Annual Commencement / Northwestern

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NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY One Hundred and Twenty- fifth Annual COMMENCEMENT SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1983 McGaw Memorial Hall, Evanston, Illinois THE 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 name forever shine! Hail to Purple! Hail to White! Hail to thee, Northwestern! Smoking is permitted only in the outer main floor lobby. THE PROGRAM PROCESSIONAL (Audience will please remain seated for the Student and Faculty Processional.) THE NATIONAL ANTHEM (first stanza only) (Audience will please remain standing until the Invocation has been offered.) THE NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY BAND Conducted by John P. Paynter, Director of Bands and Chairman of the Department of Conducting and Performing Organizations INVOCATION JAMES E. AVERY University Chaplain CONFERRING OF HONORARY DEGREES Citations read by RAYMOND W. MACK Provost of the University AWARDING OF DIPLOMAS AND CONFERRING OF DEGREES robert h. strotz President of the University DELIVERY OF DIPLOMAS TO DOCTORAL RECIPIENTS Deans of the Graduate, Medical, Law, Dental, and Music Schools THE UNIVERSITY ALMA MATER (Words to the University Alma Mater are printed inside the front cover.) BENEDICTION JOSEPH cardinal bernardin Archbishop of Chicago RECESSIONAL FACULTY RECESSIONAL (Graduates and guests will please remain seated.) STUDENT RECESSIONAL (Guests will please remain seated.) THE NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY BAND Conducted by John P. Paynter Parents and 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 ceremony must leave the building immediately through either the north or south door (whichever is closer). THE HONORARY DEGREES JOSEPH CARDINAL BERNARDIN — DOCTOR OF SACRED THEOLOGY Religious leader. Ordained a priest in Columbia, South Carolina, in 1952, he was appointed Archbishop of Chicago last July and was elevated to the rank of Cardinal in February by Pope John Paul II. Archbishop of Cincinnati for ten years before coming to Chicago, he has been active in a variety of administrative and pastoral areas within the Roman Catholic Church and serves as head of the Bishops' Committee on War and Peace of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops. Presented by Richard A. Kieckhefer, Associate Professor of History and Literature of Religions and Chairman of the Department, College of Arts and Sciences NATALIE ZEMON DAVIS — DOCTOR OF HUMANE LETTERS Historian, educator. Henry Charles Lea Professor of History at Princeton University, she has also held positions on the faculties of Brown University, the University of Toronto, and the Uni- versity of California at Berkeley. Bringing to her work the perspectives of various social sciences, she is recognized especially for her studies on society and culture in 16th-century France and on women's history. In 1976 she was honored by the French government with the Chevalier dans L'Ordre des Palmes Academiques. Presented by Bryan S. Reid, Jr., Trustee, Northwestern University PAUL SIMON — DOCTOR OF LAWS Legislator, publisher, author. Now in his fifth term as Representative from the 22nd Congres- sional District of Illinois, he has served on the House Budget Committee and the House Com- mittee on Science and Technology, and is Chairman of the House Subcommittee on Post -secondary Education. Before his election to Congress, Simon had been a newspaper editor and publisher, a state legislator, and Lieutenant Governor of Illinois. Among his books is a study of Abraham Lincoln's service in the Illinois General Assembly. Presented by William A. Sampson, Associate Professor of Sociology, College of Arts and Sciences DAVID GRENE — DOCTOR OF HUMANE LETTERS Classicist, educator. Following service on the faculties of the University of Dublin and Harvard University, he joined the faculty of the University of Chicago in 1937; since 1960 he has been Professor in the Committee on Social Thought there. A student of Greek political theory, Grene was also translator, along with Richmond Lattimore, of The Complete Greek Tragedies, volumes of which were published over a period of 11 years. His Reality and the Heroic Pattern (1967) is a study of the last plays of Sophocles, Shakespeare, and Ibsen. Presented by John H. Wright, Professor of Classics and Chairman of the Department, College of Arts and Sciences 3 ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-FIFTH COMMENCEMENT J. DAVID SINGER — DOCTOR OF LAWS Political scientist, educator. Professor of Political Science at the University of Michigan, he has also taught at New York University, Vassar College, and the United States Naval War College. Chair of the Conflict and Peace Research Committee of the International Political Science