½.Shi Gto State U Iversity Eighty- I Th a Ual Comme Ceme T

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½.Shi Gto State U Iversity Eighty- I Th a Ual Comme Ceme T ½.SHI GTO STATE U IVERSITY EIGHTY- I TH A UAL COMME CEME T May 12, 1985 1'\T The Commencement Procession Order of Exercises Presiding-Dr. Glenn Terrell, President Processional Candidates for Degrees Washington State University Wind Symphony Professor L. Keating Johnson, Conductor University Faculty Posting of the Colors Regents of the University WSU Joint ROTC Color Guard Honored Guests of the University The National Anthem Washington State University Wind Symphony President of the University Dr. Jane Wyss, Song Leader Invocation The Reverend Stephen G. Maling Pastor, Pullman Presbyterian Church President's Faculty Excellence Awards Dr. Albert C. Yates Executive Vice President and Provost Instruction: Robert J. Jonas Research: George E. Duvall Public Service: Sue Nicholson Butkus El Capitan Washington State University Wind Symphony Advanced Degrees Bachelors Degrees Alma Mater The Assembly Benediction The Reverend Stephen G. Maling Recessional SPECIAL NOTE FOR PARENTS AND FRIENDS: Professional photographers will photograph all candidates as they receive Washington State University Wind Symphony their diploma covers from the deans. A photo will be mailed to each graduate, and additional photos may be purchased at reasonable rates. Since these high quality color photos will be provided, parents and friends of the graduates are asked Music by Washington State University Wind Symphony to remain in the stands during the diploma march. 12:15 p.m. 2 A TRIBUTE PRESIDENT TERRELL William Glenn Terrell, Jr., was formally in­ augurated as the seventh president of Washington State University on March 17, 1968. This was eight full months after he made that first, now-familiar walk across the Pullman hilltop campus, greeting students, faculty, and staff with a wave and a cheery hello or good morning! Glenn Terrell's years at WSU have been full and productive. His administration has been pro­ gressive and farsighted. Too much so, some have contended. President Terrell does not believe that. He has simply given himself totally to the task of making Washington State University the very best there is. WSU has experienced tremendous growth in enrollment, programs, physical plant, and facilities under President Terrell's leadership. Enrollment was 10,558 when he came, it climbed to more than 17,000 in the early 1980s and, then, with legislative reins applied, settled around 16,000. In the turbulent campus times of the late 1960s and early 1970s, Glenn Terrell's calm, guiding style of leadership brought the University When Glenn Terrell retires July 1, 1985, he smoothly into a new era of social responsibility will have served as president of Washington State and awareness, better prepared to handle the University for 18 years. Of the six WSU presidents educational needs of all students, including various who preceded President Terrell, only Ernest 0. ethnic groups and minorities. Holland (1916-19"14) and Enoch A. Bryan The number of major buildings on campus has (1893-1915) served longer. nearly doubled during Glenn Terrell's tenure as Not many people know that Glenn Terrell president. More than a dozen major academic declined to become president of Washington State buildings have been added, including the University when the position was first offered to $17-million Electrical/Mechanical Engineering him. Then dean of faculties at the University of Building now under construction, and WSU's Illinois at Chicago Circle, President Terrell had 12,000-seat Beasley Performing Arts Coliseum is been there but three years and did not feel he the largest and finest on any university campus in should move. WSU regents were persistent; they the Pacific Northwest. knew he was the man they wanted to succeed Martin Stadium seating was enlarged from President C. Clement French, and they were will­ 23,000 to 40,000 during President Terrell's era, ing to wait. Wait they did, more than a year. and the Cougars' overall intercollegiate athletic At a news conference in the summer of 1967 complex saw the addition of Mooberry Track, announcing the new president of WSU, a univer­ Bailey Baseball Field, and the new Physical Educa­ sity spokesman saiid, "The Board of Regents, more tion Building, making it the finest on the Pacific than a year ago, promised the people of the state Coast. that we would consider only the top people in the Glenn Terrell's contributions to Washington nation in seeking a successor to Dr. French. We State University and to higher education regionally believe we have kept our pledge and that Dr. Ter­ and nationally far exceed what has been written. rell is an outstanding educator and administrator. Only in the years to come will his contributions be We think he will become a great president for