FRIDAY, MARCH THIRTEEN NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTY·FOUR The Winter Commencement of Michigan State University UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM • EAST LANSING The Winter Commencement of Michigan State University ACADEMIC COSTUME The pageantry and color at commencement exercises reveal a record of academic achievement of the various individuals taking part in the exer cises. The following brief description is given that the audience might more readily interpret such achievement. In 1895, the Intercollegiate Commission, a group of leading American educators, met at Columbia University to draft a code which would serve to regulate the design of gowns and hoods indicating the various degrees as well as the colors to indicate the various faculties. This code has been adopted by most of the colleges and univer sities in America and its use has made identifica tion of scholastic honors an immediate activity Three types of gowns are indicated by the code. Those worn by the bachelors are made of black worsted material and have long, pointed sleeves. Those worn by masters may be made either of black silk or black wool and have long, closed sleeves with the arc of a circle near the bottom. The arm goes through a slit, giving the appearance of short sleeves for the master's gown. Doctor's gowns are made of black silk and are faced with velvet. The sleeves are full, round and open with three bars of velvet on each sleeve. The velvet facing of bars on the sleeves may be black or the same color as the binding of the hood. Hoods are made of material identical with the gown and are lined in the official academic COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE Forest Products, Forestry, Packaging COLLEGE OF ARTS AND LETTERS. Music Philosophy . COLLEGE OF BUSINESS COLLEGE OF COMMUNICATION ARTS. Journalism . Speech COLLEGE OF EDUCATION COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING COLLEGE OF HOME ECONOMICS COLLEGE OF NATURAL SCIENCE Nursing. COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCE Economics COLLEGE OF VETERINARY MEDICINE. 2 color of the institution conferring the degree. If the institution has more than one color, the chevron is used to introduce the second color. Colored velvet or velveteen binds the hoods and indicates the department or faculty to which the degree pertains. Historical associations of color have been continued to signify the various faculties. Art and letters can be recognized by the white, taken from the traditional white fur trimming of the Oxford and Cambridge Bachelor of Arts hoods. Red, long traditional of the church, indicates theology. The royal purple of the King's court signifies law. The green of medicinal herbs immediately identifies a medical degree. Philosophy is signified by the color of wisdom and truth, blue. Because through re search untold wealth has been released to the world, science is identified by golden yellow. Ox ford pink indicates music and russet brown, the color of dress worn by ancient English foresters, indicates forestry. The color of the velvet of the hood is distinc tive of the subject to which the degree pertains. For example, the trimming for the degree of Master of Science in Agriculture should be maize, repre senting agriculture, rather than golden yellow, rep resenting science. At Michigan State University, it is custom ary to identify the bachelors graduating from the different departments of study by tassels of the official department color as established by the Intercollegiate Code. · Maize · Russet · White Pink Navy Blue · Drab Royal Blue Crimson Silver Gray Light Blue Orange Maroon . Golden Yellow Apricot Citron Copper . Dark Gray ORDER OF CEREMONIES PROCESSIONAL Wagner OVERTURE TO THE MASTERSINGERS . MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY ORCHESTRA - DR. GOMER L. JONES, Director AMERICA· Smith My country, 'tis of thee, Sweet land of liberty, Of thee I sing: Land where my fathers died, Land of the Pilgrims' pride, From ev'ry mountain side Let freedom ring! INVOCATION THE REVEREND TRUMAN MORRISON Edgewood United Church ADDRESS WALTER P. REUTHER, LL.D., HH.D. President, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers