1994 Fall Graduation Exercises North Carolina State University Lire- 7
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1994 Fall Graduation Exercises North Carolina State University Lire- 7/ Wednesday, December 21 , Nineteen Hundred and Ninety-Four mem': DEGREES CONFERRED Wednesday, December 21 Nineteen Hundred and Ninety-Four This program is prepared for informational purposes only. The appearance ofan individual’s name does not constitute the University’s acknowledgement, certification, or representation that the individual has fulfilled the requirements for a degree. TABLE OF CONTENTS Musical Program .................................... iv Exercises of Graduation ............................... v The Alma Mater .................................... vi Albert Camesale .................................... vii Time and Location of Departmental Ceremonies ............ viii ROTC Commissioning Ceremony ........................ x Graduation Ushers ................................... xi Graduation Marshals ................................. xi Academic Costume .................................. xii Academic Honors ................................... xii Undergraduate Degrees ............................... 1 Professional Degrees ................................. 27 Graduate Degrees ................................... 53 Master’s Degrees ............................ 53 Master of Arts Degrees ........................ 62 Master of Science Degrees ...................... 64 Doctor of Education Degrees .................... 77 Doctor of Philosophy Degrees ................... 79 iii Musical Program EXERCISES OF GRADUATION December 21, 1994 British Brass Band Concert 8:30 am. Florentiner March ...................... Julius Fucik/Barsotti What Child is This? ................... Gordon Langford, arr. Christmas Spirit ........................... Ray Woodfield Rhapsody on Sea Shanties .................. Gordon Langford America the Beautiful ...................... Ward/Trevarthan PROCESSIONAL: 9:00 am. Grand March ............................ Clare Grundman PROCESSIONAL: (Platform Party Only) Grand March ............................ Clare Grundman RECESSIONAL: (Platform Party Only) Fanfare ............................... Francois Couperin NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY BRITISH BRASS BAND Dr. Frank M. Hammond, Conductor iv Exercises of Graduation Reynolds Coliseum Chancellor Larry K. Monteith Presiding December 21, 1994 PROCESSIONAL, 9:00 am. .............. Dr. Frank M. Hammond Conductor, North Carolina State University British Brass Band. The audience is requested to remain seated during the Processional WELCOME ..................... Chancellor Larry K. Monteith INVOCATION The Reverend E. Allen Proctor, Jr. Presbyterian Campus Ministry NATIONAL ANTHEM Mr. Harold Olivey, Jr. Class of 1994 INTRODUCTIONS Chancellor Monteith ADDRESS Dr. Albert Camesale Acting President and Provost, Harvard University CONFERRING OF HONORARY DEGREES . Chancellor Monteith Dr. Benjamin S. Carson Doctor of Humane Letters Mr. Edward E. Hood Doctor of Humane Letters CONFERRING OF DEGREES .............. Chancellor Monteith baccalaureateCandidates fordegreesadvancedpresenteddegreesby DeanspresentedofColleges/Schools.by Dean of Graduate School. Candidates for ADDRESS TO FELLOW GRADUATES ....... Mr. David C. Rouzer Class of 1994 RECOGNITIONS ....................... Chancellor Monteith TURNING OF THE TASSEL ............... Mr. David C. Rouzer ALMA MATER ......................... The Grains of Time RECESSIONAL (Platform Party only) The Alma Mater Words by: Music by: ALVIN M. FOUNTAIN, ’23 BONNIE F. NORRIS, IR, ’23 Where the winds of Dixie softly blow o’er the fields of Caroline, There stands ever cherished NC. State, as thy honored shrine. So lift your voices; Loudly sing from hill to oceanside! Our hearts ever hold you, NC. State in the folds of our love and pride. vi Dr. Albert Camesale, a North Carolina State University alumnus, has had a distinguished career both in his field of American foreign policy and international security and in higher education administration. Camesale currently serves as Harvard University’s acting president, provost, dean ofthe John F. Kennedy School ofGovernment and Don K. Price Professor ofPublic Policy. His teaching and research have focused on the implications of the end of the Cold War and on issues associated with nuclear weapons and arms control. Afier earning bachelor’s and master’s degrees in mechanical engineering from Cooper Union and Drexel University, Camesale was awarded a doctoral degree in nuclear engineering from North Carolina State University in 1966. He served on NCSU’s faculty from 1962 to 1969, working his way up from instructor to associate professor. During that time, he was honored with the Alumni Award for Outstanding Teaching and was inducted into the Academy of Outstanding Teachers. Camesale went on to serve as chief of the defensive weapons systems division of the US. