Commencement to return to Wildcat Stadium due to Moody Renovation
BY MACI WEATHERS NEWSLETTER EDITORThe ongoing construction of Moody Coliseum will force May commencement into Wildcat Stadium for the second-straight year.
The first of three ceremonies will be an evening graduate ceremony on Friday at 8 p.m. Ceremonies will continue with the undergraduate ceremonies on Saturday, one morning and one afternoon at 10 a.m. and 3
p.m. respectively. There are 521 students graduating with Undergraduate degrees and 232 students graduating with gradute degrees Garrison Powell, university relations officer, said this year still does not feel like a normal year for graduation.
“Just because we haven’t had the ceremony back with Moody undergoing renovation towards the tail end of COVID, it still feels kind of a little bit not like normal,” Powell said.
to lead SGA executive team in ‘22-23
BY SYDNEY VARNER EDITOR IN CHIEFStudent Government Association has officially elected Lindsey May and Skyler Gill as the 2022-23 president and vice president respectively.
A longside May, a senior marketing major from Farmersville, and Gill, a junior english major from Schertz, the Executive Cabinet was also chosen for the 2022-23 school year.
The board is as follows:
• Treasurer: Nathan Marshall, junior financial management major from Melissa
• P ress Secretary: Gracyn McGathy, sophomore journalism major from Leander
• M arketing Director: Javier Soto Valladares, junior graphic design and advertising major from Tegucigalpa, Honduras
C hief of Staff: Alli Dimmitt, sophomore political science major from Bonita Springs, Florida
• C hief Financial Officer: Hayden Poorman, sophomore financial management major from Abilene
• D irector of Student Engagement and Recruitment: Trevon Hardy, junior management major from Houston
M ay and Gill have both been a part of SGA during the 2021-22 academic year and based their campaign
off of three main components: Transparency, Advocacy and Representation.
In all decisions we make, we want these three components to be at the center of it all,” May said.
May and Gill both hope to include more students in SGA decisions, giving students a space to make their opinions and voices heard, a goal specifically mentioned in the adovacy prong of their election campaign.
“ We want to advocate for the students that attend this University through campaign weeks, educational events, giveaways and provide a listening ear to their concerns,” May said.
“Student Government is the direct channel for students to make change happen on campus.It’s not that often that someone gets a chance to be in a position that has so much impact and I take this responsibility very seriously in that regard.”
G ill said in addition to wanting to provide a listening ear to students, she wants to serve campus through positive change within the community.
For me, SGA means service,” Gill said.
“Our main goal is to serve the students and advocate for positive change around campus.
“I hope that through our senate we are able to have student leaders from a variety of areas represent the needs of students so that we can change ACU for the better.”
“But I think the big thing is just being able to have a ceremony during COVID.”
Despite the location change, April Young, senior alumni university relations officer, said they have still been able to implement the traditions that the campus is familiar with.
Alongside the candlelight devotional, the alumni office started the tradition of giving Purple Line pins after seniors walk across the stage.
“It started a few years ago,” Young said.
“We started giving out Purple Line pins. I’m from the Alumni Association so that’s turned into what I would consider being a tradition.”
“Now, a lot of people probably don’t know about it, but we want every graduate to leave with a little piece of purple to represent they leave this place as an alumnus.”
Graduates however, continue to be upset about not graduating in Moody Coliseum.
Ally Brant, senior phys -
ics major from Abilene, said being in the stadium is the best way to graduate on ACU grounds.
“Since I heard that Moody would not be ready in time, for my graduation I was very upset.” Brant said.
“As a kid who grew up near ACU’s campus, I always saw myself graduating in Moody.”
“I also wished that we would be the first to graduate in the new and improved Moody. I am glad to at least graduate in the Wildcat Stadium on ACU ground.”
Campus to pull plug on Pepsi in favor of Coke
BY MARIAH WILLIAMS BREAKING NEWS EDITORCoke or Pepsi? Beginning Monday, the university will begin making the switch from the latter to the former.
A five-year contract with Pepsi has came up for renegotiation this semester, and Kevin Campbell, senior vice president of operations, said with students’ input and corresponding financial benefits, the decision to switch to Coca-Cola products was “a no-brainer.”
“When we put the survey out to the students, Coke was the clear winner,” Campbell said.
“Historically, Pepsi has offered a stronger financial offer for the institution, but this year Coke evened the playing field.
We were also able to negotiate the ability to still have Dr. Pepper on cam -
pus, and those were the main things that prompted the change.”
Students, faculty and staff were sent a survey to voice their opinion on their beverage product preferences in late January.
Responses varied but the majority voted to get rid of the current Pepsi prod -
ucts, showing love for Coca-Cola.
“Pepsi was good for the first month but now I am ready for some Coke products,” said Gaby Montes, sophomore nutrition major from Santa Fe, New Mexico.
“I have learned to appreciate Coke so much
since ACU has been a Pepsi school.”
While the majority is satisfied with the new change, some students do not support the switch.
“This decision upsets me a lot because I love Pepsi, and I do not think that Coke compares,” said Kamryn Boriack, fresh -
Looking forward to the future, Moody Coliseum is expected to be completed in June of 2022.
“This year the alumni is just happy to be able to host a graduation without COVID-19 on ACU’s campus,” Powell said.
“I think we will finally feel completely back to normal once we are back in Moody.”
“Definitely being back on campus is a big step in the right direction but we’re just really proud of those graduates.”
man advertisement and public relations major from San Antonio.
“I feel like ACU is taking away my pride and joy when I go to the Bean.”
Although the main dispute is between the two brands, many students appreciate that Dr. Pepper is able to remain on campus.
“I am happy Dr. Pepper is staying because I drink it all the time,” said Meghan Brummell, sophomore communication disorders major from Frisco.
Coca-Cola products include Sprite, Fuze, Fanta, Minute Maid, Powerade and Barqs Root Beer.
Students can expect to start seeing their favorite Coca-Cola products in all beverage providers located in the Campus Center and all of campus will be supplying Coca-Cola beverage choices at full capacity by the fall semester of 2022.
Campus construction continues to impact all corners
BY MACI WEATHERS NEWSLETTER EDITORThe university is ushering in a new era that will be filled with newer, nicer buildings, but it’s not without bittersweet reactions from students and alumni alike.
Five construction projects are taking place all at once on campus: The Science, Engineering Research Center (SERC)
• Wessel Hall in the Freshman Village
• Moody Coliseum
• Cullen auditorium
• Plans in place for relocated Intramural Fields
With renovations of Moody and Cullen wrapping up and the construction of Wessel Hall breaking ground, improvements to campus facilities continue.
Kevin Campbell, senior vice president for operations, said after Moody Coliseum is complete, the university hopes to keep the momentum going on Freshman Village and start the short-term plan for the intramural fields. The current main project is the new freshman dorm, Wessel Hall.
“Construction in the long term is changing campus,” Campbell said. “But it is giving us a much stronger place for our students to live and create community. It has given us the ability to create a Freshman Village for them to form relationships as they transition into college together.”
On the north side of campus, construction continues on Moody Coliseum and Cullen auditorium, both of which are expected to be handed over to the university in June.
“[The north side of cam-
Under Construction
pus] is a place where we gather,” Campbell said. “Those are places where students gather the most. It is giving us much better facilities that needed to be upgraded. It is going to give patrons and students a better experience to enjoy events put on by student productions”
Alongside the more recent announcement of SERC being built in place of the intramural fields, Campbell said the research facility will open a door for the university and its students.
“The science and engineering research center is going to enable us to do research and advance the university’s research portfolio to a whole new level,” Campbell said. “We are just
scratching the surface on the possibilities for research and the type of activities that will add to the educational experience.”
While the plans for construction are important for the campus, fundraising for those projects takes a huge part in the incentive to improve.
Dan Macaluso, vice president for advancement, said construction projects are affected significantly by fundraising.
“There’s significant fundraising for all of them,” Macaluso said. “We try to make sure that we really have investment from outside sources help us with this and we’ve actually been quite successful in some of these big projects.”
Moody Coliseum received $49 million in fundraising with 600 plus donors contributing. However, donors can range from project to project Macaluso said.
“It kind of depends on the level of interest and how broad that interest is. With Moody, it affects the entire campus,” Macaluso said.
“A lot of people have had different experiences. There’s a lot of them that we’re really interested in seeing that transformed.”
While the number of donors ranges from project to project, these donors can range in the reason they are giving, said Macaluso.
“The thing I like about
this campus is when you walk around if you’re really paying attention, their names on almost everything, you know, and some of them are honorific to where somebody made a gift,” Macaluso said.
“In fact, a lot of times someone makes a gift, an honor, somebody will name a professor that they loved, a family member or something like that. But I like people seeing names on things, especially students because I like them to be the reminder that there are others that make this all possible.”
With Moody and Cullen being under construction, Office of Spiritual Formation continues to adjust to the changing
plans. This semester and last the Chapel Office made use of the Teague Center for a “Moody Chapel” and welcomed new small group chapel options.
“Hopefully Moody and Cullen will be done in such a way that we will be able to plan on where we will be,” Cyrus Eaton, dean of spiritual formation and campus chaplain, said.
The moving of Moody chapel to the Teague center has caused readjustments with the use of apps for Chapel credit and mobile worship teams.
“The investments that have been made into Moody have been done intentionally to enhance how hospitable we can be,” Eaton said. “Many of our current students have not had to experience the fun challenges of bats flying out of the ceiling and interrupting chapel. Or the challenges of depending on where you were at you could not hear what the speaker was saying.”
In the more recent weeks, Office of Spiritual Formation has moved Chapel outside to the amphitheater as the weather is warmer.
“We see these investments into Moody is allowing us to create a space of hospitality,” “Our hope is as Moody comes back available to us with the major improvements that they have made that it allows us to better both serve one another but also to meet in a space that provides for truly being able to listen, hear, engage and relate.”
While older projects get completed and new projects break ground, the face of campus will continue to change and bring with it excitement, new beginnings and bittersweet endings.
Higher Ground aims to create higher standards for leadership
BY CONNOR MULLINS CO-SPORTS DIRECTORScholarships for students who have never considered ACU as a viable option is one thing Tamara Long hopes Higher Ground is able to achieve.
Higher Ground is ACU’s new $250 million campaign which is devoted to ensuring the success of the university. Long, vice president of enrollment and student life, said she believes Higher Ground allows prospective students to consider ACU as a feasible option because of the financial relief it offers.
“Our goal is always to help students find another place to land that’s affordable,” Long said. “It’s very sad to watch a student who wants nothing more than to stay here, have to face the reality of leaving because they couldn’t afford it. That’s where I’m most excited about the campaign is that focus on affordability and scholarship growth.”
Higher Ground is a comprehensive campaign unveiled last month and designed to push ACU to a new level. The campaign has a focus on maintaining the missional roots of ACU while combining academic excellence to continue to answer God’s call for the university.
The campaign includes two pillars: Academics and Experiences. About $130 million will be dedicated to elevating the academic profile of ACU. According to fundraising documents, that the money will be allocated to:
• Recruit, retain and reward exemplary faculty
• Develop a next-level research engine and academic infrastructure
• Remove financial barriers
for high-quality current and future Wildcats
Invest in state-of-the-art academic facilities
For experiences, the plan calls for $118 million to be used to:
Reimagine residential living communities and student-centric spaces
• Expand opportunities for students to engage in life-changing and spiritually-formative experiences
• Embody a culture of diversity and inclusion
• Advance Division I, Christ-centered athletics
New facilities, scholarships and high-level faculty are what Dr. Phil Schubert said he and his team have worked tirelessly over the past four years to put together the largest fundraising campaign in ACU history.
“It’s an incredibly expansive campaign,” Schubert said. “It’s going to provide enabling funds for a whole host of different things for the advancement forward of the university to new dimensions of opportunity and areas of success.”
Schubert and his team worked in the “silent phase” of the campaign for four years to raise the funds necessary to move into the public phase of the campaign.
Schubert and his team have already raised over $170 million toward the campaign.
“One of the things we’re continually working toward is to bridge the funding gap for students,” Schubert said. “From various families, environments and backgrounds that need and want to be here at ACU because we want to make sure it’s financially feasible for them.
We know it’s not easy to afford
a college education.”
Dr. Robert Rhodes, university provost, said it’s rare to have an excellent university that’s also heavily focused on mission when looking at national ranking. Rhodes said he hopes ACU will continue to combine the mission aspect of the university with high quality academics. He also believes that the timing of this campaign is great for the advancement of academics at ACU.
“These next five years are going to show that very important balance because we’re going to be able to continue to rise as a university in rankings and visibility but also with increased focus on mission,” Rhodes said. “We’ve always had elements of that but we have a chance to really shine in both of those areas and that would make us very unique.”
Dan Macaluso who started as the vice president for advancement in October said his immediate role in the campaign was to assess its current success, solidify the campaign timeframe and case for support, affirm the overall campaign goal, and guide and support the advancement team, university leadership and the Board of Trustees toward their public launch, which was celebrated at the President’s Circle Dinner on April 2.
Macaluso is continuing to work on the public phase of the campaign to effectively communicate the vision of Higher Ground.
“I am already excited to see how incredibly dedicated and supportive our ACU community has been – over the years and in the early phase of this campaign – in generously and sacrificially investing in ACU’s
ability to continue expanding our impact in the world, while remaining steadfast in our commitment to our Christ-centered mission,” Macaluso said. “Most of all, I am excited to hear even more of the many stories that exist around each and every gift to ACU and why people give.”
Long said she believes Higher Ground solidifies ACU’s place as a high-performing academic institution and as a faith-based institution. With Long being in charge of enrollment, she said she believes the campaign allows ACU to expand their outreach to out-of-state and international students. A trajectory of elevated excellence is the current direction Long said she believes ACU is heading.
“That’s pretty remarkable when you have other scholars and institutions that are looking over here thinking, ‘Wow, they’re doing something really special, this is really incredible research,’” Long said. “And they peel back the layers and go, ‘Wow, their research is founded in purpose and mission and does it tell the story of Jesus better?’ That to me is where we’re heading is a space where we can expose more people to what it means to be an institution whose integrity and quality is a result of our commitment to faith.”
For students, this campaign brings a forward-thinking approach to better the experience of future students. The newly renovated Moody Coliseum is set to open this August as well as Cullen Auditorium opening this summer. The Freshman Village on EN 16th Street is set to be done by 2030 with Wessel Hall, on the site of the former Gardner Hall, opening in the
fall of 2023. Campus is changing due to the money donated to Higher Ground over the past four years.
Student Government Association president Bekah Jones, a senior marketing major from Abilene, said she has been in a lot of meetings with upper management discussing the impact of this campaign.
“Just the term itself, ‘Higher Ground,’ just alludes to the fact that it’s ACU’s work and a big project to elevate the university,” Jones said. “In terms of education, opportunities, sports, and whatever that may be through construction and creating additional opportunities for students who come to campus to have a better experience. It’s a very futuristic outlook in terms of university growth.”
SGA treasurer Jackson Suss, junior financial management major from Weatherford, said the organization relies heavily on the number of students.
Suss said the SGA budget is based upon the enrollment numbers at the institution as well. Suss said he believes that ACU is heading toward a more standardized university approach.
“Often you will hear more and more from upper management of ACU comparing themselves to larger state or private schools,” Suss said.
