Greece and to make some Greek acquaintances.
- I want to have a big party at 21 that would make it a night to remember!
- I want to marry the love of my life (Aiden, my fiancĂ©) with an amazing and simple wedding that’s beautiful.
- I want to be fit and very healthy as well as lose the pounds I am overweight by; I also want to stop being addicted to Dr Pepper!
- I want to live in a gorgeous house and have a beautiful family in a great neighborhood, preferably a suburban area. I want to be a stay-at-home-mom for a bit; I think it would be wonderful.
- I want to be Miss SAU. I also want to become Miss Arkansas. I’d also love to be Miss America, and maybe even Miss Universe. Gosh, that would be so cool.
- I want to graduate with close to a 4.0 GPA and on the Presidential List every semester from now on.
- I want to buy a new car that’s reliable and beautiful (almost there!)
- I want to be a famous author and motivational speaker.
- Break a world record; I’m not sure which one, but one that would be fun to do.
- I want to learn how to swim.
- Go to Disney Land or World and Universal Studios.
- I want to go to a concert for the first time.
- I want to go to a zoo for the technical first time.
- I want to start a podcast and an audiobook for my first book.
- \I want to have my gapped teeth fixed so that I feel beautiful.
Wednesday, September 20, 2023
Bucket List: Lacy Olivarez
Monday, September 11, 2023
Bucket List: Miller Green
When people write down their bucket lists, they usually think of extravagant things. Going to space, being a world leader, becoming famous in media or the arts, and other such fantastical dreams that are usually written on a bucket list. While I understand why people want to participate or achieve the things before their death, I have never strived for such gigantic goals. My life has been graciously blessed as is, the thought of wanting to do something so important or that always puts you under the public eye baffles me! No, my bucket list instead focuses on goals that will give me lifelong happiness and not ignite my life in flames.
The first goal on my bucket list is to graduate college with a major in history, a mission I am dead set on achieving. My next goal is to find employment that allows a comfortable lifestyle that permits me to live in Arkansas for a very long time. The third goal on my bucket list is, Lord willing, to find a wife. I would think my life would be perfect to have a partner who loves me unconditionally and helps me through life till death do us part. And my last want on my bucket list is to have three kids. I have always wanted a large family and having many kids would be fantastic. The only problem with this last goal would just be attempting to convince my wife we should have three kids.
Now there are other goals as well, but I consider these small and insignificant, and I could forget them at the drop of a hat. But the major goals I have listed seem perfect for me and all I want to achieve before I am to pass away.
Tuesday, September 5, 2023
Chinedu Okeke accepted into Penn State Law School
Chinedu Okeke in Havana, February 2020
Honors College graduate, Chinedu Okeke, recently reported being accepted into the Penn State University's Law School. Felecitaciones, compadre!
Monday, August 28, 2023
First Mass Meeting Since 2019
Ruth Abiola, SAU's newest honors student introduces herself at the first meeting of the entire honors college since 2019
Tonight, 67 honors students (a record!) introduced themselves to rest of the Honors College. Welcome! See you at graduation before you know it.
Thursday, August 3, 2023
Shatina Hunter Williams in Sicily
News from one of our grads! Shatina Hunter Williams
Sunday, April 16, 2023
Honors College Recognition Ceremony Speech
David Wingfield
As many of you know, our former Assistant Director, David Wingfield, passed away in August of last year.
David was present at the founding of the SAU Honors College in 2003 and served it loyally until his end.
In many ways he inspired students, faculty, and staff during his long tenure at SAU. Soon, a memorial bench will be installed and unveiled on campus to remember him.
He is the inspiration for the theme of my talk today: transitions.
But, before I launch into it, let me first thank and acknowledge the many who have made today possible.
Thanks
First, let’s have a hand for our graduates. While this year there were only eight, they are a weighty eight as you will soon see.
Let’s have a hand for their families and friends too.
