The Fifty-Fifth
AnnualCommencement
University ofDallas
Nine O'clock in the Morning
May 18,2014
For the Degree Doctor ofHistory
Citation Honoring
Mr. George Weigel
George Weigel, Distinguished Senior Fellow of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, is a Catholic theologian and one of America's leading public intellectuals. He holds EPPC's William E. Simon Chair in Catholic Studies. From 1989 through June 1996, Mr. Weigel was president of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, where he led a wide-ranging, ecumenical and inter-religious program of research and publication on foreign and domestic policy issues. From June 1996, as a Senior Fellow, Mr. Weigel prepared a major study of the life, thought, and action of Pope John Paul II. Witness to Hope: The Biography of Pope John Paul II was published to international acclaim in the fall of 1999, and has since been translated into twelve languages, with a Chinese edition currently in progress. Mr. Weigel is the author or editor of some twenty other books, including The End and the Beginning: Pope John Paul II- The Victory of Freedom, the Last Years, the Legacy (Doubleday, 2010); Practicing Catholic: Essays Historical, Literary, Sporting, and Elegiac (Crossroad, 2012); Evangelical Catholicism: Deep Reform in the 21st-Century Church (Basic, 2013) and Roman Pilgrimage: The Station Churches(Basic, 2013).His essays, op-ed columns, and reviews appear regularly in major opinion journals and newspapers across the United States. A frequent guest on television and radio, he is also Vatican analyst for NBC News. His weekly column, "The Catholic Difference," is syndicated to sixty newspapers. Mr. Weigel received a B.A. from St. Mary's Seminary and University in Baltimore and an M.A. from the University of st. Michael's College, Toronto. He is the recipient of eighteen honorary doctorates in fields including divinity, philosophy, law, and social science. For the Degree Doctor ofHumane Letters
Citation Honoring
Mr. Joel T. Williams
Joel Williams, a member of the Dallas Bar Association and the Texas Bar Association, served the Dallas banking community for many years at various banks and savings and loans. He also served University Park as Councilman and as Mayor. Mr. Williams served along with his long-time friend, Eugene Constantin, on the Board of Directors of the Mercantile Bank. Before his death, Mr. Constantin asked Joel to serve on the board of his foundation. He subsequently served as Chairman for the Constantin Foundation Board for forty years, retiring in 2013. While on the Board, he and the foundation continued Eugene Constantin's support for the University of Dallas through gifts in support of building projects, including, most recently, the remodeling of the Haggar University Center. Mr. Williams graduated from Woodrow Wilson High School in Dallas in 1938 and earned his BA from Baylor University. After serving in the military, he returned to Dallas where he received his law degree from Southern Methodist University in 1948. In addition to his membership on the Constantin Foundation Board, Mr. Williams has also served many other Boards in the Dallas area, including Southern Methodist University, East Texas State University, the State Fair of Texas, Goodwill Industries, Presbyterian Healthcare Foundation, and Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas. He is also a life member of the Dallas Salesmanship Club.
History The charter of the University of Dallas dates from 1910 when the Vincentian Fathers took that name for the Holy Trinity College that they had fOlmded five years earlier. This charter became dormant in 1929 and was placed in the Chancery Office of the Catholic Diocese of Dallas. In 1954 the Sisters of Saint Mary of Namur obtained the charter for the purpose of operating a new institution in Dallas which would absorb their junior college in Fort Worth, Our Lady of Victory. The Sisters, together with laymen who directed the drive for funds, Eugene Constantin Jr. and Edward R. Maher Sr., induced Bishop Thomas K. Gorman to have the diocese assume sponsorship of the new institution with ownership by its Board of Trustees. Bishop Gorman announced that the University of Dallas would be a four-year co-educational institution welcoming students of all faiths and races, with a graduate school to be added as soon as practicable. The new University of Dallas opened its doors to 96 students in September 19.56, on a thousand-acre tract of rolling hills located northwest of the city of Dallas. The first president, F. Kenneth Brasted, served until 1959; the second, Robert Morris, from 1960 to 1962; and the third, Donald A. Cowan, from 1962-1977. In 1976 Bryan F. Smith was appointed Chancellor to assist Dr. Cowan and to oversee the University until the next president, Dr. John R. Sommerfeldt was appointed in 1978. Dr. Sommerfeldt returned to full -time teaching and research in 1980. During