“The goal is clear to match what they’re doing as much as possible. That helps a lot of things: athletics, education, and extracurriculars so putting that altogether that is the main focus is bringing in those students and building up those programs that are going to make us into a top-tier private school.”
In February, ACU officially
THE OPTIMIST STAFF
moved up to a research level three institution in the Carnegie Institute rankings. Every three years the institute reclassifies each institution, and Schubert said he believes ACU will move up to a research level two institution at the next review.
“I mentioned in our faculty meeting recently that there are more than 4,000 universities, there’s about 400 that are nationally universities and those national universities are research one, two, and three,” Rhodes said.
“When you get to R2, there’s about 45 privates and when you look at those private schools that are overtly faithbased, you’re down to four or five. It becomes a very limited group that there’s a chance for us to be a highly visible faithbased university.”
Schools like TCU, Baylor and SMU are research level two institutions, with schools like Harvard, Yale and Vanderbilt at a research level one. At the research level three level, where ACU currently stands, are schools like Lipscomb, Belmont, Stephen F. Austin, Dallas Baptist and Samford.
Schubert said these opportunities have opened because of the work of faculty and staff as well as the donors who have helped advance ACU into Higher Ground.
“It’s going to continue to push ACU into an elite position as a national leader in Christian higher education that’s focused on developing students with world class academics,” Schubert said. “Also as people of faith who are passionate about going out into the world and making a difference for the Kingdom.”
Hadfield moving forward after 39 years
BY SYDNEY VARNER EDITOR IN CHIEFAfter 39 years, one of ACU’s well known storytellers, Ron Hadfield, is taking a step back into a more relaxed and remote role.
Hadfield has served as director of operations while working for the university, serving under three presidents and wearing many different hats along the way including working as the editor of ACU Today Magazine, overseeing media relations, special events, signage and marketing.
“So I’ve worn a lot of hats, and I’ve enjoyed them the most, it’s just fun,” Hadfield said.
“But you can always wear so many hats for so long and I’m grateful to have some other folks that I can share some of those responsibilities with now moving forward while still retaining some things that I enjoy doing most and feel like I do well.”
Hadfield will continue to work as the editor for ACU Today in his new role as well as continuing to manage signage and environmental graphics in conjunction with the on-campus team.
He plans to still be present on campus once a month
and is grateful that during the COVID-19 pandemic, the were able to harness what remote work looked like.
“The whole university has learned a lot about working remotely during the pandemic and we’ve learned that there are certain things about our work that we can do from just about anywhere.” For Hadfield, his job isn’t just operations, it’s being
an archivist.
“There’s a lot of our archivist responsibility and what I’ve done through the years, and I’ve been here for a long time, is knowing where we’re going, where things are kept and historical work,” Hadfield said.
“I’m grateful that ACU wants me to continue in that role and see the value of value in that.”
To some like Linda Bon-
BY RILEYnin, senior vice president for marketing and strategic communication. Hadfield is an institution of his own at ACU. Bonnin said that Hadfield fingerprints are all over campus, leaving a legacy in everything from the signs, branding and the relationships he’s made.
“He bleeds purple and has a tremendous work ethic,” Bonnin said.
“He will email you at 2 a.m., at 6 a.m. and on the weekends. He is constantly working for ACU. I don’t know how many hours Ron works, honestly. I’m sure it’s an excess of 120 hours a week.”
Outside of working for the university, Hadfield’s connection to ACU goes farther back to his time as a college student.
Graduating in 1979 from
the Journalism and Mass Communication Department, serving as the editor in chief of the Optimist during his time.
Hadfield also played collegiate baseball at the university alongside Vice President Emeritus Dr. Gary McCaleb.
To McCaleb, Hadfield is not just a hard worker but also a friend who shares a love of baseball.
“We talk a lot, all the time, about baseball,” McCaleb said.
“It’s always fun to find somebody who shares a pastime or an interest with a sort of same passion that you do. And that’s been a part of our friendship years.”
Hadfield over his 39 years at ACU has worn a lot of hats, fostered close relationships and worked many hours, but Hadfield said that the most important part of it all is connecting others with the opportunity ACU provides.
“Helping connect people with [ACU], giving them the similar opportunity we have, that’s hugely important to me and to a lot of other people who work with me now and will follow later,” Hadfield said.
Cullen Auditorium still set for a name change alongside renovations
BY MACI WEATHERS NEWSLETTER EDITORCullen Auditorium is expected to be handed over to the university in June 2022, alongside a name change that coupled with the renovation will create new future for the Cornerstone class, Chapel and the Department of Theatre.
Despite the same supply issues that have delayed the grand opening of Moody Coliseum, Cullen Auditorium has been moving forward with renovations on time. However, Cullen Auditorium new name has not been solidified since the announcement of the renovations.
“The construction progress is going well,” Kevin Campbell, senior vice president for operations said. “We anticipate that Cullen will likely be
handed to the university in mid-June, we will be putting the final touches on it as we get ready for the homecoming musical in October.”
Cornerstone, the Chapel office and the Department of Theatre will make use of the new auditorium. Compared to the last years of the homecoming musical being in the Abilene Civic Center and the cornerstone class in the upstairs library.
“A lot of the renovations for it were upgrading some of the mechanical equipment and the interior,” Campbell said.
“Adding a grand lobby, redoing the restrooms and adding AV and technical equipment to the auditorium were just some of the renovations.”
In the past, Cullen Auditorium has been known to flood,
especially when it rains.
A large part of the flooding from rainwater has also been addressed in the construction.
“We worked over the years to address the flooding,” Campbell said. “We are certainly trying to make sure we continue with those improvements. And also looking for opportunities to further solidify the facility so it doesn’t have flooding when it rains.”
The two projects of Moody and Cullen will be turned over to the university likely within a few weeks of each other. However, there will be separate grand openings for each.
The theatre department as well as ACU Opera Theatre will benefit most from the renovations according to associate professor and theatre department chair, Dawne
Swearingen-Meeks.
A long-time legacy tradition is to have the homecoming musical alongside the parade and the football game. However, this has been a challenge for the theatre department since COVID-19 and construction played into the mix.
“The beautiful benefit is that we are able to bring homecoming home,” Meeks said. “It is incredibly expensive to produce a homecoming musical downtown and be able to offer the experience that our audiences have come to expect.”
The Cullen auditorium is expected to now be used for more besides the theatre department and should be fully ready by the homecoming musical in October.
“For a long time I have been waving the flag asking for fi-
nancial support and help so we can continue what we love to do,” Meeks said.
“I am really grateful to the administration and to have a revitalized space, Cullen had
been utilized for a very long time by a number of organizations so having a space that has been given a beautiful broadway facelift is an incredible gift.”
SGA teams up with Intramurals for first Olympics
BY MARIAH WILLIAMS BREAKING NEWS EDITORThe Student Government Association and Intramural team collaborated to host the first ever ACU Olympics last week with team Zebras taking first, The Backstreet Boys taking second and Gammas + Siggies taking third.
Students competed on teams of a minimum of five women and five men in swimming, track and field, bouldering, corn hole and softball. These events took place
across Abilene at the ACU Track, Student Recreation and Wellness Center and the Jane Seller Softball field. The events spread across three days, April 18, 19 and 21.
Thirteen teams competed, averaging about 170 participants in total. Monday kicked off the Olympics with Track and Field, followed by Tuesday with bouldering and swimming, and ending Thursday with softball and cornhole.
“We wanted to start with some traditionally recognized olympic sports
and things we have not had in intramurals before,” Nathan Marshall, sophomore double major finance and information systems from McKinney and SGA CFO, said.
“The Olympics has never been done before and it was something we knew SGA could help do. We wanted to help make it more of a intramural student body event.”
This idea originated last year as a part of the then SGA Vice Presidents campaign.
“It was one of the things Boone wanted to do to
increase engagement and participation he followed through an dwe have been working to put it together,” Marshall said.
Participants were very appreciative of this event, giving some athletes an opportunity at competition.
“I think it gives more opportunity for people to just come out and have some fun,” Austin Hotchkiss, a senior kinesiology major from San Antonio said. “This is something where there are a lot of good athletes that just don’t compete in sports like that.”
COMMENCEMENT Candidates for Undergraduate & Graduate Degrees
College of Arts and Sciences
Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
Aubrey Carrin Bell (B.S., Agribusiness) Red Bluff, California
Hunter Brice Meroney (B.S. Environmental Science) Granbury, Texas
Andrew Michael Dendy (B.S., Agribusiness)
Seminole, Texas
Brianna Jaquez (B.S., Animal Science) Horizon City, Texas
Katarina Isabella Moreno (B.S., Animal Science) Fort Worth, Texas
Hannah Rose Valvano (B.S., Agribusiness)
Abilene, Texas
Abigail Grace Williams (B.S., Animal Science) Woodway, Texas
Jared Tyler Williams (B.S. Environmental Science) Channelview, Texas
Katelyn Danielle Zak (B.S. Environmental Science) Fort Worth, Texas
Gerald Jose Zuniga (B.S., Animal Science) Clinton, North Carolina
Art and Design
Arleth Sarani Alvarez (B.S., Interior Design) San Antonio, Texas
Abbie Lynne Brenthan (B.F.A, Art) Bedford, Texas
Melendez María Fernanda Castellanos (B.S., Interior Design) Frisco, Texas
Rebekah Anne Conder (B.F.A., Art) Midland, Texas
Caleb Noah Crisp (B.F.A., Art) Abilene, Texas
Alexis Marie Delgado (B.F.A., Art) Tilden, Texas
Daylon Markel Franklin (B.F.A., Art) Dallas, Texas
Aubree Carolyn Herrold (B.S., Graphic Design/ Advertising) Keller, Texa
William Everett
Heyen (B.F.A., Art) Wichita Falls, Texas
Marlie Dawn Hite (B.S., Interior Design) Denton, Texas
Kortland Rylee Judd (B.F.A, Art) Keller, Texas
Ashley Brianne Lang (B.S., Graphic Design/Advertising) Lubbock, Texas
Molina Isabella Maradiaga (B.F.A.,
Art) Tegucigalpa, Honduras
Ivan Caine Martinez (B.F.A., Art) Abilene, Texas
Joshua David Pena (B.S., Interior Design) Cibolo, Texas
Joshua David Pena (A.A. Architecture) Cibolo, Texas
Aubrey Danielle Richert (B.S., Graphic Design/Advertising) Abilene, Texas
Carlisle Brooke Ross (B.F.A, Art) Aledo, Texas
Sonia Anita Seguin (B.F.A, Art) Abilene, Texas
Lillian Sell (B.S., Interior Design) Boerne, TexaAllison
Grace Stephen (B.S., Interior Design) Southlake, Texas
Emma Grace Stringer (B.F.A, Art) Richardson, Texas
Lauren Paige Taylor (B.S., Interior Design) San Angelo, Texas
Courtney Faye White (B.S., Interior Design) Canyon Lake, Texas
Biology Jaidyn Shae Ancell (B.S., Biology) Clyde, Texas
Seaton Lance Berry (B.S., Biology) Granbury, Texas
Benjamin Keith Black (B.S., Biology) Durango, Colorado
Neely Diane Bolin (B.S., Biology) Abilene, Texas
Sierra Ginelle Brock (B.S., Biology) Princeton, New Jersey
Jacob Warren Brown (B.S., Biology) Boise, Idaho
Madeline Cardinal (B.S., Biology) Metamora, Michigan
Sophia Lily Christian (B.S., Biology) Abilene, Texas
Brianna Nichole
Douglas (B.S., Biology) Abilene, Texas
Claire Ashton Ely (B.S., Biology) North Richland Hills, Texas
Destiny Star Escobedo (B.S., Biology)
Abilene, Texas
Tyler Allen Harmon (B.S., Biology) Richmond, Texas
Megan Riley Howard (B.S., Biology) Mansfield, Texas
Baileigh Rae Ivey (B.A., Biology) York, Nebraska
Justin Joe Molder (B.S., Biology) Granbury, Texas
Misha Munoz (B.S., Biology) McKinney, Texas
Chase Nolan (B.S., Biology) El Paso, Texas
Emily Puente (B.S., Biology) Granbury, Texas
Braden Jameson Smith(B.S., Biology) Lubbock, Texas
Shelbi Paige Stephenson (B.S., Biology) Talpa, Texas
Kennedy Nicole Timms (B.S., Biology) Tyler, Texas Chemistry and Biochemistry
Brito Jimena Andrea Castanedo (B.S., Biochemistry) San Antonio, Texas
Hongjian Chang (B.S., Biochemistry) Beijing, China
Seth Alexander Chapman (B.S., Biochemistry) Gordon, Texas
Samantha Marie Cole (B.S., Chemistry) Combine, Texas
Abigail Leigh Cortinas (B.S., Biochemistry) San Antonio, Texas
Sarah Kay Dunn (B.S., Biochemistry) Denton, Texas