fully recognized, as historians gather their stories Washington State University." for WSU: The Glenn Terrell Years. Richard B. Fry Candidates for Advanced and Professional Degrees 3 Richard Clifford Shane ANTHROPOLOGY The Graduate School Brandt, South Dakota B.S., South Dakota State University Coburn Leo Currier, Jr. The candidates will be presented b,y M.S., University of Arizona Old Town, Maine Dean C. J. N,yman Thesis: An Interregional Analysis of the Ef­ B.A., University of Maine at Orono fects of Increased Potato Production, Process­ M.A., University of Arizona ing and Transportation Factor Input Costs Thesis: Wabanaki Ethnic-History, Five Cen­ Doctors' Degrees on the United States Potato Industry. turies of Becoming Indian: An Ethnohistor­ Major Adviser: Professor Norman K. ical Approach to Ethnicity. Whittlesey Major Adviser: Professor Louis Hieb Doctor of Philosophy "Michael Louis Wise "Franklin Kennedy Deaver, Jr. Starkville, Mississippi Mansfield, Ohio AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS B.S., Mississippi State University B.A., M.A., Washington State University Thesis: How Communities Choose: A Study Thesis: On the Selection of a Subsistence of Selected Rural Washington Communities. Strategy: A Model Based on Archaeological Supote Dechates Major Adviser: Professor Paul W. Barkley Bangkok, Thailand Data. B.A., Kasetsart University Major Adviser: Professor Grover S. Krantz M.S., University of Hawaii (Manca) AGRONOMY Thesis: On Farm Impacts of Economic Policy Benjamin Raymond Druian Choices in Thailand. "Nguyen van Mung Chicago, Illinois Major Adviser: Professor Leroy L. Blakeslee Pullman B.A., Roosevelt University B.S., University of Wisconsin-Madison M.A., Washington State University "Joe H. Dewbre M.S., University of Illinois at Urbana­ Thesis: The Rise and Fall of Classical Mor­ Rubottom, Oklahoma Champaign phology: the Influence of Society on the B.S., Oklahoma State University Thesis: Inheritance of Protein Content and History of Physical Anthropology. M.S., New Mexico State University Composition in a Cross between Two Spring Major Adviser: Professor Grover S. Krantz Thesis: An Analysis of the Potentials for Wheats (Triticum aestivum). Major Adviser: Professor C. F. Konzak Using Midwest Furures Contracts to Increase Lawrence Hennigh Storage Earnings on Pacific Northwest Riddle, Oregon Wheat. AMERICAN STUDIES B.A., M.A., University of Washington Major Adviser: Professor Leroy L. Blakeslee Thesis: The Overriding Problem Approach David Marr to Federal Aid to Educational Innovation. Christopher F. Feise Olympia Major Adviser: Professor John Bodley Albion B.A., M.A., University of Iowa B.A., Johns Hopkins University Thesis: "The Infinitude of the Private Man": Thesis: A Radical Analysis of the Transfor­ Essays on Emerson, Whitman, William "Mikell Alan Marsh mation of American Agriculture and Its Im­ James, Blackmur and Heller. Pullman pacts on Labor, 1910-1975. Major Adviser: Professor Mary Land B.A., Moorhead State University Major Adviser: Professor John T. Donnelly M.A., Washington State University "David G. Pugh Thesis: Favorlang-Pazeh-Saisiat: A Putative Pullman Formosan Subgroup. Michael Dean Hammig B.A., Eastern Washington State College Major Adviser: Professor Raleigh J. Ferrell Lawrence, Kansas M.A., Washington State University B.A., University of Kansas Thesis: Virility's Virtue : The Making of the Thesis: Supply Response and Simulation of Masculinity Cult in American Life, 1828- Ula Laura Moody Supply and Demand for U.S. Fresh Vege­ 1890. Bigfork, Montana table Industry. Major Adviser: Professor Mary Land B.A., M.A., University of Montana Major Adviser: Professor David W. Price Thesis: Microstratigraphy, Paleoecology, and Tephrochronology of the Lind Coulee Site, * Alan S. Kezis ANIMAL SCIENCES Central Washington. Staatsburg, New York Major Adviser: Professor Henry Irwin B.S., M.S., Rutgers University John M. Klindt Powell, Wyoming Thesis: An Examination of Economies of B.S., M.S., University of Wyoming Lonnie Corlett Pippin Size and Net Revenues on Columbia Basin Reno, Nevada Farms: Implications for Acreage Limita­ Thesis: Development and Use of a Radio­ immunoassay for Thyrotropin-Releasing Hor­ B.A., Adams State College tion Policy. mone (TRH). M.A., University of New Mexico Major Adviser: Professor David Holland Major Adviser: Professor Steven L. Davis Thesis: The Archaeology and Paleoecology of Guadalupe Ruin, Sandoval County, New *Ronald Carl Mittelhammer *Mohammad Qasem Mayar Mexico. Bergenfield, New Jersey Kabul, Afghanistan Major Adviser: Professor Peter J. Mehringer B.S., M.S., Rutgers University B.S., Kabul University Thesis: The Estimation of Domestic De­ M.S., University of Wyoming Judy Ann Rose mand for Salad Vegetables Using A Priori Thesis: Pituitary Responsiveness following Sacramento, California Information. Infusion or Repeated
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