xt7hmg7fv48j https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7hmg7fv48j/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky. University Senate University of Kentucky. Faculty Senate Kentucky University of Kentucky. University Senate University of Kentucky. Faculty Senate 1973-12-10  minutes 2004ua061 English   Property rights reside with the University of Kentucky. The University of Kentucky holds the copyright for materials created in the course of business by University of Kentucky employees. Copyright for all other materials has not been assigned to the University of Kentucky. For information about permission to reproduce or publish, please contact the Special Collections Research Center. University of Kentucky. University Senate (Faculty Senate) records Minutes (Records) Universities and colleges -- Faculty University of Kentucky University Senate (Faculty Senate) meeting minutes, December 10, 1973 text University of Kentucky University Senate (Faculty Senate) meeting minutes, December 10, 1973 1973 1973-12-10 2020 true xt7hmg7fv48j section xt7hmg7fv48j    
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  

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MINUTES OF THE UNIVERSITY SENATE, DECEMBER 10, 1973

The University Senate met in regular session at 3:00 p.m., Monday, December

10, 1973. Chairman Adelstein presided. Members absent: Staley F. Adams*,
Lawrence A. Allen, John Banwell*, Charles E. Barnhart, Robert P. Belin*, Ben

W. Black, Harry M. Bohannan*, Peter P. Bosomworth*, Robert N. Bostrom*, Charles
L. Brindel*, Thomas Connelly, Raymond H. Cox, James E. Criswell*, Vincent Davis*,
Wayne H. Davis*, John A. Deacon*, John L. Duhring, Claude Farley*, James Flegle,
Juanita Fleming*, Lawrence E. Forgy, R. Fletcher Gabbard*, Art Gallaher*, John

G. Gattozzi*, Jack B. Hall, Joseph Hamburg, Holman Hamilton*, Thomas Hansbrough,
George W. Hardy, Damon Harrison*, S. Zafar Hasan*, Virgil W. Hays*, Ron Hill,
Raymond R. Hornback, Charles W. Hultman*, Raymon D. Johnson*, William S. Jordan*,
John J. Just*, Irving F. Kanner, E. Barrie Kenney*, James B. Kincheloe*, Robert
L. Lester*, Arthur Lieber, Cynthia Link, James W. Little*, Paul Mandelstam*,
William L. Matthews, Marion E. McKenna*, Michael P. McQuillen*, Alvin L. Morris*,
Robert C. Noble*, Jacqueline A Noonan*, Blaine F. Parker*, Paul F. Parker;

Harold F. Parks*, James A. Prestridge*, Donald A. Ringe*, Wimberly C. Royster*,
D. Milton Shuffett, Otis A. Singletary*, David Smith, Robert H. Spedding*,

Susan Sprague, William J. Stober*, Andy Strickland*, Paul A. Thornton*, Relmond
P. VanDaniker*, Jacinto J. Vazquez*, Wayne Waller, Daniel L. Weiss*, Rebecca
Whitis*, Paul A. Willis, Constance P. Wilson*, William W. Winternitz*, Ernest

F. Witte*, Robert G. Zumwinkle*.

The minutes of September 10 and November 12, 1973 were approved as circulated.

Vice President Lewis W. Cochran presented a Resolution on the death

of Dr. Ralph H. Weaver and directed that the Resolution be made a part of the
Minutes and that copies of the Resolution be sent to his family.

Dr. Ralph Holder Weaver was born in Khedive, Pennsylvania, January
13, 1903. He received the 3.8. degree in 1922 at age 19 from Allegheny
College where he was also elected a member of Phi Beta Kappa. One year
later he received the M.S. degree from Allegheny, and in 1926, the Ph.D.
degree from Michigan State College. While working on the doctorate he
served as a graduate assistant.

Dr. Weaver came to the University of Kentucky as Instructor in
Bacteriology in 1926. He rose rapidly through the academic ranks to full
Professorship in 1936.