Sydnee Ann Ervin (B.S., Biochemistry) Heath, Texas
Matthew Louis Ferguson (B.S., Biochemistry) Abilene, Texas
Leonardo Daniel Garcia (B.S., Biochemistry) Bulverde, Texas Madison Martin (B.S., Biochemistry) Abilene, Texas
Jarvis T Mba (B.S., Biochemistry) Amarillo, Texas
Zachary Josiah Tilton (B.S., Biochemistry) Midland, Texas
Justin Matthew Tobar (B.S., Chemistry) Abilene, Texas
Tierra Grace West (B.S., Biochemistry) Abilene, Texas
Communications and Sociology
Emily Ann Womble (M.A., Communication) Eustace, Texas
Eden Mae Barnhouse (B.S., Communication) Springfield, Missouri
Emma Grace Barnhouse (B.S., Communication) Springfield, Missouri
Malaya Laine Bizaillion (B.S., Communication) Fort Worth, Texas
Tommy Gabriel Cruz (B.S., Communication) Wesley Chapel, Florida
Truman Scott Cuthbert (B.S., Communication) Granite Bay, California
Sophia Grace Fox (B.S., Sociology) Southlake, Texas
Kaitlyn Jiefond Howard (B.S., Communication) Mico, Texas
Davion Reginald Johnson (B.S., Communication) Bedford, Ohio
Mary Heather Johnson (B.S., Communication) Claude, Texas
Caroline Marie Jones (B.S., Communication) McKinney, Texas
Eastin Mckenna Kandt (B.S., Communication) San Antonio, Texas
Tessa Holly Lewis (B.S., Communication) Keller, Texas
Sarah Helena Ottinger (B.S., Communication) Nashville, Tennessee
Jackson W Scott (B.S., Communication) Abilene, Texas
Megan Makenzie Scott (B.S., Communication) Lubbock, Texas
Emilie Grace Thompson (B.S., Communication) Fort Worth, Texas
Cole Michael Trader (B.S., Communication) Southlake, Texas
Shelby Lamont Washington (B.S. Sociology) Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Wyatt Hall Whitaker (B.S., Communication) Houston, Texas
Joshua Tyrese White (B.S., Communication) Beaumont, Texas
Engineering and Physics
Mukundwa Diane Akimana (B.S.E.N., Engineering) Abilene, Texas
Emily Grace Branson (B.S., Physics) Colleyville, Texas
Ally Lauren Brant (B.S., Physics) Abilene, Texas
Kenneth Walker Brown (B.S.E.N., Engineering) Conroe, Texas
Ji Cen (B.S., Physics) Shanghai, China
Luke David Brian Dowdy (B.S.E.N., Engineering) New Braunfels, Texas
Joshua Dowell Thomas (B.S.E.N., Engineering) Amarillo, Texas
Aaron Abel Escobedo
(B.S.E.N., Engineering) Snyder, Texas
Colton Kenneth Gates (B.S.E.N, Engineering) Aurora, Colorado
Nathaniel Taylor Hartin (B.S.E.N., Engineering) Round Rock, Texa
Maria Amalia Hernandez (B.S.E.N., Engineering) Round Rock, Texas
Reuben O Howe (B.S.E.N., Engineering) Abilene, Texas
Elizabeth Diane Jennings (B.S., Physics) Bentonville, Arkansas
Justin Todd Keathly (B.S.E.N., Engineering) Van Alstyne, Texas
Payton Elizabeth Kirk (B.S.E.N., Engineering) Coppell, Texas
Adam Michael Jacob Kish (B.S.E.N., Engineering) Grand Prairie, Texas
Lars R. Lindgren (B.S., Social Studies) Grand Rapids, Michigan
Laura Anne Elizabeth Mauldin (B.S., Social Studies) Farmersville, Texas
Jared Tyler Mayfield (B.S., Physics) Corinth, Texas
Lilian Alexandra McIntosh (B.S.E.N., Engineering) Abilene, Texas
Noah Tyler Mitchell (B.S., Physics) Pinehurst, Texas
Joshua David Nicholson (B.S., Physics) Corinth, Texas
Noah Paul Pope (B.S., Physics) North Richland Hills, Texas
Luke Evan Prins (B.S.E.N., Engineering) Fairview, Texas
Michael Bryan Ranger (B.S.E.N., Engineering) Fort Sill, Oklahoma
Michael Bryan Ranger (B.S., Physics) Fort Sill, Oklahoma
Allen Cortes Roldan (B.S.E.N., Engineering) Joshua, Texas
Nathaniel Travis Rowlands (B.S., Physics) Abilene, Texas
McKenna Lee Towell (B.S.E.N., Engineering) Abilene, Texas
Sylvia Michelle Viljoen (B.S.E.N., Engineering) Jackson, Mississippi
History and Global Studies
Royce Arnold Clough (B.A., Global Studies) San Angelo, Texas
Emma Kate Longley
(B.A., History) Abilene, Texas
Alexandra Kaye Lynch (B.A., History) North Richland Hills, Texas
Jeremiah Andrew Taylor (B.A., History) Abilene, Texas
Jane England Tomlinson (B.A., History) Pensacola, Florida Doyl L Watson (B.S., Social Studies) Abilene, Texas
Journalism and Mass Communicaion
Alyssia Aulani Anuat (B.S., Convergence Journalism) Santee, California
Jack Lewis Coatney (B.S., Multimedia) North Richland Hills, Texas
Paige Isabella Cudini (B.S., Multimedia) Cypress, Texas
Avery Jude Jackson (B.S., Multimedia) Belton, Texas
Alexsis McKinley Jones (B.S. Advertising/Public Relations) Rule, Texas
Kate Elizabeth Matthews (B.S., Advertising/Public Relations) Mount Pleasant, Texas
Erin Noel Miller (B.S., Multimedia) Sugar Land, Texas
Madison Anne Miller (B.S., Convergence Journalism) Wylie, Texas
Allie Paige Nichols (B.S. Advertising/Public Relations) Abilene, Texas
Andrew Joseph Norsworthy (B.S., Convergence Journalism) Frisco, Texas
Kathleen Pantoja (B.S., Multimedia) Roscoe, Texas
Sydney Marie Villanueva (B.S. Advertising/Public Relations) San Jose, California
Language and Literature
Courtney Breanne Cook (M.A., English) Corinth, Texas
Jonathan Caleb Ladd (M.A., English) Mont Belvieu, Texas
Coleton Shawn Parks (M.A., English) Wichita, Kansas
Krista Denise Toten (M.A., English) Abilene, Texas
Kelsea Renae Abston (B.A., English) Slaton, Texas
Amber Christine Anderson (B.A., English) Friendswood, Texas
Emma E Conatser (B.A., English) Dallas, Texas
Emily King (B.A., English) Santa Fe, New Mexico
Yexin Liu (B.A., English) Abilene, Texas
Ashlen Joelle Pamplin (B.A., Spanish)
Abilene, Texas
Mya Juel Parker (B.A., Spanish) Fairfax, Virginia
Brian Stephen Patton (B.A., English)
Abilene, Texas
Cecily Patrice Powell (B.A., English) Brentwood, Tennessee
Carson Lee Ross (B.M. Music-Teach. Instru.-All Level) Rio Rancho, New Mexico
Hannah Elizabeth Sterenberg (B.A., English) Spring, Texas
Doyl L Watson (B.S., Social Studies)
Abilene, Texas
Liberal Arts
Krista Cukrowski
Masci (M.L.A., Liberal Arts) Abilene, Texas
Shaylee Kainani Alani (B.S., Liberal Studies)
Kailua Kona, Hawaii
Courtney Grace Binz (B.S., Liberal Studies)
Allen, Texas
Jordan Lewis Brooks (B.S., Liberal Studies) Fort Worth, Texas
Tobias Macpherson
Cameron (B.S., Liberal Studies) Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia
Sosa Oswaldo Cano (B.S., Liberal Studies)
Zacatlan, Mexico
Madeline Cardinal (B.S., Biology) Meta-
mora, Michigan
Connor Reid Carlton (B.S., Liberal Studies) Abilene, Texas
Stacy Zebechi Chukwujekwu (B.S., Liberal Studies) Richmond, Texas
Victoria Romero Garcia (B.S., Liberal Studies) Abilene, Texas
Paige Elizabeth Goldston (B.S., Liberal Studies) Fair Oaks Ranch, Texas
Kelissa Renee Holloway (B.S., Liberal Studies) Abilene, Texas
Megan Cailey Klimisch (B.S., Liberal Studies) Waco, Texas
Coryon Duane
Mason (B.S., Liberal Studies) Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Jaden Roberts McGrew (B.S., Liberal Studies) Abilene, Texas
Mickey Andrew McGrew(B.S., Liberal Studies) Waller, Texas
Mahki Ramon Morris (B.S., Liberal Studies) Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Takato Okunoya (B.S., Liberal Studies) Ibaraki, Japan
Blake Warren Proctor (B.S., Liberal Studies) Merkel, Texas
Taylor Mckenna Reinhold (B.S., Liberal Studies) Abilene, Texas
Robert Dale Smith (B.S., Liberal Studies) Rockwall, Texas
Tyler James Welch (B.S., Liberal Studies) Henderson, Nevad
Music
Emma E Conatser
(B.A., Music) Dallas, Texas Taylor Ray John son (B.M. Vocal Performance) Godley, Texas
Carson Lee Ross (B.M. Music-Teach. Instru.-All Level) Rio Rancho, New Mexico
Rachel Elizabeth White (B.M. Vocal Performance) Boerne, Texas
Mathematics
Brookley Renae Baker (B.S., Mathematic-Teaching) Newark, Texas
Branden Lee Combs (B.S., Mathematics-Teaching) Grapevine, Texas
Lauren Marie Ferraro (B.S., Mathematics) Georgetown, Texas
Brett Michael Herman (B.S., Mathematics) Forney, Texas
Carter Andrew Leslie (B.S., Mathematics) Helotes, Texas
Carter Andrew Leslie (B.S., Mathematics) Helotes, Texas
Raegan Janae Palacio (B.S. Mathematics-Teaching) Mason, Texas
Wyatt Dale Witemeyer (B.S., Mathematics) Abilene, Texas
Political Science and Criminal Justice
Bryan Anthony Briones (B.A., Political Science) Jourdanton, Texas
Charlotte Grace Burleson (B.S., Criminal Justice) Rockspring, Texas
Genner Ariel Cervantes (B.S., Criminal Justice) Phoenix, Arizona
Connor Vincent Fishchelli (B.A., Political Science) Wylie, Texas
Ryan Daniel Fox (B.S., Criminal Justice) Fort Worth, Texas
Ashley Marie Gonzalez (B.S., Criminal Justice) Brownsville, Texas
Caegan Charles Long (B.S., Criminal Justice) Abilene, Texas
Preston Stuart Miller (B.A., Political Science) San Antonio, Texas
Ailin Arlett Ortega (B.A., Political Science) Denver City, Texas
Jacob Earl Andreu Pritchard (B.S., Criminal Justice) Abilene, Texas
Maelene Zyta Rosales (B.A., Political Science) San Antonio, Texas
Adelynn Lorraine Vasquez (B.A., Political Science) Wichita Falls, Texas Psychology
Autumn Alexis Bellow (S.S.P., Specialist in School Psychology) Abilene, Texas
Brian Alan Counts (M.S., Psychology, (Counseling)) Abilene, Texas
Jessica Rose Guajardo (M.S., Clinical Psychology) Helotes, Texas
Hermonique L Hardeman (M.S., Psychology, (Counseling)) Fort Worth, Texas
Jacob Hugh Kranendonk (M.S., Clinical Psychology) Grand Rapids, Michigan
Kathryn Nicole Nault (M.S., Psychology, (Counseling)) Abilene, Texas
Cameron Hugh Nelson (M.S., Psychology, (Counseling)) Abilene, Texas
Jennifer Michele Rios (S.S.P., Specialist in School Psychology) Winters, Texas
Ethan Nicholas Smetana (M.S., Clinical Psychology) Temple, Texas
Sarah Ellen Sparrow (S.S.P., Specialist in School Psychology) Grand Prairie, Texas
Ella Tua-Talvikki Anttila (B.S., Psychology) Helsinki, Finland
Rohama Girma Bekele (B.S., Psychology)
Dallas, Texas
Destinee Corin Caesar (B.S., Psychology) Castle Rock, Colorado
Rozyo Diana Castro-Becerra (B.S., Psychology) San Antonio, Texas
Ji Cen (B.S., Physics)
Shanghai, China
Raegen Kaylee Chaka (B.S., Psychology)
Abilene, Texas
Tessa Breanna Cisco (B.S., Psychology) Willow Park, Texas
Kobe Clark (B.S., Psychology) Sweetwater, Texas
Caleb Frederick Crecelius (B.S., Psychology) Fort Worth, Texas
Megan Nicole Deitch (B.S., Psychology)
Weatherford, Texas
Natalie Anne Dindorf (B.S., Psychology) Seguin, Texas
Anthony Chikezie Egbo (B.S., Psychology) Houston, Texas
Justin Alexander Ford (B.S., Psychology) Boerne, Texas
Nicole Teceria Green (B.S., Psychology) El Paso, Texas
Rylee Nicole Hallum (B.S., Psychology) Lake Jackson, Texas
Caitlyn Ariel Irene Harvey (B.S., Psychology) Burleson, Texas
Audrey Anna Helm (B.S., Psychology) Coppell, Texas
Bonilla Ariana Raquel Hernandez (B.S., Psychology) Miami, Florida
Peyton Alle Himango (B.S., Psychology) Lubbock
Hannah Marie Holst (B.S., Psychology) Abilene, Texas
Jakob Dean Langston (B.S., Psychology) Colleyville, Texas
Payton Elizabeth Liebl (B.S., Psychology) Abilene, Texas
Addyson Logan (B.S., Psychology) Burleson, Texas
Thelma Mascorro (B.S., Psychology) Fort Worth, Texas
Breeana Leigh Matthews (B.S., Psychology) Big Spring, Texas
Kaylee Elizabeth McCurdy (B.S., Psychology) North Richland Hills, Texas
Paige Cudini
Ashlyn Nicole Morris (B.S., Psychology) San Antonio, Texas
Kamryn S Mraz (B.S., Psychology) Rogers, Texas
Mitchell Wade Bradford (M.A., Global Service) Abilene, Texas
Isadora Ferreira De Melo (M.M.F.T., Marriage & Fam. Therapy Thesis) Spanish Fork, Utah
Gabriel Andrew Fisher (D.M.I.N., Christian Ministry) Abilene, Texas
Hannah P King (M.M.F.T., Marriage & Fam. Therapy Thesis) Desoto, Texas
Nicole Leigh Larsen (M.M.F.T., Marriage and Family Therapy) Houston, Texas
Robert Anthony Lopez De Castilla (M.A., Global Service) Abilene, Texas
Marshal Dillon
Maiwald (M.M.F.T., Marriage and Family Therapy) Abilene, Texas
Blake Michael Patterson (M.M.F.T., Marriage and Family
Therapy) Alpharetta, Georgia
Curtis Lee Perry (M.M.F.T., Marriage and Family Therapy) Krum, Texas
Maisie Grace Ray (M.M.F.T., Marriage and Family Therapy) Gilmer, Texas
Jillian Shae Rolan (M.M.F.T., Marriage and Family Therapy) Abilene, Texas
Jonathan Byrd Shelburne (M.M.F.T., Marriage and Family Therapy) Abilene, Texas
John McCrae Smith (M.M.F.T., Marriage and Family Therapy) Waller, Texas
Austin Amos Willhelm (M.M.F.T., Marriage and Family Therapy) Abilene, Texas
Immanuel Isaiah Allen (B.S., Child and Family Services) Phoenix, AZ
David William Brown (B.A., Ministry and Vocation) Aledo, Texas
Sydney Denise Carr (B.A., Ministry and Vocation) Tyler, Texas
Levi Asa Chambers (B.A., Bible and
Ministry, Ministry and Vocation) Abilene, Texas
Rowdy Ray Colten (B.A., Ministry and Vocation) Little Elm, Texas
Savannah Sue Dean (B.S., Child and Family Services) Keller, Texas
Emily B Dublin (B.A., Bible and Ministry) Georgetown, Texas
Travis Jackson Eades (B.A., Ministry and Vocation) Abilene, Texas
Brianna Noel Farokhirad (B.S., Child and Family Services) Flower Mound, Texas
Ellie Kate Gorman (B.S., Child and Family Services) Schertz, Texas
Drake Nathaniel Hernandez (B.A., Bible and Ministry) Pleasanton, Texas
Melissa Anne Huffines (B.A., Ministry and Vocation) Abilene, Texas
Madison Ann Jones (B.S., Child and Family Services) Abilene, Texas
Spencer David Kasselman (B.A., Bible and Ministry) Abilene,
Class of 2022
Bachelor of Science in Athletic Training
Chasing dreams requires passion and hard work. You're half way there now. Keep striving and putting in the work. We are so PROUD of you!! Love- Dad, Mom, Abigale, Nienie, Papa, Granna, & Pepaw.
Class of 2022
Emma Stringer
Bachelor of Fine Arts, Graphic Design Wow, we are so proud of all you’ve accomplished these past 4 years!
You’ve made wonderful use of the gifts and talents that God has blessed you with. You’ve enjoyed making many friends and building all kinds of relationships. You’ve been dedicated, determined, and disciplined as you focused on your goals. You’ve learned more about yourself and bravely tried many new things. You’ve grown in your walk with the Lord and reliance on the Holy Spirit. You are full of kindness and grace.
Keep shining like a bright light in the world!