We cannot forget to thank ARAMARK and Gigi Baucum either.
Numbers
Now, let me share some numbers.
Donations
Look at the table tents at each of your tables. There are 12 of them.
Each tent represents a minimum donation to the HC of $100. One is $500, another is $250. The total pledged or donated is $1750! That is a new record.
We have received donations from local businesses:
the Peoples Bank, Albemarle, and Southern Aluminum
From SAU former and current administrators:
David Rankin, Trey Berry, David Lanoue, Donna Allen, Robin Sronce, Connie Wilson, and Abdel Bachri
From the two directors of the Honors College:
Drs. Odendaal and myself
These monies supplement and enhance our state funding and enable the Honors College to fund travel, purchase supplies, and house and feed students when they attend professional meetings. THANK YOU
Let’s give our donors a hand!
GPAs
Four of the graduates are holding a 4.00 GPA (and hopefully will not lose it during their last semester)
The lowest GPA is 3.64. So, the other three are bracketed from there to 4.00.
The AVERAGE was 3.91. Also a new record.
Guess what, time for some more applause, right?
Need I remind you that 3.25 is the minimum GPA to remain in the Honors College
and
Arkansas will award undergraduate degrees to all students who exceed a 2.00 GPA
Transitions
Let me now transition to that topic
We all experience many transitions in life, we don’t remember the warm, wet, womb we were expelled from or cut out of, do we? Probably just as well.
We exited into a cold, well lit room, most likely. Not long ago we might have been born at home. My mother in law and her three sisters were each born at home a couple of generations ago.
I don’t plan to review every transition we experience, but I’d like to highlight a few.
Nowadays, many children, and perhaps some of you, ended up early on in a daycare. While that may have been scary most children soon adapt. They learn circle time, lining up by height, and holding hands when the class crosses streets.
Kindergarten teachers can easily tell which of their students did not go to daycare. When little Johnny is wandering around the room after “circle time” is called and all the others are sitting in front of the teacher, that’s the tell.
The first day of high school. I’ve always said that teens survive high school, how could I have known how real that word, “survive,” has become.
I began videoing students in Honors Seminar in 2010. I wanted them to see how far they had come from then till now.
Nearly all of you saw your Honors Seminar selves on the video. Chance, I regret that Covid deprived you of that embarrassment. You see, Chance was in the Honors Seminar class that met, for the only time ever, online. Sorry.
Truli was in the next Honors Seminar class. You noticed that she removed her mask before speaking. I had all of the students that year start with their masks on. I did that for posterity. We tend to forget all too soon.
As you saw, these grads did very well academically. Soon, all will transition to graduate education or to a career. As they will soon hear, their lives will commence at commencement. That’s probably a misnomer, if I ever heard one. It’s also a little bold of a college to say their students’s lives just began at graduation. They were living long before they stepped foot on a campus.
Despite their high GPAs, their college years were historically unusual thanks to Covid. They lived through a college experience unlike any other. Just a few days ago, the president declared the Covid emergency over and we hope he’s right.
Recall the fear Covid caused and the changes it made to all levels of society. I can count on one hand the few movies I have seen in a theatre since March 2020. Only now, do I no longer put a mask in my left pocket. I still keep 6’ between myself and the person in front of me in a line.
Let’s remember the victims of Covid too. Let’s give thanks to the many doctors, nurses, researchers, undertakers, janitors, retail employees, and other critical workers who had to, literally put their lives on the line.
Online Education
Many of you have heard me say in the past that I would never teach online. Well, guess what? Covid took care of that too.
Earlier this week, I wrote the following to a colleague:
“Not quite Paul on the road to Damascus, but I became a convert to online education and have spread that gospel since.”
But, God willing and the creek don’t rise, I plan to always meet the Honors Seminar face to face. As all of you will recall that is not how we first met, but it was where we first got to know each other.
