| S | M | T | W | T | F | S |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | ||||
| 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
| 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 |
| 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 |
| 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 |
Willamette University
900 State Street
Salem, Oregon 97301
503-370-6014 voice
503-370-6153 fax
Willamette University will bid adieu to the Class of 2008 in four commencement ceremonies Sunday, May 11.
The College of Liberal Arts commencement begins at 3 p.m. on The Quad. The Atkinson Graduate School of Management ceremony is at 9:30 a.m. in Hudson Hall, and the College of Law commencement is at 11:30 a.m. on The Quad. The School of Education ceremony is at 11 a.m. in Smith Auditorium.
The College of Liberal Arts will honor 500 students with bachelor’s degrees. The College of Law will award 114 JD and LLM degrees, and the School of Education will award 101 MAT degrees. Atkinson will recognize 47 early career MBA graduates (18 professional MBA graduates were honored in January).
Helen Vendler, the A. Kingsley Porter University Professor at Harvard and a well-recognized poetry critic, will receive an honorary doctor of humane letters and deliver the CLA commencement address. The Honorable Wallace P. Carson Jr., former Chief Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court and a 1962 College of Law graduate, will receive an honorary doctor of laws.
Oregon Supreme Court Chief Justice Paul DeMuniz, a 1975 College of Law graduate, will deliver the law commencement address, and Jack McGowan, recently retired executive director of SOLV, will speak at the Atkinson ceremony.
For more information on Willamette’s commencement activities, go to www.willamette.edu/events/commencement/.
Update: Jonathan Kozol, a longtime educator and social justice advocate who was scheduled to receive an honorary degree and speak at the School of Education commencement, has canceled his appearance due to medical reasons. The School of Education speaker will be Dean Nakanishi '98, MAT'00, who teaches in a special education academy near Seattle and has researched and lectured on the history of Salem Japanese-American students sent to internment camps during World War II.
[ email this story ]
Professor S. Allen Counter, director of The Harvard Foundation of Harvard University and a neurophysiologist at the Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, will deliver the College of Liberal Arts commencement address at Willamette University Sunday, May 14.
An honorary Doctor of Science degree will be awarded to Counter and an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree will be awarded to philanthropist Catherine B. Reynolds, Los Angeles schoolteacher Rafe Esquith, and Columbia Sportswear Company chairwoman Gert Boyle.
Willamette University College of Law alumnus, the Honorable Wallace P. Carson Jr., will deliver the law commencement address.
Honorary degree recipient Catherine B. Reynolds will give the commencement address for the Atkinson Graduate School of Management.
The College of Liberal Arts will award 334 degrees, the College of Law 146, Atkinson Graduate School of Management 60 and the School of Education 94 degrees.
The College of Liberal Arts and the School of Education will hold commencement at 3 p.m. on the Quad; Atkinson commencement is 9 a.m. in Hudson Hall, and the College of Law commencement is at 11:30 a.m. on the Quad.
CLA Commencement
For more than 20 years, commencement speaker Counter has engaged students at Harvard University and Harvard Medical School. As a neurophysiologist, he conducts both clinical and basic research studies on nerve and muscle physiology, auditory physiology, and neurophysiological diagnosis of brain-injured children and adults. His latest research focuses on toxic lead and mercury exposure in Ecuadorian children.
He is the first and only director of the Harvard Foundation for intercultural and race relations. The Foundation programs and mission have been replicated at universities across the country. His work through the Foundation earned him the distinguished NAACP Image Award in 1989. In 1994, the National Medical Association awarded Counter the Hall of Fame Award honoring his achievements in medicine.
He has published extensively in both cultural and scientific journals, including National Geographic and Scientific American. He has appeared on local and national television promoting scientific literacy of young people. He continues to work in the areas of ethics in science and technology, nature conservation, and human rights at the international level. He is presently co-host of EcoForum, a nationally televised program on earth conservation.
Law Commencement
Carson joined the Oregon Supreme Court in 1982 and was Chief Justice from 1991-05. Prior to joining the Supreme Court, he served as a judge for Marion County Circuit Court from 1977-82. He graduated from Stanford University in 1956 and Willamette University College of Law in 1962.
Atkinson Commencement
Reynolds created a new and affordable way for Americans to finance a college education. She developed a privately funded alternative to government student loan programs that has enabled hundreds of thousands of Americans to attend college. In only 10 years, this approach to private educational financing revolutionized student lending and spawned a multibillion-dollar industry of 65 lenders offering more than 200 financial products.
She is the creator and chairman of the Catherine B. Reynolds Foundation, one of the largest foundations in the nation. In 2004, Reynolds was selected by Business Week as one of the 50 most philanthropic living Americans and the first self-made woman ever to make their list. She is a graduate of Vanderbilt University.