During his 47 years here at UK, Ralph Weaver was an outstanding example
of balance in his efforts in his Department and in the University. Over
this entire period he taught regularly a microbiology course at the be-
ginning level, and shortly after his arrival he developed courses in Bac—
teriology of Foods and Bacteriology of Water and Sewage which he taught
regularly for many years. Following initiation of the Ph.D. program in
Microbiology on this campus, Dr. Weaver contributed to this program with
two graduate level courses, "History of Bacteriology" and "Advanced General
Bacteriology". At about this time very rapid development was occurring
in the fields of bacterial anatomy and microbial genetics and, recognizing
the need for organized instruction at the graduate level in these areas,

Dr. Weaver's Advanced General Course soon consisted chiefly of advanced work
in these two areas along with material on bacterial taxonomy and nomenclature.

This course became one of the core courses in the microbiology graduate program.

*Absence explained

 

 

 

 

 

    
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
 
  
 
    
 
   
  
 
 
   

 

 

 

 

Minutes of the University Senate, December 10, 1973 — cont

Dr. Weaver always set high achievement standards in his courses.
He had little patience with the lazy student but afforded unlimited ‘
time for the student who was willing to make the effort. In general, Vf
his door was always open to students. He enjoyed talking with them and $fi,
the students who took advantage of his open door policy developed a /
genuine fondness for the man as well as a respect for his thorough know—
ledge of his field.

Thoroughout the years, Dr. Weaver played a very active role in the
direction of thesis and dissertation projects, displaying his talents
as a research director and his special ability to transmit to the graduate
student the importance in scientific writing of conciseness of expression
along with clarity and completeness. His publication list is very impressive
from the standpoints of both quantity (over 100 publications) and the
scope of his research interests, chiefly in applied microbiology. The
majority of his publications have appeared in the Journal of Bacteriology.

Weaver's success with graduate students is attested to also by the If
fact that approximately 60% of those students who carried out master's gta‘
thesis under his direction continued on toward the Ph.D., both here and in 7
such institutions as Chicago, Cornell, Harvard, Indiana, Iowa State,

Pennsylvania, Purdue, Texas, Tulane and Yale. An impressive number of
our own Ph.D. graduates completed their dissertations under his guidance.

Dr. Weaver and his students have appeared regularly on the programs of
the annual meetings of the American Society for Microbiology and of other
societies during the past 40 years.

The high quality of his research enabled him to obtain financial support
from NSF, NIH and other sources, during a time when such support was
essential to program development.

Dr. Weaver's reputation as a teacher and researcher won for him the
highest honor bestowed upon a faculty member of the College of Arts and
Sciences when in 1957 its faculty elected him the "Distinguished Pro— _
fessor of the Year". He also received a University of Kentucky Alumni gfi
Research Award in 1961 for "outstanding research". “a”

Despite his heavy teaching and research loads, Dr. Weaver contributed
very greatly to the development of academic policy and procedures in the
University. He was elected by the Graduate Faculty to three 3—year
terms on the Graduate Council and during one summer he served as Acting
Dean of the Graduate School. He was elected to numerous terms on the
University Senate and served on virtually all the committees of the Senate
at one time or another. He was the first Chairman of the Senate Council.

Dr. Weaver served on the I'Search Committee" that selected John Oswald
as President of the University. He helped with the Academic Plan of 1964
and spent many months organizing and codifying material into the first
draft of the Governing Regulations of the University. .

At the departmental level for many years Dr. Weaver functioned as fit
adviser of the incoming freshman majors. During 1951—52, he served as f‘
acting chairman of the Department of Microbiology.

 rt

Minutes of the University Senate, December 10, 1973 — cont 3682

Dr. Weaver participated actively in the Kentucky Academy of Science,
the Kentucky chapters of Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi, the Kentucky—
Tennessee Branch of the Society of American Microbiologist (of which
he was a co—founder), the University of Kentucky Research Club and served
at one time or another as President of each of these organizations. He
was a fellow in the American Association for the Advancement of Science,
the American Academy of Microbiology and the American Public Health Asso—
ciation, and a member of the American Society of Industrial Microbiology
and the American Society for Microbiology.

Dr. Weaver was an ardent sports fan, an excellent bridge player and
enjoyed billiards and bowling. He will be sorely missed by his family,
his colleagues, his former students, and a host of friends among the
microbiologists of the world.

Dean Charles F. Haywood, College of Business and Economics, presented a

Resolution on the death of Dr. Ralph R. Pickett and directed that the Resolution
be made a part of the Minutes and that copies be sent to his family.