Philippians 2:15
All our love, Mom, Dad, and Clara
Aubree Herrold
Graphic Design
Aubree, congratulations on earning your college degree.
You will do amazing things and we couldn't be more proud of you. May you always find yourself as excited and full of big dreams as you are today!
We love you!
Mom, Dad, Colton & Devon.
Class of 2022
Texas
Mason Taylor King (B.A., Bible and Ministry) Sunnyvale, Texas
Trinity Robbins Koemel (B.S., Child and Family Services) Watauga, Texas
Gabriel Edward Laskey (B.A., Bible and Ministry) Fort Worth, Texas
Colton James Mowry (B.A., Bible and Ministry) Wylie, Texas
Emily Anne Musslewhite (B.A.,Ministry and Vocation) Frisco, Texas
Lindsey Kate Overstreet (B.S., Child and Family Services) Farmersville, Texas
Ryan Patrick Ray (B.A., Ministry and Vocation) Barksdale AFB, Louisiana
Rylie H Ray (B.S., Child and Family Services) Montgomery, Texas
Kendall Grace Rhodes (B.S.,Child and Family Services) Austin, Texas
Karah Rae Ross (B.S., Child and Family Services) Lubbock, Texas
Trevor James Ryan
(B.A., Bible and Ministry) Manteca, California
Elissa Mercedes Villareal (B.A., Bible and Ministry) Seguin, Texas
Lucas Kenneth Vogt (B.A., Bible and Ministry) McKinney, Texas
Sarah Rose Wagler (B.S., Child and Family Services) Rifle, Colorado
Addison Duncan Welborn (B.A., Bible and Ministry) Thibodaux, Louisiana
Rachel Elizabeth White (B.A., Ministry and Vocation) Boerne, Texas
Kaelin G Winters (B.A., Ministry and Vocation) Leander, Texas
Jared Michael Yanez (B.A., Bible and Ministry) San Antonio, Texas
Graduate School of Theology
Omoike Eric Aizenofe Robert (M.A., Theology) Ibadan, Nigeria
Stephen Kwakye Anyan (M.A.C.M., Christian Ministry) Accra, Ghana
Penelope Lynn Biddy (M.A., Ancient
and Oriental Christ.) Abilene, Texas
Penelope Lynn Biddy (M.D.I.V., Master of Divinity) Abilene, Texas
Kenton Reeves Brown (D.M.I.N., Christian Ministry) Yukon, Oklahoma
Joel Breton Childers (M.A., Modern and American Christ.) Hawley, Texas
Damond Demond Coleman (M.D.I.V., Master of Divinity) Rockwall, Texas
Christopher Roland Cornell (M.A.T.S., Theological Studies) Los Angeles, California
Jarrell Vernon Cunningham (M.D.I.V., Master of Divinity) Albuquerque, New Mexico
Tiffany Anne Dahlman (D.M.I.N., Christian Ministry) Hope Mills, North Carolina
Juan Arturo Miguel Dawson (M.D.I.V., Master of Divinity) Makawao, Hawaii
Wesley Charles Erickson (M.D.I.V., Master of Divinity) Abilene, Texas
Class of 2022
Kailey Massey
Bachelor of Business Administration, Management
Kailey, Congratulations, you did it! We are so proud of you. You have become a beautiful and intelligent young woman and we have no doubt that you will go far and succeed in life. We love you! May the LORD always protect you. Happy Graduation Day!
Class of 2022
Madison Miller
Convergence Journalism
Madi, It has brought us great joy to watch you grow into the smart, and beautiful young woman that you have become. Now it’s time for you to go in the direction of your hopes and dreams and accomplish all that you have set out to do! You now have the wings to fly, the roots to remind you where you came from, and the education to fulfill them. Always remember “the best is yet to come!" We love you big!
Mom, Dad, Syd, and PK
Class of 2022
Hannah Marie Holst Psychology
Congratulations! Hannah Holst
We are so proud of you! You believed you could and you did!
Life is tough but so are you! Everything you need is already on the inside of you!
Love Mom and Dad
Victoria Kay Gilliland (M.D.I.V., Master of Divinity) Houston, Texas
Joshua Edward Gorenflo (M.A.,Theology) Flint, Texas
John Arthur Kimber (M.A.C.M., Christian Ministry) Tallahassee, Florida
Troy Madison LaRue (M.A., Old Testament) Winters, Texas
Troy Madison LaRue (M.D.I.V., Master of Divinity) Winters, Texas
Stephen Robert Mead (M.A., New Testament) North Richland Hills, Texas
Wilbert Lance Meche (D.M.I.N., Christian Ministry) Waxahachie, Texas
Emeline Mugisha (M.A.T.S.,Theological Studies) Columbia, Marilyn
Ebo Wilson Prah (M.A.C.M., Christian Ministry) Accra, Ghana
Gustavo A. Prato (M.A.C.M., Christian Ministry) Winston-Sa-
Hansen (M.A.C.M., Christian Ministry) Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Brianna Christine Paige Rideout (M.A., Old Testament) Sherman, Texas
Ryan David Russell (D.M.I.N., Christian Ministry) Charlotte, North Carolina
Matthew Wells Sapp (M.A., Old Testament) Abilene, Texas
Ashley Elizabeth Stirman (M.D.I.V., Master of Divinity) Abilene, Texas
Riley Jerrod Stirman (M.D.I.V., Master of Divinity) Abilene, Texas
College of Business Administration
Accounting and Finance
Nicholas Austin Boone (M.ACC., Accounting) Abilene, Texas
Madison K Crockett (M.ACC., Accounting) Lubbock, Texas
Brenda Esparza (M.ACC., Accounting) Bulverde, Texas
Lacy Elaine Mayes
(M.ACC., Accounting) Abilene, Texas
Greyson Covey Piersall (M.ACC., Accounting) Abilene, Texas
Hannah Gail Pinson (M.ACC., Accounting Abilene, Texas
Jonathan Rugamba (M.ACC., Accounting) Abilene, Texas
Mikel-Ann Terry (M.ACC., Accounting) Roby, Texas
Ashley Paige Alexander (B.B.A., Management and Accounting) Winnsboro, Texas
Jon Westin Bennett (B.B.A., Financial Management) Abilene, Texas
Titus Tramain Brooks (B.B.A., Financial Management) Killeen, Texas
Brian Choe (B.B.A., Financial Management) Farmers Branch, Texas
Destanie Joy Crist (B.B.A., Financial Management) Valley Center, California
Boone Stevenson Denton (B.B.A., Financial Management) Temple, Texas
Mitchell Thomas Dickson (B.B.A., Fi-
nancial Management) Abilene, Texas
Jillian Elizabeth Hefner (B.BA., Financial Management) Austin, Texas
Dustin Lee Inness (B.B.A., Financial Management) Phoenix, Arizona
Andre Raymon Laster (B.B.A., Financial Management) San Diego, California
Sang Hyun Lee (B.B.A., Accounting)
Pyeongtaek, Korea
Morgen Brittany Maltby (B.B.A., Accounting and Financial Management) New Braunfels, Texas
Grayson Joseph Martin (B.B.A., Accounting) Abilene, Texas
Noah Lee Maston (B.B.A., Financial Management) Mineral Wells, Texas
Chris Duren Montana (B.B.A., Financial Management) Mansfield, Texas
Lauren Neas (B.B.A., Financial Management and Accounting) Colorado Springs, Colorado
Dax Riley Neece (B.B.A., Financial Management) Albany,
Francisco Gutierrez Osio (B.B.A., Financial Management and Accounting) La Herradura, Mexico
Hayden Elijah Price (B.B.A., Accounting) Montgomery, Texas
Carter McCook Rhyne (B.B.A., Accounting and Financial Management) Spring, Texas
Jaslyn
Ysabel Rivera (B.B.A., Accounting and Financial Management) Lubbock, Texas
Carter Scott Sells (B.B.A., Financial Management) Brentwood, Tennessee
Mark Jiaen Shi (B.B.A., Financial Management) Plano, Texas
Michael Gene Skinner (B.B.A., Financial Management and Accounting) Mansfield, Texas
Andrew James Stripling (B.B.A., Accounting and Financial Management) Meadowlakes, Texas
Steven Anthony Teel (B.B.A., Financial Management) Sugar Land, Texas
Maya Marie Villan
cial Management)
Modesto, California
Sarah Katherine Williams (B.B.A., Accounting) Abilene, Texas
Alec Christian Wilson (B.B.A., Financial Management and Accounting) Prosper, Texas
Sitong Zhou (B.B.A., Accounting and Financial Management) Abilene, Texas
Management Sciences
Justin Lawrence Allen (B.B.A., Management) Littleton, Colorado
Jake Dylan Bay (B.B.A., Marketing and Management) Shattuck, Oklahoma
Elijah Bruce Biedinger (B.B.A., Management) San Antonio, Texas
Joseph Alexander Boglin (B.B.A., Management and Marketing) Alpharetta, Georgia
Brantley James Brumley (B.B.A., Marketing) Fairview, Texas
Katie Cristine Carter (B.B.A., Management) Wichita, Kansas
Caleb Alejandro Casas (B.B.A., Management) Spring, Texas
Management and Marketing) Helotes, Texas
Kaitlan Taylor Cox (B.B.A., Management)
Lubbock, Texas
Dane Andrew Crass (B.B.A.,Management and Marketing) Fort Worth, Texas
Joseph Daniel Crockett (B.B.A., Management) Cross Plains, Texas
Abigail Marie Cullins (B.B.A., Marketing) McKinney, Texas
Camryn Nicole Eason (B.B.A., Marketing and Management) Keller, Texas
Caroline Grace Fairly (B.B.A., Marketing) Amarillo, Texas
Erica Marie Fossey (B.B.A., Marketing) Tyler, Texas
Irma Garcia Guadalupe Garza (B.B.A., Management) Coppell, Texas
Grayson Matthew Gradke (B.B.A., Marketing) Grapevine, Texas
Landon S Hamm (B.B.A., Management and Marketing)
Abilene, Texas
Karsen Elizabeth Harlien (B.B.A., Management) Lubbock, Texas
Lilly Catherine Hartley (B.B.A., Management)
Austin, Texas
Jackson Andrew Henderson (B.B.A., Marketing and Management)
and Management) Tyler, Texas
Dante Giovanii Heredia (B.B.A., Management) Prosper, Texas
Bryson Taylor Hill (B.B.A., Marketing)
Paradise, Texas
Ashlyn Nicole Ison (B.B.A., Marketing) Bulverde, Texas
Lane Andrew Jackson (B.B.A., Management) Gonzales, Texas
David Benjamin Johnson (B.B.A., Management) Southlake, Texas
Tabitha Brooke Johnson (B.B.A., Marketing) Heath, Texas
Rebekah Kay Jones (B.B.A.,Marketing and Financial Management) San Antonio, Texas
Ellen Anne Joss (B.B.A., Marketing and Management) Louisville, Kentucky
Cody James Karov (B.B.A., Management and Marketing) Fort Worth, Texas
Canon James Kreidler (B.B.A., Marketing and Management) Grand Junction, Colorado
Jolee Read Lane (B.B.A., Marketing and Management) Abilene, Texas
Kara Paige Lehnert (B.B.A., Management) Dallas, Texas
Spencer Scott Liles (B.B.A., Management) Temple, Texas Long (B.B.A., Marketing) San Jose. California
Remington Gaige Lutz (B.B.A., Management) Temple, Texas
Alan Michael Maldonado (B.B.A., Management) Hurst, Texas
Nicole Elizabeth Mallet (B.B.A., Management and Marketing) Helotes, Texas
Molina Isabella Maradiaga (B.B.A., Marketing) Tegucigalpa, Honduras
Kailey BreAnn Massey (B.B.A., Management) Azle, Texas
Bryanda Lynette Mauricio (B.B.A., Management) San Antonio, Texas
Sara Kathryn Newman (B.B.A., Marketing) Edmond, Oklahoma
Thomas Oliver Oxley (B.B.A., Marketing) Bakersfield, California
Rebekah Nicole Penton (B.B.A., Marketing) Coppell, Texas
Timothy Lawrence Polvado (B.B.A., Management) Sugar Land, Texas
Liliana Maria Salazar (B.B.A., Marketing) Abilene, Texas
Luke Brandon Sheppard (B.B.A., Management) Midland, Texas
Chester Ornald Sims (B.B.A., Management) Richmond, Texas
Sarina Kay Smith (B.B.A., Management) Melissa, Texas
Connor Reed Stephens (B.B.A., Management) Argyle, Texas
Adam Douglas Stephenson (B.B.A., Marketing) North Richland Hills, Texas
Rebekah Sarah Straka (B.B.A., Management and Marketing) Phoenix, Arizona
Daniel Joseph Turner (B.B.A., Marketing) Hurst, Texas
Jace Bennett Usrey (B.B.A., Management) Abilene, Texas
Vasti Nepthaly Villarreal (B.B.A., Management) Sweetwater, Texas
Jemimah Jasmine Kirabo Wavamunno (B.B.A., Management) Kampala, Uganda
Gerald Jose Zuniga (B.B.A., Management) Clinton, North Carolina School of Information and Technology
Isaiah Richard Barrera (B.S., Digital Entertainment Tech) Round Rock, Texas
Kathryn Denae Carr (B.B.A., Information Systems) Wichita, Kansas
Fisher Win Coburn (B.S. Computer Science ) Austin, Texas
Travis Walker Corrigan (B.S., Digital Entertainment Tech) Abilene, Texas
Nicolas Daniel Fornicola (B.S. Computer Science) Spring Branch, Texas
Christa Grace Green
Joshua Adelard James (B.B.A., Information Systems) San Antonio, Texas
Matthew Allen Jones (B.B.A., Information Systems) Abilene, Texa
Zachary Hunter Kasper (B.S., Digital Entertainment Tech) Tuscola, Texas
Carter Andrew Leslie (B.S., Computer Science) Helotes, Texas
William Mitchell Melrose (B.S., Computer Science) Tyler, Texas
Gabriela Becerra Jael Morel (B.S., Digital Entertainment Tech) Tegucigalpa, Honduras
Michael Tanner Parker (B.S., Digital Entertainment Tech) Abilene, Texas
Cospin Miranda Ramirez (B.S., Computer Science) Guatemala City, Guatemala
Dakota Steward Smith (B.B.A., Information Systems) Abilene, Texas
Christopher Morgan St. John (B.B.A., Information Systems) Hamlin, Texas
William Henry Stanley (B.S., Digital Entertainment Tech) Spring Valley, California
Joseph Victor Swedlund (B.S., Computer Science) Abilene, Texas
Nathan Sterling Swedlund (B.S., Computer Science) Abilene, Texas
Quent Malcolm Titre (B.B.A., Information
City, Texas
Wyatt Dale Witemeyer (B.S., Computer Science) Abilene, Texa
s
Ruben Ray Yanez (B.B.A., Information Systems) Monahans, Texas
College of Education and Human Services
Kinesiology and Athletic Training
Ashlee Anne Camp (M.A.T., Athletic Training) Temple, Texas
Michael Isaiah De La Fuente (M.A.T., Athletic Training) Weslaco, Texas
Anna E Goains (M.A.T., Athletic Training) Cleburne, Texas
Mikaela Jackson (M.A.T., Athletic Training) Pearl, Mississippi
Candace Parker (M.A.T., Athletic Training) Jayton, Texas
Michelle Schiwart (M.A.T., Athletic Training) Magnolia, Texas
Morgan Shelley Spencer-Roth (M.A.T., Athletic Training) Houston, Texas
Derran James Strydom (M.A.T., Athletic Training) Chantilly, Virginia
TaSean Young (M.A.T., Athletic Training) Durham, North Carolina
Chester O. Sims
“Find your style and stick to it.” - Manolo Blahnik What a great pleasure it’s been to see you grow and mature. You have accomplished much in your educational and sports career. I was excited to follow your career as you grew each year. You should be very proud of yourself to have stuck with the “goal” to succeed at a higher level in all your endeavors. I am proud to call you my grandson and I know your life will be successful from your continued dedication to succeed. Sorry we cannot be there to see you graduate and accomplish that goal of higher achievement. I love you and I will be here if you need a helping hand or just need a friend. - Love, Greggie
“To live a good life: We have the potential for it. If we can learn to be indifferent to what makes no difference.” – Marcus Aurelius - Love, Jordan
“What you get by achieving your goals is not as important as what you become by achieving your goals.”– Henry David Thoreau
You are a very bright light that shines with positive energy and love. It's difficult to find adequate words to express the depth of my love, pride, and joy watching you grow and flourish over the course of your life. Your achievement of reaching this important milestone is the foundation to continue to reach for and realize your hopes and dreams. I love you tons. - Love, Mother
To God be the glory for the things He has done! Putting in words the honor you deserve is such a difficult task. It is like honoring a rare gem for being impeccable and magnificent. How does one really accomplish such a task? Son, we can't begin to tell you just how loved you are and how PROUD of you we are! Truthfully, to tell you we are proud doesn’t even begin to express the pride and joy we have for you. YOU did it, Trey! You honored both of your grandfathers and great-grandmother by completing your degree in four years. Above all, you keep your promise to your Pops and your namesake, Chester O. Sims, Sr. Now, you are about to start one of the biggest adventure in life…GRAD SCHOOL! If asked to describe you the words God-fearing conqueror, intelligent, quiet, kind, supportive, well-mannered, witty, and a GREAT son immediately come to mind. Yet, there is another word that represents your life...INTEGRITY. We have witnessed your determination to do what is right no matter the consequence or reward, make decisions wise beyond your years, and we marveled at your ability to remain humble with all of your achievements. We are thankful God gave you to us, as we have had the privilege of watching you serve others by "doing justly, loving mercifully, and walking humbly with our God." In times where we have been separated by distance the past four years, we have always left you with the phrase, “May the blood of Jesus cover you and make smart choices” to remind you that you are not only the younger brother of Brandon and the youngest child of Chester and Carrie, but more importantly a child of God. While we are excited to see what your future holds, we know that His plans have been made for you since before you were born (Jeremiah 29:11). The greatest fulfillment in life is when you acknowledge God and seek His kingdom first. He will always make your path straight in order for you to be a blessing to others. Although you will see your family cry, rest assured the tears are full of life, joy, and memories. Most of all, the tears are anticipation of the journey which is ahead for you. Your life has a purpose. You are destined for great things son! Always remember that God is good, merciful, and almighty! Continue to grow in Christ and serve as an example of what it looks like to live life humbly in the overflow of favor and blessings ordained just for you! Congratulations and we love you to life Trey!