SYMPHONY NUMBER 93 IN D MAJOR (FIRST MOVEMENT) . Haydn CONFERRING OF DEGREES JOHN A. HANNAH, D. AGR., LL.D., HH.D., L.H.D., D.Se. President, Michigan State University Traynor When from these scenes we wander And twilight shadows fade, Our mem'ry still will linger Where light and shadows played. In the evening oft we'll gather And pledge our faith anew, Sing our love for Alma Mater And thy praises, M.S.U. ALMA MATER M.S.U., we love thy shadows When twilight silence falls, Flushing deep and softly paling O'er ivy-covered halls. Beneath the pines we'll gather To give our faith so true, Sing our love for Alma Mater And thy praises, M.S.U. BENEDICTION THE REVEREND MR. MORRISON RECESSIONAL Purcell TRUMPET TUNE AND Am Purcell TRUMPET VOLUNTARY M.S.U. SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA - BYRON AUTREY AND KEITH AMSTUTZ, Soloists The escorts for the procession are m emb ers of Mortar Board, the honor society for senior women. The audience is requested to remain seated while those in the procession are entering and leaving the auditorium. 3 BOARD OF TRUSTEES Michigan State University operates under the jurisdiction of a constitutional body known as the Board of Trustees. The eight elected members serve eight-year terms. Two are elected biennially from the state at large. The President of the University is appointed by the Board and is by constitutional provision the presiding member of the body. The Board likewise appoints a Secretary and a Treasurer. The Board has general supervision of the University and the control and direction of all expenditures of University funds. THE HONORABLE CONNOR D. SMITH, Chairman THE HONORABLE C. ALLEN HARLAN . THE HONORABLE WARREN M. HUFF. THE HONORABLE FRANK MERRIMAN . THE HONORABLE STEPHEN S. NISBET. THE HONORABLE DON STEVENS THE HONORABLE PAUL D. BAGWELL THE HONORABLE JOHN S. PINGEL . JOHN A. HANNAH, Ex Officio, President JACK BRESLIN, Secretary. PHILIP J. MAY, Treasurer Pinconning Detroit Plyrrwuth Deckerville Fremont Okemos Detroit Grosse Pointe East Lansing East Lansing East Lansing 4 MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY Michigan State University, one of the lead ing land-grant universities and the first agricultural college in America, strives for excellence in afford ing liberal and practical education for its students in a broad range of human endeavors. MSU also serves people of the state, nation and world through its numerous research, extension and international programs. Now in its 110th year, Michigan State has grown from three buildings and six faculty members to one of the ten largest universities in the nation. It has approximately 2,500 staff members engaged in teaching, research and public service, 435 build ings, and 4,710 acres of land, including 1,440 acres in the campus and housing area and 420 more in planned development. Founded in 1855 to educate youth for the major occupation of that day-farming-MSU has broadened its offerings to meet the educational needs of young people today. Michigan State now has the School for Advanced Graduate Studies and 11 colleges-Agriculture, Arts and Letters, Business, Communications Arts, Education, Engineering, Home Economics, Natural Science, Social Science, Veterinary Medicine and the University College which offer basic courses for all freshmen and sophomores. Nearly 200 areas of specialization are available to undergraduates; approximately 300 are offered for graduate students. More merit scholars were in the freshman class at Michigan State University this year than were admitted to any other university. A leading attraction for them is the Honors College, which enables superior students to waive normal gradua tion requirements and undertake individual pro grams. One of the newest of the many innovations in higher education made by Michigan State Uni versity is its academic-coeducational residence halls. Incorporation of classrooms and faculty offices with living, dining and recreational facilities has given these giant new dormitories an academic emphasis that helps students learn. Four of these residence halls are now occupied and two more will be opened in September. The academic-coeducational arrange ment has worked so well that it