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ORDER OF EVENTS INVOCATION Eugene Samuel Ashton, University Chaplain A THEM The Star Spangled Banner ADDRESS Paul A. Freund CO 1FERRING OF HONORARY DEGREES CONFERRING OF DEGREES IN COURSE College of Liberal Arts Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Jackson College Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy College of Engineering School of Medicine College of Special Studies School of Dental Medicine Crane Theological School AN1'HEM Dear Alma Mater, Jane Eichkern, J'71 BE EDICTION HONORARY DEGREE RECIPIENTS KENNETH B. CLARK ( L.H .D.) Psychologist. President of the Metropol itan Applied Research Center, Inc., and professor of psychology, City College of the City University of New York; member, New York State Board of Regents. B.A. and M.A., Howard University, 1935 and 1936; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1940. A member of Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi, he holds four honorary degrees. He has taught at Howard University, Hampton Institute, Queens College, and has been a visiting professor at Columbia University, the University of California at Berkeley, and Harvard University. Formerly president of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues and board member of the American Psychological Association. he is a trustee of Howard University and of Antioch College. He received the Spingarn Medal from the NAACP in I 961, and the Kurt Lewin Memorial Award in 1966. He was appointed by President Lyndon B. Johnson to the Council for the Humanities in 1966. One of his several books, Dark Ghello: Dilemmas of Social Power, received the Sidney Hillman Prize, and his work on the effect of segrega ti on on children was cited by the U.S. Supreme Court in its 1954 decision on school desegregation. LEE A . DuBRIDGE (Sc.D.) Physicist. Science adviser to President Richard M. Nixon. A.B. Cornell College ( Iowa), 1922; A .M., Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, 1924 and 1926; recipient of 25 honorary degrees. He has taught at the University of Wisconsin. the California Institute of Technology, Washington University (Missouri) and the University of Rochester, where he was professor of physics, chairman of the department, and dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. During World War 11 he directed the Radiation Laboratory (radar research) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. From 1946 to 1968 he was the president of California Institute of Technology. Formerly vice president and later president of the American Physical Society, he is also a member of the American Philosophical Society; the National Academy of Sciences; and the Royal Society of Arts, London. England; Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi and Eta Kappa Nu. He was awarded the King's Medal for Service in the Cause of Freedom (British), 1946; United States Medal for Merit, 1948; Arthur Noble Award (City of Pasadena). 1961 ; and the Honorary Fellowship and Gold Medal, American College of Cardiology, 1966. PAUL A. FREUND (LL.D.) Lawyer and author. Carl M. Loeb University Professor at Harvard University. A.B., Washington University; LL.B. and S.J.D., Harvard Law School. He was a law clerk to Justice Louis D. Brandeis following graduation. He served seven years in the Solicitor General's Office in Washington. In 1957-1958 he was Pitt Professor of American History and Institutions at Cambridge University. H e is the author of The Supreme Court of the United States. On Law and Justice; and editor in chief of a multi-volume history of the Supreme Court, now in preparation, co mmissioned by Congress as a memorial to Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes. He was president of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1964-1967. He is a trustee of Washington University and a director and former vice president, Salzburg Seminar in American Studies. He is a mc111ber of the American Philosophical Society, the Commission on Electoral College Reform, and the American Bar Association; and a Council member of the American Law Institute. Senior Fellow of the Society of Fellows, Harvard University, he holds eight honorary degrees. HOWARD NEMEROV (Litt.D.) Poet, novelist, essayist and critic. Professor of English, Brandeis University. B.A., Harvard College, 1941. Formerly on the faculty of Bennington College, the University of Minnesota and Hollins College, he was also a visiting lecturer at the University of Minnesota and a writer in residence at Hollins College. In I 960 he lectured at Salzburg Seminar in American Studies and from 1946--1952 was associate editor of Furioso. A consultant in poetry for the Library of Congress from 1963-1964, he was awarded the Kenyon Review Fellowship in Fiction in I 965; he is also the recipient of a grant from the National Institute and Academy. Some of his numerous books and articles of criticism are: verse, The Image and th e Law, Guide to the Ruins, The Salt Garden, Mirrors and Windows, New and Selected Poems, and The Next Room of the Dream and two plays in verse. His fiction includes The Melodramatists, Federigo, or the Power