Mr. & Mrs. Chester Sims Jr. & Family
Triston Kyle Anderson (B.S., Kinesiology)
Rockwall, Texas
Lilyana M B eebe (B.S., Kinesiology) Cedar Park, Texas
Hunter Jay Burcham (B.S., Kinesiology) Round Rock, Texas
Savanna Marie Carrillo (B.S., Kinesiology) El Paso, Texas
Celeste Adriana Castaneda (B.S., Kinesiology) San Antonio, Texas
Josselyn Andrea Castillo (B.S., Kinesiology) Friona, Texas
Sarah Elizabeth Cooper (B.S., Kinesiology) Yoakum, Texas
Kendall Ann Davis (B.S., Kinesiology) San Antonio, Texas
Camryn Rae Dickson (B.S., Kinesiology) Los Alamos, New Mexico
Sarah Elizabeth DiRago (B.S., Kinesiology) San Antonio, Texas
Jade Nicole Fant (B.S., Kinesiology)
Crossroads, Texas
Emily Katherine
Gaskins (B.S., Kinesiology ) Haslet, Texas
Gregory Green (B.S., Kinesiology) Houston, Texas
Aaron Matthew Guillen (B.S., Kinesiology) A bilene, Texas
Toriano A Hargrove (B.S., Kinesiology) Arlington, Texas
Doak Anderson Holloway (B.S., Kinesiology) Abilene, Texas
Caleb Harold Horne (B.S., Kinesiology) Mason, Texas
Richard Austin Hotchkiss (B.S., Kinesiology) Live Oak, Texas
Elizabeth Christine Janssen (B.S., Kinesiology) Brentwood, Tennessee
Taylor O livia Lofton (B.S., Kinesiology) Magnolia, Texas
Harrison Ray Manuel (B.S., Kinesiology) Rowlett, Texas
Taylor Nicole McCoy (B.S.,Kinesiology) Wichita Falls, Texas
Alexandria Nicole Mentavlos (B.S., Kinesiology) Colleyville, Texas
Michael Anthony Mungia (B.S., Kinesiology) S onora, Texas
Jonathan Daryl Ply (B.S., Kinesiology) Dayton, Nevada
Chloe Allison Ransom (B.S., Kinesiology) San Antonio, Texas
Anthony James Shelton (B.S., Kinesiology) P lano, Texas
Reid Thomas Smith (B.S., Kinesiology) Aledo, Texas
Grant Christopher Solley (B.S., Kinesiology ) Westlake, Texas
Austin D elray Tobar (B.S., Kinesiology)
Riley Matthew Tran (B.S., Kinesiology) Colleyville, Texas
Kelton Cole Wylie (B.S., Kinesiology) Breckenridge, Texas
Blair Edward Zepeda (B.S., Kinesiology) Richardson, Texas
Nutrition
Emily Elizabeth Bartley (M.S.,Nutrition) Abilene, Texas
Ashton Elisabeth Bronson (M.S., Nutrition) Keller, Texas
Lauren Elizabeth McCarthy (M.S., Nutrition) Fort Worth, Texas
Leah E. Becker Murgo (M.S., Nutrition) Dallas, Texas
Irma Carolina Rodriguez (M.S., Nutrition) Brownsville, Texas
Alexandria Taylor Stack (M.S., Nutrition) Irving, Texas
Mackenzie Jordan West (M.S., Nutrition) Abilene, Texas
Emily Katherine Wilson (M.S., Nutrition) San Antonio, Texas
Sydney Erin Wolfe (M.S., Nutrition) Dallas, Texas
Meda Abigail Bow (B.S., Nutrition) Stephenville, Texas
Mary Ashley Coffey (B.S., Nutrition) Krum, Texas
Grayson Daniel Tatrow (B.S., Nutrition) Arlington, Texas
Ariana Celestina Trevino (B.S., Nutrition) Schertz, Texas
Danielle Shirley Viljoen (B.S., Nutrition) Jackson, Missouri
Marissa Wilks (B.S., Nutrition) Boerne, Texas
Occupational Therapy
Gabriel D Alcorn (M.S., Occupational Therapy)
Grand Prairie, Texas
Cristan D enise Allen (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Rowlett, Texas
Staci Renee Ashley (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Abilene, Texas
Danielle Nicole Bahrenburg (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Lubbock, Texas
Bailey Jane Baker (M.S.,Occupational Therapy) Abilene, Texas
Cristina Lucia Basaldu (M.S., O ccupational Therapy)
Corpus Christi, Texas
Kelsey Paige Blase (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Decatur, Texas
Tiffanie Chene Boggs (M.S.,Occupational Therapy) Newcastle, Oklahoma
Marion Dielle Bradford (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Abilene, Texas
Mikayla Danae Brinson (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Lumberton, Texas
Kendal Moriah Cloninger (M.S., Occupational Therapy)
Dallas, North Carolina
Madelyn Sue Conway (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Trophy Club, Texas
Brandi Lanelle Dodd (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Willis, Texas
Tayler B reanne Dray (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Fort Worth, Texas
Terra Deanne Dupree (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Clinton, Oklahoma
Kiana O livia Evans (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Jackson, Georgia
Sabrina Facundo (M.S., Occupational Therapy) New Braunfels, Texas
Clarissa Monique Garcia (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Odessa, Texas
Samantha Leigh Garcia (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Waxahachie, Texas
Ortiz Esmeralda Hernandez (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Carrollton, Texas
Andrea Morgan Hill (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Fresno, California
Madison Mikael Hoelting (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Tulia, Texas
Alexis Savanna Hogan (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Trent, Texas
Chandler Wynne Johnson (M.S., Occupational Therapy)
Seneca, South Carolina
Brooke B ailyn Kelley (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Spring, Texas
Emma L Le wis (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Perry, Georgia
Taylor D’Ann M artin (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Wellington, Texas
Morgan Elizabeth McKay (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Tulsa, Oklahoma
Kristen Nicole McLarty (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Southlake, Texas
Lauren Paige Nicola (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Spring Branch, Texas
Zoe Karalyn Oppriecht (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Kansas City, Missouri
Daisy Yvette Perez (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Carlsbad, New Mexico
Kaitlin Jean Pine (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Abilene, Texas
Ashley Kenison Rooker (M.S., Occupational Therapy) San Antonio, Texas
Garrett Vance Stephens (M.S.,Occupational Therapy) Childress, Texas
Shamyiah J Stone (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Malden, Missouri
Class of 2022
Rebekah Anne Conder
Bachelor of Arts in Painting
What an incredible journey this has been! Watching you learn and grow has been a great joy to us. As you enter into this new season, we pray that your desire to bring glory to the Lord through all you do will only increase. Worshiping Him through creating your art is such a gift, to you, to us, and to all who will encounter it. As you continue working to hone His gift to you, we will be there to cheer you on, and to watch in amazement as you declare to the world how creating Beauty is Worship. May He bless you with never ending revelations of Who He Is and how precious you are to Him. May your life reflect the Truth of His Heart, through your thoughts, your words, your actions, and your art. We love you and are so very proud of you! Mom and Dad
Class of 2022
Tabitha Brooke Johnson
Bachelor of Business Administration, Marketing
We are so proud of you and amazed by your accomplishments. Your self-motivation, hard work, courage and kind spirit have served you well. We know that you will continue to succeed as your journey takes you down new and exciting paths. We are truly blessed to have you as a daughter and sister.
"I know the plans I have in mind for you, declares the Lord; they are plans for peace, not disaster, to give you a future filled with hope. When you call me and come and pray to me, I will listen to you. When you search for me, yes, search for me with all your heart, you will find me." Jeremiah 29:11-13
We love you, Daddy, Momma & Katy
Kelsey B rooke Sutton (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Abilene, Texas
Kayla M arie Tyler (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Abilene, Texas
Anne Elizabeth Wooliscroft (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Abilene, Texas
Communication Sciences and Disorders
Allison Mills Alexander (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Dallas, Texas
Sarah Caitlin Almeida (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Northlake, Texas
BreAnna Taylor Anderson (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Belton, Texas
Lucas Joseph Bennett (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology)
Abilene, Texas
Brittany Ann Betty (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Sachse, Texas
Peyton Leighann Brazee (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Watauga, Texas
Lea Grace Buchanan (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Bentonville, Arkansas
Morganne Mackenzie Clay (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Addison, Texas
Laney Cone (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Carrollton, Texas
Caroline Endesia Craver (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Abilene, Texas
Niccola Gabrielle Quiambao Daniel (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Irving, Texas
Tania Esmeralda DeSonnaville (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) San Antonio, Texas
Christine Nicole Dyal (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Boerne, Texas
Siera B lake Edmonds (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Kerrville, Texas
Kelsey E lizabeth Fish (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Southlake, Texas
Vianey Flores (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) El Paso, Texas
Alyssa M ary Fry (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Colorado Springs, Colorado
Victoria Rose Gonzalez (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) San Antonio, Texas
Gracie Kay e Harris (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Tulsa, Oklahoma
Jamila Hassan (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Garland, Texas
Madison Hatchett (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Breckenridge, Texas
Shaela Victoria Herbert (M.S.,
Speech-Language Pathology) Abilene, Texas
Camilette Denise Huddleston (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Abilene, Texas
Britnie Ruth Jenkins (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Fort Worth, Texas
Abigail Layne Kurszewski (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Iowa Park, Texas
Nicole Faith Large (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology)
Little Elm, Texas
Jaci Lynn Largent (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Granbury, Texas
Taylor Jean Ruth Ledbetter (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Abilene, Texas
Daniella Madrinan (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Arlington, Texas
Bethany Grace Malcolm (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Amarillo, Texas
Nathalie-Rose Oceane Malecot (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) San Diego, California
Christa Ann Martin (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Sweetwater, Texas
Jessica Eleanor McNeill (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Fort Worth, Texas
Yaxuan J. Meyer (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Flower Mound, Texas
Austin Hotchkiss
Bachelor of Science, Kinesiology
Austin...we are proud of you and excited for you! There are many great days ahead as you continue to love the Lord and serve others! We can't wait to see all God has in store for you!
Love, Mom, Dad (in heaven), Taylor, and Aubri
Kendall Dru Miller (M.S., Occupational Therapy) McKinney, Texas
Morgan Mary Molder (M.S., Occupational Therapy) Granbury, Texas
Devyn S hea Nall (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Chandler, Arizona
Krystal Nelson (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Tinley Park, Illinois
Alexandra Ma rie Odello (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Keller, Texas
Irene A Osemwegie (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Houston, Texas
Esha Palande (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Irving, Texas
Madison Grace Perez (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Olney, Texas
Rodnicka Alaudee Pierre-Jerome (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Tamarac, Florida
Savannah Lee Pinion (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Bullard, Texas
Ashley Christine Redwine (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Highlands Ranch, Colorado
Aranxa Roman (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Cedar Park, Texas
Meghan Alyssa Santo (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Frisco, Texas
Melony-Jane Tryphosa Saripalli (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Arlington, Texas
Deisy Esperan -
za Serrano (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Santa Ana, California
Amanda Summer Sorensen (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Richardson, Texas
Sophia Rose Stanley (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology)
Richardson, Texas
Cali Deann Stevens (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology)
Abilene, Texas
Taylor Lanae Stone (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology)
Bridgeport, Texas
Kirstyn Georganne Taylor (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Dimmitt, Texas
Katherine Jane Wallis (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology)
Longview, Texas
Austin A dele Ward (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology)
Kerrville, Texas
Tatum Leigh Watson (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology)
Murfreesboro, Tennessee
McKaylee Lynn Weishuhn (M.S., Speech-Language Pathology) Andrews, Texas
Kaylee Lynn Adams (B.S., Communication Disorders) Wichita Falls, Texas
Lauren Brooke Bueter (B.S., Communi -
cation Disorders)
Garland, Texas
Madison Riley Cole (B.S., Communication Disorders) Lamesa, Texas
Madeline Denise Collins (B.S., Communication Disorders) Aledo, Texas
Madison Renee Kean (B.S., Communication Disorders) McKinney, Texas
Wan Kei Lau (B.S., Communication Disorders) Taipa, Macao
Abbey Ann M iller (B.S., Communication Disorders) Abilene, Texas
Keeley Moore Mungia (B.S., Communication Disorders) Sonora, Texas
Ashlen Joelle Pamplin (B.S., Communication Disorders) Abilene, Texas
Hollee Elizabeth Rogers (B.S., Communication Disorders) Coppell, Texas
Allison A Skelton (B.S., Communication Disorders) Lufkin, Texas
Kaleigh Brooke Tom (B.S., Communication Disorders) Abilene, Texas
Elizabeth Bailey Tutt (B.S., Communication Disorders) Tuscola, Texas
Lauren Camille Ward (B.S., Communication Disorders) Abilene, Texas
Laurel A Wood (B.S., Communication Disorders) Abilene, Texas
Bachelor of Science in Nutrition
in store for you in this next chapter of your life. We love you Medaloo!