Dr. Ralph R. Pickett joined the faculty of the College of Business
and Economics (then the College of Commerce) in 1946. He retired from
the position of Professor of Finance in the Department of Business Ad—
ministration in 1969. During his 23 years of service to the University
of Kentucky he was held in high esteem by his colleagues and students
as an effective teacher, productive scholar, and capable administrator. His
15 years of service as Director of Graduate Studies in the College con-
tributed importantly to the development of the College's graduate program.

Born in Mercer, Missouri, Professor Pickett earned the Bachelor of
Arts from Missouri Wesleyan College and the Master of Arts and Doctor
of Philosophy from the University of Chicago. He was head of the Commerce
Department, Kansas State College, from 1929 to 1946. On leave from Kansas
State College from.l942 to 1945 he served in the U.S. Air Force as stat—
istical officer with the rank of Captain. His career, prior to joining
the faculty of the University of Kentucky, also included visiting appointments
at Southern Illinois University, City College of New York and Harvard
University.

Dr. Pickett contributed to the literature in his field of finance
through frequent publications in scholarly journals and trade publications.
In 1954 he co—authored, with Professor Marshall D. Ketchum, INVESTMENT
PRINCIPLES AND POLICY, which for a period of years was one of the leading
texts in the field of investment analysis.

Dr. Pickett's tenure in the College of Business and Economics exemplified
a well directed balance of teaching, research, and service. The faculty
of the College of Business and Economics expresses its profound appreciation
for Dr. Pickett's devoted service. We move that the University Senate
adopt this resolution, that it be spread upon the minutes, and that a copy
be conveyed, with our deep personal regard, to Mrs. Agnes Kerr Pickett.

Following the reading of the Resolutions the Chairman asked the Senators

to stand for a moment of silence in tribute and respect to Doctors Weaver and Pickett.

 

 

 

 

    
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
   
   
   
     

 

 

 

 

 

Minutes of the University Senate, December 10, 1973 — cont

Chairman Adelstein made the following remarks to the Senate:

The Senate Council has had several meetings during the past month fig»
with the President, Vice President Cochran, and Mr. Don Clapp, the -u
executive assistant to the President, about matters regarding tenure
and promotion and about admissions policies. There was a vigorous
exchange of ideas but no conclusions were reached at these meetings.

The Senate Council also met with Dr. Ray Hornback, Vice President 1
of University Relations, and there was discussion about his area of the 1
University.

There was an informal meeting with the Community College Senate. We
realized from this meeting, as we have realized from past meetings with
the Senate, the importance of communication between our Colleges and the
Community Colleges. This might involve seeing that they are consulted I
in decisions which affect them in their courses and that they receive
information about changes that are important to their students. @fl‘
1

The Council received a report on the selective admissions proposal
from the College of Architecture. The Committee has overwhelmingly
endorsed this proposal from that College and the Council will act upon
the endorsement at its January meeting.

The Council has also received and reviewed a lengthy Report from the
Academic Ombudsman, Dr. Donald Diedrich, in which he requests a number of
clarifications, and changes in the Senate Rules pertaining to academic
offenses. The Report from the Academic Ombudsman has been sent to the
Student Affairs Committee, under the chairmanship of Dr. Richard Gift, and ;
we hope that there will be action items coming before the Senate in the
spring in regard to these requested changes.

So much for Council actions and activities. I wish to say a few
words about the state of the Senate as 1973 draws to a close, and with
it, my term of office.

Under the new reorganization plan, 13 committees have been estab—
lished, charges written, appointments made, procedures formulated, and
issues proposed. Most of these committees are functioning well. But
some are suffering from birth pains, particularly those subcommittees
working in the new fields. I accept some responsibility for their lack \
of progress; some of it is also due to the general tendency to avoid
or postpone meetings until or unless a clear and urgent problem has developed.

In another area, a plan has been formulated for preparing numerous
academic policy statements and the writing of them will commence this spring.

A further step in the Senate's reorganization will occur when the new
apportionment rule, basing Senate representation on the number of faculty
and students, will go into effect. As you know, this is expected to de—
crease the representation from the Medical College and the College of
Agriculture, and increase the representation from the Colleges of Edu—
cation and Business and Economics.

