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A RCH1VES f. S. U. LIBRARY .%e fftwida !/late O!hu~t'1l YatuIJldall1 ~ .A{nth" Jf/~ Yt:nriPed ff+e~t GRADUATION EXERCISES Westcott Auditorium Saturday Afternoon, August Ninth, Three o'Clock PRO CE S SI 0 N AL ____________ __ ______ ________ __________ __ ______________ __ ____ _______ _________ H andel Ramona Cruikshank Beard, Organist INVOCATION _______________ ________ __ ~ ________ ___ _______ __ __ __ ______________ EDWIN R. HARTZ Chaplain, The Florida State University SPECIAL MUSIC "The Shepherd on the Rock" ___________________ __ __________ __ ______ ____ 8chubert Edith Campbell Kaup. Soprano Harry Schmidt, Clarinet Robert Glotzbach, Piano AD D RE S S __ _____________ _______ ___ __ _____________________ ____ ___________ ___ __CHARLES S. D AVIS Dean of the Faculties, The Florida State University CONFERRING OF DEGREES _____ __________ __ __ Robert Manning Strozier President, The Florida State University BE NE D I CTI 0 N ____________ _________ ________________ _____ ____ ______________ ____________ MR. HARTZ RE CESS IONAL ___ __ __ ______ ___ ________ _____ ___________ __ -----___________ _______________ _____ 8 tan ley Mrs. Beard, Organist President and Mrs. Stozier invite the graduates, members of their families, and friends to a reception in the President's Home after the graduation exercises. ACADEMIC REGALIA Three academic degrees are generally recognized: the bachelor, the master, and the doctor. The name of each degree seems to have been determined by medieval university custom. The bachelor's degree, the baccalaureate, takes its name directly from the medieval practice of "bachelors" wearing a garland of bayberries. The master's degree was equivalent to a license to teach, and sometimes was followed by the express words Licentia Docendi. The doctor's degree was originally a title of respect, and a recognition of great learning. Today, the doctor's degree when earned by study, as is true of Doctor of Philosophy degree, indicates advanced study and independent research in a specialized field of learning, whereas honorary degrees are granted for meritorious service and for distinction in public or private endeavor. In the medieval university, students and teachers wore gowns indicating their status and scholastic achievement. In 1895, an intercollegiate commission drafted a uniform code for the use of academic caps, gowns, and hoods in the United States. This code is followed by The Florida State University and by approximately ninety-five per cent of all other colleges and universities. Those holding a bachelor's degree wear a gown of worsted material, fastened at the top, and distinguished by long pointed sleeves hanging nearly to the knees. The master's gown, worn open, is made either of worsted or silk, and has long closed sleeves with an arc of a circle appearing near the bottom and a slit for the arm near the middle of the sleeves. The doctor's gown, also worn open, is made of silk, faced with a broad strip of velvet, and has three bars of velvet on each sleeve. A hood may be worn with the gown and is made of the same material. The bachelor's hood is three feet long, with a two-inch strip of velvet; the master's hood is three and one-half feet long, faced with a three-inch strip of velvet; the doctor's hood is four feet long, faced with a five-inch strip of velvet. The color of the tassel or the velvet strip on the hood indicates the field of study in which the degree was earned or granted, as for example: Arts, WHITE; Science, YELLOW; Education, LIGHT BLUE; Music, PINK; Library School, LEMON YELLOW; Social Welfare, CITRON; Business, DRAB; Public Admin istration, PHILOSOPHY BLUE and WHITE; Journalism, BLACK and WHITE; Law, PURPLE; Divinity, SCARLET; Medicine, GREEN; Philosophy, BLUE. Each hood is also lined in silk with the colors of the institution which granted the degree, as for example, The Florida State University, garnet and gold; the University of Florida, orange and blue. The appropriate cap for all degrees is the familiar black "mortar board." A black tassel, or one of a color signifying the field of specialization, hanging to the left of the face, is appropriate for all degrees. Those holding a doctor's degree may wear a soft velvet cap of the color indicating their field of study, or with the "mort;1r board" may wear a tassel in whole or in part of gold thread. The order of procession has been fixed by custom, the position of greatest honor being at the end of the line. Therefore, after the graduates, the faculty marches according to rank; the instructors first, followed by the assistant professors, associate professors, full professors, with the deans, guests, speakers, and the president coming last. The recessional reverses the order of march. THE FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY School of Nursing BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN NURSING Mary Ann Blanton Loida R. Velazquez Richardson Ann Louise Linthicum Marilyn Willette Shealey Shirley Ann Miller Barbara Elnora Spencer Glenda Rae Moore School of Business BACHELOR