DAD, MOM, MAY, & EVAN
We are so proud of you and the many accomplishments that you have attained so early in life. You are an amazing person that displays a servants heart in all that you do. God has blessed you tremendously during your years at ACU. He will continue to bless you now embark on the next journey that God has for you.
We love you, Mom, Dad, Seth, Sarah, Sophee Jeff and Anna
Congratulations, Bekah!
It is amazing how fast the last four years have gone! All your creativity, organizational skills, and ability to balance many things at once have paid off and we are so proud of how hard you have worked to get to this point. Best wishes and support as you begin your career!
We love you! Mom and Dad
Graysen Isabella Wright (B.S., Nutrition) San
Antonio, Texas
Allison Leigh Zitek (B.S.,Communication Disorders) Whitehouse, Texas
Social Work
Tiffany Elaine Brown (M.S.S.W., Social Work)
La Vernia, Texas
Cassie Michaela Christian (M.S.S.W., Social Work) Round Rock, Texas
Rosalind M Evans (M.S.S.W., Social Work)
Abilene, Texas
Alicea Gray (M.S.S.W., Social Work) Abilene, Texas
Yana Sue Hendricks (M.S.S.W., Social Work)
Athens, Georgia
Claudia A Lasater (M.S.S.W., Social Work)
Abilene, Texas
Joshua I.D. Meribole (M.S.S.W., Social Work)
Abilene, Texas
Carmen James Price (M.S.S.W., Social Work)
Abilene, Texas
Mariesha Roshel Shaw (M.S.S.W., Social Work)
McKinney, Texas
Brittany Nichole Venegas (M.S.S.W., Social Work) Cleveland, Texas
Brooklyn Faith Bailey (B.S., Social Work) Hawley, Texas
Hanna Gayle Brown (B.S., Social Work) Benbrook, Texas
Hugh Douglas Castillo (B.S.,Social Work)
Lewisville, Texas
Felicia L Doss-Curtis (B.S., Social Work)
Abilene, Texas
Karissa Alexandra Gonzalez (B.S.,Social Work)
Abilene, Texas
Diamond T Jackson (B.S., Social Work) Lewisville, Texas
Sydney E Moreland (B.S., Social Work) Fair Oaks Ranch, Texas
Faith Maureen Parsons (B.S., Social Work ) Baird, Texas
Madison E Reyna (B.S., Social Work) Whitney, Texas
Hannah Marie Shahan (B.S., Social Work)
Abilene, Texas
Jackson M Taylor (B.S., Social Work) Abilene, Texas
Kerri Lynn Taylor (B.S., Social Work) Abilene, Texas
Emily Gayle Tippens (B.S., Social Work) Abilene, Texas
Dakotah Lynn Vignery (B.S., Social Work) Vassar, Kansas
Kaela Villegas (B.S.,Social Work) Zolfo Springs, Florida
Teacher Education
Katelyn R Belch (M.E.D., M.Ed. Teaching and Learning) Rowlett, Texas
Peyton E Bourland (M.E.D., M.Ed. Teaching and Learning) Abilene, Texas
Cameron Kellie Boyette (M.E.D.,M.Ed. Teaching and Learning) Mesquite, Texas
Emily Anne Colwell (M.E.D., M.Ed. Teaching and Learning)
Abilene, Texas
Emily Anne Colwell
(M.E.D., M.Ed. Teaching and Learning) Abilene, Texas
Elizabeth Ashlyn Griffin (M.E.D., M.Ed. Teaching and Learning) Abilene, Texas
Jessica Diaz Hance (M.E.D., M.Ed. Teaching and Learning) Abilene, Texas
Megan Kristine Hertz (M.E.D.,M.Ed. Teaching and Learning) Watauga, Texas
Sarah Janae Mcglothlin (M.E.D., M.Ed. Teaching and Learning) San Antonio, Texas
Sydney Marie Rubey (M.E.D., M.Ed. Teaching and Learning) New Braunfels, Texas
Paige Erin Schmidt (M.E.D., M.Ed. Teaching and Learning) Cypress, Texas
Takuma David Tsuneki (M.E.D., M.Ed. Teaching and Learning) Mito City, Japan
Kenzi A Valadez (M.E.D., M.Ed. Teaching and Learning) Denton, Texas
Emily Grace Wooten (M.E.D., M.Ed. Teaching and Learning) Hughson, California
Lindsay J. Dilbeck (B.S., Int.Stud:Early Child/ Elem.) Abilene, Texas
Kennedy Rachel Flores (B.S., Int.Stud:Early Child/Elem.) Haslet, Texas
Grace Abigail Frank (B.S., Int.Stud:Early Child/ Elem.) Allen, Texas
Anna M Gilb (B.S., Int. Stud:Early Child/Elem.) Ennis, Texas
Lauren Elizabeth Gumm (B.S., Int.Stud:Early Child/Elem.) Abilene, Texas
Hannah Lynn Hamaker (B.S., Int.Stud:Early Child/Elem.) Richardson, Texas
Brendan B Harmon (B.S., Social Work) Arlington, Texas
Margaret Elizabeth Hess (B.S., Middle School Education (4-8)) Lubbock, Texas
Victoria M Martinez (B.S., Int.Stud:Early Child/Elem.) Watauga, Texas
Katie Nicole Perryman (B.S., Int.Stud:Early Child/Elem.) Dallas, Texas
Kaitlin Marie Pica (B.S., Int.Stud:Early Child/ Elem.) Salina, Kansas
Lesslie Jessenia Picena (B.S., Int.Stud:Early Child/Elem.) Dallas, Texas
Kaitlyn Anne Pipkin (B.S., Special Education Elementary) Midland, Texas
Lauren Michelle Ramsey (B.S., Int.Stud:Early Child/Elem.) Frisco, Texas
Kimberly Katie Rempel (B.S., Middle School Education (4-8)) Brookston, Texas
Rileigh Morgan Smith (B.S., Int.Stud:Early Child/Elem.) Friendswood, Texas
Lydia Joyce Sparlin (B.S., Int.Stud:Early Child/ Elem.) Santa Maria, California
Taylor J Whitworth (B.S., Int.Stud:Early Child/Elem.) Burleson. Texas
Saylor Joell Wooden (B.S.,Int.Stud:Early Child/
College of Professional and Graduate Studies
School of Educational Leadership
Bryan David Akins (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Keota, Oklahoma
Je Quila De Awn Broussard (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Houston, Texas
Bridgett Ligon Brown (M.E.D., Higher Education) Sulphur, Oklahoma
Danette Lee Cagnet (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) McCordsville, Indiana
Robert Marcus Canonico (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Midlothian, Texas
Robert Angelo Cerasoli (E.D.S., Organizational Leadership) Quincy, Massachusetts
Kathryn Elizabeth Clark (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Arlington, Texas
Ethel J. Clayton (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Byars, Oklahoma
Caleb Coleman (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Indianapolis, Indiana
Kacey R Cottrill (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Zanesville, Ohio
Brandon Curtis (M.E.D., Higher Education) Abilene, Texas
Julianne Hennessy Denton (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Moore, Oklahoma
Megan Duncan (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Vacaville, California
Cristina Angelica Figueroa
Dean Langston
(E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Odessa, Texas
Stephanie Gracia-Rocha (M.E.D., Higher Education) Garland, Texas
Elizabeth C. Gilbert (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Fort Belvoir, Virginia
Janelle M. Green (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Pflugerville, Texas
Rusty Ranay Hohlt (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Bryan, Texas
De’Aira Holloway (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) The Colony, Texas
Pauline Jones (M.S., Organizational Development) Alexandria, Virginia
David W. Kerr (E.D.S., Organizational Leadership) Grove City, Ohio
Cathy Granaderos Keys (M.S., Organizational Development) Manvel, Texas
Melissa M. Kinder (M.E.D., Higher Education) Stephenville, Texas
Amy Rebecca Knierim (M.E.D., Higher Education) Saginaw, Texas
Amanda Gayle Korkow (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Sherwood, Wisconsin
Lanean Lang (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Fate, Texas
Carmela Marisa Levy-David (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Richmond, Texas
Roderick Corvel Lewis (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Victoria, Texas
Michael Charles Marino (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Carrollton, Texas
Isabella Freels
YOU ARE LOVED, YOU ARE BLESSED, YOU ARE WORTHY. YOU ARE AN AMAZING YOUNG WOMAN AND WE ARE SO PROUD OF YOU!
Zachary Warren Stephens
Class of 2022 Bachelor's of Science in Psychology
We are very proud of you, Zachary. You worked so hard to get to this moment. Receiving your degree in three years because of your dedication. Always reach for your dreams. It has been and continues to be, our privilege and honor to be your parents.
We love you. Congratulations to Zachary Warren Stephens as a Graduate of Abilene Christian University 2022.
Class of
2022
Michael B. Ranger Engineering & Physics
Michael,
We are so proud of you. You have accomplished your goal of a duel major. You have always set your sights high and the Lord has seen you through. You started this journey away from home and alone. You end it having found your wife whom God has provided. You are very blessed. The future of this world is better having you and Mariah in it together. Look forward always, learn from mi stakes and never forget we’re here for you.
Dana Charles Martin (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Bryan, Texas
Pervaiz Masih (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Soledad, California
John M Mello (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Omaha, Nebraska
Tijuana Mitchison (M.S., Organizational Development) Humble, Texas
Courtney
Ann Pruner (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Jenks, Oklahoma
William Lawrence Raab (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) State College, Pennsylvania
Michael Anthony Smith (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Newberry, South Carolina
Andrew Paul Stewart (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Little Rock, Arkansas
Sara Katherine Strickland (M.S., Organizational Development) Vidalia, Georgia
Carole A. Thomas (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Fremont, Ohio
Anthony Michael Ungaro (E.D.D., Organizational Leadership) Indianapolis, Indiana
Tomishia Denise Williams (M.E.D., Higher Education) Houston, Texas
Consuelo Yukiko Yamaguchi-Mayorquin (E.D.S., Organizational Leadership) Montgomery, Texas
Sarah Jean Baker (M.M.F.T., Marriage and Family Therapy) St. George, Utah
Shevawne Dominique
Delgado (M.M.F.T., Marriage and Family Therapy) McAllen, Texas
Michelle Renee Evans (M.M.F.T., Marriage and Family Therapy) Dallas, Texas
Ashton Hansen Hosford (M.M.F.T., Marriage and Family Therapy) Ammon, Idaho
Marcus Layne Hunt (M.M.F.T., Marriage and Family Therapy) Spanish Fork, Utah
Jessica Nicole Jacob (M.M.F.T., Marriage and Family Therapy) Winters, Texas
Ann Michelle Kent (M.M.F.T., Marriage and Family Therapy) St. George, Utah
Martha Rymal Firkins (M.A., Conflict Management & Res.) Ocala, Florida
Tonya M Fore (M.B.A., Business Administration) Wichita Falls, Texas
Kathryn Elizabeth Gough (M.B.A., Business Administration) Lewisville, Texas
Dustin A Green (M.B.A., Business Administration) Fort Worth, Texas
Hannah Laurice Hutchinson (M.A., Conflict Management & Res.) Springdale, Arkansas
Jarrett Andre Jacobs (M.A., Conflict Management & Res.) Snellville, Georgia
Susan Annabeth Jungling (M.B.A., Business Adminis tration) Abilene, Texas
Yvon Christel Mankou (M.A., Conflict Management & Res.) Midland, Texas
Julio Cesat Manzano (M.B.A., Business Administration) Brownsville, Texas
Mayte Rocio Martinez (M.B.A., Business Administration) Mesquite, Texas
Jazzmin Janae Mathews (M.B.A., Business Administration) Frisco, Texas
Thomas Brackney Newman (M.B.A., Business Administration) Edmond, Oklahoma
Kristopher Michael Olvera (M.B.A., Business Administration) Abilene, Texas
Kevin Chase Owen (M.B.A., Business Administration) Germantown, Tennessee
Corry Deshaun Perez (M.A., Conflict Management & Res.) Del Valle, Texas
Kyra G Phillips (M.B.A., Business Administration) Tomball, Texas
Blake William Rudd (M.B.A., Business Administration) Allen, Texas
Antonio Topps (M.B.A., Business Administration) Rosharon, Texas
Crystal G. Weems (M.A., Conflict Management & Res.) Houston, Texas
Curtis Lane Williams (M.B.A., Business Administration) Bossier City, Louisiana
Samantha Woodley (M.S., Management) Silverlake, Washington School of Undergraduate
Houston, Texas
Burton Robert Cannon (B.S., Integrated Studies) Beaumont, Texas
Natalie Rene Chapman (B.S., Marketing) Abilene, Texas
Caleb Lindbergh Hickman (B.S., Management) Sherman, Texas
Adrionna Kaylan Jones (B.S., Integrated Studies) Frisco, Texas
April D Martin (B.S., Psychology) Bryan, Texas
Katherine Mast (B.S., Psychology) Fort Worth, Texas
Sarah Elizabeth Mccoy (B.S., Marketing) Euless, Texas
Jewel Elizabeth Miller (B.S., Integrated) Allen, Texas
Meredith Mcdavid Peters (B.S., Marketing) Joshua, Texas
Jennie Rebecca Register (B.S., Integrated Studies) Austin, Texas
Cerina Riley (B.S., Psychology) Missouri City, Texas
Elaina Danielle Rockwell (B.S., Integrated Studies) Abilene, Texas
Melvin Pazhoor Thampan (B.S., Information Technology Admin) Royse City, Texas
Victoria Anne Tschoerner (B.S., Psychology) Bartlett, Texas
Annette Watts (B.S., Psychology) North Richland Hills, Texas
Veronica Lynn Wier (B.S., Management) League City, Texas
Adam Zatlo (B.S., Management) Fort Worth, Texas
School of Nursing
Jazmine Davis Collins (D.N.P., Nursing Practice) Grand Prairie, Texas
Atalie Yvette Henderson (D.N.P., Nursing Practice) Cedar Hill, Texas
Kasandra Renee Johnson (D.N.P., Nursing Practice) Clinton, Mississippi
Jannelle Violet Sanchez (D.N.P., Nursing Practice) Whittier, California
Paula M Todd (D.N.P., Nursing Practice) Milton, Tennessee
Pricilla Marie Wyatt (D.N.P., Nursing Practice) Abilene, Texas
Jennifer Michele Young (D.N.P., Nursing Practice) Abilene, Texas
Sabrina Paige Anthony (B.S.N., Nursing) Pearland, Texas
Espitia Karen Arreguin (B.S.N., Nursing) Fort Worth, Texas
Lauren Ashley (B.S.N., Nursing) Aledo, Texas
Jose Alfredo Barrera (B.S.N., Nursing) San Benito, Texas
Kayleigh Beth Benson (B.S.N., Nursing) Burleson, Texas
Carys Benay Blume (B.S.N., Nursing ) Cedar Park, Texas
Roslynn An n Boeke (B.S.N., Nursing ) McKinney, Texas
Addison Grace Boston (B.S.N., Nursing) Ennis, Texas
Abby Claire Brown (B.S.N., Nursing) Midland, Texas
Mallorie Marie Clark (B.S.N., Nursing)
Keller, Texas
Aubrey Leigh Dowdle (B.S.N., Nursing) Round Rock, Texas
Emma Lachelle Elerick (B.S.N., Nursing) Fort Worth, Texas
Caroline Annyce Farish (B.S.N., Nursing) Flower Mound, Texas
Eva Brightwell Freeman (B.S.N., Nursing) Abilene, Texas
Brett Cotter Garcia (B.S.N., Nursing) Keller, Texas
Laura Marie Hamilton (B.S.N., Nursing) Abilene, Texas
Binh Thanh Ho (B.S.N., Nursing) Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Karala Whitney Hough (B.S.N., Nursing) Allen, Texas
Lyndon Kyra Huff (B.S.N., Nursing) Dana Point, California
Lauren Kaylynn Hughes (B.S.N., Nursing) Midland, Texas
Addie Jordan Japhet (B.S.N., Nursing) North Richland Hills, Texas
Charmaine Nichole Jolivette (B.S.N., Nursing) Houston, Texas
Joel Kent Jones (B.S.N., Nursing) Graham, Texas Easton Neal Kirkbride (B.S.N., Nursing) Denison, Texas
Anna Elizabeth Klick (B.S.N., Nursing) Marble Falls, Texas Jiwon Lee (B.S.N., Nursing) Dallas, Texas
Monica Haley Lucero (B.S.N., Nursing) Canyon Lake, Texas
Congragulations
Destanie Joy Crist
Financial Management
Dear Destanie, to know you is to Love you! We are always proud of you! You have chosen to "delight yourself in the LORD" by living for Jesus and loving God with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength. We praise God for so many sweet answers to prayers.