Honorary Degree Recipients
Rafe Esquith introduces Shakespeare’s masterpieces to inner city fifth graders at Hobart Boulevard Elementary School in central Los Angeles. He molds his students into latter-day Renaissance scholars and shows them a world outside their neglected neighborhoods. His students spend an entire year studying and rehearsing one play and then perform it at Shakespeare festivals across the county. By any measure, these student actors, many of whom speak English as their second language, have been wildly successful including opening for the Royal Shakespeare Company.
As a result of his commitment to his students both inside and outside the classroom, Esquith’s students consistently score in the top 5 to 10 percent nationally in standardized tests and many of his students have moved onto college and law school.
Esquith has received several accolades for this dedication including the Walt Disney American Teacher Award for National Teacher of the Year and Oprah Winfrey’s $100,000 Use Your Life Award. He used his award money to create a charitable fund at his school. He is currently working with the NEA to help put Shakespeare in 10,000 American classrooms.
Gertrude Boyle is the matriarch and chairwoman of the board of the international outdoor apparel and footwear manufacturer Columbia Sportswear Company. Hailed by Working Woman magazine as one of America’s Top 50 Women Business Owners – and named one of 1994’s “Best Managers” by Business Week – Boyle is the center of Columbia’s irreverent, award-winning advertising campaign. She portrays cantankerous “Mother Boyle,” the stern taskmaster who enforces Columbia’s demanding quality standards.
Since Boyle and her son Tim began managing the company, Columbia Sportswear has gone from near bankruptcy to become one of the world’s largest outerwear manufacturers and the leading seller of skiwear in the United States. Columbia’s sales have soared from $12.9 million in 1984 to $1.1 billion in 2004, and the company continues to forge ahead with product diversification and innovation.
Throughout her career, Boyle has been a leader in the Portland community. She has received many honors recognizing her business savvy and philanthropic endeavors. Most recently she received Oregon’s prestigious First Citizen Award in 2005.
[ email this story ]
Willamette University's graduate schools will host speakers for the Atkinson Graduate School of Management graduation ceremony, the College of Law graduation ceremony and the School of Education hooding ceremony on Sunday, May 16.
Atkinson Graduate School of Management
This year's speaker at the Atkinson graduation ceremony at 9 a.m. in the Mary Stuart Rogers Music Center is Greg Merten, a long-time executive at Hewlett Packard.
For most of the last 20 years, Merten was responsible for Inkjet operations and producing the Inkjet cartridges world wide, becoming a vice president and general manager at HP. He grew his organization from about 75 people on a single site in Corvallis, Ore. in 1984 when the first Inkjet product was introduced, to about 10,000 people on six sites around the world in the year 2001.
During the last year and a half of his career at HP (he retired last October), Merten focused on bringing some of the lessons learned in Inkjet to the rest of HP during and after the merger with Compaq, primarily in the area of leadership development. He continues to consult with HP and elsewhere and frequently speaks about the lessons learned from these experiences to business and government groups.
Oregon State has recognized Merten's accomplishments by electing him to the Academy of Distinguished Engineers and he was also named Business Person of the Year by the Benton County Chamber of Commerce for extraordinary leadership in the development of both the business and the people associated with it. He is a graduate of Oregon State University in electrical engineering with a solid-state physics focus.
College of Law
This year's speaker at the College of Law graduation ceremony at 11:30 a.m. on the Quad is U.S. House of Representative Jay Inslee JD'76.
Inslee has been representing Washington State at the national level for more than five years. He was elected U.S. representative from Washington's 1st Congressional District in 1999, but he also served Washington's 4th Congressional District from 1993-95. Inslee first entered politics in 1988 when he was elected to the Washington State House of Representatives.
Inslee has built a broad-based legislative career that balances economic development with progressive policymaking. As a member of the Committee on Resources and the Committee on Financial Services, Inslee has championed intellectual property rights, consumer protection, education, homeland security, technology innovation and environmental protection. Inslee is one of a handful of U.S. congressional leaders to be recognized by The League of Conservation Voters as an "Environmental Champion" and to receive a "100 percent" environmental rating from the Sierra Club.
Prior to entering public service, he was regional director for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and served as an attorney in Selah and Tacoma, Wash. Inslee graduated magna cum laude from Willamette College of Law in 1976.
School of Education
This year's speaker at the School of Education hooding ceremony at 12:30 p.m. at the Mary Stuart Rogers Music Center is Drea Ferguson MAT'95, one of America's outstanding educators.
This year she received the National Educator Award from the Milken Family Foundation, which recognizes the country's brightest educational innovators. Ferguson has taught Drama and Language Arts at Newberg High School since 1995. For the past three years, she has served as the school's instructional leader of the Arts and Communications Department. In her current capacity, she has successfully designed courses, such as Shakespeare and Advanced Shakespeare, which earn students college credit. She also directs four plays a year that cover every range of genre, while teaching courses in Advanced Placement (AP) Humanities and British and Western Literature.
Ferguson received her Masters of Arts in Teaching from Willamette University's School of Education in 1995 and she completed an MA in theatre production from Central Washington University in 2003.
[ email this story ]