Annual Commencement / Northwestern University

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Annual Commencement / Northwestern University NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY ONE HUNDRED AND THIRTIETH ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT JUNE 18, 1988 NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY ONE HUNDRED AND THIRTIETH ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT 9:30 A.M., SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1988 McGAW MEMORIAL HALL, EVANSTON, ILLINOIS . UNIVERSITY SEAL AND MOTTO Soon after Northwestern University was founded, its Board of Trus- tees adopted an official corporate seal. This seal, approved on June 26, 1856, consisted of an open book surrounded by rays of light and circled by the words Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois. Thirty years later, Daniel Bonbright, professor of Latin and a member of Northwestern's original faculty, redesigned the seal, retaining the book and light rays and adding two quotations. On the pages of the open book he placed a Greek quotation from the Gos- pel of Saint John, chapter 1, verse 14, translating to The Word . full ofgrace and truth. Circling the book are the first three words, in Latin, of the University motto: Quaecumque sunt vera (What- soever things are true). The outer border of the seal carries the name of the Uruversity and the date of its founding. This seal, which remains Northwestern's official signature, was approved by the Board of Trustees on December 5, 1890. The full text of the University motto, adopted on June 17, 1890, is from the Epistle of Saint Paul to the PhDlippians, chapter 4, verse 8: Whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are ofgood report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things. COMMENCEMENT PROGRAM 5 HONORARY DEGREES 6 * GRADUATES AND CANDmATES College of Arts and Sciences 8 Medical Sciiool 12 School of Law 15 School of Speech 17 Dental School 19 School of Music 20 J. L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management 23 MedDl School of Journalism 31 School of Education and Social Policy 35 Technological Institute 36 Graduate School 39 Center for Nursing 51 Traffic Institute 52 Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps 52 PRIZES AND HONORS 53 ACADEMIC DRESS 61 SCHOOL CONVOCATIONS 62 COMMENCEMENT COORDINATORS 64 * The appearance of a candidate's name is presumptive evidence of graduation but is not to be regarded as conclusive. UNIVERSITY ALMA MATER Hail to Alma Mater! We will sing thy praise forever; All thy sons and daughters Pledge thee victory and honor. Alma Mater, praise be thine, May thy nameforever shine! Hail to Purple! Hail to White! Hail to thee, Northwestern! Guests are respectfully requested to remain in their seats during the entire ceremony. The aisles of the hall must be kept clear at all times, and those who leave their seats before the close of the cere- mony must leave the building immediately through either the north or south door, whichever is closer Smoking is permitted only in the outer main-floor lobby. PROGRAM PROCESSIONAL (Audience will please remain seated for the Student and Faculty Processional.) The Northwestern University Band, Conducted by John P. Paynter, Director of Bands and Professor and Chairperson of the Department of Conducting NATIONAL ANTHEM (first stanza only) (Audience will please remain standing until the Invocation has been offered.) INVOCATION Timothy S. Stevens, University Chaplain WELCOME Howard J. TVienens, Chairperson, Board of Trustees GREETINGS William L. Achenbach, President, Northwestern University Alumni Association TRIBUTE Composed by Mark Camphouse, B.Mus., Northwestern University, 1975; M.Mus., 1976 The Northwestern University Band CONFERRING OF HONORARY DEGREES Citations read by Robert B. Duncan, Provost of the University REMARKS TO THE GRADUATES Murray H. Finley, J.D., Northwestern University, 1949; LL.D., 1988 CONFERRING OF DOCTORAL DEGREES Arnold R. Weber, President of the University AWARDING OF DIPLOMAS AND CONFERRING OF GRADUATE AND UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES Arnold R. Weber MESSAGE TO THE CLASS OF 1988 Arnold R. Weber UNIVERSITY ALMA MATER BENEDICTION Timothy S. Stevens RECESSIONAL Faculty Recessional (Graduates and guests wall please remain seated.) Student Recessional (Guests will please remain seated.) The Northwestern University Band HONORARY DEGREES WALTER HUBERT ANNENBERG RAOUL BERGER DOCTOR OF HUMANE LETTERS DOCTOR OF LAWS Publishing company executive, former ambassador. Chairman and Legal historian. LL.M., Harvard University, 1938. After a successful chief executive officer of Triangle Publications, Inc., Annenberg career as a concert violinist, Berger received his law degree at the founded Seventeen magazine in 1944 when he sensed that teen- Northwestern Uruversity School of Law and began the practice of agers would become an important