Congratulations on your college graduation! Love Always, Mom & Dad
Proverbs 3:5-8
Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to him, and he will make your paths straight. Do not be wise in your own eyes; fear the Lord and shun evil. This will bring health to your body and nourishment to your bones.
Abilene Christian University - Class of 2022
Bachelor of Fine Arts, Theatre
Hannah, we are so incredibly proud of you! You have worked so hard for this. Your sweet spirit and love for Jesus is something that makes us so proud. You are a joy to have as our daughter. We're so honored for you, not only for graduating - but receiving the ACU University Scholar Award! You have worked so hard for this, and your love of theater is inspiring. Thank you for always being the respectful, fun-lov ing daughter, who is such a bright light to everyone you meet. We love you so much! Enjoy today. Enjoy your graduation from this incredible college and theater department that has taught you so much. You'll only go up from here! We're your biggest fans. Psalm 139 - "You are a child of God, you are wonderfully made, dearly loved and precious in His sight."
CONTINUED FROM
Alexis Grace McCown (B.S.N., Nursing) Tyler, Texas
Morgan Anne McDowall (B.S.N., Nursing) Abilene, Texas
Katherine Marie McMillan (B.S.N., Nursing) Plano, Texas
Rachel Faith Melnyk (B.S.N., Nursing) Abilene, Texas
Amber Nicole Mendoza (B.S.N., Nursing) El Paso, Texas
Cameron Lee Miller
(B.S.N., Nursing) Plano, Texas
Amber Marie Minor (B.S.N., Nursing) Belton, Texas
Kathryn B Norman (B.S.N., Nursing) Lucas, Texas
Rosalyn Noel Pratt (B.S.N., Nursing) Richards, Texas
Savannah Joyce Rakovalis (B.S.N., Nursing) Cibolo, Texas
Madison Nicole Ray (B.S.N., Nursing) Allen, Texas
Chelsea Elaine Rios (B.S.N., Nursing) Watauga, Texas
Zoe Faith Spinn (B.S.N., Nursing) Holland, Texas
Megan Alyse Taylor (B.S.N., Nursing) Albuquerque, New Mexico
Danielle Dawn Tilly (B.S.N., Nursing) Hawley, Texas
Rebecca Lauren Toppert (B.S.N., Nursing) Abilene, Texas
Lauren Elizabeth Weilemann (B.S.N., Nursing) Austin, Texas
Class of 2022 Davion Johnson
Communications
Son we are proud of you and all your accomplishments. From the day you were born we knew you were special. At birth you were born with Erb's Palsy. Life wasn't easy for you in the beginning but with patience and a strong will to accomplish anything you set your mind to; you overcame all obstacles and dealt with adversity gracefully. We would like to congratulate you son for this amazing accomplishment. Continue on your road to success but know that your work isn't finished. Salute to you son: Love Mom, Dad, and the rest of the family. "WE LOVE YOU SPEEDY"
I remember the day you were born with such clarity. With head control and an alertness unusual for a newborn you looked around the room and seemed to be thinking - "What will I do with this life that God has graciously given me?"
You have blossomed into a young woman with an extraordinary heart, keen mind and a clear purpose.
You and I have spoken of your heart's mission many times over the years. You have never wavered from your promise to Aunt Lori. While cry softly in my arms at age of five, you whispered to me that God made your purpose clear. You were to use your gifts of intelligence, kindness and creative thinking to battle cancer, so Aunt Lori did not loose her fight in vain. I do not know of many people who work on a dream or a promise for so long. You are truly extraordinary. Never forget you have so many people who believe in you. Today we celebrate you for your accomplishments while at ACU and commend you on your next stepsMasters/PhD program in Biochemistry/Chemistry at TCU to continue your focus in cancer research.
Listed below are a few of your many accolades that I'm sure you're modestly blushing about as you read this acknowledgement.
ACU Presidential Scholar Dean’s Honor Roll (every semester)
ACU University Scholar (1 of 50)
Phi Eta Sigma (Honor Society) Research Assistant & Senior Research Assistant
ACU Women’s Honors Society (President) Honors College
Honors Graduate (highest distinction, with thesis) Chemistry Club Vice President
Wildcats for Sustainability Vice President Senior Class Speaker
Sarah, never forget that your dad, siblings - Julia, Sophia, Jenna and Andrew, and extended family and I are so incredibly proud of you.
We love you!
Mama
Class of 2022
Reagan Chaka Psychology
CONGRATS!
I am so very proud of you!
You have always been the sunshine in my life. J'lyn would be so proud of everything you have accomplished and will continue to accomplish. Always remember you have the strength to face any challenge. You are what you choose to become. Be motivated in your journey! If you can dream it you do it. Most of all understand that life is short so don't sweat the small stuff !!
I LOVE YOU DEARLY, DAD
Malaya Malaya Bizaillion Bizaillion
Congradulations Malaya Bizaillion! We are so proud of you! Feels like just yesterday we were celebrating your graduation from Kindergarten. Watching you start each chapter of your life has been so exciting. But I sure miss the days of you helping me change the oil on my truck, getting to do your hair before school each morning, watching you play basketball, listening to you sing karaoke as you aspired to be an American Idol. But this day will go down as one of my favorite accomplishments. I could not be more proud of the way you have persevered to complete this chapter in your life.
God, Jenny, Kim, Grammy and Grampy; we are all your biggest fans!!!
We can not wait to see what God’s plan are for you as you start the next chapter of your life.
We Love you so much!!!! Go Malaya!
Div. 1 athletes seek attention on mental health
BY SARAH NADING SPORTS WRITERFor Ally Anderson, playing NCAA Div. 1 beach volleyball was a dream since she was a high school sophomore. She joined ACU’s fledgling beach volleyball team in the fall of 2019 with optimism.
That excitement turned to disappointment, she said, because the experience was nothing like she expected. Anderson said the conditions she subjected to were detrimental to her mental health and she did not feel support and care from her coaches and teammates. By the end of her freshman year, Anderson had quit the team, and the next year, she left school.
“It was so much more a job,” Anderson said, “not an activity.”
Anderson is now a recruiting coordinator at an EMS school in Abilene and said she has not looked back since 2020.
The increase in competitiveness and busy schedules at the college level – especially in Div. 1 – can damage athletes’ mental health. The Department of Athletics is working toward having athletes be more open about what they are going through on a daily basis.
Cory Driskill, senior associate athletic director for sports performance, said trainers take on the role of making sure athletes are physically and mentally feeling good.
“Through our relationships as athletic trainers with our student-athletes, this is one of the things I try to preach to our staff, is keeping the pulse of what their mental state is,” Driskill said. “We are not only concerned about their physical state but also mentally, sleep patterns and nutrition. It’s all something we need to pay attention to.”
Immanuel Allen, a junior guard on the men’s basketball team from Phoenix, Arizona, said the intensity of his coaches negatively affected him early in his career.
“I was so worried about trying to do everything perfectly and not make mistakes because I didn’t want to get yelled at,” Allen said.
A study by the American College of Sports Medicine reported that about 30% of female and 25% of male student-athletes suffer from collegiate mental health challenges.
The study describes the challenges as “pressures from academics, as well as other possible triggers of stress. These triggers include missed classes due to off-campus sports competitions, being away from home for the first time, social isolation from students other than
their teammates, and adapting to constant visibility within their campus and communities.”
Moreover, the pressures to perform well in their sport and well in the public eye causes challenges for athletes’ mental health, according to the ACSM.
None of this surprises Allen, who said student-athletes face pressures typical student don’t.
“As a student-athlete, a lot of times I feel people get our lives misconstrued,” he said. “Yes we do have more of a public persona than others, but that comes with early morning practices, grueling weight sessions, long afternoon practices, film, study hall and, not to mention, how the homework and expectations are exceeded in the classroom.”
Driskill said coaches want a tough mindset but have lost sight of the extent to which their athletes are dealing with challenges of busy weeks. Not being seen or heard by their coaches can weigh in on performance and overall health, he said.
The NCAA created a fourhour limit on the amount of allowed daily practice time and a 20-hour limit per week. Before 2000, these rules weren’t consistently enforced. This changed when two football players from the University of North Carolina filed a lawsuit against their 30-50hour week schedule.
The lawsuit argued the athletes were deprived of “meaningful education” due to the unequal balance of time with their school work and their sport. The NCAA investigated their case by identifying the loopholes found in the 20-hour rule, like making workouts “voluntary” even though they effectively were mandatory.
The ACSM said exercise increases endorphins in the body that naturally produce hormones that make active people feel happier.
“However, playing sports does not make athletes immune to mental health challenges,” they said.
Megan McDonald, sports academic coordinator, said she believes athletes want to be cared about and valued by their coaches.
“All coaches have high standards and expect these things, but some might not pour into the athletes spiritually and mentally,” McDonald said.
With a schedule as packed as 20 hours a week to their sport, McDonald said athletes she works with are stressed and overworked even when it might not look like it.
“They have those straight A’s,
but they are so overwhelmed,” McDonald said.
Athletes are encouraged to get eight hours of sleep and excel in the classroom but are forced to often choose between the two. Anderson said she found herself prioritizing her sleep over education.
“I didn’t want to focus on school and instead focused on getting my eight hours of sleep so I could perform better,” Anderson said.
Along with the pressure to succeed in their sport and the classroom, social life is just as important to students’ mental health.
In early March, Katie Meyers, a 22-year old standout soccer player at Stanford University, made national headlines when she took her own life. The decision was attributed to the lack of sleep, social life, study time and self-worth student-athletes often deal with.
Responding to Meyers’ passing, Gwen Schemm, a retired soccer player at Frostburg State University, said in a post on Instagram that student-athletes can be perceived only as “living the dream” despite those challenges.
“You live a facade of perfection when inside your world is crumbling,” she said. “You don’t
want to be rejected or be treated as weak. You don’t want to lose your starting spot or, worse, your scholarship.”
McDonald said higher-achieving academic athletes often put effort into school and their sport resulting in no outside social life.
Kolton Kohl, a retired men’s basketball player from San Angelo, said it was a challenge trying to find time to hang out with friends but he chose to prioritize sports. Kohl said he realized sports will end but the people in your life will be there forever.
“You are going to want people there to hangout with and have a good time when you’re not playing sports anymore,” he said.
Women’s soccer player Samantha Brown said she became so consumed with her performances because her life had been swallowed with how good her athletic performances are for the past 15 years.
“I caused myself to put a lot of my worth in whether or not I am seeing success in my sport,” said Brown. “You put so much time and effort into an activity, it becomes consuming.” McDonald, the academic coordinator who is also a former student-athlete, said she struggled
mentally without even knowing it when playing softball at Sam Houston State University from 2017 to 2021.
“I had to realize these things don’t ultimately define me,” McDonald said. “Once I realized that, I was able to just go out and enjoy the sport.”
To help with this stigma of mental health in Div. 1 athletes, some athletes say it first needs to be acknowledged and talked about more openly.
The athletic trainers once a semester send out a survey asking questions that gauge mental health problems. Driskill will contact those who show red flags and offer to help them get the assistance they need if they ask for it.
“People are talking about it more, and they are becoming more accepting towards it,” Driskill said.
In previous times, the stigma made athletes feel like they had to push things to the side to “be tough,” Driskill said.
Allen said athletes should spread awareness to those in authority who are able to speak up for their overworked players. McDonald is determined to make this happen as the sports academic coordinator.
“Sharing experiences is the best way,” McDonald said. “As a retired athlete, I have been in their shoes. Letting them know this is not the end of the world, this is not who you are, this is just what you do.”
McDonald sits down with athletes and helps them plan out their daily schedule, encouraging free time for fun activities.
Kohl said receiving the well-deserved rest would help athletes’ bodies recover mentally and physically.
“I feel like many athletes are working hard every day at their craft to get better and win, like coming back from a long road trip and getting home late and waking up early for class. You’re not getting the rest of your body,” Kohl said.
Allen said being in the right headspace physically and mentally is what athletes need in order to perform to the best of their ability.
McDonald agrees. In order to enjoy a sport, athletes must have the right mindset mentally.
“Good mental health lets athletes be able to separate the bad practices from their outside life,” McDonald said.
McDonald said athletes tend to let negatives spiral into their daily routines. It is important to find a way to separate the double lives, she said.
Allen has found a way to use his sports as way to create peace in his outside life.
“I can always just go to the gym, listen to music loud on the big speaker and get shots up and leave the outside world outside, he said. “It has helped me clear my head a lot in the past.”
Div. 1 athletes go through the daily challenge of their mental side. As a retired athlete, Kohl has used the strength he has gained in the real world.
“I am stronger for sure; it pushed me to become a strong-minded person. As far as pushing myself to limits in the classroom and on the court, I’ve had to learn time-management,” Kohl said.
Sports have become a lot more competitive and serious at the D1 level. Coaches’ intensity has pushed these athletes to be mentally tough, preparing them ready and stronger for the real world.