the search for his successor, Dr. Svetozar Pejovich served as acting President. In July 1981 Dr. Robert F. Sasseen became the fifth president of the University. In December of 1995 Dr. Sasseen returned to teaching. Monsignor Milam J. Joseph was named the sixth president of the University in October of 1996 and served until December of 2003. Robert Galecke, senior vice-president for Finance and Administration, served as interim president until July, 2004, when Dr. Francis Lazarus took office as the seventh president of the University. On March 1, 2010 Thomas W. Keefe became the eighth president of the University. Members of the Cistercian Order and the Sisters of Saint Mary of Namur, together with three Franciscan fathers and a number of laymen, composed the original faculty of the University. The Franciscan fathers depruted after three years. Dominican priests joined the faculty in 1958 and established the Albert the Great Priory. The School Sisters of Notre Dame came in 1962. The Cistercians now have a permanent abbey church and college preparatory school for boys adjacent to the main campus. In time, the faculty has become largely lay of many faiths and counts distinguished scholars among its members. Accreditation by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools came in 1963, was reaffirmed in 1973, 1984, 1994, and 2004. Significant honors have been won by University graduates since the first class in 1960 which eruned its first Fulbright and Woodrow \Vilson awards for graduate studies. His Excellency Thomas Tschoepe succeeded Bishop Gorman and served as grand chancellor of the University
until his retirement as Bishop in 1990 when Bishop Charles Grahmann, his successor, assumed this position. The seventh Bishop of Dallas, His Excellency Kevin 1. Farrell, succeeded Bishop Grahmann upon his retirement in 2007, and currently serves as Chancellor of the University. A gift of seven and one-half million dollars from the Blakley-Braniff Foundation established the Braniff Graduate School in 1966 and allowed the construction of the Braniff Graduate Center, Tower and Mall. The Constantin Foundation similarly endowed the undergraduate college with gifts in 1967 and 1969. In 1970 the Board of Trustees named the undergraduate college the Constantin College of Liberal Arts. Gorman Lecture Center and the Maher Athletic Center were completed in 1965. A legacy from the estate of Mrs. John B. O'Hara established the Summer Science Institute in 1973. Holy Trinity Seminary was founded in 1965 and occupied its present facilities adjacent to the main campus in 1967. The Graduate School of Management began in 1966 and offers the largest MBA program in the Southwest. Influential graduate programs in Art and English also began in 1966. In 1973, the Institute of Philosophic Studies, the doctoral program of the Braniff Graduate School and an outgrowth of the Kendall Politics and Literature Program, was initiated. The Institute for Religious and Pastoral Studies began in 1987. In 2007 IRPS was renamed the School of Ministry. The College of Business, incorporating GSM and undergraduate business, opened in 2003. In 2013 the College of Business eruned accreditation from the highly selective American Association of Colleges and Schools of Business. In 2014 the University honored alumni Satish and Yasmin Gupta for their gift of twelve million dollars, the largest single gift in its history; the College of Business now proudly bears their names. In 1975 the University Center was doubled in size and named for J. M. Haggar, Sr., and an addition was made to the Haggerty Art Center. The University Apartments, a facility for upper division students, opened in 1980. 1985 saw the completion of the Patrick E. Haggerty Science Center and the Chapel of the Incarnation. A chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, the prestigious honor society, was granted in 1988. In 1992 Anselm Hall, the first dormitory, was renovated and the Fr. Thomas Cain Courtyard adjoining it was dedicated. On June 11, 1994, the University dedicated permanent facilities for its Rome Program, begun in 1970. The 12Â acre Constantin Campus, Due Santi, near Albano, Italy, is 15 kilometers from the heart of Rome. Recent years have seen the Haggerty Art Village, the Dominican Priory, and the Women' s Softball Complex completed, and other athletic facilities upgraded. A new student residence, West Hall, was dedicated on January 19,2010. The University celebrated its 50th Anniversary with an 18Â month series of events that began at the May 2005 Commencement and concluded with a major celebration, The 5dh Gala, September 22, 2006.
Today the University enrolls over 2500 students from all over the United States and the world, divided roughly into 1350 full-time undergraduates; 900 largely part-time Graduate School of Management students; and over 300 students in the Braniff Liberal Arts and School of Ministry programs.
