For
Immediate Release
May 15, 2002
494
SENIORS TO RECEIVE DEGREES
AT MOUNT HOLYOKE COLLEGES 165th COMMENCEMENT
Her
Majesty Queen Noor of Jordan to deliver address in May 26 ceremonies.
SOUTH HADLEY, Mass.
Four hundred and ninety-four seniors will receive degrees
during Mount Holyokes 165th commencement ceremonies Sunday,
May 26. Ceremonies begin at 10:30 AM in Gettell Amphitheater.
In the event of rain, the event will be held in the Kendall Field
House.
Her Majesty Queen
Noor of Jordan, known throughout the world for promoting international
exchange and understanding of Middle Eastern politics, Arab-Western
relations, and global issues, will deliver the commencement address.
Sara Curtin '02 has
been chosen by the senior class to speak on behalf of her classmates.
Curtin, of Chicopee, Massachusetts, is an English major with a
minor in music. A violinist, she co-founded the Mount Holyoke
College Symphony Orchestra during her junior year, and served
as concertmaster for nearly all of its existence. She was a speaking
mentor and leadership assistant with the College's Weissman Center
for Leadership, and served as an upper-class academic advisor.
Curtin is also a dancer and was chosen to perform in the Senior
Dance Concert during her junior year.
Queen Noor will receive
the degree of doctor of humane letters from the College. She will
be joined by four other honorary degree recipients: Reverend Peter
Gomes, a best-selling author and one of the nation's foremost
preachers; Ellen Baxter, an advocate for the homeless; Claude
de Renty du Granrut '48, a deputy mayor who represents her region
of Picardy, France, to a European Union committee; and University
of Massachusetts Professor Lila M. Gierasch '70, a leading authority
on protein chemistry.
A number of activities
related to commencement, including receptions, open houses, campus
tours, worship services, and fireworks, will be held in the days
before the event. Among the most cherished traditions are the
Laurel Chain Ceremony, scheduled for the morning of Saturday,
May 25 at College founder Mary Lyon's grave, and the canoe sing,
to be held that evening on Lower Lake. The Laurel Chain Ceremony
will be preceded by the Alumnae Parade. New this year will be
"Professors Unplugged," in which four professors chosen
by the seniors will address subjects relevant to seniors' experiences
at Mount Holyoke. That event takes place on Friday, May 24, in
Pratt Hall.
Presiding at this
year's commencement ceremony will be Acting President Beverly
Daniel Tatum, recently named the ninth president of Spelman College
in Atlanta. Tatum is serving as acting president during President
Joanne V. Creighton's six-month sabbatical, which began on January
1.
Mount Holyoke College
is one of the nation's finest liberal arts colleges. Rigorous
academics, an internationally diverse student body, and integration
of cutting-edge technologies through all aspects of the Mount
Holyoke curriculum create an environment that prepares women to
become leaders in an increasingly complex world.
COMMENCEMENT 2002 PROFILES OF HONORARY DEGREE
RECIPIENTS
Her Majesty Queen Noor
Born to a distinguished Arab-American family in 1951, Lisa Najeeb
Halaby attended schools in the United States and entered Princeton
University as a member of its first coeducational class. After
receiving a bachelor's degree in architecture and urban planning
in 1974, she participated in international urban planning and
design projects in Australia, Iran, the United States, and Jordan.
In 1976, she traveled throughout the Arab world to research training
facilities for the preparation of a master plan for an Arab Air
University in Jordan. Subsequently, she joined Royal Jordanian
airline as director of planning and design projects.
Marrying the late King Hussein in 1978, Halaby took the name
Noor and with him raised six children. She became an advocate
for the arts, environmental protection, and business development
in Jordan and directed numerous projects concerning community
development, education, conservation, culture, childrens
welfare, family health, women, and enterprise development. Her
projects have received international recognition as development
models for the Middle East and the developing world.