  
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
     

Minutes of the University Senate, December 10, 1973 — cont 3684

During the past year I think that relationships with the President
and the administration have become more harmonious. Mutual respect,
flag cooperation, and communication between the three components of the Univer-
., sity —- students, faculty, and administration —~ are vital if the Univ—
{ ersity is to function effectively. Adversary relationships with the
! administration -— although traditional and often unavoidable due to
overlapping spheres of concern, if not authority -- must be minimized.

 

 

\ i As I personally View it, the main challenge to the University —— to
the departments, the colleges, the administration, and the Senate —— continues
to be the improvement of undergraduate education, particularly the first
‘ two years. Much study and attention has recently been given this problem
by Dean Stephenson and Vice President Cochran, as evidenced by the Carnahan
meeting on the freshman year this fall. Some departments, particularly
English with its new full faculty commitment to Freshman English, Sociology,
Physics, and probably others —— are paying more attention and allocating
greater faculty and financial resources to improve the undergraduate ex—
‘ periences. But the University as a whole, including the professional
fl!‘ colleges, should be able to do more to develop a distinctive and distin-
guished undergraduate program. We have this responsibility not because
the Council on Public Higher Education may confront us one day with the
question of why we should continue to enroll freshmen or sophomores, or
even undergraduates. We have the responsibility because we are a fine in—
stitution, committed to excellence, not only in our research, in our service,
and in our graduate seminars, but also in our undergraduate classes.

 

 

I thank you for your indulgence and attention today and in the past.
Serving as chairman has been a great honor and a fine experience.

Chairman Adelstein reminded the Senators of the informal End—of—the—Semester
Social to be held at the Helen G. King Alumni House on Tuesday, December 11,
1973, from 4:00 to 7:00 p.m. and strongly urged them to attend.

 

Professor Stanford L. Smith, acting secretary of the Senate Council in the ‘ ,é
absence of Professor Wilson, presented a motion on behalf of the Senate Council, 1 ‘fi
gflmh that the list of candidates for degrees at the December 21, 1973 graduation
‘4 date be approved for recommendation to the Board of Trustees. This list had
been circulated under date of November 19, 1973. The Senate approved the list
as circulated for recommendation to the Board of Trustees.

(See list of candidates in the Registrar's Office)

 “<3,“

Minutes of the University Senate, December 10, 1973 — cont 3685

GRADUATE SCHOOL
Wimberly Calvin Royster, Dean

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY

Suphal P. Agrawal Le Van Hoa

Clifford Walter Bond Weerawooth Katanyukul
Richard R. Carroll Manfred Harwood Ledford
Chi—p0 Chen Jose Antonio Madrigal
Ashok Kumar Chugh Larry C. Morgan
William M. Clarkson Robert Lee Nayle
Richard Anthony Couto John Francis Nishimuta
Henry Merrick Darley Jose F. Noronha

John Wesley Dorson Anna Kremer Reed
Roland P. Ficken Thomas Beebe Ripy
Quentin Lee Gehle Victor Rizza

Syamal Kumar Ghosh David Walter Rowden

G. Richard Granneman Marvin Edward Taylor
Vasilios Constantine Groutas Justo Celso Ulloa
Tong—Whi Han Marie Olesen Urbanski
Charles E. Hanrahan Harold Lee Weidner
Darmawan Harsokoesoemo Mildred Louise Wood
Virginia Floy Haughton John William Woodring
Charles Hays Paul Hieng Luang Wong

Allen Kenneth Hess
CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF EDUCATION

Charles Patterson Ainsworth Mary Catherine Dowe
Connie Bruce Carpenter Joe Finrow Pederson
Robert Lee Crawford

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
Jack Lawson Dyer Robert Kinkead Landrum
CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF MUSICAL ARTS

Virgil Edward Hale John Holstead Mead
Robert Carson Jones

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF SPECIALIST IN EDUCATION

Patricia Lolita Branyon Aileen Kiser Greer
Nell Theresa Collins

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS

Phillip Reeves Aaron Carol Jean Bursik

Rosamund Slyvia Abel Gary Wayne Callahan

Stanley Ray Aeschleman Nancy Lynne Carpenter

Thomas Howard Appleton Ann Marie Daly

Ronald Edward Ball Marguerite Jane Atteberry Emmons

Gaye Keller Bland Susan Fancher Grisette

 

      
 
 
  
 
   
 
   
  
 
  
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
   
    
  
