Garcia Receives Algernon Sydney Sullivan and AU President?s Award
In a ceremony at the Auburn University Hotel and Dixon Conference Center, Caesar
Garcia, a senior in mechanical engineering, received the 2005 Algernon Sydney
Sullivan Award and the President's Award for engineering.
The Algernon Sydney Sullivan Awards were established in 1925 by the New York Southern Society in memory of Sullivan, a southerner and prominent New York lawyer, businessman, and philanthropist. The award is given each year to a graduating male and a graduating female student at select universities in recognition of scholarship, university involvement and community service.
Recipients must exhibit and support a spirit of love for and helpfulness to other men and women. Former recipients of the Algernon Sydney Sullivan National Award include environmentalist Kelly Mosley, historian Wayne Flynt, and astronaut and engineering alumnus T.K. Mattingly.
"The Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award is a great honor to me because of what it stands for," Garcia said of the announcement. "Because of my love for this university, representing Auburn is something of which I am extremely proud. Auburn provides a great education. But first it's also a great community that has wonderful traditions and an admirable spirit. I have the fondest memories of my time here at Auburn."
The Auburn University President's Award is given each year to a graduating student in recognition of those high qualities which "ennoble and beautify living and bind man to man in mutual love and helpfulness." Qualifications include characteristics of heart, mind, and conduct that evince a spirit of love for and helpfulness to other men and women.
Garcia has received many academic, athletic and civic awards. He was recently named to USA Today's 2005 All-USA College Academic Team, and in 2003 was named the outstanding mechanical engineering student of the year.
A championship diver and member of AU's varsity swimming and diving team, Garcia is the only man to ever win back-to-back NCAA titles on the platform and was named 2004 NCAA diver of the year.
An active member of the Catholic Student Organization, he also served as executive chair of the Cupola Engineering Society, a group of student ambassadors for the Samuel Ginn College of Engineering. Raised in Bogalusa, Louisiana, Garcia graduated with a 3.91 grade-point average in May and plans to attend Georgia Tech in the fall.
