1992 Commencement Program, University Archives, University Of

1992 Commencement Program, University Archives, University Of

DO NOT REMOVE MASTER COPY UNIVERSITY of PENNSYLVANIA Two Hundred Thirty-Sixth Commencement for the Conferring of Degrees FRANKLIN FIELD Monday, May 18, 1992 SEATING DIAGRAM Guests will find this diagram helpful in locating the approximate seating of the degree candidates. The seating roughly corresponds to the order by school in which the candidates for degrees are presented, beginning at top left with the College of Arts and Sciences. The actual sequence is shown in the Contents on the opposite page under Degrees in Course. Reference to the paragraph on page seven describing the colors of the candidates' hoods according to their fields of study may further assist guests in placing the locations of the various schools. Contents Page Seating Diagram of the Graduating Students 2 The Commencement Ceremony 4 Commencement Notes 6 Honorary Degree Citations 8 Degrees in Course 10 The College of Arts and Sciences 10 The College of General Studies 19 The School of Engineering and Applied Science 20 The Wharton School 28 The Wharton Evening School 32 The Wharton Graduate Division 33 The School of Nursing 38 The School of Medicine 40 The Law School 42 The Graduate School of Fine Arts 45 The School of Dental Medicine 48 The School of Veterinary Medicine 49 The Graduate School of Education 50 The School of Social Work 52 The Annenberg School for Communication 53 The Graduate Faculties 54 Certificates 61 General Honors Program 61 Advanced Dental Education 61 Fine Arts 62 Commissions 63 Army 63 Navy 63 Air Force 63 Principal Academic Honor Societies 64 Faculty Promotions to Emeritus Status 67 Faculty Honors 68 Prizes and Awards 72 Class of 1942 and Alumni Class Representatives 80 Events Following Commencement 81 The Commencement Marshals 83 Academic Honors Insert 3 The Commencement Ceremony MUSIC The First United States Army Band DAVID A. RATLIFF, Conductor and Commander STUDENT PROCESSION PROCESSION OF THE CLASS OF 1942 PROCESSION OF ALUMNI CLASS REPRESENTATIVES ACADEMIC PROCESSION OPENING PROCLAMATION ALVIN V. SHOEMAKER, Chairman of the Trustees INVOCATION STANLEY E. JOHNSON, Chaplain THE NATIONAL ANTHEM GREETINGS SHELDON HACKNEY, President ACADEMIC HONORS MICHAEL T. AIKEN, Provost CONFERRING OF HONORARY DEGREES The President K. JON BARWISE College Professor of Philosophy, Mathematics, and Doctor of Science Computer Science and Adjunct Professor of Linguistics, Indiana University CANDICE BERGEN Actress, Writer and Photojournalist Doctor of Laws RUPERT E. BILLINGHAM Retired Professor and Chairman, Department of Doctor of Science Biology and Anatomy, University of Texas Health Science Center, Dallas Former Professor and Chairman, Department of Medical Genetics, Professor of Zoology, and Director of the Henry Phipps Institute, University of Pennsylvania JOHN R. CASANI Director, Office of Flight Projects, NASA Jet Doctor of Science B.S. in Electrical Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute Engineering, 1955 of Technology JAMES P. COMER Maurice Falk Professor of Child Psychiatry, Yale Doctor of Humane Letters Child Study Center and Associate Dean of the School of Medicine, Yale University NATALIE ZEMON DAVIS Henry Charles Lea Professor of History, Princeton Doctor of Humane Letters University CHEN Fu Koo Businessman and Citizen Diplomat Doctor of Laws 4 ISMAIL MAHOMED Supreme Court Justice, Republic of South Africa Doctor of Laws ARNO A. PENZIAS Vice President for Research, AT & T Bell Laboratories Doctor of Science Nobel Laureate in Physics ACADEMIC FESTIVE ANTHEM Words by Benjamin Franklin Music by Bruce Montgomery The Commencement Chorus and First Army Band BRUCE MONTGOMERY, Conductor INTRODUCTION OF THE COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER The Provost COMMENCEMENT ADDRESS THE HONORABLE JUSTICE ISMAIL MAHOMED Supreme Court of the Republic of South Africa GREETINGS DAVID K. HILDEBRAND, Chair, Faculty Senate PRESENTATION OF THE FIFTY-YEAR CLASS The President CONFERRING OF DEGREES IN COURSE The President Candidates are presented by the Deans and the Vice Provost CLOSING REMARKS The President THE RED AND BLUE (By William J. Goeckel, '96 and Harry E. Westervelt, '98) Come all ye loyal classmen now, in hall and campus through, Lift up your hearts and voices for the royal Red and Blue. Fair Harvard has her crimson, old Yale her colors too, But for dear Pennsylvania we wear the Red and Blue. Hurrah! Hurrah! Pennsylvania! Hurrah for the Red and the Blue: Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah for the Red and Blue. BENEDICTION The Chaplain RECESSIONAL 5 Commencement Notes Commencement exercises at American universities and colleges are traditionally composed of three essen- tial elements: the academic procession, the conferring of degrees and the commencement address. This prac- tice has been