  
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
  
 

 

  
  
 
 
  
  
 
 
  
  
   

 

 

 

 

 

 

3686

Candidates for the Degree of Master of Arts — cont

Bonnie Louise Hammel
William Edward Havens

Bobby Gene Hawkins
Elizabeth Rehm Horn

fiaEfigalJmmoflgllagsuléawell
Jennifer Dockery Hunsucker

John William Hunt

HHEHi obeBEaKetcfiadriCk

Willis Little

Donald R. Lowrey
Karen Colucci Lowrey
James David Miller

Minutes of the University Senate, December 10, 1973 — cont

Calvin Breckinridge Peters

Chantra Purnariksha
Alfred Guy Reed

James Edward Rivers
Cecilia M. Roberts
Nona Elisabeth Saling

William Clarence Sallee

John Martin Shank
Sue Ellen Stultz

Donald Henrich Tolzmann

Beverley Anne Wakem
John Rodger Williams
Claudia Lee Winkler
Edward Ray Wolfe

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE

Wilfred Leonard Arnason

Kerry Gene Bemis
Ke—Chang Chen

Edwin Lonn Cunningham
James Wellington Hazel
Harold Dean Hupp

Cecelia Annette Johnston

Nitaya Kanlong
Somchai Kanlong

Rashdaporn Kasemprasitauk
Petch Jasadaponpun Katanyukul

Hans Emil Klein
William Maksymowicz

i da L& edMills Eaiiuis

ert IIIQ
Donna Kay dMu 1gan
Gary Lee Neidert

Charles Gunter Olentine, Jr.

Joan Marie Ploetz
James Lee Powell
Vises Prasert

Carl Reed Richardson

Robert Joseph Ritter III
Robin Hirchert Rosebrough

gery yl Glgnn Rowe
Mlga ra angghglélé

Charles Harris Slack
Tawin Srisomchai
Henry Joseph Stoklosa
Ladda Sukprasobchok
Chung—Lu Sya

Daniel Lee Weiner
Edward Allen Wolsing

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE 0F MASTER OF SCIENCE IN AGRICULTURE

William Nesmith Cannon

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE IN CHEMICAL ENGINEERING

Steven Michael Brien

Richard Charles Culbertson

Kenneth Ray Johnson

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE IN CIVIL ENGINEERING

Kenneth Robert Agent
William Terry Davis
Danny Jasper

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE IN ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING

Joseph Charles Clements

Michael Harry Wallace

Clarence Randall Lewis

John E. Pfander
Kenny Weaver

Nicholas William Nicholson

Richard H. Stith

Roger Lee Starnes

M

 M

Minutes of the University Senate, December 10, 1973 — cont

     

3687

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE IN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING

Jeffrey Henry Skorupski

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS IN EDUCATION

Betty Sue Barber

Sandra Tackett Blankenship
Kay Elizabeth Bohannon
Carol Diane Bourne
James Richard Brinegar
Susan Clay Brown

Earl Roden Bryant
Cheryl Ardith Callahan
Sister Catherine Carlew
Georgia Chamberlin Collins
Rick Wayne Collins

Mary Jo Cross

Mary Elizabeth Davidson
Paula Kay Davis Duren
Ann Bortner Eads

Melva Rhea Edrington
Michael Joseph Fallahay
Livia Martinez Farias
Elizabeth B. Glass
Victoria Marie Greco
Peggy T. Hatchell

Mary Bohan Houlihan
Lynn Louise Kaufman
Marsha Joy Leviton
Laura Elizabeth Lewis

Russell Paul Witten, Jr.

Lonnie Wade Lewis
John Roland Lonneman, Jr.
Penny Kesselman Medley

Gary R. Medlin :I”V J

Kathy Lashbrook Miles
Sarah Eugenie Orr

Mary Jayne Ouren

Ann Rutherford Pass
Bettina Burchett Patrick
Marjorie Jean Scholten Penning
Martha H. Poe

Colleen Ann Powell

Marcia Milby Ridings
Christine Annette Rowinski
Audrey M. Scudder

Marilee Comfort Smith
Lynne Ruth Swanson
Catherine Fruth Taylor
William Lloyd Turner