will be carried one step further this fall when three of the six new residence halls will be reserved primarily for upper classmen. Each of these halls will be the center of curricular and non curricular activities for a college, creating a "college within a college" atmosphere. Today, more than 27,000 students attend the University at East Lansing. About 80 per cent come from Michigan, representing every section of the state. Students from every state in the United States and 90 foreign countries are also in attendance. Looking to the future, Michigan State Uni versity is preparing for increasingly larger enroll ments as the great number of children born during and after World War II reach college age. To meet this challenge MSU is revising curriculums and de veloping new teaching techniques through its Edu cational Development Project. In the land-grant tradition it pioneered, Michigan State University is concerned with re search and service as well as teaching. I All colleges and the Agricultural Experiment Station are engaged in a wide range of research. Some 1,600 individual projects are in progress. The University's research tools include the giant new Control Data 3600 Computer and a 50-million-volt cyclotron, which will begin operations this year. Facilities to be completed in 1964 include a $6 mil lion chemistry building, a $5.2 million biochemistry laboratory, and an $862,000 psychology research building. A $4.7 million veterinary medicine build ing will be finished in 1965. Through an agreement with the Atomic Energy Commission, MSU will become a national center for basic research on plants and their re actions to radiation. Involved is construction of a $2 million building, a staff of about 90 persons and an annual budget of about $1 million when the pro gram is fully underway. Benefits of the University are brought to every county in Michigan by the Cooperative Ex tension Service and the Continuing Education Serv ice. Their programs, on and off campus, provide many kinds of technical information and formal course work for hundreds of thousands of Michigan citizens. The Kellogg Center for Continuing Educa tion, one of the finest conference centers in the na tion, annually hosts nearly 50,000 adults traveling to the campus for some 600 conferences and other educational meetings. The land-grant concept of service is interna tional. Supported by grants from the federal govern ment and private foundations, Michigan State Uni versity maintains research and technical assistance projects at 13 educational institutions in Asia, Africa and South America. International projects have given many faculty members overseas experience, adding a new dimension to their teaching. Through teaching, research and service in the agricultural, business and professional fields, Michigan State University daily proves its worth to the people of Michigan. Noted for its democratic and friendly spirit, the student body harmonizes with the University faculty to make Michigan State University one of the great educational institutions. 5 COLLEGE OF AGRICUL TURE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF SCIENCE The candidates will be presented by DEAN THOMAS K. COWDEN William Warren Austin Pomology and Vegetable Production Fisheries and Wildlife Jack Deverick Bails Duane Neil Barnard Fisheries and Wildlife Dean Sheldon Blanchard Agricultural Mechanics °William James Bolthouse Pomology and Vegetable Production Packaging Alan Karl Borkenhagen °James Allen Bruce Multiple-Use Forestry Leroy Wallace Burgeson Fisheries and Wildlife Fisheries and Wildlife Gerald Lee Cooper Agricultural Economics Birney Lee Crosby Mary Lynnette Dast Fisheries and Wildlife Glen William Diesing Agricultural Mechanics Packaging Martin Alexis DiLoreto Park Management David Alan Dilts Robert Lee Eder Agricultural Economics Richard Dean Erickson Agricultural Mechanics Robert Harrison Fargher Residential BUilding Multiple-Use Forestry John Jay Ferris Poultry Science Grant Joseph Fettig Richard James Frank Packaging Fisheries and Wildlife David William Galvin Multiple-Use Forestry Allan Kyle Green Donald Ned Groves Jack David Harby John R. Hesselink Dale Herman Hopp °Paul Thomas Horn Wood Processing and