of Love, The Homecoming Game and A Commodit)' of Dreams and Other Stories. His critical work, Poetry and Fiction: Essm·s, was published in 1963, and Journal of the Fictive Life in 1965. JOSEPH SILVERSTEIN (D.Mus.) Violin soloist and concertmaster, Boston Symphony Orchestra. Faculty member of the New England Conservatory and chairman of the faculty of the Berkshire Music Center. He studied at the Curtis lnstitule in Philadelphia, and later with Joseph Gingold and Mischa Mischakoff. Winner in the 1959 Queen Elisabeth of Belgium International Competition, a year later he won the Naumberg Foundation Award. He played in the orchestras of Houston, Denver and Philadelphia before joining the Boston Symphony Orchestra in I 955, the youngest member at that time. Internationally known as soloist and as first violin of the Boston Symphony Chamber Players, last year he led their tour to the Soviet Union, Germany and England, and earlier this year led a tour to the Virgin Islands and Florida. First violinist of the [;oston Symphony String Trio, he is an organizer of the Boston Symphony Chamber Players. CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES (Authority for the bestowal of degrees is given for the Trustees of Tufts College by Robert William Meserve, Chairman of the Board. Candidates for honorary degrees are presented to President Burton Crosby Hallo1l'ell by Professor Seymour Oliver Simches, Presenter.) HONORARY Paul A. Freund Muy 31, 1969 Doctor of Laws Kenneth B. Clark Howard Nemerov Doctor of Humane Letters Doctor of Letters Lee A. DuBridge Joseph Silverstein Doctor of Science Doctor of Music (Recommendations of the Faculties for the bestowal of degrees are conveyed to the Board of Trustees and the President by Provost Albert Daniel Ullman.) COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS (Candidates are presented by Dean Charles Edward Stearns) October 26, 1968 BACHELOR OF SCIENCE Ronald Lester Gerson BACHELOR OF ARTS (magna cum Laude) Paul Edmond Janson Robert Andrew Anderson, Jr. (summa cum Laude) Harold Nelson Bornstein Robert Blanchard MacDonald Owen Stuart Gallagher George Herbert Nahas Billy Lee Havron Harlan Neil Polishook Richard Paul Jaffe Donald Edward Trites, Jr. Daniel Francis O'Leary, Jr. Thomas Ernest Stevens Karl David Westphalen May 31, 1969 BACHELOR OF ARTS HONORS PROGRAM BACHELOR OF SCIENCE Charles Steven Mayer Kenney Bolster Bassett (magna cum Laude in artihus Francis Patrick Brown picturae et imaginum) David Hambleton Ellis David Harry Gold George Ronald Griffiths (summa cum Laude in sc:ientia William Stuart Hughes remm publicamm) Gary William Sweeney Richard John Scaldini David Glenn Williams (magna cum Laude in studiis Frank Steven Zungolo linguae Ga/licae) Michael Gordon Schatzberg (cum laude in scientia rerum publicarum) April 12, 1969 BACHELOR OF ARTS Clifford Frazer Abbott BACHELOR OF ARTS (magna cum Laude, Classical Theron Jon Chun Studies) Allan Walter Cortese Richard Jay Adler Roger Williams Dewey (rnm laude, English) Robert Farrell Ganley Kevin Joseph Ahern Robert John Hendrix William Horn Ainslie, Jr. Joel Mandus Johnson, III Lee Paul Alfieri Victor Emile King Jack Harris Alkon David George Pond Adrian John Anders 3 Vincent Thomas Antonelli Bruce Lee Dockstader Andrew William Apter Richard Worthen Dow, Jr. Richard Allan Arena John Walter Dunbar (cum Laude, English) Glenn Russell Durfee David Richard Arrajj Hubert Potter Earle, Jr. William Marshall Arrand Richard Ingraham Ely Ronald Asadour Arslanian (cum La11de, English) (cum Laude, Philosophy) Emerson William Emrich, Jr. Paul Steven Arthur Alan Andrew Ewald (cum Laude, English) Austin Hunt Farrar Robert Charles Ballard Robert Lewis Feldman Stuart Ellis Bannett Peter Maxwell Fertig (summa cum Laude) Richard Jay Fingeroth John Edward Barry, Jr. (summa c11m Laude) (magna cum Laude, French) James John Fiorentini Peter Sears Bartlett Kevin Gerard Ford Ronald James Beachy Robert Paul Ford (magna cum laude, English) Peter Norman Gardner Robert Jack Benediot Stephen Elias Gellis Stanley Taylor Bennett, II (cum Laude, Biology) Peter Lee Beren Thomas Charles Golart (magna cum Laude, English; Robert Knight Gordon cum Laude, Spanish) Thomas Richard Gorman Richard Ira Bier Robert Lester Gross Robert Ira Blecker (s11mma cum laude) (magna cum laude, Creative Writ Thomas John Gusek ing and Play Writing) Thomas Richard Hadges (cum !aude, Ec0nomics) (magna cum Laude, Biology) (cum laude, Political Science) Thomas S. Hansen David Allen Bower (c11m laude, German) Jack Gordon Boyle Conrad Ben Harding Kirk Leroy Bridgman Franklin Vernon Hardy Gerard Roland Brodeur James Carlton Harriman Dana Martin Brownstein Alan Bridges Hart Robert Harold Burger (magna cum Laude, Music; (magna cum Laude, Russian) cum laude, English) Dennis Peter Burgess Victor Norman Harwood Laird Peter Cagan David Alan Hastings (magna cum laude, History) Charles Deane Havens John Hunter Campbell Benjamin Bryant Hawley Carleton C. Cappuccino Robert Charles Healey (magna rnm iaude, Biology) ( cum la11de, Education; Sanders Mark Chattman cum laude, Drama) ( cum Laude, Political Science) William Charles Heck James Alan Cherney (magna cum Laude, Political (cum /aude.