Clyde Thomas Vantreese, Jr.
LaVerne R. Walker

Patrick Francis Weir

Ena Whitis

Mark Aaron Yelton

Robert Palmer Young

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE IN EDUCATION

Patricia Morgan Jarrett
Billy Carroll Melton
Donna Marie Mertens

Roger Vern Moll
Gregory William Nailing

CANDIDATE FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE IN ACCOUNTING

Frank P. Cassell

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

Billy H. Curtis

Bernard P. Heidelberg
Herbert Frank Hunter
Lawrence Elliott Ladnier III
Paul Allen Nueller

David Gill Pearce

Galen David Powers E REEF

Shankarnarayanan Ramaswamy
Thaddeus Terrell Russell, Jr.
Jamie Luis Sampedro

John William Steinlage

George Michael Tarsis ,3? gh. '”
.L

 

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Minutes of the University Senate, December 10, 1973 — cont
CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE IN LIBRARY SCIENCE

James William Maynard
Patricia Ellen McDuffee
Mildred Ann Ragan
Mary F. Ramonda
Randall Leigh Roberts
Melanie Laura Sale
Jon Edward Schmitzler
Linda Kay Sharp

David Lee Stone
Priscilla L. Swatos
James L. Thomas

Wayne Joseph Waller
Ferrell Jean White
Lance Thomas Wyman

Pamela May Besser
Dennis Neil Brandewie
Paula Cunningham Bush
Jonathon Erlen

James Calvin Fields
David Ernest Gleim
Lee Eric Goodeman
John Daniel Hales, Jr.
Erik Gordon Halverson
Alayne Whitney Heck
Lynn Dee Heinzeroth
Gilbert A. Hurwood
Margaret R. Huth
Sarah Kathryn Jennings

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE IN HOME ECONOMICS
Doris Jane Gray

Linda Carol Horn
Kathryn Gail Keaton

Mary Joan Oexmann
Welynda Wright
CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF MUSIC

Mary Patricia Ogletree Barbara Falls Reinhardt

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE IN NURSING

Carol Lynn Caples
Irma Kay Blues

Kathryn Jane Younger

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF FINE ARTS
Robert Harold Martin Robert Eugene Nichols
CANDIDATE FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SOCIAL WORK
Stephen Fox
CANDIDATE FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE IN DENTISTRY
Thomas Charles Lawton
COLLEGE OF LAW

George W. Hardy III, Dean

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF JURIS DOCTOR

Richard Edmund Anderson

Thor Hilding Bahrman Jacob Perry Cline III
Michael Lee Barr Gale C. Coil

Albert Mack Bender Ralph Combs

Steven Gregory Bolton

«a.

 «a.

Minutes of the University Senate, December 10, 1973 — cont 3689

Candidates for the Degree of Juris Doctor — cont

Forrest Evan Cook
Andrew Byrd Cox

Stephen Bowman Cox
Jesse C. Crenshaw

Jack R. Cunningham
Lloyd Ray Edens

William Engle III

David Cecil Fannin
Kenneth Leon Fields
Peter James Glauber
Paul Church Gordon
Carolyn Ann Greene
Alan Lee Harrington
Charles Edward Hastie
Paul Vincent Hibberd
Lewis B. Hopper

Samuel Evans Isaacs II
Ernest Henry Jones II
Thomas Martin Jones
Paul Rodney Keen

Harold Wayne Kern
Henry E. Kinser
William Darby Lambert III
Kenneth Charles Lassiter
James David Lawson
Quinten Byck Marquette
Kathleen Juliana McCabe
Frank Howard McCartney
Ralph Thomas McDermott

Michael Emanuel McGrath
Ronald Clinton McGuire
James Daniel McQueen, Jr.
Thomas W. Miller

Stephen Dale Milner

Lewis William Burton Milward, Jr.
Kendale Allen Moore

Vernon Poorman Moore
Robert Lee Page

Marshall Scott Peace

Laura Steeples Portwood
Timothy Thornton Riddell
Roger Donald Riggs

Ralph Charles Robke

Jay David Rosenberg

Walter Lapp Sales

James Richard Smith
Hershel Sparber

Roscoe Franklin Stainback, Jr.
Howard Randall Starnes
David Thomas Stosberg
Danny Ray Taulbee

John Russell Triplett
Stephen Edward Underwood
Stuart Moulton Vaughan, Jr.
Richard Spurr Webb IV
Nicholas W. Williams
William Cassidy Wilson III
Stephen A. Zrenda, Jr.

