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"Forrest Gump" Author Winston Groom
Speaks at UA Spring Commencement, Posthumous Degree Awarded to NFL
Great Derrick Thomas
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. Best-selling author Winston Groom spoke
Saturday to the 2,190 members of The University of Alabama's 2000
graduating class.
"Be bold, be brave, and take chances," Groom advised
graduates. "Be honest, be kind, be decent, be tough, and be
fair, and you'll be just fine."
Degrees were awarded during two University-wide commencement ceremonies
held at 9 a.m. and 1:30 p.m., respectively.
Saturday's ceremonies capped off the ninth straight year 4,000
or more students graduated from UA. Approximately 2,190 students
received May degrees, bringing the total number of graduates in
this academic year to more than 4,500. With this graduating class,
UA has awarded more than 174,000 degrees since its founding in 1831
as the state's first public university.
Groom, who spoke both Saturday morning and afternoon, received
an honorary doctorate of humane letters. He is best known for his
1986 novel "Forrest Gump" which received enthusiastic
reviews and was adapted into the Academy Award-winning 1994 motion
picture starring Tom Hanks and Sally Field.
Groom, a 1965 graduate of UA, told the audience of a trip back
to campus some 10 years ago. During that visit, while standing between
UA landmarks Denny Chimes and Gorgas Library, he was flooded with
memories of his days as a student, Groom recalled.
"It came to me then that this is where the most fragrant days
of our lives had been spent. I had never realized it until then."
"In subsequent years, I've been back to the University many
times, and I've made many friends."
In addition to "Forrest Gump," Groom is the author of
10 books, including "Gump & Co.," his sequel to "Forrest
Gump." He also wrote the acclaimed Vietnam War novel, "Better
Times Than These;" as well as the prize-winning, "As Summers
Die;" the Civil War history, "Shrouds of Glory;"
the Pulitzer Prize nominee, "Conversations with the Enemy;"
and, most recently, "Such a Pretty, Pretty Girl," a novel
of blackmail and suspense.
Groom is currently working on "The Crimson Tide: An Illustrated
History of Football at The University of Alabama," due out
this fall by The University of Alabama Press. The book covers the
illustrious history of UA's football from its first season in 1892
to the 1999 season.
Groom received his undergraduate degree in English from UA's College
of Arts & Sciences in 1965 and now serves on the Board of Visitors
for UA's College of Communication and Information Sciences.
He served as an officer in Vietnam with the 4th Infantry in 1966
and 1967. He spent the next eight years working as a reporter with
The Washington Star, honing his writing skills and earning Pulitzer
Prize nominations before resigning to write fiction.
During the afternoon ceremony, UA awarded former Crimson Tide and
NFL linebacker, the late Derrick Thomas, his bachelor's degree in
criminal justice posthumously. Accepting Thomas' degree (criminal
justice, social welfare) was his mother, Edith Morgan, and grandmother,
Annie Adams.
Thomas died Feb. 8 of complications resulting from a Jan. 23 automobile
accident that had left him paralyzed from the chest down.
Thomas was an All-American football player at Alabama and won the
1989 Butkus Award as the nation's top linebacker. He began his professional
career with the Kansas City Chiefs as the NFL's Rookie of the Year
in 1989. A nine-time Pro Bowl player, Thomas holds the NFL one-game
record of seven sacks and ranks ninth on the career sack list.
In mid-February, the Derrick Thomas Endowed Scholarship Fund was
established by an initial gift from Eliza and Hugh Culverhouse Jr.
of Miami. The scholarship will benefit students who are committed
to community service.
Other graduates receiving degrees included:
Rick Stephens -- Five years ago, Rick Stephens would have never
guessed he would be receiving his master's degree in social work
Saturday in front of thousands of people. But he did, and beside
him, also in cap and gown, was the one who helped him the most his
service dog, Chief. Stephens, a Vietnam veteran diagnosed with Post-traumatic
Stress Disorder, said Chief is with him 24 hours a day to help anticipate
possible anxiety attacks and to assist him through the day. "Chief
gave me the possibility of having a life. I wouldn't have been able
to accomplish this without him," said Stephens.
Derek P. Green Air Force pilot Derek P. Green picked up
his master's of science degree in aerospace engineering Saturday
on his first visit to the Tuscaloosa campus. Green, a 36-year-old
VIP airlift pilot at Andrews Air Force Base near Washington, D.C.,
earned his degree through a video-based distance learning program
at UA known as QUEST (Quality University Extended Site Telecourses).
QUEST provides professionals with a means of continuing their education
without quitting their jobs or following a regimented class schedule.
A 14-year military veteran, Green, in a newly acquired Air Force
position, will soon begin piloting an ASTRA business jet used to
fly various government and military dignitaries on time sensitive
Congressional or national defense matters.
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