market force and TV Guide in law. FoUoviang three decades of private practice and government 1953. In 1969 he was appointed American ambassador to the Court service, he became one of the preeminent Constitutional historians of St. James smd established himself in that position as a knowl- of the 20th century, known for his uncompromising scholarship and edgeable and effective spokesperson for American interests in his ability to address fundamental legal issues that would soon come Great Britain; on his retirement in 1976, Queen EUzabeth desig- to public attention. Such books as Impeachment: The Constitu- nated him a Knight Commander in the Order of the British Empire. tional Problems ( 1973), Executive Privilege: A Constitutional His interest in the media and their role in society has led him to Myth ( 1974), and Government by Jvuiiciary: The Transfomnation underwrite numerous educational and research programs in com- of the Fourteenth Amendment ( 1977) have each played a major munications and telecommunications. In 1981 he funded the ambi- role in public debate on those issues. His historical research on the tious Annenberg CPB project to provide opportunities for college Fourteenth Amendment provided a solid historical base from which education for distant learners of all ages through such media as others have argued that Constitutional interpretation should be radio, television, computers, and video and audio cassettes. He is closely guided by the framers' intentions. His most recent book, a trustee of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and a member of Federalism: The Founders' Design, was published last year. the National Neiman Fund Committee. Presented by Franklin A Cole, trustee. Northwestern University Presented by Newton N. Minow, professor of communications law and policy, Northwestern University; director, The Annen- berg Washington Program in Communications Policy Studies CHING-WU CHU ofNorthwestern University; trustee, Northwestern University DOCTOR OF SCIENCE MILTON BYRON BABBITT Physicist. Ph.D., University of California, San Diego, 1968. Currently M. D. Anderson Professor of Physics at the University of Houston, DOCTOR OF FINE ARTS Chu has been a pioneer in the discovery of high temperature super- conductivity, the development of which promises to make possible Composer. M.F.A., Princeton University, 1942. Currently William the superefflcient generation and transmission of electricity. Imme- Shubael Conant Professor Emeritus at Princeton, where his teach- diately following the discovery of the 35° Kelvin superconductor for ing career began in 1938, Babbitt is among the world's most impor- which the Nobel Prize was awarded to Bednorz and Muller in 1987, tant and influential living composers. His compositions have been Chu demonstrated that the transition temperature could be raised performed by orchestras throughout the world, and many have beyond 90° Kelvin, well above anything imagined theretofore. His been commercially recorded. Author of The Function of Set Struc- work has transformed superconductivity from an esoteric phenome- ture in the Twelve Tone System (1946) and numerous articles in non useful only in a few applications justifiable at helium cooling musical journals, Babbitt continues in the 20th-century tradition of temperatures to practical uses at the much higher liquid nitrogen composer-theorists such as Schoenberg, Hindemith, and Messaien; temperatures. His discoveries have led to a worldwade explosion of his theoreticcd writings have had wide influence on contemporary research seeking room temperature superconductors. music and musicians. A member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sci- Presented by Arthur J. Freeman, Morrison Professor of Physics ences, Babbitt has received two citations from the New York Music and Astronomy, College ofArts and Sciences Critics Circle, the National Music Award, a Pulitzer Prize special citation, and the George Peabody Medal. In 1986 he was named a MacArthur Fellow. Presented by Alan B. Stout, Harry N. and Ruth F. Wyatt Professor ofMusic Theory and Composition, School ofMusic 6 HENRY CROWN MURRAY HOWARD FINLEY DOCTOR OF HUMANE LETTERS DOCTOR OF LAWS Industrialist. The son of a penniless Lithuanian innmigrant, Crown Labor union official. J.D., Northwestern University, 1949. Joining the began working at the age of 14 and studied bookkeeping and other Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America following his graduation commercial subjects in night school. With his brother, he founded from the Northwestern University School of Law, Finley assumed the Material Service Corporation, which soon dominated the Chi- increasingly responsible positions with that organization. Having cago building materials market and then became the leading con- been architect of the merger of that union with the Textile Workers struction
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