W ('63:???) Sixty-Sixth Annual Commencement the North

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

W ('63:???) Sixty-Sixth Annual Commencement the North W (‘63:???) SIXTY-SIXTH ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT THE NORTH CAROLINA STATE COLLEGE of Agriculture and Engineering of the University of North Carolina EXERCISES OF GRADUATION Sunday, May 29 Nineteen Hundred and Fifty-Five Band Program at 10:00 a.m. Overture Americana .....................Buchtel Prelude and Fugue in Bb minor iBach—Moehlmann Irish Tune from County Derry .......... Grainger Military Symphony in F ................. (1) Allegro maestoso; (2) Larghetto; (3) Allegro.Gossec Spiritual .................................. Gillie Chorale Prelude on “Dundee” ............ Whitney PROCESSIONAL: Triumphal March, from “Sigurd Jorsalfar” ............................ Grieg Pomp and Circumstance, March No. 1 ..i.Elgar Marche Noble .......................Chr. Bach Swedish Coronation March ............ Svendsen Slow March from “Scipio” ..............Handel Coronation March, from “The Prophet”—Meyerbeer RECESSIONAL: University Grand March Goldman GOD OF OUR FATHERS......................Roberts God of our fathers, whose almighty hand Leads forth in beauty all the starry band Of shining worlds in splendor thro’ the skies, Our grateful songs before Thy throne arise. Thy love divine hath led us in the past; In this free land by Thee our lot is cast; Be Thou our Ruler, Guardian, Guide and Stay, Thy Word our law, Thy paths our chosen way. Refresh Thy people on their toilsome way; Lead us from night to never—ending day; Fill all our lives with love and grace divine; And glory, laud, and praise be ever Thine. PROGRAM EXERCISES OF GRADUATION WILLIAM NEAL REYNOLDS COLISEUM 11:00 A.M. PROCESSIONAL North Carolina State College Band C. D, KUTSCHINSKI, Director HERBERT FRED, Assistant Director Presiding: CAREY H. BOSTIAN, Chancellor INVOCATION HYMN—“God of Our Father’s” ANNOUNCEMENTS SCRIPTURE READING—Genesis 12:1—9 Sermon—“Out of Thy Country - Into a Land” GAYLORD B. NOYCE, Pastor The United Church of Raleigh PRAYER CONFERRING OF DEGREES Candidates for undergraduate degrees presented by Deans of Schools Candidates for advanced degrees presented by DEAN D. B. ANDERSON Goodwife Diplomas presented by LLOYD M. CHEEK, President, Student Government Honorary Degrees REMARKS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS THOMAS M. LYNAM President, Class of 1955 GORDON GRAY President, University of North Carolina LUTHER H. HODGES Governor of North Carolina BENEDICTION RECESSIONAL Diploma Presentations 2 :30 RM. School Dean Location Agriculture D. W. COLVARD College Union Ballroom Design H. L. KAMPHOEFNER College Union Reception Room Education J. B. KIRKLAND Pullen Hall Engineering J. H. LAMPE Coliseum Forestry R. J. PRESTON Kilgore Hall Textiles M. E. CAMPBELL BuildingNelson Textile CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES School of Agriculture BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN AGRICULTURAL AND BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY TZoe Hollingsworth Smith Raleigh IN AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS John Bryan Collins ...................Asheville *Abdul Karim Jafar Al-Dakhili. .Aa’dhamia, Iraq Ralph Baynes Warren ............ Hurdle Mills BACHELOR OF AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERING *Glenn Robinson Bailey ............... Statesville Joe Millard Bunn .................... Pikeville *Talmadg‘e Rudd Burgess ............. Henderson Donald Cekada Craft .............. Walstonburg Colbert Lee Dilday................ Powellsville Wayne Floyd Grainger ............... Fair Bluff William Harris .........................Ayden Daniel Gold Lattimore ................. Polkville Jason Rufus Lineberger ............... Gastonia Robert Leonard Sheppard .......... Norfolk, Va. John Wayne Smith, Jr................ Albemarle BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN AGRONOMY Dan Edison Baucom.................... Burgaw Billy Edward Caldwell ................. Newton Robert Eugene Clayton ................. Raleigh Jerry Speight Grimes ............... Battleboro William Allen Hayes Fairmont *Van Smith Jenkins ..................... Oxford *Harold Wesley Lloyd ............. Jacksonville David Monroe McIntyre ............ Dillon, S. C. Sheppard Neal Moore ................ New Bern “"Renford Wendell Peed, Jr.......... .. V Wilson Van Washington Respess .......... .. .Pantego Albert Mason Smith ............. Elizabeth City Joshua Joyner Stanton, Jr........ Stantonsburg *Choju Tomoyose ...... i . ,Shuri, Okinawa Gene Lowe Warren ................... .Dunn TWillard Kendall Wynn, Jr.............. Raleigh IN ANIMAL INDUSTRY Carol Rudyard Baker ............. Nichols, S. C. i‘John Ashcraft Bivens, Jr............... Wingate *William Carlyle Bledsoe.............. Jefferson William Bobadilla Bynum ............. Maysville *Stedman Hall Carr ........ Burgaw Hubert Wesley Cartner, Jr. V .Winston-Salem 'i‘ Honors ’1‘ In Absentia Adrian Fernando Castro Gonzalez San Jose, T*Leroy Coggins .................. ThomasvilleCosta Rica Gilbert Allen Conrad. , . ,,,,,,, Winston—Salem iMiles Robert Cooper ............. Elizabeth City Thomas Austin Dixon. ............. Leasburg John Wade Fuquay, . ............. Snow Camp Richard Paul Harris, Jr............ New London Robert Doughton Hodges ................ Boone James Bryan Holton, Jr.. ........... New Bern "I'John Lafayette Irvin ............... Greensboro ‘tFreddie Nelson Knott ................... Oxford *Thomas Robert Lathan .................. Monroe Marvin Lee Leatherman ................ Newton Jarvis Linton Palmer, Jr............ Waynesville William Alexander Pierce, III .......... Weldon *William Francis Pressly ............ Stony Point *Gale Thomas Reeves .................... Sparta Ovidio Restrepo Tobon. .Medellin, Colombia, S. A. Percy Harper Riden............. Lewistown, Pa. David Sledge Sartini .............. Providence TWilliam Henry Sparrow ............... Gastonia Jim Roe Tucker ................. Laurel Springs ’I‘Clark Wesley Walker.................. Old Fort James Earl Walters ............ Fuquay Springs Joe Dan Washburn ...................... Shelby Clarence Bill Weatherly, Jr............. Durham Kenyon Benedict Zahner, Jr........... Highlands IN BOTANY Charles Wilson Averre, Jr. San Jose, Costa Rica TFloyd Fuller Hendrix, Jr............. Greenville IN DAIRY MANUFACTURING 1*Gordon Ellis Abell .............. Campbell, Minn. Liston Calvin Beck, Jr.................... Troy George Wallace Ellis . , . , . ...... Durham *Allen Howell Harris, Jr. .............. Concord Keith Roy Hunting................... Asheville TBanks Lee Leonard .................. Lexington Frederick Meyer Moore ................ Kinston Alva Edison Williams, Jr.. , , .......... Durham Carol Michael Yarborough. ............ Sanford IN HORTICULTURE William Samuel Enloe ............... Edneyville William Harry Laughter. iiiiiiiiii Edneyville IN MECHANIZED AGRICULTURE Paul McRae \Vagoner ............... Gibsonville IN POULTRY SCIENCE George Curtis Bowers ..................... Hays Malcolm Monroe Lowder.............. Albemarle Harry Withers Myers, Jr. .............. Ruflin * In Absentia 1“ Honors I High Honors *Ned Rash West Jefferson *Luther Elliott Robinson Clinton June Edward Routh Greensboro Kenneth Dwight Shields ................ Shelby Snodie Bond Wilson .................Winterville IN RURAL SOCIOLOGY Hugh Max Miller................Winston-Salem IN WILDLIFE CONSERVATION AND MANAGEMENT Grady Lynn Barnes Raleigh James Tilden Burns ................... Atkinson John Frank Chapman ............Winston-Salem *Maurice Eugene Hester............ Hurdle Mills Robert Dean Lewis Gastonia *Raymond Earl Murphrey................ Maury Monte Ellison Seehorn .................. Lenoir Joseph Raymond Stephenson, Jr.......... Saluda * In Absentia School of Design BACHELOR OF ARCHITECTURE Glenn Allen Jefferson Buff .............. Newton Levi Frank Caldwell.................... Maiden James McNeill Clark, Jr Fayetteville William Lewis Grouse........... Winston-Salem ~fHarry Ellenzweig.............. New York, N. Y. William Martin Finch, Jr Sanford iWilliam Lyon Hall .............. Westport, Conn. TRoger Lee Jackson...............Winston-Salem George Julius Jernigan, Jr................Dunn TWilliam Leonard Kaplan Raleigh Hugo Jose Martinez Serrano Zapatoca, Colombia, S. A. Harry Wade Moser, Jr Raleigh John Gus Pappas ......................Ahoskie James Toms Quinn Shelby fWilliam James Rabon, Jr................Weldon Rodolfo Werner Seifert. .Medellin, Colombia, S. A. Francis Hopkinson Smith, III. .Knoxville, Tenn. fHarold Eugene Smyre................. Hickory Alva Eugene Warren Charlotte Donovan Lyle Warren .................Durham Robert Chester Wilkanowski. .Long' Island, N. Y. Charles Hans Winecoff........... Winston-Salem 1‘ Honors I High Honors School of Education BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION William Elmo Alford................... Zebulon fHoyle Reece Allen ..................... Oakboro *Roy Dredmond Boles .............. Walnut Cove Frank Belton Boyette ............ Newton Grove J{Joseph Ray Clary ...................... Shelby J{Joseph William Cowan................. Garland T*Herman Gilmer Dellinger............. Crossnore Charles Jackson Dutton .............. Wadesboro Marion Donnie Dutton .............. Wadesboro James Blue Fields .................... Carthage .................... Deep Run HarleyEarl EugeneEugeneGrayGray .................. Franklin *Aubrey Evans Harrell ................. Edenton Hubert Edwin Hatcher .............. Morrisville TParran Waldo Hawkins ............ Sandy Ridge Crawford Lee Hooks ................. Goldsboro Billy Howard ........................ Richlands J(Johnny*JosephusErvinDanielKeeverJacobs................................... PembrokeAlexis Ralph Columbus King................. Freeland William Earl Lane..................... Raleigh #Forrest Henry Lowe ..........
Recommended publications
  • ANNUAL REPORT Suite 350 San Francisco, CA 94111
    Founded in 1956 by John D. Rockefeller III, Asia Society is the leading educational institution dedicated to promoting mutual understanding and strengthening partnerships across people, leaders, and institutions of Asia and the United States in a global context. Across the fields of art, business, culture, education, and policy, the Society provides insight, generates ideas, and promotes collaboration to address present challenges and create a shared future. Asia Society is a nonpartisan, nonprofit institution with headquarters in New York, major centers in Hong Kong and Houston, and offices in Los Angeles, Manila, Mumbai, New York, San Francisco, Seoul, Shanghai, Sydney, and Washington, D.C. Asia Society Northern California Center 2015 500 Washington St. ANNUAL REPORT Suite 350 San Francisco, CA 94111 Find us online: www.asiasociety.org/northern-california www.facebook.com/asiasocietync @asiasocietysf www.instagram.com/asiasocietysf We Know Asia, Get to Know Us ASIA SOCIETY WORLDWIDE HONG KONG . HOUSTON . LOS ANGELES . MANILA . MUMBAI . NEW YORK SAN FRANCISCO . SEOUL . SHANGHAI . SYDNEY . WASHINGTON, D.C. Asia Society is proud to celebrate its 60th Anniversary as the leading educational organization dedicated to promoting mutual understanding and strengthening partnerships among peoples, leaders and institutions of Asia and the United States in a global context. Across the fields of arts, business, culture, education, and policy, the Society provides Northern California Center insight, generates ideas, and promotes collaboration to address present challenges and create a shared future. Established in 1998, Asia Society’s Northern California Center (ASNC) is uniquely positioned on the edge of the Pacific and at the entrance to Silicon Valley. ASNC connects the San Francisco Bay Area’s diverse local community with a wide network of leaders and visionaries in the fields of policy, business, arts & culture, and sustainability.
