Commencement Exercises

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Commencement Exercises One Hundred and Twenty-Fifth Commencement Exercises OFFICIAL JUNE EXERCISES THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME NoTRE DAME, INDIANA THE GRADUATE ScHooL THE LAw ScHOOL THE CoLLEGE oF ARTs AND LETTERS THE CoLLEGE OF ScmNcE THE CoLLEGE OF ENGINEERING The Graduate and Undergraduate Divisions of · THE CoLLEGE OF BusiNEss ADMINISTRATION Athletic and Convocation Center At 2:00 p.m. (Eastern Daylight Time)· Sunday, June 7, 1970 PROGRAM oeoo PRocESSIONAL NATIONAL ANTHEM- ORCHESTRA AND AuDIENCE CITATIONS FOR HoNoRARY DEGREES by the Reverend Ferdinand L. Brown, C.S.C., Ph.D. Acting Vice-President of Academic Affairs THE CoNFERRING oF HoNORARY DEGREEs by the Reverend Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., S.T.D. President of the University PRESENTATION OF CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES by the Reverend Paul E. Beichner, C.S.C., Ph.D. Dean of the Graduate School by William B. Lawless, LL.M. Dean of the Law School by Frederick J. Crosson, Ph.D. Dean of the College of Arts and Letters by Bernard Waldman, Ph.D. Dean of the College of Science by Joseph C. Hogan, Ph.D. Dean of the College of Engineering by Thomas T. Murphy, M.C.S. Dean of the College of Business Administration THE CONFERRING OF DEGREES by the Reverend Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., S.T.D. President of the University PREsENTATION OF THE FAcULTY AwARD PRESENTATION OF THE PROFESSOR THOMAS MADDEN FAcULTY AwARD CoMMENCEMENT AnDREss by Honorable James E. Allen, Jr. U. S. Commissioner of Education Washington, D. C. SENIOR CLAss PRESIDENT's ADDREss by John F. Crawford CoNCLUDING REMARKs by the Reverend Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., S.T.D. THE BLESSING by His Eminence John Cardinal Willebrands Rome, Italy NoTRE DAME, OuR MoTHER-ORcHESTRA AND AuDIENCE (Words are on inside back cover.) REcESSIONAL OF THE PLATFORM PARTY Degrees Conferred The· University of Notre Dame announces the conferring of The Degree of Doctor of Laws, honoris causa on: His Eminence John Cardinal Willebrands, Rome, Italy Honorable James E. Allen, Jr., Washington, D. C. Dr. John Bardeen, Urbana, Illinois Jerome J. Crowley, Jr., South Bend, Indiana Dr. John H. Franklin, Chicago, Illinois Dr. John A. Hannah, Washington,.D. C. Most Reverend Denis E. Hurley, Durban, South Africa Roger P. Peters, Notre Dame, Indiana Joseph C. Wilson, Rochester, New York The Degree of. Doctor of Science on: Dr. Robert R. Wilson, Batavia, Illinois IN THE GRADUATE SCHOOL The University of Notre Dame confers the following degrees - in course: The Degree of Doctor of Philosophy on: William R. Aho, Mishawaka, Indiana . B.S., State Teachers College, Fitchburg, Massachusetts, 1958; M.A., Univer­ sity of Notre Dame, 1964. Major subject: Sociology and Anthropology. Disser­ tation: The Orientations of Medical Students to Osteopathic Medicine. Hiroshi Akita, Tokyo, Japan B.S., Yokohama National University, 1963; M.S., University of Notre Dame, 1968. Major subject: Metallurgical Engineering and Materials Science. Disser­ tation: Dislocation Damping in Copper Single Crystah of Controlled Sub­ structure. Sister Eileen Allison, Sisters of St. Joseph, Pembroke, Ontario, Canada B.A., University of Ottawa, 1950; M.A., University of Notre Dame, 1966. Major subject: English. Dissertation: Robert Frost's Poetic Treatment of Human Relationships. tBrother Henry G. Altmiller, Congregation of Holy Cross, Austin, Texas B.S., University of Notre Dame, 1964. Major subject: Chemistry. Disserta­ tion: The Mechanisms of Radiation- and Photo-Induced Isomerizations and the Determination of Triplet Yields in '¥-Irradiation of Various Organic Solvents. t Luis Enrique Amaya I., Bogota, Colombia B.S.C.E., University of Notre Dame, 1960; M.S.C.E., ibid., 1962. Major sub­ ject: Civil Engineering. Dissertation: The Elastic Stability of Circular Cylin­ drical Shells under External Pressure. Michael Joseph Amoruso, Flushing, New York B.S., College of the Holy Cross, 1960; A.M., Columbia University, 1963. Major subject: Physics. Dissertation: Atomic Hyperfine Interactions in Alkali-Like and Halogen-Like Atoms. · t Febru~ graduates. 