Technology Residential Building Food Science Packaging Crop Science Edward J. Huls Agricultural Mechanics Wilbur Corneal Johnson Fisheries and Wildlife Food Science H tMichael Edward King Thomas Arend Lenderink Wood Processing and Technology Fishm·ies and Wildlife John Richard Lyons Food Science Fred Michael Madsen Animal Husbandry Robert Franklin Mannisto Fisheries and Wildlife Roger Alan Martz Packaging Donald Edward McBryant Residential Building J on Fredrick Merchant Thomas Owen Mitchel Mobile Homes John Fisk Morrish Packaging Perez Malande Olindo Fisheries and Wildlife Packaging Thomas Keith Ondrus Floriculture Robert L. Sabourin Charles Russel Schriner Packaging Agricultural Mechanics Durell Walter Scott Joseph John Stempek M obile Homes Ronald M. Summers Packaging Residential Building George Adelbert Swartz Soil Science James William Timmerman David Jon Tooker Packaging Multiple-Use Forestry David Earl Tubbs Packaging Wendell Gene Vander Ploeg Packaging Robert Michael Vuillemenot Packaging John Richard Walton Willy Ray Wilson Packaging Robert Michael Zabonick Residential Building Nathan Conrad Zimmerman Dairy Production DEGREE GRANTED JOINTLY WITH THE COLLEGE OF EDUCATION - AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION Edward Aloysius Birkmeier John Stephen Kent Donald Lee Munger H °John Louis Okay Robert Ward Wiles DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE Paul D. Adams Richard William Daniels Fisheries and Wildlife Animal Husbandry Ian Bain Flann Trygve Graee Forest Products Agricultural Mechanics H Honors College o W ith Honor t With High Honor 7 COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE (Continued) Richard Lee Harlan Leland Don Lambert Fang Hui Liao Edward James Lynch John MacLeod Willard Lee McLeod Julius Henry Miller Jose Moreno Montoya Bruno Carl Moser Forestry Agricultural Economics Soil Science Crop Science Animal Husbandry Agricultural Economics Food Science Crop Science Horticulture Crop Science Benoy Rumar Mukherjee Food Science Yolanda Esther Nino Agricultural Economics Jerrold Linden Nye Crop Science Orlando Valentin Sanchez Dairy Yagya Nand Sinha Agricultural Economics Samuel Galen Unger Agricultural Economics Nydia G. Villegas Robert Newell Wisner Agricultural Economics Forest Products Bruce Arden Wittrup DEGREE GRANTED JOINTLY WITH THE COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING Harold C. Wu Agricultural Engineering 8 COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF SCIENCE The candidates will be presented by DEAN JOHN D . RYDER Civil Engineering Dennis Alan Muirhead Donald Raymond Baker <'>Dwight Edward Barlow Mechanical Engineering <'>Ronald Eugene Dull Mechanical Engineering Richard Herman Hanewald <'>Surinder Kapur Sergio Kavalhuna Andrejs Kruklitis Kenneth Lewis La Grand Metallurgical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Electrical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Arthur Raymond Neibarger Mechanical Engineering Richard Norman Steenis <'> Charles Andrew Stoll Gaidis Timms Electrical Engineering Civil Engineering Civil Engineering DEGREE GRANTED JOINTLY WITH THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE Jerry M yrl Zimmerman Agricultural Engineering DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE Gary Alexander Cervo Mechanical Engineering Electrical Engineering Mu-Chuan Chen Mechanical Engineering Richard J. Cramer Mechanical Engineering Kui Yong Park Kishorchandra Pragdas Patel Manharlal Laxmichand Shah Electrical Engineering William Frederick Shutler Electrical Engineering Ewald Timon Van Wieren Civil Engineering Mechanical Engineering Achyut Gangadhar Patwardhan Civil Engineering ·With Honor 9 COLLEGE OF HOME ECONOMICS DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF SCIENCE The candidates will be presented by DEAN THELMA E. PORTER Ann Marie Temple Balcam H °Patricia Ann Kleinknecht General Home Economics Diane Berger Retailing of Textiles and Clothing Lucy Anne Carroll General Home Economics Sally Ann Costley General Home Economics Home Furnishings' Barbara June Koehn Concetta Anne Micale General Home Economics Marsha Lee Mills Retailing of Textiles and Clothing Retailing of Textiles and Clothing Carole Jean