[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 181 (Monday, December 14, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8632-S8633]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO DR. ROBERT E. WOLVERTON, SR.
Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, I am pleased to commend the
remarkable 66-year, and still counting, career of Mississippi State
University professor and lifelong educator, Robert E. ``Bob''
Wolverton, Sr., of Starkville, MS. His many years of hard work and
dedication continue to inspire the Mississippi State family to learn
more and achieve more for the betterment of our State and Nation. I
congratulate Dr. Wolverton for his important contributions to higher
education throughout his distinguished career. He and his wife, Peggy,
are well respected and admired throughout the university and community.
Mr. President, I ask that a December 1, 2015, article from
Mississippi State University, titled ``MSU honors Wolverton with naming
of new building rotunda,'' be printed in the Record.
The material follows:
[From the Mississippi State University,
Dec. 1, 2015]
MSU Honors Wolverton With Naming of New Building Rotunda
(By Harriet Laird)
Starkville, MS.--An accomplished professor and lifelong
educator whose career spans more than six decades will be
honored by Mississippi State with the naming of a select area
in one of the university's newest and largest buildings.
Robert E. ``Bob'' Wolverton Sr., former vice president for
academic affairs and longtime professor of classics, will see
his name etched into the rotunda of MSU's new classroom
building, a 150,000 square foot structure currently under
construction in the heart of the 137-year-old campus. The
honor comes while the 90-year-old educator is still active as
a member of the MSU faculty.
Seeing more than 2,000 students walk each day through the
facility's rotunda once construction is completed in the fall
of 2016, this naming reflects Wolverton's dedication to
educating students for 66 years, 38 of those at Mississippi
State.
``Simply put, Dr. Wolverton is a venerable institution at
our university,'' said MSU President Mark E. Keenum. ``At an
age where most professors have long since retired, Dr.
Wolverton continues to inspire his students, his colleagues,
and this administration through his true wisdom and the
passion he still has for the subject matter he imparts. What
a fitting honor that the rotunda in one of our soon-to-be
iconic buildings will forever bear his name.''
Wolverton began his tenure at MSU in 1977 when he became
the university's vice president of academic affairs, having
served previously as president for the College of Mount St.
Joseph in Ohio. In 1986, he began teaching in the Department
of Foreign Languages, now the Department of Classical and
Modern Languages and Literatures, serving as the unit's head
from 1991-1996.
A two-term chair of MSU's Robert Holland Faculty Senate, he
last held the title eight years ago at age 82, with many
regarding him as the ``elder statesman'' in such a position
at any college or university.
Also an MSU John Grisham Master Teacher, the highest honor
given for excellence in classroom instruction, Wolverton has
been honored with the MSU Alumni Association Faculty
Achievement Award and College of Arts and Sciences Humanist
Award.
``All of us admire Bob Wolverton for his unwavering
commitment to excellence in
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teaching and to the students of MSU,'' said Jerry Gilbert,
MSU provost and executive vice president. ``Through his many
years of service, he has established himself as a tremendous
asset to the university. I am so proud that we have chosen to
recognize Bob by naming the rotunda in his honor.''
Wolverton holds a bachelor's degree in classics from
Hanover (Indiana) College, a master's from the University of
Michigan, and a doctorate from the University of North
Carolina. He has been on the faculty at the University of
Georgia, and Tufts and Florida State universities.
Active in the community, he was honored in 2001 as one of
Mississippi's ``Ageless Heroes'' by Blue Cross and Blue
Shield of Mississippi. He has served as a board member for
the Starkville Friends of the Library, president of the
Starkville-MSU Symphony Association, and was a founding
member of the Starkville Community Theatre.
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