Ally Anderson felt if she was supported by her coaches and teammates she would have stayed longer.
“I not only want to play for myself but also the people who truly believe in me,” Anderson said.
Money, television rights and FCS football
How the 2021 conference realignment affected the trajectory of a new era in ACU athletics
BY KAUY OSTLIEN SPORTS WRITERBrian Davis franticly shuffled to contact his sources at the University of Texas. The UT athletics beat writer for the Austin-American Statesman had just heard a rumor that would change the face of college athletics.
“From my point of view initially, it was disbelief in the idea that this can’t be true; there’s no way this is true,” Davis said. Davis had just heard the rumor that The University of Texas and the University of Oklahoma were leaving the Big 12 and, in doing so, spark another conference realignment.
The 2021 conference realignment was a long time coming for NCAA. Texas and Oklahoma finally decided they had outgrown the Big 12, and they moved to the SEC. This transition sparked a chain of events that has boiled down to the WAC and left ACU athletics looking at its future.
Conference realignments have become a standard of NCAA Division I. The loyalty of conference rivalry games has gone away for television rights and conferences spanning the country and breaking geographic norms.
In the early days of collegiate athletics, conferences were geographic, with rivalries like Oklahoma and Nebraska in the Big Eight and Texas A&M versus Texas in the Southwest Conference. Now conferences are decided by the money and TV that comes with the position. So why do realignments happen?
Television contracts and the money that accompanies them are the driving force of many realignments. While large conferences benefit from these moves, smaller conferences see minimal gains from them while still being
affected by realignments.
In 1984, The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the NCAA’s TV plans violated the Sherman Antitrust Act by limiting the conferences and schools’ ability to negotiate their TV deals. This opened up the opportunity for schools to go to individual networks and create contracts to produce their athletics.
In what could be the most crucial TV deal in collegiate sports history, the SEC signed a deal with CBS to broadcast SEC athletics in 1995. Due partly to the SEC’s invite of the Southwest’s Arkansas Razorbacks to join their conference just four years earlier.
As the most prominent football program and athletic entity in the state of Arkansas, the addition of the Razorbacks added to a broad TV market that the SEC had created.
This move sparked the first significant conference realignment in 1996, and without any interference from NCAA, many more realignments came after.
So, what happened this time?
In late July, the Houston Chronicles Brent Zwerneman sounded the alarm that Texas and Oklahoma were looking to join the SEC. These rumors were found to be accurate by multiple sources, including Brian Davis.
“I started making calls and talking to my top people, and they basically admitted, ‘yeah, this has been in the works, but we didn’t expect it to get spoiled like this.’ Because they had a calculated plan that had been laid,” Davis said. The Big 12 left the American with just seven football programs in this move. In response, they added six programs from Conference USA, with the Sun Belt following suit, adding three uni-
versities from CUSA and FCS football powerhouse James Madison University.
Aggressive moves are the face of conference realignments. Some conferences thrive while others get gutted, creating a dog-eat-dog atmosphere and barren conferences like C-USA.
While this happens, it doesn’t mean that universities like doing this. Just ask Dallas Morning News college sportswriter Chuck Carlton.
Carlton has been writing about conference realignments for as long as they’ve been happening and has seen the pack-like mentality universities use when making these moves.
“Nobody particularly likes it, but also nobody wants to be left behind in a conference that seems to be shrinking,” Carlton said. “So, when that lifeboat arrives, yeah, all of the sudden, you’ve got schools jumping on board.”
With only five member schools remaining, C-USA extended that lifeboat to the WAC’s FCS football powerhouse Sam Houston and WAC loyalist New Mexico State Aggies.
While a football powerhouse like SHSU might be an easy choice, New Mexico State University had been a loyal member of the WAC since 2005. While their football program bounced around FBS conferences and ended up independent, they remained even after the WACs’ loss of FBS football sponsorship during the 2013 realignment.
In that 2013 realignment, the WAC lost seven universities to other conferences, including four other universities that left in 20112012, leaving the WAC with two FBS football programs forced to go independent. These were the Idaho Vandals and NMSU.
Idaho moved its football program to the Sun Belt in 2014, eventually moving football down to FCS and joining its other athletics in the Big Sky Conference.
NMSU football accompanied Idaho in the Sun Belt in 2014, and both were removed for geographical reasons in 2017, with NMSU becoming an Independent.
“So just having the ability to get back in a conference, especially one that’s just going to receive a portion of the distribution of the CFP.”
The College Football Playoff or CFP is the championship committee created to assign a national champion in Division I FBS football. The CFP pays out millions of dollars to conferences whose teams participate in post-season football, the CFP itself or a bowl game.
“Nobody wants to be left behind in a conference that seems to be shrinking. So, when that lifeboat arrives, you’ve got schools jumping on board.”
While the WAC did regain a football sponsorship, it was only for FCS leaving the Aggies independent.
Stephen Wagner, the NMSU beat writer for the Las Cruces SunNews, says life for Division I FBS independents is a struggle with universities not getting the financial benefits of being in a conference or having name recognition.
“Being an independent in football unless you’re Notre Dame or West Point really isn’t sustainable long term; the revenue simply isn’t just there,” Wagner said.
When programs aren’t affiliated with a conference, they miss out on large payoffs from the College Football Playoff. So, for a university that has been so loyal to one conference for so long, the move to C-USA comes with clear benefits for NMSU.
“New Mexico State financially just is a pretty poor athletic program that is currently operating on a multimillion-dollar budget deficit that’s supposed to be paid off in the latter half of this decade,” Wagner said.
While conferences gain revenue from the CFP, FBS independents like NMSU are left with minimal financial gain, setting a clear precedent for NMSU to leave its longtime home.
With its largest FCS football program and its oldest member departing, the WAC quickly responded to this loss.
First, with the addition of the University of the Incarnate Word, UT-Rio Grande Valley’s future football program and another non-football university in UT-Arlington. So, what could this mean for ACU?
Simply put, nothing, nothing yet. The current situation is that these moves affect ACU’s schedule quality, leaving the Wildcats and other WAC schools to hash out WACs’ future.
The Wildcats currently have no plans of moving; that’d be out of character. ACU has not historically been known for changing conferences, having a short track record of conference history, with most time spent in NCAA Division II’s Lone Star Conference.
In Division I, ACU spent nine seasons in the Southland before joining the Southlands’ mass exodus to the WAC in 2021. ACU is now in a conference that has shown, with its quick response to a realignment, that it wants to survive in all sports.
“I think about, ‘How does it value ACU?’” said Zack Lassiter, ACU vice president for athletics. “The WAC is the most difficult conference ACU has ever played in any sport. For us right now, we’re focused on Division I basketball, others, and then FCS football, and so for now, the WAC allows us to pursue those goals.” Lassiter was at Oregon State during the realignment and came into his ACU position after the dust settled. He has worked in athletics for over 20 years and said he isn’t shocked by anything with realignment.
“Certainly, every time you have one of the dominos falls, there’s going to be an impact, and that’s going to be felt all the way down,” Lassiter said. He also believes that even though these moves can cause instability for some Div. I conferences, it’s not the NCAA’s job to step in.
“It’s not their role, nor should it be their role,” Lassiter said. “Their job is to put on championships and to create rules and regulations, but the NCAA’s job is not to tell schools who they should or shouldn’t align with from a standpoint.”
So, while ACU looks set, for now, Chuck Carlton reminds everyone that college athletics is no longer as steady as it once was.
“Don’t be surprised by anything we might see in the future, and it’s going to be driven by money and TV contracts,” Carlton said.
(This article has been updated due to a misunderstanding involving Idaho’s relationship with the Sun Belt. It said that Idaho had moved its entire athletic program to the Sun Belt when, in reality, it was just football.)
CHUCK CARLTON DALLAS MORNING NEWS COLLEGE SPORTSWRITERBY KAUY OSTLIEN SPORTS WRITER
ACU baseball continued its historic season last week with a win against No. 9 Texas Tech in Lubbock and a sweep of Stephen F. Austin in Nacogdoches.
The Wildcats entered Lubbock on April 26, 19-20, having dropped two games to UTRGV that weekend. The Wildcats would put together a valiant effort to down the Red Raiders on
offense and defense.
The game versus Texas Tech started with a seven-spot top of the second for the Wildcats, led by an inside-the-park grand slam from junior outfielder Grayson Tatrow of Mansfield. This was the first grand slam this season for Tatrow, who made headlines across the college baseball world for his efforts.
The score was 7-2 after the second, with the Wild-
BASEBALL OVERCOMES TOP TEN TEAM TEXAS TECH
cats having to turn their efforts towards holding off a Red Raider team that ranks second in the country in runs scored. Sophomore left-handed pitcher Max Huffling would play hero for the Wildcats closing the game out with three innings of no-hit baseball striking out seven of nine batters faced.
The 8-5 win was the first for the Wildcats versus Texas Tech and the first for the Wildcats versus a top 10
opponent. This was the second win for the Wildcats versus a ranked opponent this season, the first time they have achieved that mark in history.
The series in Nacogdoches started with an 11-2 Wildcat win on the back of three RBI efforts from Tatrow and graduate infielder Hunter Gieser of Burleson. This would be the fourth win in a row for the Wildcats versus SFA, a streak they would not
lose during that series. Game two would be the same story for the Wildcats, with five different Wildcats driving in two runs apiece, ending in a 13-9. Game three also was a productive offensive outing for the Wildcats putting in ten runs to sweep the Lumberjacks.
One performance that stands out was junior left-handed pitcher Adam Stephenson of Southlake. Stephenson went 5.1 in-
nings with five runs and two hits Saturday, his third tworun outing in a row. This season, the Wildcats have three series remaining, heading to Stephenville this weekend to face the Tarleton Texans. The postseason for the Wildcats begins May 25 in the WAC conference tournament in Mesa, Ariz. We were unable to receive comments from head coach McCarty or any players at this time.
Golf shocks WAC rivals to takes home conference tournament title
BY JOSEPH CHAPA SPORTS WRITERACU’s first year in the Western Athletic Conference proved to be a success, as Coach Tom Shaw’s program won the conference championship on Sunday in Boulder City, Nevada.
This is the first conference title for the Wildcats in university history.
The Wildcats climbed back from third and second place on Friday and Saturday and came out on top on Sunday against one seed Sam Houston, and three seed GCU with a finishing score of 7-under.
“It’s an amazing feeling to be conference champs,” said graduate student Alex Clouse. “I think a key reason we won was the culture of grit and
resiliency we have established on our team. Each of us made clutch putts and hit great shots down the stretch to give ourselves a chance to win. We played and acted like a championship team and it was a lot of fun to be a part of.”
It was a total team effort for ACU to get the victory, but when it was time for a clutch play to be made, Clouse was able to seal the deal with the short putt after the Sam Houston bogey. Other early playmakers such as seniors Francisco Osio and Brian Choe, paved the way for early success with their confident swinging to put the team in title contention.
How ACU got to winning the championship was remarkably challenging, but
so was proving the doubters wrong, as the Wildcats were picked fifth in the pre-championship tournament polls.
“The biggest takeaway is that no matter how bad it looked, we never gave up,” said junior Zane Huesel.
“We started this semester finishing dead last. No one thought it was possible for us to win this week, but we proved everyone wrong. We have a strong team and our coaches are to thank for always pushing us.”
ACU’s season was filled with hills and valleys starting with the first spring tournament. The emphasis on accountability and self-improvement instilled by Shaw and his staff turned out to be a championship formula for
him and his team.
Every year the objective is to win it all, but especially this year as the team is filled with seniors that have left their mark on a program that has been searching for a special unit to bring home the first trophy.
“I was so thankful my family got to come out this week and win the championship with them,” Clouse said.
“My mom would send me texts of encouragement before each round I played this semester, and those loving cheerful texts go a long way with me.”
Shaw’s team is far from finished, and the Wildcats await to be seeded for their respected national championship rounds. No matter what hap-
pens in Scottsdale, Arizona, history has already been made at ACU.
“This may be our first conference championship, but it certainly won’t be our last,”
Huesel said. “We want to thank everyone who has supported us and helped us get to this point, and we look forward to the opportunities that are to come.”
Men’s tennis gains first WAC Confernce Championship in school history
BY KAYLEE KAHN ASSISTANT SPORTS DIRECTORThe men’s tennis team secured the victory over No. 1 Lamar in the Western Athletic Conference Championship Tournament to secure the university’s first WAC Championship.
Going into the tournament, the Wildcats had a 5-1 conference record, putting them in the second seed and bypassing the quarterfinal round. They met No. 3 New Mexico State in the semifinals, gaining the win, 4-2.
“Beating a team three times is hard,” head coach Juan Nunez said. “I think you know it’s what we talk about being resilient, being tough when it comes to a conference set and conference tournament setting.”
It’s about who is going to be able to take more punches and continue to fight and we were able to do just that.”
Playing the No. 1 doubles spot was Daniel Morozov, freshman from Joliet, Illinois, and Dario Kmet, sophomore from Sydney, Australia, who secured the win in a tiebreaker 7-6 (7-5).
In the No. 2 doubles spot were Jose Maria Rastrojo, freshman from
Seville, Spain, and Savan Chhabra, sophomore from Irving, who secured the first win of the day, 6-4. The No. 3 doubles went unfinished. With the Wildcats being up 2-0 after doubles, they had to continue to stay strong through singles.
Going into singles, No. 4 Chhabra and No. 5 Cesar Barranquero, freshman from Villaes -
cusa, Spain, won both of their matches in straight sets, putting ACU now up 4-0. No.1 Morozov and No. 2 Kmet both lost their matches in a close battle, giving New Mexico their first two wins.
In No. 3 singles, Tyler Stewart, freshman from Midland, was the last match to finish, splitting sets and moving into a
third set tiebreaker where he won 6-2, 3-6, 7-6 (75), securing the ultimate victory for ACU.
“I’ve had to put different lineups and different people in the lineup,” Nunez said.
“Everybody that we’ve put through has always been able to step up and get it done and today was no different, right, we got it done.”
Moving on to the championship matchup against No. 1 Lamar, the Wildcats were ready to give it their all.
With the same doubles lineup as the last dual, ACU secured each win one by one in a straightset. Heading into doubles, the Wildcats were up 3-0, reaching closer to a WAC title. Stewart lost his match
in straight sets, giving Lamar their first win. Kmet had a tough match, reaching a tiebreaker in the first set but gaining the win 7-6 (7-5), 6-3. Barranquero also reached a tiebreaker in the first set, giving him a competitive matchup, but he pulled through and got the win 7-6 (7-2), 6-3.
Finishing last, No. 6 Oswaldo Cano, senior from Zacatlan, Mexico, had two close sets but stayed strong and secured the win in straight sets, 7-5, 6-4.
“The guys were so excited on the way back home,” Nunez said. “It would be silent on the ride back and then all of a sudden it would just get loud and they would be passing the trophy and sign around again.”
“Someone would ask to play ‘We are the Champions’ again but they deserved it. They worked so hard and they deserve to celebrate as much as they want.”
The Wildcats gained the victory over Lamar 4-1, pulling an upset, giving them their first-ever WAC trophy.
The men prepare for the NCAA National Championships Tournament, where they will face Baylor on May 6 at 6 p.m.
BY TAELYN WILLIAMS | PHOTOGRAPHER