
Carrie Kliewer, 2006 CBA graduate
Corn, OKLA. — Corn Bible Academy students come from diverse backgrounds and when they leave CBA, they embark on many different paths to pursue their futures. Students who receive their education at the school may choose to take the traditional path and attend colleges and universities for degrees in education, medicine, business, or other disciplines, or students may choose to enter the workforce immediately and begin to make their mark on the world. Because of the 108 years that Corn Bible Academy has been in existence, there are CBA graduates all around the world in all types of vocations. The school has a reputation for sending out students who are ready to face the world and are ready for the rigorous, challenging courses they will face at the university level.
One such alumnus is Carrie Kliewer, from the CBA class of 2006. On May 15, at Oklahoma Panhandle State University’s commencement ceremony, Ms. Kliewer was honored with the J.R.P. Sewell award. Established in 1949, the award honors the memory of the late J.R.P. Sewell, a former Texas banker and civic leader who was instrumental in establishing and organizing the Panhandle Agricultural Institute, now known as Oklahoma Panhandle State University. The award promotes and encourages scholarship, leadership, and citizenship among OPSU students and the Sewell family gives each recipient an engraved gold watch.
Kliewer was selected from a competitive group of seniors and graduated with two degrees – a Bachelor of Science in Animal Science and a Bachelor of Science in Equine Science, and she earned magna cum laude academic honors in both. During the School of Agriculture’s annual banquet on Friday evening before Commencement, Carrie was presented as the Outstanding Animal Science Student and Outstanding Equine Science Student, receiving awards for both. She has been an active member of the Equestrian team, serving two years as co-captain. She also participated as a member of the OPSU cross country team and was selected OPSU Female Student Athlete of the Year in 2009. In addition, Carrie competed with OPSU’s programming team at Association of Information Technology Professionals (AITP) contests.
Carrie’s future plans are to work with horses in some aspect, and this will involve heading back to Hugoton, Kansas, where she will train horses for W Bar H Training Stable. “I need more experience in horse training and want to work under the leadership of the trainers at the stable,” remarked Carrie.
So in what way did CBA play a role in the success of this bright young woman from a small farm just outside Corn? “My parents have always been very supportive of me and made the financial sacrifice to send me to a private school. I really appreciated the fact that when I entered college, I was prepared for the amount of homework and studies that come with college life. I was also prepared to deal with understanding what people believe and why they believe what they do because of Mrs. Creed’s class on worldviews.”
Carrie Kliewer is just one of the students who represent Corn Bible Academy beyond the walls of the junior high/high school in rural southwest Oklahoma. No doubt there will be many more who graduate from the oldest Christian school west of the Mississippi, making their mark on an ever-changing world.
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Media Contact:
Rhonda Goering
580.343.2262