Queen Noor also plays a prominent role internationally. She
chairs the King Hussein Foundation, a nonprofit, nongovernmental
organization dedicated to humanitarian interests, and she serves
on numerous boards and organizations committed to developing global
cooperation, creating environmental conservation strategies, banning
landmines, preventing substance abuse, and supporting developing
countries. In recognition of her efforts to advance development,
democracy, and peace, the queen has won several international
awards and been granted honorary doctorates in international relations,
law, and humane letters.
For further information about Queen Noor, please visit her official
Web site at http://www.go.com.jo/QNoorjo/home.html
Reverend Peter Gomes
The author of seven volumes of sermons, including the best-selling
The Good Book: Reading the Bible with Mind and Heart (1996) and
Sermons: Biblical Wisdom for Daily Living (1998), Reverend Peter
Gomes, Plummer Professor of Christian Morals and Pusey Minister
in Harvard University's Memorial Church, is considered one of
America's most distinguished preachers. His most recent book is
a collection of sermons titled You Can Do This! and Other Sermons
Preached at Harvard. Gomes is a graduate of Bates College and
Harvard Divinity School and holds fourteen honorary degrees. He
has preached and lectured throughout the United States and British
Isles and has participated in the inaugurations of presidents
Ronald Reagan and George Herbert Walker Bush. He was named Clergy
of the Year in 1998 by Religion in American Life. He is the former
acting director of the W.E.B. DuBois Institute for Afro-American
Research. He will receive the degree of doctor of humane letters.
Ellen Baxter
Ellen Baxter has been an advocate for the homeless since 1976,
when she settled in New York with the hope of creating permanent,
cost-effective, humane housing for the mentally ill and destitute.
She was inspired by the Belgian village of Geel, home to the shrine
of St. Dymphna, patron saint of the mentally ill, where she had
seen a large colony of mentally disabled persons living with dignity
in community rather than in institutions. By 1986, Baxter had
established "The Heights," which offered housing units
with integrated social and mental health services. She founded
the nonprofit Broadway Housing Development Fund, which now owns
five such "supportive housing" buildings for 220 formerly
homeless people, and she serves on the board of directors for
the Corporation for Supportive Housing, an organization formed
in 1991 to replicate and expand the supportive housing model on
a nationwide basis. There are now active programs in nine cities,
assisting 6,000 units of supportive housing for people coping
with extreme poverty and mental illness, addiction, or HIV/AIDS.
Baxter will receive the degree of doctor of humane letters.
Claude de Renty du Granrut '48
Since 1977, Claude de Renty du Granrut '48 has been deputy mayor
of Senlis, a small medieval town in the northeast region of Picardy,
France, and since 1986, a regional councilor of Picardy, serving
the land planning commission on infrastructure, local development,
culture, and tourism. As a member of the Committee of the Regions
of the European Union since 1994, she informs the people of Picardy
of the implications of European Union decisions and writes recommendations
on public health, the environment, culture, innovation in technological
research and development, and town and country planning. Du Granut
holds a degree from the Institute of Political Sciences of Paris,
and an honorary doctorate from Mount Vernon College. She studied
for one year at Mount Holyoke College. She will receive the degree
of doctor of laws.
Lila M. Gierasch '70
Lila M. Gierasch '70, professor of chemistry and professor and
head of biochemistry and molecular biology at the University of
Massachusetts, Amherst, earned a bachelor's degree in chemistry
at Mount Holyoke, graduating summa cum laude and with great distinction,
and a doctorate in biophysics from Harvard University. Having
taught at Amherst College, the University of Delaware, and the
University of Texas Southwestern, she joined the faculty of the
University of Massachusetts, Amherst, in 1994. While doing research
supported by grants totaling $3 million there, she spearheaded
a rebuilding of both the chemistry department and the department
of biochemistry and molecular biology. Gierasch has published
more than 170 papers, her research focusing on human proteins
and the "mistakes" in the protein folding and assembly
process that give rise to diseases such as cystic fibrosis and
Alzheimer's. She has been a member of the National Advisory Council
to the General Medical Sciences Institute of the National Institutes
of Health and a member of the Advisory Committee to the Math and
Physical Sciences Directorate of the National Science Foundation.
Gierasch will receive the degree of doctor of science.
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