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ā€˜Weā€™re very proud of youā€™: Keenum, Ļć½¶Ö±²„leaders share hopeful messages with grads, present Fraiser with honorary degree during virtual commencement

ā€˜Weā€™re very proud of youā€™: Keenum, Ļć½¶Ö±²„leaders share hopeful messages with grads, present Fraiser with honorary degree during virtual commencement

Contact: Sasha Steinberg

Ļć½¶Ö±²„President Mark Keenum is seen on a monitor at the University Television Center.
In a first-of-its-kind online commencement ceremony for the 142-year-old university, Mississippi State leaders including President Mark E. Keenum praised graduates for resilience throughout their college journey, concluding in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic. About 3,300 are Ļć½¶Ö±²„graduates this spring. (Photo by Logan Kirkland)

STARKVILLE, Miss.ā€”In a first-of-its-kind online commencement ceremony for the 142-year-old university, Mississippi State leaders praised graduates for resilience throughout their college journey, concluding in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic. About 3,300 are Ļć½¶Ö±²„graduates this spring.

During Fridayā€™s [May 1] virtual commencement ceremony, Ļć½¶Ö±²„President Mark E. Keenum said that while he shares the graduatesā€™ disappointment in not being able to experience a traditional commencement ceremony this spring, he is anticipating the opportunity to appropriately honor and personally congratulate his fellow Bulldog alumni after the public health crisis has ended.

ā€œYou have worked long and hard to earn your degree, and all of us at this great university, weā€™re very proud of you,ā€ he said. ā€œI also want to personally thank your families and other loved ones who have been by your side on your journey. Iā€™m truly grateful to everyone who has had faith in you and helped you.ā€

Keenum said now more than ever, a college degree and the values of integrity, hard work and respect for others that the graduates have learned at Mississippi State will help them succeed in a world undergoing unprecedented change. Especially in light of the current pandemic, Keenum encouraged graduates to exhibit another important valueā€”courage.

ā€œMany have compared our current fight against COVID-19 to a war. I am so thankful for the many thousands of frontline heroes who are fighting this warā€”the first responders, health care providers, researchers, scientists and so many others who are serving tirelessly on our behalf,ā€ he said. ā€œThey are truly courageous, and clearly, we all need courage. You must have courage to stay focusedā€”to stay focused on your future.ā€

Keenum encouraged the newest members of MSUā€™s alumni family to support their own family and friends during these difficult times.

ā€œMy hope and prayer for each of you is that one day, you will be able to share with your grandchildren or great grandchildren how you and your family overcame the many challenges through your courage and faith and how you never lost sight of the importance of education in order to be ready for a bright future and your special purpose in this world,ā€ Keenum said. ā€œI know all of you are ready to make a difference. Until we are able to safely gather again, please stay strong, keep your faith and stay safe.ā€

The Honorable John J. Fraiser Jr. is pictured with the Doctor of Public Service honorary degree, the universityā€™s highest honor
During a virtual commencement ceremony Friday [May 1], Mississippi State recognized the Honorable John J. Fraiser Jr., a World War II veteran and longtime attorney, county prosecutor, and member of the Mississippi Senate, with the Doctor of Public Service honorary degree, the universityā€™s highest honor. (Photo by Logan Kirkland)

Along with conferring undergraduate and graduate degrees, Keenum also recognized the Honorable John J. Fraiser Jr. with the Doctor of Public Service honorary degree. A member of the Second World Warā€™s ā€œGreatest Generation,ā€ Fraiser is a native of Minter City who attended Mississippi State before joining the military at age 18. As a member of a 15th Army Air Force squadron during World War II, he flew 35 missions over Europe as a turret gunner on a B-24 Liberator and was awarded the Air Medal.

Subsequently, Judge Fraiser has spent a lifetime serving the people of Mississippi as an accomplished attorney, county prosecutor, and member of the Mississippi Senate. During his time as a senator, he served as chairman of the Universities and Colleges Committee and the Appropriations Subcommittee for the Institutions of Higher Learning. He also has served as a Mississippi Supreme Court magistrate and was the first chief judge of the Mississippi Court of Appeals. His papers are housed in the Congressional and Political Research Center in MSUā€™s Mitchell Memorial Library.

ā€œJudge Fraiserā€™s many professional achievements are exemplary and most distinguished. He is most deserving of the universityā€™s highest honor,ā€ Keenum said. ā€œWe thank him for all he has done for our state, nation and beloved university.ā€

Ļć½¶Ö±²„Provost and Executive Vice President David Shaw recognized members of the commencement platform party, including Randy Follett, Holland Faculty Senate president and associate professor of electrical and computer engineering, and Alan Marcus, William L. Giles Distinguished Professor and history department head. Shaw thanked the graduates and their loved ones, along with the universityā€™s faculty and staff for their efforts.

ā€œTo all of those who have supported these graduates along the way, we genuinely thank you for your support,ā€ Shaw said. ā€œĻć½¶Ö±²„ is proud of its outstanding faculty and the work they do in the classroom, in research and in service to our state. Iā€™m sure I speak on behalf of all of you when I say thank you to the faculty for their major role in making this day possible.ā€

Student Association President Jake Manning congratulated his fellow graduates on the efforts they made to ā€œlearn, invest in ourselves and to work on becoming a person that can make the world a better place.ā€

ā€œMississippi State gave us a family of lifelong friends, teachers, advisers and mentors who cared and invested in us, and a family that taught us more about ourselves and the world than any classroom ever could,ā€ he said. ā€œRather than allowing this experience to foster anger and regrets, I challenge all of us to use this experience to shape our perspective into one of gratitude. Focus on the family and opportunities we got to enjoy while we were here, and focus on ensuring we appreciate all of those things in our life to come.ā€

The commencement ceremony, broadcast online and on television statewide, was produced by the . Other highlights included:

ā€”Ļć½¶Ö±²„Assistant Professor of Landscape Architecture Peter Summerlin, a recipient of the ā€™s Early Career Undergraduate Teaching Excellence Award, carried the graduation mace.

ā€”Incoming Ļć½¶Ö±²„Student Association President Tyler Packer delivered the invocation.

ā€”Miss Ļć½¶Ö±²„and spring 2020 graduate Leah Boyd and the Ļć½¶Ö±²„Woodwind Ensemble performed the National Anthem on the universityā€™s historic Drill Field. The group also performed the universityā€™s alma mater, ā€œMaroon and White.ā€

ā€”Shaw also recognized this yearā€™s Stephen D. Lee Scholarsā€”a select group of students who have earned all Aā€™s during the course of their college career.

ā€”Sherri Bevis, Ļć½¶Ö±²„Alumni Association national president, conducted the alumni inception on behalf of over 147,000 alumni worldwide and the largest alumni association in the state of Mississippi. She encouraged the graduates to make full use of their Ļć½¶Ö±²„alumni network and become active participants in one of over 100 alumni chapters across the country.

In his final remarks, Shaw invited all spring 2020 graduates back to campus this fall to attend traditional commencement ceremonies on Dec. 11, with registration available on the . The graduation ceremony also is archived and available for viewing at this website.

Ļć½¶Ö±²„is Mississippiā€™s leading university, available online at .