Nicholson Vicki Lee Gates Retailing of Textiles and Clothing Retailing of Textiles and Clothing Janice Irene Sneesby °Sharon Elizabeth Anne Kappel Retailing of Textiles and ' Clothing Home Economics Extension Judith Lynn Sprayman General Related Arts DEGREE GRANTED JOIN'ILY WITH THE COLLEGE OF EDUCATION Ann Marie Arend Home Economcis Teaching Bonnie Carol Baker Home Economics Teaching Mary Ellen Burness Child Development and Teaching Home Economics Teaching Mary Dimeck Joyce Marguerite Dunkle Home Economics Teaching Lesley Kay Ellward Home Economics Teaching °Sharon Lynn Hawley Child Development and Teaching Diana Ruth May Hicks Home Economics Teaching Patricia Mable Horn Child Development and Teaching Frana Tritle Potter Child Development and Teaching Alice Swing Rowe Home Economics Teaching Home Economics Teaching Sue Ann Sprowl Stephanie Campbell Sumner Child Development and Teaching Barbara Diana Verral Home Economics Teaching Beverly Ann Weller Home Economics Teaching DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE Charlotte Ann F elsted Rita Schuler Rood Institution Administration Institution Administration H Honors College • With Honor 10 COLLEGE OF VETERINARY MEDICINE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF SCIENCE David Lynn Luhring Veterinary Medicine The candidates will be presented by DEAN WILLIS W. ARMISTEAD DREGREE OF DOCTOR OF VETERINARY MEDICINE John W. Arbaugh Joseph Baillargeon, Jr. Thomas Joseph Barrett, Jr. \)Donald Edward Bixby, Jr. \) Archie J. Conkey Donald Wells DeYoung Gordon Wayne Fish Robert E. Foley \)William Alvin Freitag Beverley Jean Frommert Merrill Edgar Frownfelter Richard Glenn Gremel tArthur Isaac Hurvitz Stephen August King Edward Charles Liebler Floyd Maynard Lindquist, Jr. \) Ann Marion Lucas George Elliot Malarney Thomas Paul Piekunka Dennis Bradley Pinkston David James Remondini Paul Llewellyn Roullard DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE Surgery and Medicine Samuel M. Getty Anatomy Kartika Kartawiria Dineshwar Prasad Sinha Surgery and Medicine Ram Das Sinha Larry J. Wallace Anatomy Veterinary Pathology '''lith Honor • t With High Honor 11 COLLEGE OF BUSINESS DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF ARTS The candidates will be presented by DEAN ALFRED L. SEELYE Joseph Gerald Abramowski General Business Administration Daniel Peter Alfonso Hotel, Motel and Club Management Alexander Wayne Anderson General Business Administration Darryl Eugene Apps Transportation Administration Martin William Arlen Restaurant Management Accounting Nelson William Armstrong, Jr. David Arthur Atlee Hotel, Motel and Club Management Robert Harwood Baylis Personnel Administration Ralph Clayton Bird, III General Business Administration William Earl Bogard, Jr. General Business Administration David Monash Bottrill Hotel, Motel and Club Management General Marketing James Russell Brewer <'>John Eugene Briggs Hotel, Motel and Club Management Leslie Alan Brill General Business Administration Edward Joseph Brockman Douglas Allen Burgess Donald Duane Byerly Transportation Administration Accounting Food Marketing Management Chapman Roosevelt Cannon, Jr. Transportation Administration Bruce James Carnick General Business Administration David Ewig Casebeer General Business Administration Lindus LaRell Caulum, II Hotel, Motel and Club Management Raymond Lester Champ Institutional and Hospital Management Accounting Roger William Cheeseman Henry William Collier Production Administration Michael Dennis Connaughton John Joseph Connolly, Jr. General Business Administration General Marketing Gene Alan Crouse Douglas McClay Davidson General Marketing Ralph Leonard Day General Business Administration William Russell Deutsch General Business Administration Lyle William DeYoung General Business Administration John Spencer Duncan Production Administration Gary Dean Edwards General Business Administration Cherrie Weight Emmanuel Executive Secretarial Administration Accounting General Marketing General Marketing D. Ray Engleman Bernard Thomas Estfan Kenneth Stephan Farr Donald Charles Fletcher Personnel Administration Charles Donald French <'> Ronald R. Fuller Ned Rudolph Gilardino Transportation Administration Accounting