BISHOP, MPUNZWANA TO SPEAK AT ABAC GRADUATION
DECEMBER 16
Congressman Sanford Bishop will be the
guest speaker at Abraham Baldwin
College’s graduation ceremony on
Dec. 16 at 6 p.m. in Gressette Gym. Pippa R. Mpunzwana, the reigning Ms. Abraham Baldwin 2004 and a
member of this semester’s graduating class, will also be a featured speaker.
Bishop is serving
his sixth term in the U.S. House of Representatives from Georgia’s
Second Congressional District. He was first elected to Congress in 1992 after
serving in the Georgia House of Representatives from 1977 - 1990 and the
Georgia Senate from 1991 - 92. Bishop serves on the House Appropriations
Committee.
A native of Mobile,
Ala., Bishop graduated from Morehouse
College in 1968 and from Emory
University Law School
in 1971 with a Doctor of Law Degree. He serves as Chairman of a Democratic
House task force on homeland security and the Working Group on Defense of
Physical Infrastructure and Natural Resources. Bishop also serves as Co-Chairman
of the Peanut Caucus, promoting sound policy for growers, agri-businesses, and
consumers. He is a member of several caucuses, including Congressional Black
Caucus, National Guard and Reserve Components Caucus, Law Enforcement Caucus,
National Security Caucus, Federal Government Service Caucus, as well as the
Council on Foreign Relations, a privately-funded research and educational
organization.
Bishop has held
leadership positions at the community, state, and national levels, including
serving as Georgia’s
representative on the Southern Growth Policies Board and on the Governor’s
Advisory Council on Drug Abuse.
A fashion
merchandising major from Harare, Zimbabwe,
Mpunzwana is the daughter of Philip and Chipo Mpunzwana.
At ABAC, she is
the Student Union President and a member of the Family and Consumer Sciences
Club (FACS), the Student Government Association (SGA), and Phi Theta Kappa (PTK).
Earlier this year, Mpunzwana was selected as Ms.
Baldwin 2002-03 in a campus-wide vote. She is also a writing tutor in the Academic
Assistance Center (AAC) and was a recipient of the GACS Scholarship and the SGA
Senator Scholarship Award.
To
add an historical touch to ABAC’s graduation ceremony, a 70-year-old diploma
will be presented. The 1933 diploma of Jack Benjamin Pittman was discovered in
the Registrar’s Office in Tift Hall while staff members were relocating to
their new office in the Student Center. The
diploma dates back to the time when ABAC was named Georgia State College for
Men, probably the last graduation before the college’s name was changed to Abraham
Baldwin Agricultural
College in 1933. Dr. Carl S.
Pittman, Jr. and Dr. William L. Bridges, nephews of Pittman, will accept the
diploma on behalf of their late uncle.
The
George P. Donaldson Award for outstanding scholarship
and leadership, the highest honor awarded to a graduating student from ABAC, will
also be presented by the ABAC Alumni Association. Donaldson served as president
of ABAC from 1947 - 61. The award includes a plaque and a check for $500, provided
with funding from the ABAC Ag Alumni Council.
Approximately 150 graduates
are expected to participate in the ceremony.
#
# #