    [Show full text]
  • Perseus International Rights  Foreign Rights Guide Fall 2014 
    Perseus International Rights Foreign Rights Guide Fall 2014 Perseus Books Group Imprints Basic Books .................................................................... 3 Da Capo Press .............................................................. 16 Da Capo Lifelong Books ................................................ 25 Nation Books ................................................................ 37 PublicAffairs ................................................................. 40 Running Press .............................................................. 48 Seal Press ..................................................................... 59 Weinstein Books ........................................................... 63 Westview Press .............................................................. 65 Client Publishers Amherst Media .............................................................. 67 BenBella Books ............................................................. 71 Hazelden Publishing ...................................................... 86 Oneworld ...................................................................... 92 Pear Press ................................................................... 104 Redleaf Press .............................................................. 105 Roaring Forties Press .................................................. 109 Santa Monica Press ..................................................... 111 Visible Ink Press ......................................................... 114 West Hills
    [Show full text]
  • The Attacker's Advantage Uncertainty's Upside Ram Charan Summary
    Business Titles from Perseus International Rights Spring 2014 The Attacker's Advantage Uncertainty's Upside Ram Charan Summary The phenomenon of uncertainty is not new; what is new is its intensity and potential to change industries and destroy companies. Business leaders can be on the defensive, or they can be on offense, prepared to lead decisively. The ability to deal with uncertainty is perhaps the paramount skill leaders must have to be successful in this era. Without it they risk becoming personally obsolete and driving their companies off a cliff. In The Attacker's Advantage, renowned business expert and bestselling author Ram Charan shows what skills are needed to be able to spot the disruption that is coming, and what actions are necessary to take advantage of these changes. While many leaders know how to cope with operational uncertainty-when, for example, revenue fluctuates-the same cannot be said for dealing with structural uncertainty that can alter the money-making patterns of a company, industry or entire economic sector. Charan demonstrates the huge upside offered by structural uncertainty and provides PublicAffairs the concepts and tools-such as being able to spot the catalysts of disruption, building 9781610394741 organizational preparedness, developing a financial understanding of the consequences- Pub Date: 12/23/14 $23.99 to take advantage of forces that are creating new customer needs, market segments Hardback / Cloth over boards and ways to make money. 224 pages Uncertainty is now ubiquitous. The sources of structural change are so varied and fast TBD Business & Economics moving, and their convergence so unpredictable.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ledger and Times, December 3, 1948
    Murray State's Digital Commons The Ledger & Times Newspapers 12-3-1948 The Ledger and Times, December 3, 1948 The Ledger and Times Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/tlt Recommended Citation The Ledger and Times, "The Ledger and Times, December 3, 1948" (1948). The Ledger & Times. 7057. https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/tlt/7057 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Newspapers at Murray State's Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Ledger & Times by an authorized administrator of Murray State's Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 0. • 4•11. eke • • • - As nest ATI-Round Kentucky Community Newspaper ror 1947 48 Selected IIER FORECAST • cky—Clearing with Just Ken mild temperature today. Fair the and slightly cooler tonight sees Saturday inceeasing cloud:- , to nets-and a little warmer. she Bill eteel YOUR PROGRESSIVE HOME NEWS- 3, 1948 MURRAY POPULATION — 8,000 Vol. XX; No. 143 p to United Press PAPER FOR OVER HALF A CENTURY Murray, Kentucky, Friday Afternoon, Dec. the Thoroughbreds To Rent, Food Prices co Be Feted At Grid Slated For Ft Ltr 4 Banquet Tuesday Limited Number Increase Next Year • Of Tickets For JAMES ROGERS Public Available DIES SUDDENLY Burley Drops Reports Show Rents In The annual football banquet for the Murray State College Thoro- AT LYNN GROVE On Kentucky ughbreds will be held in the Wells East Already Adranced Hall dining room Tuesday night, James S. Rogers, 74, died sud- Lynn Markets Again • According to reports received to- Dec.
    [Show full text]