OF SCIENCE Robert E. Abel David F . Lee Carl William Alderman, Jr. Richard L. Lehmann Frank Richard Arrendale* Robert D. MacLean, Jr. Robert Nelson Barnes J ames Edward Mahoney J ames Robert Bishop Harold Joseph Mecke Ruel L. Bradley, Jr. Joseph C. Miller, II'" Kenneth C. Brown William E. Mills, Jr. Julian Paul Bryant William L. Moody Merle Ray Bryant Charles Henry Paul Howard Thomas Bunge"'* Charles W. Pennington John Graydon Deal John Collier Perry Stanley Dobosz Travis Harvey Ross William Joseph Franklin William Thomas Ryan Ralph Howard Green Ann Marion Barnes Savige* Bruce A. Greene Roderick Williams Scudder Emmett C. Harrison Zack Henry Shelley, Jr. Murphy Roy Hinson, Jr. Richard A. Smith J ames Edwin Howe* Theodore C. Smith"'*'" John N. Ireland James Lee Thompson, Jr. James Oren Jackson, Jr.'" Thomas Calvin Tolbert Edward R. Johnson, Jr.'" Kenneth Alan White, Jr. Frank J. Kearney John R. Wood Edward Junior Keel BACHELOR OF ARTS Apolonio Barraza Rafael E steban Ramos School of Journalism BACHELOR OF SCIENCE Laurie Hobbs Hosford Madge S. Purvis Charles Raymond Hunt BACHELOR OF ARTS Fehmi Zeko *In Absentia **Phi Kappa Phi ***Earned Chartered Life Underwriter, professional Insurance designation, June 1958. The C.L.U. is the highest national attainment in the Life Insurance education field. School of Public Administration BACHELOR OF SCIENCE Charles P. Barrier Laurie H. Reams John Robert Crowell Richard J. Roemheld Robert Keating Fletcher David Samuel Troup LeRoy J. Jacoby School of Social Welfare BACHELOR OF SCIENCE John Walton Alford Mary Leslie Lanier Sandra Guest Cox Mary Claire McCall Martha Chandler Hartsfield BACHELOR OF ARTS Eleanor G. Woodward Library School BACHELOR OF ARTS Katharine Crommelin Leak School of Music BACHELOR OF MUSIC EDUCATION James Elwin Matson Doris Evelyn Pulliam BACHELOR OF MUSIC Richard Elder Adams Richard Stanley Sheffer* Patricia Anne Melton* School of Home Economics BACHELOR OF SCIENCE Evelyn Ruth Gay Carolyn Jane Wilkinson King Ruth Ann Ivey Mary Ann Rykard *In Absentia School of Education BACHELOR OF SCIENCE Jacqueline R. Andreen Patricia Helen Howell Minerva S. Andrews* Lacy R. Humphrey* Minnie Ola Arrant Hazel Cassels Johnson Ressie Paula Barker Willie Lee Jones Barbara Carlan Bass Juanita B. Mitchell Lawerence Edward Joseph Boyack Cornelia V. Lawson Clarence Robert Boynton* Rosemary G. Maddox Leah Ramey Bright James Franklin Matthews Sibbie Bell Brinson James Edward McFatter John Edward Bryan Evelyn DeFrehn Metzger Thelma Louise Williams Bullock Edmarie Muniz Patricia Ann Chapman Nella B. Nichols Edna Marvin Stanfill Clark John Kelly Padgett Kathleen Thomason Crawford Luis Alberto Paniza Leah Davis Carroll Emil Persbacker Imogene Edenfield E . Katherine Plaines Faye Augusta English George W. Plowman Rosemary D. Grow Violet Mize Richardson Eula Brannen Guess· Eleanor Lilly Rodgers Cora Thurman Hagan Barbara R. Shirley J ewell Langston Hagan Myrdell Stanfill Stanley Barbara Wilkerson Hale Barney W. Stoutamire Susie N. Hicks Melanie Ann Vollmerhausen Gwendolyn Leavins Holland Katharine Ritter Wallace Betty Napier Holloway Dorothy Jane Williams BACHELOR OF ARTS Linda Louise Harris Mabel Peaden Charles Lowell Mason College of Arts and Sciences BACHELOR OF SCIENCE Donald A Austin Alfred F. Dorner William Francis Austin Rodney S. Fields Muhsen Fuad Ayoubi David G. Fisher John Dudley Bacheller, Jr. Harry George France John Stanley Baldwin* Ernest William Gladstone, Jr. N encie Clementine Bevan Stephen E. Glazebrook, Jr. James G. Boucher Gail Frances Granger James D. Bradford James Lee Harrison Frederick G. Bradley William M. Holmes Jerry L. Brokaw Soong Bok Hong Thomas H. Broome, Jr. Byron K. Hopkins, Jr. * David Reynolds Byars Robert M. Jones David L. Cantor Vernon N. Luber David L. Cecil Eleanor B. Mauldin R. B. Chastain, Jr. Arminta D. McNeilan John Coubrough, Jr. Earl Louis Meeks Robert D. Cronin David S. Melluish Henry Edward Curci, Jr. James D. Moy Edmond Harvey Davis, Jr.* Lelyn W. Nybo *In Absentia **Phi Kappa Phi Francis B. Plencner Manas Thummanond Burton T. Poole Thomas J. Turpin, Jr. Harold Douglas Powell, Jr. Ralph E. Waterman, Jr. Frank N. Roig Eugene A. Welenteichick Arnold A. Schmucker** Collis Howard White David L. Segers James F. Whitehurst Robert Kauffman Sheffield Oscar Howell Williamson Donald W. Showerman, Jr. Robert Burr Winzurk Paul Eugene Smith Kiatibasn K. Xuto Eugene S. Soud Sugit Yensuang BACHELOR OF ARTS Geraldine Mary Baumgartner Jenis Calvin McMillan** Mary Ann Bryant Sharon Angela Black Moran** Lucille Yvonne Chao (Cum Laude) Donald Balton Clark** (Cum Laude) Maria A. Salgado** (Cum Laude) Ardith B. Cochran Jane King Salley Martin Perdue Crabtree Madison D. Short, Jr. Carolyn Brice Hull George A. Williams **Phi Kappa Phi GRADUATE SCHOOL MASTER OF MUSIC EDUCATION Charles Herman Anderson, B.S., Middle Tennessee State College (Murfreesboro, Tenn.) ___________________________________________________________________ ________ _____________ __ Beechgrove, Tenn. Music Thaddeus Stowe Grimes, Jr., B.M., .Wesleyan School of Fine Arts (Macon, Ga.) __ ____ ____ _____________ Camilla, Ga.