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TheJohns Hopkins University Conferring of Degrees At the Close of the 1 14th Academic Year May 24, 1990 Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation http://archive.org/details/commencement1990 Contents Order of Procession 1 Order of Events 2 Honorary Degree Citations 9 Academic Regalia 16 Awards 18 Honor Societies 22 Student Honors 25 Degree Candidates 28 Order of Procession MARSHALS Stephen R. Anderson Marion C. Panyan Andrew S. Douglas Peter B. Petersen Elliott W. Galkin Edward Scheinerman Grace E. Goodell Henry M. Seidel Sharon S. Krag Stella Shiber Bonnie J. Lake Susan Wolf Bruce D. Marsh Eric D. Young THE GRADUATES MARSHALS Jerome Kruger Dean W. Robinson THE FACULTIES to MARSHALS Frederic Davidson AJ.R. Russell-Wood THE DEANS OFFICERS OF THE UNIVERSITY THE TRUSTEES CHIEF MARSHAL Owen M. Phillips THE PRESIDENT OF THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY ALUMNI COUNCIL THE CHAPLAINS THE PRESENTERS OF THE HONORARY DEGREE CANDIDATES THE HONORARY DEGREE CANDIDATES THE INTERIM PROVOST OF THE UNIVERSITY THE GOVERNOR OF THE STATE OF MARYLAND THE CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY - /- Order ofEvents Si even Muller President of the University, presiding * • 4 PRELUDE La Mourisque Tielman Susato (? -1561) Basse Dance Tielman Susato (? -1561) Two Ayres for Cornetts and Sagbuts JohnAdson (?- 1640) Sonata No. 22 Johann Pezel (1639-1694) » PROCESSIONAL The audience is requested to stand as the Academic Procession moves into the area and to remain standing after the Invocation. FESTIVAL MARCHES THE PRESIDENTS PROCESSION Fanfare Walter Piston (1894-1976) Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1 Sir Edward Elgar (1857-1934) » INVOCATION Gretchen van Utt Chaplain TheJohns Hopkins University * THE NATIONAL ANTHEM * GREETINGS Morris W. Offit Chairman of the Board of Trustees GREETINGS Wendell Smith President, TheJohns Hopkins University Alumni Council CONFERRING OF HONORARY DEGREES Douglass Cater Willard Hackerman Claudia Taylor Johnson D. Mead Johnson Robert H. Levi Robert Shaw Garry B. Trudeau David J. Weatherall Sol M. Linowitz **• ADDRESS Sol M. Linowitz Former Ambassador to The Organization ofAmerican States, and to The Middle East Peace Negotiations » - 3- THE FESTIVAL BRASS AND THE JOHNS HOPKINS MEDICAL INSTITUTIONS CHORUS Ellery B. Woodworth, Conducting Give Ear Ye Children To My Law William Tansur (1700-1783) Conferring ofDegrees on Candidates BACHELORS OF ARTS Presented by Lloyd Armstrong, Jr. Dean, School ofArts and Sciences • A A A BACHELORS OF SCIENCE IN BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING BACHELORS OF SCIENCE IN CHEMICAL ENGINEERING BACHELORS OF SCIENCE IN CIVIL ENGINEERING BACHELORS OF SCIENCE IN COMPUTER SCIENCE BACHELORS OF SCIENCE IN ELECTRICAL AND COMPUTER ENGINEERING BACHELORS OF SCIENCE IN ENGINEERING MECHANICS BACHELORS OF SCIENCE IN MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING BACHELORS OF SCIENCE IN MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES BACHELORS OF ARTS BACHELORS OF CIVIL ENGINEERING BACHELORS OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING BACHELORS OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Presented by V David VandeLinde Dean, G.W.C. Whiting School ofEngineering t%^ t^ ?< PERFORMERS CERTIFICATES BACHELORS OF MUSIC Presented by Robert O. Pierce Director, Peabody Conservatory of Music - 4- BACHELORS OF SCIENCE Presented by Carol J. Gray Dean, School of Nursing s i %' o4 i4 ASSOCIATES OF SCIENCE BACHELORS OF SCIENCE Presented by Stanley C. Gabor Dean, School of Continuing Studies <%- t4- i%- MASTERS OF SCIENCE MASTERS OF LIBERAL ARTS MASTERS OF ARTS IN TEACHING MASTERS OF ADMINISTRATIVE SCIENCE CERTIFICATES OF ADVANCED STUDY Presented by Stanley C. Gabor Dean, School of Continuing Studies *; <& *"'•- MASTERS OF SCIENCE Presented by Carol J. Gray Dean, School of Nursing *4 (4 04 GRADUATE PERFORMANCE DIPLOMAS MASTERS OF MUSIC ARTIST DIPLOMAS Presented by Robert O. Pierce Director, Peabody Conservatory of Music - 5- MASTERS OF SCI F\( I MASTERS OF HEAITI I S( II.\( IE MASTERS OF PUBLIC HEALTH Presented try Donald A. Henderson Dean, School of Hygiene and Public Health * * * MASTERS OF INTERNATIONAL PUBLIC POLICY MASTERS OF ARTS IN INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS MASTERS OF ARTS Presented by George R. Packard Dean, Paul H. Nilze School of Advanced International Studies 4 * 4 MASTERS OF ARTS Presented by Richard S. Ross Dean, School of Medicine 4 4 4 MASTERS OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERING MASTERS OF CIVIL ENGINEERING MASTERS OF ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING MASTERS OF MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING MASTERS OF SCIENCE MASTERS OF SCIENCE IN ENGINEERING MASTERS OF ARTS Presented by V. David VandeLinde Dean, G.W.C. Wliiting School of Engineering 4 4 4 MASTERS OF ARTS Presented lr\ Llovd Armstrong, Jr. Dean, School of Arts