"Either we were going to break him out or they were going to bring the Skype in," Croft said with a laugh. So on April 28, Kielhorn put on his glasses, took out his textbook and gave his last lecture through a laptop that was perched on the dining table of his hospital bed. "I felt the students had paid for the courses and the least I could do was show up and teach," Kielhorn said. Kielhorn gave the engineering lecture in his hospital gown with IVs still attached to his body while about 15 students watched from a classroom at nearby LeTourneau University.
Kielhorn had been teaching three classes a week until his hospitalisation, but the day of his last lecture he was so weak he could barely speak. But Bellamy, who was in the room for her grandfather's last class, said the moment he began talking to his students his voice transformed. "It was perfect, it was strong, it was just unbelievable really," she said. "I had not seen him talk like that in a long time." Janet Ragland, director of university relations, was in the classroom with the students as they watched Kielhorn's lecture on a projection screen.
"His love for his students is very obvious," she said. "They seemed to appreciate his dedication." Ragland added that to her knowledge Kielhorn was the only teacher in the school's history to go 45 years without missing a day. Later today, the university will hold a ceremony for a newly renovated lab that will be named in Kielhorn's honour. His family plans to attend. Kielhorn has been moved out of the intensive care unit, but is still hospitalised and struggling with health issues.
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