codified since 1895, when a national conference on academic costume and ceremony was pro- posed and a plan known initially as the "Intercollegiate System" was formally adopted. The Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania incorporated this code in the statutes of the University in November 1896. Now under the aegis of the American Council of Education, the "Academic Costume Code and Academic Ceremony Guide" has been revised in 1932 and 1960.' Throughout the 20th century commencement at Penn has, with minor modifications, followed the dictates of the code and its revisions. By 1896, however, Penn had been granting degrees for nearly one hundred forty years. Like other American colonial colleges, Penn borrowed its 18th century commencement rituals directly from the English universities. In England the history of academic dress reaches back to the early days of the oldest schools. As early as the second half of the fourteenth century, the statutes of certain colleges prohibited "excess in apparel" and required the wearing of a long gown. It is still an open question as to whether academic dress finds its sources chiefly in ecclesiastical or in civilian dress. It is often suggested that gowns and hoods were the sim- plest, most effective method of staying warm in the unheated, stone buildings which housed medieval schol- ars. In any case academic costume had evolved to contemporary familiarity by the time Benjamin Franklin was awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws by the University of St. Andrews in Edinburgh in 1759. Two hundred years ago, the University of Pennsylvania was just emerging from the political turmoil wrought by the Revolutionary War. In 1779, in the midst of the conflict, public opinion demanded punitive measures against those who earlier had defended the interests of the Penn family proprietors and the British Crown. The Trustees of the College of Philadelphia included several of the most prominent officials under the colonial regime. The Provost was one of the proprietary government's most reliable polemicists. The state Assembly accused them of being "dangerous and disaffected men" and passed an act which removed them from the direction of the school. In their place the Assembly established the University of the State of Pennsylvania, an institution funded and controlled by the state legislature. A new Provost and board of Trustees, chosen in part for their allegiance to the revolutionary cause, renewed the work of the college and medical departments on the campus at 4th and Arch Streets. The University was a far more open and diverse institution than the College had been and the student body and faculty of the 1780's included many of the most notable figures in Penn history. By 1789, however, public opinion had swung back in favor of those who defended the old College. Now dominated by a Federalist majority, the state Assembly again intervened. In March of that year the College was re-instituted and the former Provost, William Smith, and most of the former Trustees resumed charge of - the buildings and equipment. The College of Philadelphia had no students, however, and the Trustees and Faculty of the University, undaunted by their eviction, continued to administer and teach. The restoration of the College in 1789 left Philadelphia with both a private college and a state university. Two institutions were more than even the new nation's largest city could support. Neither was financially able to implement its programs and there was conflict between the two faculties, particularly between the medical departments. By July 1791 the schools had begun negotiations aimed at union. Agreement came rapidly and on 30 September the state legislature passed a bill which re-incorporated both under the name "The Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania." Provost John Ewing of the former University was chosen to head the merged institution. The spring of 1792 would see the last of separate classes and separate commencements. On 18 April 1792, Provost Ewing, acting on behalf of the Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania, con- ferred the Bachelor of Arts degree upon twelve members of the senior class of the College of Philadelphia. This small group was nevertheless quite prominent. Two members, George Steptoe Washington and Lawrence Augustine Washington, were nephews of the President of the United States; another, Bird Wilson, was son of U.S. Supreme Court Justice James Wilson. Like the Washington and Wilson, the other graduates of the College tended to be members of wealthy, elite Philadelphia families, a group which generally reflected the Anglican and Federalist interests of the former College's advocates. Three weeks later, on 11 May, Provost Ewing and the Trustees conferred undergraduate degrees upon twenty-four young men

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