and Sciences - 6- DOCTORS OF EDUCATION Presented by Stanley C. Gabor Dean, School of Continuing Studies DOCTORS OF MUSICAL ARTS Presented by Robert O. Pierce Director, Peabody Conservatory of Music &&• %& £•> DOCTORS OF SCIENCE DOCTORS OF PUBLIC HEALTH DOCTORS OF PHILOSOPHY Presented by Donald A. Henderson Dean, School of Hygiene and Public Health ^ £#- ^ DOCTORS OF PHILOSOPHY Presented by George R. Packard Dean, Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies DOCTORS OF MEDICINE DOCTORS OF PHILOSOPHY Presented by Richard S. Ross Dean, School of Medicine %%> ^ ^ - 7- DOCTORS OF PHILOSOPHY Presented by V. David VandeLinde Dean, G.W.C. Whiting School ofEngineering * * * DOCTORS OF PHILOSOPHY Presented by Lloyd Armstrong, Jr. Dean, School of Arts and Sciences * * * STATEMENT TO THE GRADUATES Steven Muller President of the University BENEDICTION Clyde R. Shallenberger Director The Chaplaincy Service Thejohns Hopkins Hospital RECESSIONAL March, from "Athalie" Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847) POSTLUDE Washington Post March John Philip Sonsa (1854-1932) The audience is requested to remain standing aftn the Benediction until the principals, officials, members of the faculties, and the graduates have left the area. - 8- Citation Read by Milton Cummings in Presenting Douglass Cater for the Degree ofDoctor of Humane Letters May 24, 1990 College president, writer, and public servant, you have advanced the cause of the liberal arts and of higher education with your unsurpassed sense of mission, your keen appreciation for the rare and irreplaceable, and your dedication to humane values. You achieved success early in your first career, journalism, serving as Washington editor and national affairs editor for the Reporter Magazine. Later, you were to become vice-chairman of England's oldest weekly newspaper, The Observer. As a journalist, you were recognized with major distinctions, including the Front Page Award and the George Polk Memorial Award. Beginning in 1964, you performed a signal service to the advancement of education in this nation as special assistant to President Lyndon B. Johnson. You helped in this capacity to launch the Higher Education Act, the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, and the International Education Act, as well as the Teachers Corps and the Public Broadcasting Commission. Later you were associated as lecturer and professor with several of our most distinguished universities, and you became Senior Fellow, Founding Fellow, and Trustee of the Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies. It was admirable and fitting that in 1982, the nation's tenth oldest chartered college, Washington College in Chestertown, should have sought you out as president. Your achievements in helping the college to flourish as perhaps never before are well known and furnish convincing evidence of your superb leadership and of this society's enduring need for the independent liberal arts institution. Douglass Cater, in recognition of your lasting contributions nationally to the promotion of education, and in appreciation of your consistent championing of independent higher education within this state and nation, The Johns Hopkins University is proud to confer upon you the degree of Doctor of Humane Letters, honoris causa. Citation Read by V. David VandeLinde in Presenting Willard Hackerman for the Degree ofDoctor ofHumane Letters May 24, 1990 Master builder, alumnus, and long-time friend and supporter of this institution, your creative contributions to the construction industry have helped change the face of the state and nation, while your generosity has enriched and preserved valuable elements of Baltimore's cultural heritage. - 9- You joined the Whiting-Turner Contracting Company in 1938 as a 19-year- old engineering graduate of Johns Hopkins. Since 1955, you have been its president, and during this time it has become the largest construction firm in Maryland. Under your leadership, Whiting-Turner has built some of the area's most distinctive landmarks, including the second Chesapeake Bay Bridge, nine sections of Interstate Route 95, office buildings, shopping malls, pioneering turnkey housing for the elderly in Washington, D.C., Harborplace in Baltimore, the National Aquarium, and the Meyerhoff Symphony Hall. The firm's many major construction projects for this university include the Space Telescope Science Institute, the Montgomery County Center, and the just-dedicated Bloomberg Center for Physics and Astronomy, the largest building on the Homewood campus. You played a key role in saving the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra during a crippling labor dispute; bought and gave to the city the historic Mount Vernon mansion known as the Thomas-Jencks-Gladding House, now called the Hackerman House; and aided such other Baltimore institutions as the Walters Art Gallery, Peale Museum, Peabody Conservatory, and Maryland Historical Society. Your contributions