'There's More to Achieve,' Obama Tells ASU Graduates

Crowd cheers president's message about continuing to learn.

ByABC News
May 14, 2009, 8:36 AM

TEMPE, Ariz., May 14, 2009 -- Despite the melting heat, heightened security and hours of waiting, more than 9,000 Arizona State University students roared their approval of President Barack Obama's message that "there's always more to do, more to learn, more to achieve."

"It's very inspiring as a young African-American woman," said Tingirt Alemavehu, 24, an Ethiopian student who received her masters in accounting. "I know now that I don't have any limits. I can do whatever I want."

He may not have gotten an honorary degree, but the president turned what some perceived as a snub by the university into a commencement theme.

"I come here not to dispute the suggestion that I haven't yet achieved enough in my life," Obama said. "I come to embrace it; to heartily concur; to affirm that one's title, even a title like president, says very little about how well one's life has been led."

The president warned the graduates that "you too cannot rest on your laurels. Your body of work is yet to come." He urged them "to step up. We need your daring and your enthusiasm and your energy."Instead of a degree, ASU named a new scholarship program after the president, in which five disadvantaged high school students would be awarded up to $17,000 annually to pay for tuition, books, room and board.

Obama said the program was a core mission for both the university and his presidency, and hoped that it would serve as a model for colleges across the country.

Eva Martinez, whose son Louie Martinez received his masters in business, called Obama's appearance "mind-blowing."

"Me and my son were hardcore Republicans," Martinez added, "but when we first heard him speak and got to know him more, the more we loved him."

Not everyone was roused by the president's arrival. A small group of antiwar activists hoisting signs reading "Peace Is Priceless" stood outside the Sun Devil Stadium. Their presence, however, did not cause any disruption to an event that opened with an aging Alice Cooper's raucous 1972 rock anthem "School's Out."