Asso- ciation, Singer has been particularly concerned with international politics and the causes of war. Among his books are The Wages of War, 1816-1965: A Statistical Handbook (1972) and Resort to Arms: International and Civil War, 1816-1980 (1982). Presented by Victor S. Gulliver, Captain, United States Navy; Professor of Naval Science and Commanding Officer, Northwestern University Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps Unit MINOR JESSER COON — DOCTOR OF SCIENCE Biochemist, educator. Chairman and Professor of Biological Chemistry at the University of Mich- igan Medical School, he has done research in metabolic biochemistry ranging from fundamental metabolic and substrate specificity studies to mechanistic investigations of flavoprotein- and hemeprotein-mediated catalysis with particular emphasis on hydroxylase enzymes. A member of the National Academy of Sciences, he has received the William C. Rose Award in Biochemistry and Nutrition and the Bernard B. Brodie Award in Drug Metabolism. Presented by Karl D. Bays, Trustee, Northwestern University ARTHUR RUBLOFF — DOCTOR OF HUMANE LETTERS Real estate developer, civic leader, philanthropist. As developer of the Evergreen Plaza Shop- ping Center in 1942, he established the basic designs, patterns, and methods followed in shop- ping centers throughtout the world. Now Chairman of the Board of the Rubloff Development Corporation, he has also served as a founder and director of the Lyric Opera of Chicago, as a director of three museums, and as chairman, president, trustee, or member of over 45 civic and charitable organizations. Presented by George S. Grossman, Professor and Librarian, School of Law LYNN TOWNSEND WHITE, JR. — DOCTOR OF LITERATURE Historian, educator. Now Professor Emeritus of History at the University of California at Los Angeles, he was President of Mills College from 1943 to 1958. An historian of technology and an authority on the medieval roots of Western technology, he was a co-founder of the Society for the History of Technology and has served on the councils of numerous scholarly organiza- tions. Among his books are Medieval Technology and Social Change (1962) and Medieval Reli- gion and Technology (1978). Presented by Joel Mokyr, Professor of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences 4 NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY ROGER WILLIAM BROWN — DOCTOR OF SCIENCE Psychologist, educator. Since 1974 the John Lindsley Professor of Psychology in Memory of William James at Harvard University, Brown has also served on the faculty of the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology and is Chairman of the Department of Social Relations at Harvard. A member of the National Academy of Sciences, he has been interested primarily in communica- tion and social psychology, especially linguistic and cognitive development in children. His books include Social Psychology (1965) and A First Language: The Early Stages (1973). Presented by Roy A. Koenigsknecht , Associate Dean, Graduate School, and Professor of Communicative Disorders, School of Speech MARJORIE CRAIG BENTON — DOCTOR OF HUMANE LETTERS Public servant. United States Representative to UNICEF (United Nations Children's Emer- gency Fund) and Chair of Save the Children Federation, she has received the 1978 UNICEF Award for Outstanding Public Service and the 1981 Adlai Stevenson Award for International Service. In addition to service on national boards of numerous organizations dealing with peace, environmental issues, and social justice, she is active in Democratic Party affairs and has served as a delegate to the last three Democratic national conventions. Presented by Margaret T. Gordon, Associate Professor of Journalism, Medill School of Journalism, and Director of the Center for Urban Affairs and Policy Research OSCAR EMMANUEL PETERSON — DOCTOR OF FINE ARTS Pianist, composer. A prolific recording artist, he has given concerts throughout the world and has conducted master classes in jazz piano at universities throughout North America. Recipient of awards from Down Beat and Metronome magazines, he also received Grammy Awards in three out of four consecutive years. A Canadian citizen, Peterson was awarded the service medal, Order of Canada, in 1973. Composer of such works as "Hymn to Freedom" and the "Canadiana Suite," he has published instructional materials as well as transcriptions of his own, solos. Presented by Patricia H. Buehler, Trustee, Northwestern University DONALD THOMAS CAMPBELL — DOCTOR OF SCIENCE Psychologist, educator. For 25 years a member of the Northwestern faculty, he is currently University Professor of Social Relations and Psychology at Lehigh University. A member of the National Academy of Sciences, he is recognized for his work relating psychology
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