Hotel, Motel and Club Management Clair William Green General Business Administration Neil Gordon Guiles General Business Administration Accounting Restaurant Management General Marketing Gordon L. Gullicksen John Peter Hanzas Hajime Hara Lawrence Francis Harding, Jr. General Business Administration John Paul Hauch Hotel, Motel and Club Management Accounting Financial Administration Accounting H tJoel Howard Heath LeRoy Allen Heinz Keith Jon Hess William Henry Hillerman General Business Administration Richard L. Hinkelman Restaurant Management Hotel, Motel and Club Management H Honors College o With Honor t With High Honor 12 DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF ARTS (Continued) COLLEGE OF BUSINESS H "'Raymond H enry Arnold Huberts "'Louis Emery Pelletier Food Marketing Management Hotel, Motel and Club Management Burnett Nelson Johnston John Gary Piceu Hotel, Motel and Club Management Accounting Larry Arthur Jones H tDavid Allan Kaplan General Business Administration Shrikumar Poddar General Business Administration General Business Administration Thomas Gary Pratt Daniel John Keating, Jr. Hotel, Motel and Club Management Production Administration Ronald Louis Provus William Joseph Keilen Production Administration Joseph Randolph Kern General Business Administration Kazuo Kikuchi General Business Administration David Wayne Kiser Philip Curtis Koehn Martin Stuart Kopstein H tJerome Charles Langham General Business Administration General Marketing Accounting Accounting Marilyn Linsenmann Personnel Administration '" Arthur Albert Loesel General Business Administration General Marketing Von Douglas Logan Thomas Jeffrey Lyon General Business Administration "'John Corbin Malley "'Thomas Edward Martin "'Betty Lynn Mason Roy Glenn Mathews, Jr. General Business Administration Accounting Accounting General Business Administration Roy Joseph Meier Hotel, Motel and Club Management David Edward Modeen General Business Administration General Marketing Michael Allyn Moon Craig MacDonald Moore General Business Administration Douglas Oscar Neff General Business Administration General Marketing Brent H. Nettle Barbara Leona Nitecki Hotel, Motel and Club Management Ronald Norman Rademacher General Marketing Martha Anne Ream Executive Secretarial Administration General Marketing William Louis Riehl William Travers Riepe Hotel, Motel and Club Management General Marketing William Ryan Ritchie Larry Joel Rosenquist Hotel, Motel and Club Management Accounting Edward Lionel Ruby Alan Francis Rybak Food Marketing Management David William Segelstrom General Business Administration H tBruce Henry Seyburn General Business Administration General Marketing Accounting Accounting Accounting Accounting Raymond James Smith William Richard Sprow Robert Wallace Stetler Lawrence Delbert Storie "'Douglas Lee Stowitts "'Russell Joseph Thompson Institutional and Hospital Management Richard Ernest Tomlinson Industrial Administration John Edward Turbeville General Business Administration Raymond Waldmiller General Business Administration Mary Rachel Walls General Business Administration Michael J ames Walsh Executive Secretarial Administration Transportation Administration "'Doris Elaine Oliphant H tThomas Damien Wanner Executive Secretarial Administration John Edward Papernik General Business Administration Accounting Jack Dale Patrick Sally Maurine Patterson General Business Administration Industrial Administration John Dennis Weisbruch General Business Administration Gordon Raymond Wells Stephen Albert White General Business Administration General Marketing H Honors College o With Honor t With High Honor 13 COLLEGE OF BUSINESS DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF ARTS (Continued) John Frederick Willemse Jerry Patrick Wolford Larry Alvin Wondero "'David Yau Wong Restaurant Management Accounting General Marketing General Business Administration Barry H. Young George Robert Zambiasi Restaurant Management General Business Administration Martin David Zuckerman General Marketing DEGREE RECOMMENDED JOINTLY WITH THE COLLEGE OF EDUCATION - BUSINESS EDUCA nON Harlan Eric Blomquist t Carolyn Jean Carpenter Dennis Michael Fitzgerald Marvin E. Hess Joan Marie Lesniak Margaret Ann