Muncie Times, Muncie, Delaware County, 18 May 1995 — Page 22

The Muncie Times, Thursday, 18 May 1995, Page 22

5-foot-6 Purdue hoops’ star graduates with honors

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — Although Timothy D. Ervin was a walk-on for Purdue University’s back-to-back Big Ten-champion men’s basketball team, he takes more pride in his offcourt achievements. He graduated in May with a 3.6 overall gradepoint average and a bachelor’s degree from Purdue’s School of management. “People see I’m only 5-foot-6 and all they want to talk about is my playing basketball in the Big Ten,”

Ervin says.

“What the fans don’t see is the academic side of things. I think it’s important for people, young people especially, to realize just how crucial an education is to your future. Sports are fun, and are important in their own way, but if you don’t get an education you could find yourself sitting on the bench.” Coach Gene Keady says: “As tri-captain, Tim was the spark plug that kept us focused and pushed us to be our best. He plays the same role in the classroom — always trying to give that extra 10 percent.” Although Ervin averaged 14 points and 10 assists as the most valuable player on his high school basketball team, those weren’t the numbers that brought him to Purdue. He was an honor student during every grading period at Chicago’s Provi-dence-St. Mel High School. His emphasis on academics there earned him valedictorian honors his senior year. He was awarded two academic scholarships, one from Heller Financial Corp., a financial services firm in Chicago where he interned, and one from Pur-

due. Looking back, Ervin says he’s lucky to be alive, let alone receiving a degree. “While I was growing

helped us realize that an influence in my life,” Ervin education was our ticket out says. “The BOP program of the inner city,” Ervin gave me a sense of family says. and belonging here on camPaul Adams, Ervin’s pus before I started taking

Timothy D. Ervin

up, I didn’t realize what a rough neighborhood I lived in,” he says. “I saw a little bit of everything, from drug deals to gang fights. I remember plenty of time when I could have been shot, or even killed.” Ervin grew up on the west side of Chicago in an area known as “K-Town,” because all of the street names began with a K. He and his younger sister, older brother and a cousin were raised by his mother and grandmother. His father died of cirrhosis of the liver when Ervin was a junior in high school. Although the family struggled, Ervin says his mother, who works for the Internal Revenue Service in Chicago, supported the family on her income. They never relied on public sup-

port.

“My mother taught us right from wrong and

high school principal, was another influential person who helped steer him in Purdue’s direction. “I planned all along to go to Georgetown and get an engineering degree,” Ervin says. “But Mr. Adams asked me if I had ever considered Purdue, because they have such a strong engineering reputation. Mr. Adams put me in touch with Dr. Cornell Bell, director of the Business Opportunities Program at Purdue. After Dr. Bell came to visit with me, I knew I was going to Purdue.” The Business Opportunities Program is a minority education program that brings students to campus the summer before their freshman year to start taking core classes and to get oriented to the surroundings and programs available to them. “Dr. Bell has been a big

classes.” Ervin says he chose management over engineering because he was impressed with the school’s focus on the technical side of management education. ‘The curriculum isn’t too far removed from the engineering program I was considering,” he says. “It’s a very rigorous, quantitatively uiicnted program that gives you the analytical skills you need in business. I also realized that if I wanted to own and operate any type of business, marketing and management skills would be an absolute necessity.” After graduation, Ervin will take a position in Heller Financial Corp.’s management division rotational program. He plans to pursue a master’s degree soon. ❖

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