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scenes before commencement | Commencement in 60 seconds | reactions after ceremony | Doctoral Hooding ceremonyMORE PHOTOS: Commencement | Doctoral Hooding ceremony | Baccalaureate Mass
At Bellarmine University’s largest-ever commencement ceremony — moved off-campus to
Freedom Hall this year to accommodate the crowd — the university’s provost, Dr. Carole
Pfeffer, offered graduates words of wisdom and advice
to help carry them through life after college. Bellarmine awarded 932 undergraduate,
graduate and doctoral degrees in a Saturday ceremony that drew an estimated crowd
of 10,000. "I hope your time with us has helped you become better human beings," Pfeffer
said in her commencement remarks. "I urge you and all of us to be intentional in
attending to and basking in those moments that can truly overwhelm us with beauty,
and awe, and joy, and gratitude," she said. "Moments that speak to those greater mysteries
and meaning in our lives --
moments to fill our souls." Pfeffer earned a bachelor's degree from Bellarmine in
1974 and spent the next 13 years teaching English at Louisville's Assumption High
School. She holds advanced degrees from the University of Louisville and Spalding
University. She is retiring this month after 30 years at the university as an English
professor, administrator and -- for the past five years -- provost. "Carole has been
a tremendous help to me in my first years as president," remarked Bellarmine's president,
Dr. Susan M. Donovan. "In fact, she postponed her planned retirement to help with
the transition. I think that there are few people who spend
the last day of their career delivering a commencement address to their alma mater.
But then again, the mold was broken when Dr. Pfeffer became an educator!" Donovan
awarded Pfeffer an honorary doctoral degree during the ceremony. After formally conferring
degrees to the assembled graduates, Donovan told the newest members of Bellarmine's
Alumni Association that the world needs them. "It needs your ability to question,
to learn, and to act, and your commitment to treat each
person as an individual worthy of respect," she said. "The task may seem daunting
at times. But you take with you everything you need to be successful. You will carry
the 'Bellarmine Difference' inside you, always." Watch video of the full ceremony and see more coverage of commencement week festivities at /commencement-2019/. Story continues below photo Doctoral Hooding CeremonyOn Friday evening in Knights Hall, Bellarmine’s candidates for doctoral degrees were
honored at a hooding ceremony, a campus tradition that started last year. Theo Edmonds,
a cultural innovator and healthcare professional, spoke during the ceremony. He is
an assistant professor and director of the Center for Creative Placehealing at the
University of Louisville who was called one of the "50 People Changing
the Face of the South" by Southern Living Magazine in 2015. He challenged the doctoral
candidates to understand and embrace cultural inclusivity in the workplace. "We need
your brains and we need your hearts," he said. "Will we work for a culture that excludes,
or will we create one that is radically inclusive
- a society whose culture says to its members, you are needed, you are valued - all
of you - just as you are?"
Bellarmine News
Record graduating class receives degrees in Freedom Hall ceremony
May 11, 2019