Soulliere Lucille Anne U'Ren "'Jane Ann Van Etten Sonja Lou Walker DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS - Business Administration Ernest Leo Bebb, Jr. Charles James Demos Hermann Nuyken John Evans Peck Frederick Boiten Plasman Robert Hal Ruble Zoe Peckman Slagle Hamilton Madureira Vilela GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION DEGREE OF MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Robert Massimo Abruzzi Bret George Bell Richard Lee Bellaw Telmo Raul Blauth David Cyril Christie Arthur Ward Cornwell John Randall Cribbs Robert L. Cutler Dale J. Dailey Noshir Jehangir Daruvalla John Pearson DeGarmo Thomas Edward Donovan Robert Malcolm Duncan Norman E. Frye Edward Roy Gallagher James Rowland Hedges Patrick O. Homant H Honors College o With Honor t With High Honor 14 Daniel Stanley Janicki James Richard Jones Martin Thomas Kallighan Noel Edward Kurth Theodore Thomas Latz John Murwyn Mason, Jr. Carolyn Charlotte Mueller John Carl Nelson Leonard Dalton Orr Richard C. Rusthoven Ishwer C. Shah George Oliver Smith Terrence Clare Smith John Patrick Stokes, III Robert Edmund Visscher Stanley Gordon Wheeler COLLEGE OF EDUCATION DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF ARTS - Elementary Education The candidates will be presented by DEAN JOHN E. IVEY. JR. "'Barbara Mary Agocs Sandra Anne Balconi Judith May Barber Patricia Louise Barrack Carol Marie Bartley "'Virginia Hamilton Bell Bonnie R. Bernfeld Diane Marie Biera H tJulie Ann Bock H tBarbara Jean Brady Elinor Louise Browne Francis Ogden Burk Harriet Judy Carnick Donna Bryant Carter Linda Jane Cary "'Catherine Jean Cobb Cherri Lynne Collinge Bettie Karen Crable "'Catherine Jean Crockett Patsy Ann Crow "'Rosemary Anne Czarney tLinda Lee Dawson Marjorie Lehr Deppong Mona L. Dunckel Phyllis Jean Edwards Kay Ann Fager Karen Kay Folkmier Penelope Louise Forsen Gerald William Fuller Roxie Caldona Gardner Leona Kay Gates Katherine Marie Giacoletto "'Kathleen S. Gilbert Sandra Lou Gilmore Ruth Joan Goldberg Dorothy Hean Harris Cynthia Neihardt Hart Roberta Eileen Hill Lynne Humphreys Connie Anne Hungerford H Honors College o With Honor t With High Honor W. Ferne Hurd "'Hyacinth Maxine Husbeck Ruth Alice Jackson Joanne Leah Jamroz "'Sherren Kay Jones Carol Krezel Keller "'Kathie Irene Ketchum Jonalee Ruth Kowalske Karen Alice Kralowetz Patricia Joan Larson "'Rene Latzer Mary Ellen Maidlow Judith Benjamin Mann Richard N. McEnaney Mary Ellen McGeath Patricia Ann McIsaac Ruth M. Milligan Carol Anne Natharius "'Rosanna Teresa Niedermier Mary Ann Orner Louise I. Paine George Harry Rosingana Kimberley Roberts Sankey J an Michele Scott Susan Marie Seibert Marion Linda Seligson Judy Ann Sellek H tSylvia June Sikkenga Karen Rose Smith "'Kathleen Margaret Smith Anne Solomon Mary Louise Stace "'Malilyn Louise Swart Patricia May Thornton Mary Beth Wagoner Jane Maxine Walker Maria Waybridge "'Dianne Borsum Westfall Sharon Kay Winans Susan Elizabeth Woods 15 COLLEGE OF EDUCATION DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF SCIENCE Buhl H erbert Burton Stuart Lee Capling Lucy Ann Fomenko Theodore Campbell Guthard , Physical Education Recreation Physical Education Irma Oleta Hill Jerome Edward Hoffman Physical Education Health Education Physical Education and Health Education Physical Education Recreation Recreation Recreation Okla Warren Johnson John Phillip Kemppainen Mary Margaret McConnell Gerald Ernest Medler DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS - Education Therezinah Marie Mello Barreto Donna Davis Berryman Ray A. Bowman Louis Wayne Brown Donald James Cardinal Donald Francis Cas carelli John Walter Chopard David Kenneth Clum Theodore John Corombos Kenneth Douglas Coutts Lana Gertrude Dart Lucinda Coulter Dupree Thomas Howard Englund Richard Lee Fitzgerald Kenneth Fridsma Frederick Sherman Gable Ronald Walter Gilbertson Wade C. Hager Velma Goodpaster Hayes Gail G. H elgemo Richard Arthur Holmes Louise Brooks Honey Donald John Hudak Paula Dorothy Johnston Lenore May Kalenda Richard Allen Kanehl John Kapral Barbara Eilander Klaasen o With Honor 16 J ames Burton Middleton Bert Olah Bernard Bruce Palmateer Gerald Lee Reynolds Ronald D. Roberts Ronald Richard Ross