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency’s Science and Technology Bureau. In that post, he was responsible for formulating and evaluating arms-control policies and measures, primarily in the area ofstrategic defensive weapons systems. He also was a member of the US. delegation to the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks, or SALT I, with the Soviet Union in 1970-72. He returned to NCSU briefly, from 1972 to 1974, to serve as professor and head ofthe Division ofUniversity Studies and as coordinator for environmental studies. Camesale then joined the faculty at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government. He was named provost of the university earlier this year. Camesale has consulted widely on foreign and defense policy matters. He also has written on international affairs, defense policy and nuclear energy issues. He is co-author ofNew Nuclear Nations: Consequences for US. Policy (1993); Fatefirl Visions: Avoiding Nuclear Catastrophe (1988); Superpower Arms Control: Setting the Record Straight (1987); and several other books. He was born in 1936 in the Bronx, N.Y., and now lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts. vii Time and Location of College and Departmental Ceremonies College ofAgriculture and Life Sciences - 11:15 am. Agricultural Business Management and Agricultural Economics ......................... 2 Patterson Hall Agricultural and Extension Education 532 Poe Hall Agronomy, Crop Science, Soil Science, Conservation and Natural Resources 2215 Williams Hall Animal Science 5A Polk Hall Biochemistry 128A Polk Hall Biological and Agricultural Engineering 158 D. S. Weaver Laboratories Biological Sciences 2722 Bostian Hall Biological Sciences Major Microbiology Botany Nutrition Ecology Plant Pathology Entomology Toxicology Genetics Food Science ....................... 105 Schaub, Food Science Building Horticultural Science 159 Kilgore Hall Physiology Program ................... Location ofMajor Faculty Advisor Poultry Science .....................................106 Scott Hall Applied Sociology 218 Withers Hall Zoology 3712 Bostian Hall Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences Medical Technology Zoology Majors School of Design - 11:15 am. ................Auditorium, Kamphoefner Hall Reception - 12:15 pm.................................. Brooks Hall College ofEducation and Psychology - 11:30 am......... McKimmon Center, Western Boulevard College ofEngineering - 11:15 am. Aerospace Engineering ............ Cinema, University Student Center Annex Biological and Agricultural Engineering .......... 158 Weaver Laboratories Chemical Engineering 11 Riddick Laboratories Civil Engineering 216 Mann Hall Computer Science ..................... Pullen Memorial Baptist Church, 1801 Hillsborough Street Electrical and Computer Engineering Stewart Theatre, University Student Center Industrial Engineering Ephesus Baptist Church, 6767 Hillsborough Street Integrated Manufacturing Systems Engineering .............. 109 Page Hall Master ofEngineering ................................ 109 Page Hall Materials Science and Engineering ............... 234 Riddick Laboratories Mechanical Engineering ........... Cinema, University Student Center Annex Nuclear Engineering ...................... 1202 Burlington Laboratories viii College of Forest Resources - 11:15 am McKimmon Center, Western Boulevard College of Humanities and Social Sciences — 11:15 am. except for the one marked with an asterisk * Communication - 11:30 am. Raleigh Civic and Convention Center English West Raleigh Presbyterian Church Foreign Languages and Literatures ...... West Raleigh Presbyterian Church History 107 Harrelson Hall Multidisciplinary Studies West Raleigh Presbyterian Church Philosophy and Religion .............. West Raleigh Presbyterian Church Political Science and Public Administration 216 Poe Hall Social Work G107 Caldwell Hall Sociology and Anthropology 218 Withers Hall College of Management - 11:15 am. Accounting Reynolds Coliseum Business Management Reynolds Coliseum Economics Reynolds Coliseum College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences — 11:15 am. Chemistry 124 Dabney Hall Marine, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences 2010 Biltmore Hall Mathematics 207 Harrelson Hall Physics ......................................... 209 Cox Hall Statistics The Velvet Cloak Inn College ofTextiles 11:15 am. W. Duke Kimbrell Atrium, Centennial Textiles Complex Reception — 12:15 pm. Convocation Center, Centennial Textiles Complex ix ROTC COMMISSIONING CEREMONY CAPTAIN ROBERT B. AVERY, USN Presiding University Student Center Ballroom 21 December 1994 PROCESSIONAL MARCH, 4:00 pm ....... Dr. Frank M. Hammond Conductor, North Carolina State University British Brass Band POSTING OF THE COLORS ........... Multi-Service Color Guard NATIONAL ANTHEM INVOCATION