COLLEGE OF MEDICINE

William S. Jordan, Jr., Dean

CANDIDATE FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF MEDICINE

Thomas Greene Furgason

COLLEGE OF PHARMACY

Joseph Vincent Swintosky, Dean

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHARMACY

Avis J. Ericson

Ricky Carl Pahl

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN PHARMACY

William Earl Adams, Jr.
Bernard Terry Box
Michael Keith Chesnut
Thomas Harrison Leach
Laine Ellen Marshall

William Patrick Mattingly
R. Marcella Murray
Deborah Gregory Pence
Dale Alan Withers

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Minutes of the University Senate, December 10, 1973 — cont

COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
Art Gallaher, Dean m

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF ARTS J}

Erik Randolph Albrektson
Dwight Wayne Alley

Rocco Phillip Ambrose
Martha Joyce Anderson
Belinda Arnett

Gillis Mitchell Arnold
Douglas Colburn Barger
Jay Christopher Barlow
Dianne Benjamin

Peter Newhard Berres
Rose Ann Blair

Cynthia Sondergelt Bloch
David Michael Britten
Gary Blaine Broderick
Rustina N. Burton

Allen Williams Bush
Susan Brent Calderwood
Dennis Howard Carney
Ronald Lee Chenot

Earl Thomas Clayton
John L. Clements

Theresa Gail Clements
Gary Dale Clemons

Zack Joseph Coblens, Jr.
Suzanne Helen Collins
Thomas Fred Davidson
Mary Tohill Davis
Douglas James Delafield
Timothy D. DeRossett
Michael Garner Doucomes
Susan Jean Dreger

Mary Wells Dupree

James Milton Eblen
Abigail Adams Eli
Edward Fitzgerald Ellis
Alicia Marie English
Robert Evan Evans

Logan Reid Fairchild
Florence Jennifer Fields
Allan Foster Fleming, Jr.
Catherine E. Fleming
Carla Batts Gerding
Betty Jean Gooch

Gary Ray Green

Larry Allen Green
Michael E. Gresosky
Deborah Schrader Hackney
Dennis Nels Hagstrom
Nancy Knight Hammond
Michael Joseph Hammons

Lenville Dail Haney

Stephen Edward Hayden
John Charles Heaberlin

Eleanor Hedges I
Jennifer Ann Hewlett

Leonard Wallace Higgins III ?
Donald Neal Hoben

Barbara Pepper Holland

Cynthia Ann Hood

Jane Allen Hopkins

Deborah Kay Humphrey

Ricky Darrell Jacobs

Alane Sandra Jolles

Ronald Jay Karpinsky

Patsy Gail Kennan W
Albert Frank Kochenrath
James David Lee

William LeVee

Leslie Eugene Lewis

Nolte Scott Ament Lilly
Gregory Herbert Louis
Judith Ann McCallister
Catherine Anne McCarthy
Kathleen Ann McClurken
Fernando Stephen McCullough
Barbara Lou Maines

Alfred Michael Marx
Patricia Merz Mertens
Babette Kathleen Meyers
Danny Craig Mohn

James Bruce Morse

Michael Antonio Mucio \w
Anna Bruce Neal '”’
Victoria K. Ness

Ann Leighton Nickles
Richard Lynn O'Bryan
Kevin Robison O'Connell l
Robert West Parker
Margaret Frances Pledger
Frederick George Povey III
Steven Edward Redmon
Timothy M. Reitman

Steven Edward Rice

Peggy Lee Richardson
William Charles Ridge III
C. Gregory Rose_

Donald Ralph Rose M
Norma Cady Rosser ,3
Evelyn Anne Rowe [
Billie Mae Sebastian {
Barbara Smith x
Franklin Edward Smith I

 Minutes of the University Senate, December 10, 1973 — cont

Candidates for the Degree of Bachelor of Arts — cont

David Michael Sproull
Dennis Edward Stacy

Roy Wayne Staggs

Denise Lynn St. Clair
Christiana Fahey Steinmetz
Raymond David Stengel
Mary Katherine Stoll
Donald Gene Stone