3 Richard H. Berquist, St. Paul, Minnesota B.A., College of St. Thomas (Minnesota}, 1954; Ph.L., Laval University,,1956. Major subject: Philosophy. Dissertation: The Idea of The Natural Law m the Writings of Giorgio Del Vecchio. John William Berry, Ottawa, Canada B.S., University of Toronto, 1963; M.A., Queen's University (Canada}, 1965. Major subject: Mathematics. Dissertation: Almost Recursively Enumerable Sets. tWilliam Charles Binning, Stamford, Connecticut B.A., St. Anselm's College, 1966. Major subject: Government and International Studies. Dissertation: The Role of the Export-Import Bank in Inter-American Affairs. Robert P. Boner, Parsons, Kansas A.B., Rockhurst College, 1963; M.A., Indiana University, 1966. Major subject: Mathematics. Dissertation: Maximal Affine Subschemes. Dennis Bonnette, Youngstown, New York A.B., University of Detroit, 1960; M.A., University of Notre Dame, 1962. Major subject: Philosophy. Dissertation: St. Thomas on: "The Per Accidens Necessarily Implies The Per Se.'' Randolph Donald Brunell, Niles, Michigan B.S.A.E., University o£ Notre Dame, 1966; M.S.A.E., ibid., 1967. Major subject: Aerospace Engineering. Dissertation: Numerical Solutions for Com­ pressible Flow in Planar Converging-Diverging Ducts. Christopher Leon Caenepeel, South Bend, Indiana B.S.Ch.Eg., University of Notre Dame, 1964; M.S.Ch.Eg., ibid., 1965. Major subject: Chemical Engineering. Dissertation: The Effect of Surface Active Agents on Mass Transfer During Drop Formation and Drop Coalescence. James E. Cavanaugh, South Bend, Indiana B.S., Niagara University, 1965. Major subject: Chemistry. Dissertation: The Alkylation of Aminobenzoic Acids with Tertiary Propargylic Chlorides. t Paul Leo Chabot, Brockton, Massachusetts B.S., Boston College, 1965. Major subject: Mathematics. Dissertation: Sylow 2-Groups with Cyclic Commutator Groups. tHugh Paul Chalfant, South Bend, Indiana B.A., College of Wooster, 1951; B.D., McCormick Theological Seminary, 1954; M.S., Oklahoma State University, 1966. Major subject: Sociology and Anthro­ pology. Dissertation: Illegitimate Illness and the Sick Role: Social Workers and Alcoholism. tChie Ken Chang, Taichung, Taiwan B.S., National Taiwan University, 1958. Major subject: Chemistry. Disserta­ tion: Spectroscopic Studies of Molecular Structure and Internal Rotation. tThomas Arthur Clare, New York, New York B.S.A.E., University of Notre Dame, 1966; M.S.A.E., ibid., 1967. Major sub­ ject: Aerospace Engineering. Dissertation: Non-Linear Resonance Instability in the Flight Dynamics of Missiles. Daniel J. Costello, Junior, Seattle, Washington B.S.E.E., Seattle University, 1964; M.S.E.E., University o£ Notre Dame, 1966. Major subject: Electrical Engineering. Dissertation: Construction of Convolu­ tional Codes for Sequential Decoding. James Joseph Countryman, New Carlisle, Indiana B.S., Wisconsin State College, 1959; M.S., University of Notre Dame, 1963. Major subject: Mathematics. Dissertation: On Commutation Semigroups o£ pq Groups. Sister Eva Mary Cox, Sisters of St. Francis, Philadelphia Foundation, Dublin, Ireland B.A., San Diego College for Women, 1962; M.A., Gonzaga University, 1967. Major subject: English. Dissertation: George Washington Cable's Handling of the Racial Problem in His Fiction. 4 tMartin J. Daley, Hartford, Connecticut B.S.A.E., University of Notre Dame, 1961; M.S.A.E., ibid., 1963. Major sub­ ject: Mechanical Engineering. Dissertation: Development of a Cryogenic Support for Aerodynamic Measurements. tWilliam C. Damert, Chicago, Illinois B.S., DePaul University, 1963. Major subject: Physics. Dissertation: Sym­ metry Breaking in Static Models. tKennard Michael Davies, Los Angeles, California B.S., Loyola University of Los Angeles, 1963. Major subject: Physics. Disserta­ tion: Interphase Surfaces. Leo Paul S. de Alvarez, Irving, Texas B.A., Stanford University, 1957. Major subject: Government and Interna­ tional Studies. Dissertation: The Romantic Imperialism of Benjamin Disraeli. tBrian Joseph Deery, Norwalk, Connecticut B.A., LaSalle College, 1964. Major subject: Physics. Dissertation: A Study of the Reaction 7r + d ~ d 7r + 7r + 7r - at 5.4 GeV/C, and Application of the Veneziano Model to the 3-71" System. Sister Mary Rachel (Carrin) Dunne, Sisters of St. Mary of Namur, Fort Worth, Texas B.A., University of St. Thomas (Texas), 1955; M.A., University of Notre Dame, 1965. Major subject: Philosophy. Dissertation: Kierkegaard and So­ cratic Ignorance: A Study of the Task of a Philosopher in Relation to Christianity. Alexander Ronald Dzierba, Buffalo, New York B.S., Canisius College, 1964. Major subject: Physics. Dissertation: A Study of Neutral. Boson Production in rP Interactions at 8 GeV jc. Ronald J. Foust, Manchester, Iowa B.S., Loras College, 1962. Major subject: Physics. Dissertation: Nuclear Resonance Fluorescence in P-31 and Mn-55. Richard William Friday, Rochester, New York B.S., St. John Fisher College, 1965. Major subject: Chemistry. Dissertation: Studies in Quantum Chemistry: Evaluation of Electron Repulsion Integrals, Hermite Gaussian Orbitals, and Comparative One-Center Calculations. tFrancis Chun-Wa Fung, Shanghai, China B.S.E., Brown University, 1960; M.S.E., Johns Hopkins University, 1962. Major subject: Mechanical Engineering. Dissertation: Vanishing Plate in Blasius Flow. Edward Joseph Gallagher, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania B.S., St. Joseph's College (Pennsylvania), 1964. Major subject: English. Di!­ sertation: A Critical Study of Edward Johnson's Wonder-Working Providenc11 of Sions Saviour in New England. Philip Francis
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