The rest of you might not realize that honors students and I don’t really see much of each other following Honors Seminar. In a way, today is a kind of class reunion for us. I hope never to have to teach that course online ever again. It is too important to all of us that honors students receive a worthwhile introduction to the Honors College and the university experience.
Having said that, I was at Backyard BBQ a few months ago and handed my credit card to the cashier. She exclaimed, “I took your course!” I asked her right away what her grade had been and she said she had earned an A. By the way, if you have never dined there, do so, order the ribs!
The Future
Let me share with you some transitions our soon to be graduates will likely experience after they commence in May.
I’ll start at the end so as not to end this speech on a depressing note.
When I explain the word “prognosis” in class I tell the class, here is your prognosis:
We are all going to die.
I quickly follow that up by saying that a better prognosis would include the words: When and How.
Right now, my father in law, John, is in a hospice hospital in Texarkana. He’ll likely not reach his 87th birthday in May.
On our first date (36 years ago), Julie, my wife, told me that her father had bad heart disease and was likely to die soon. Well, she was not much of a prognosticator, was she?
None of us know when we will take our last breath. None of us knows the future.
But, I know, retrospectively, some of the transitions that I have lived through. You, too, will share some of these transitions.
Decisions
For example, you will soon make many decisions: life partner, career, children, and many others.
I met Julie at a VHS video parlor (I know some of you have no idea what that is). Less than a year later we were married and we will celebrate our 35 anniversary on July 3. That was, for me at least, a fortunate decision.
Julie and I are now grandparents. Our oldest, Christian and his wife Susie, are the proud parents of John Edward Kardas. They named him John after his great grandfather. I don’t know where his middle name came from however. (That’s not true, obviously, and it gives me great pride and brings a tear of happiness to my eye.)
Let me conclude by repeating something you should have heard before. That is, at college we cannot teach you everything you need to know. But, we can teach you how to solve those unforeseen problems that arise from time to time.
Hardly anyone was prepared for Covid. But, eventually, we adapted but at a tremendous cost.
On December 6, 1941, the day before Pearl Harbor, most Americans wanted nothing to do with Hitler and his designs to take over Europe. Americans were even more unprepared for the Sunday morning surprise attack by Japan on Hawaii than we were for Covid. Overnight, public opinion changed and Americans were suddenly ready for war against Japan. Again, a tremendous cost was paid worldwide by all sides in World War II.
What else did that war do? Basically, everything changed. For one thing, it made my life possible. I would not be here except for World War II. It took my father from Philadelphia to Cairo. There, he met my mother (and the rest is history).
So, the most important transition you will face is the one that has not happened yet, the unpredictable one. But, because of the transitions you have already conquered you will be ready for that one too.
Many of the decisions you will make will be important and some will be life changing. Nevertheless I know you will be ready to make them. Use what you have learned when the time comes.
Maybe that theme of commencement is not so bad after all.
Thank you.
Thursday, March 2, 2023
Poem: Monet Coppersmith
Monet Coppersmith recently won second place in the 2023 Southern Arkansas University for her poem:
Encephalon Empyrean
The ether of the sky and mind are one and the
same,
Toying with the firmament and capricious
brain,
The stygian sky rises when the clock hits 1,2,
And the ardor of the soul fills with colors of
every hue.
At zero hours the encephalon fills with
blossoming flowers.
Then when a chronograph anxiously strikes
three,
The cerebrum at last is truly free.
Lost in the landscapes of places never
traveled,
Fathomless fears vigorously come unraveled.
The spirit yearns for a chance to take flight,
Soaring into the empyrean of twilight.
Emotions themselves mourn, filled with
forlorn,
As the body shivers with vehemence that’s
freshly born.
The welkin begins to fill up with light,
Scarlet, carmine, and vermillion take over the
night.
Swirling shades pulled from the recollection
with a hush,
And gifted to the sky so it may once again
blush.
The consciousness rises and stirs with gelid
somber,
As it tries to recall memories that it can never
ponder.