Susan Gail Stopher

Janet Strunk

Steven Alan Surmont
William Anthony Thielen
Jacqueline Therese Thomas
Stephen Cowan Thomas

Ann Cosden Thompson

Caroline Elizabeth Thompson
Lucinda Wylie Thompson
Robert Bentley Tincher
Katherine Anne Kennedy Underwood
John David Van Meter

Jill Marie Wagner

Edwin James Walbourn III
Lee Douglas Walker

Vicki White Watkins

John Ray Weeks

James Stephen Wetmore
Pamela Louise White

Frances Amelia Wilmoth
Mark Lee Witzer

Robert Alva Young

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF SCIENCE

Ward S. Blakefield
Jane Amy Boughton

Thomas Claiborne Christopher

James Calvin Currens
Dorothy Ruth Dean
Randy Lee Downs

James Harold Filson
Walter Thomas Fister
Terry Gene Gray

Jerri Lynn Haight
Marshall Burwell Hardy
Hobert Hurt, Jr.
William Fuller Hussein

Lyman M. Johnson
Malcolm Roderick Mathews III
Steven Michael Niebauer
Joanna Sue O'Dell
William Eugene Robinson
Barry Lynn Russell
Margaret Ellen Saunier
Sheldon Craig Settle
Margie Singler

Jeanie Petrasek Smith
Michael Lee Strain
William Joseph Sudduth
Thomas Charles Wachs

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF MUSIC IN MUSIC EDUCATION

John Steven Kutzlo

Carroll Lewis Wallace

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF GENERAL STUDIES

Gregory Scott Bates
Mary Ellen Buckner
Kathy Diane Carpenter
Daniel Ray Clark

Basil Cole, Jr.

Charles Patrick Doyle, Jr.
Kenneth Larry Durham
Katherine Lynne Edwards
Kenneth Fern, Jr.

John Robert Foote
Jerry Furrow

Samuel Chaffin Galloway, Jr.

John Lewis Hicks
Kevin D. Hill

John Marvin Joy
Patricia Ann Kahoe
Anna Lee Kefauver

William Bradley Kelly

Richard Allen Lange
Bettie Jean Latimer
Manzie R. Lawfer

Linda Carol Link

Thomas Elliott Merritt
Allen Francis Moss
Stephen Carl Myles
William Dennis Pollitte
James William Schwenterley
Steve Dupre Scruggs
Ronald Joseph Skees
Charles Andrew Spears
Gwendolyn Anne Todd
William Steven Vatter
David Bruce Waters
Helen Lucille Whipple
Edward James Winner

 

  
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
  
  
 
  
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
  
 
 
  
  
  
   
  
  
 
  
  
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
   

 

  

 

 

 

 

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN AGRICULTURE

Edward Allen Abell
Ricky Len Alexander
C. E. Althoff

Madge Cook Balden
Todd Andrew Bryan
Michael W. Bush
Shannon Lee Cady
Donald Lee Chowning
Janine Heltzel Davie
Bruce H. Davis

John Baird Foree
David Scott Greenhorn
Jimmy Harvey Hall
Lowell G. Hamilton
Terry Lee Hancock
Philip Edward Hays
Gregory Thomas Henson
George A. Hernandez
Emmitt Ballard Holtzclaw
William Alan Houchin
Barry L. Huesing

John Dawson Hume

C. Kenneth Keen

Eddie Carl Klingenfus
Dwight David Lawrence

Minutes of the University Senate, December 10, 1973 - cont

COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE

Charles Elmer Barnhart, Dean

Ronald Edward Leick
Eugene Edele Leppert
James Bronaugh Major
Stephen L. Martin
Thomas Michael Mattingly
Yvonne Kettring Moore
Jo Caroline Nall

Brenda Sue Oldfield
William Joseph Peterson
Caleb Pollitt

Gary Goodan Raynolds
Gabe Michelson Rice
David Michael Richey
Larry C. Roberts
Charles Jeff Rowland
Michael Eugene Russell
Robert Slone

Clifton Richard Smith
Jerry Lynn Smith

Kirby Louis Bernard Smith
Roger Gayle Southerland
Jerry Wayne Spears

Paul Lynn Tucker
Jeffrey Jay Wander
Marvin Lee Wilson
Shannon Albert Wolfram

CANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN FORESTRY

Wayne Peter Bailey
James Gil