The University Seal The seal of the University of Dallas is emblematic of the ideals to which the University is dedicated. It is likewise reminiscent of the deposit of faith of the Roman Catholic Church and of the traditions of two teaching communities within the church. The decorative outer circle indicates the date the University was chartered and the motto, "Veri tatem, Justitiam Diligite. " The quotation, taken from Zacharias VIII, 19, "Love, Truth and Justice," or more freely translated, "Through Truth, Seek Ye Justice," emphasizes the University' s function of advancing the search for truth and encouraging the pursuit of the good. Enclosed within the band which bears the motto, in an octagonal field of green, are several emblems associated with the traditions of the University. The central figure of the triquetra interwoven with the triangle is a double symbol of the Holy Trinity to Whom the University is dedicated. The circle is a symbol of eternity and of the unity of the Godhead. The fleur-de-lis, at once an ancient symbol of the Blessed Virgin Mary and of France, recalls the direct and indirect French origins of the two teaching orders which cooperated initially with the Roman Catholic Diocese of Dallas-Fort Worth in establishing the University of Dallas. The Cistercian Order originated in France in the Eleventh Century; the Congregation of the Sisters of Saint Mary of Namur was founded in Belgium in 1819 by a Cistercian Monk. A crusader' s shield, emblematic of faith, stands within the green field on either side of the central device. The shield on the left contains a star, a traditional emblem of Mary, as well as the chosen emblem of Texas, the Lone Star State. The shield on the right presents the torch of liberty and learning. The branches of the live oak and olive trees, taken from the Seal of Texas, make further reference to the State. The Trinity River, on which the University is located, is represented by the heraldic device of the wavy lines centered beneath the emblem of the Blessed Trinity. The Official Seal, in all of its symbolic color, hangs in the J. M. Haggar, Sr., University Center foyer. The exquisite
mosaic, completed by art alumnus Xavier Zamarripa, was commissioned by the Class of 2002.
Academic Regalia Academic costume of today has a history of nearly eight centuries. In medieval Europe men and women wore robes or gowns. They survive today in the gowns of religious orders and the judiciary, and in academic costume. Students and teachers in medieval universities such as Paris, Bologna, Oxford, and Cambridge organized themselves into guilds. Gradually the costume became distinctive for Bachelors (apprentices) of Arts, Masters (teachers) and Doctors (teachers who had completed postgraduate studies). The distinction appeared mostly in the hood. The hood, originally a practical element of dress, evolved into a purely ornamental article, draped over the shoulders and down the back. The color of the outside trim of the hood is indicative of the degree earned, as is the tassel. Arts and letters can be recognized by the white, taken from the traditional white fur trimming of the Oxford and Cambridge hood. Scarlet red, long symbolic of the church, indicates theology. The royal purple of the King' s court signifies law. Philosophy is signified by the color for wisdom and truth, blue. Science is identified by golden yellow, fine arts by brown. Drab is used for business administration. The colors of the hood lining are those of the university conferring the degree. The University of Dallas hood is lined in navy and white. First conferred as a symbol of the M.A. degree, the academic cap was a later development. Some caps were stiff, some soft, some square, some round with a tuft in the center. The tassel of today is an elaboration of the tuft. Round caps are still used. The "mortar board" style comes to us from Oxford. In the United States academic costume was standardized in 1895 by the Intercollegiate Code. Taking the Oxford costume as a starting point, the American system is as follows: the Bachelor's gown has long, pointed sleeves; the Master' s gown has closed sleeves with a slit for the arms; the Doctor's gown has round full sleeves with three bars of velvet on each and velvet facing. Like the velvet, the gold tassel on the cap is reserved to Doctors, Presidents, and those of similar estate such as university trustees. Each University displays its distinguishing characteristics in its doctoral and trustee robes. The University of Dallas regalia was designed by Waltraud Bartscht, a former member of the University faculty.
The Constantin College ofLiberal Arts The undergraduate college bears the name of one of its founders and principal benefactors, the late Eugene Constantin, Jr. He was chairman of the first fund drive and served the University as a trustee from its beginning. Ruth and Eugene Constantin established a significant under graduate endowment in memory of their son and took as their principal interest the welfare of the undergraduate college, an interest which is continued through the
Constantin Foundation. Fittingly, in 1970 the Board of Trustees named the college in their honor. The Constantin College of Liberal Arts seeks to educate students of seriousness, intelligence, and spirit-so they may develop the intellectual and moral virtues which will prepare them for life and work in a changing and problematic world, achieve a mature understanding of their faith, and become leaders who act responsibly for the good
of their family, community, county, and church. Quite unabashedly, the curriculum is based on the supposition that truth and virtue exist and are the proper objects of search in an education. The specific mission of the Constantin College is to provide undergraduate education through baccalaureate degree programs which include a substantial and coherent core curriculum common to all undergraduates, and major studies in the humanities and sciences proper to liberal
learning. The core emphasizes the study of the great deeds and works of Western civilization, both ancient and modern. Majors invite students to disciplined inquiry into fundamental aspects of being and of our relation to God, to nature, and to fellow human beings. The curriculum as a whole seeks to enable students to achieve the understanding of the human condition necessary for them to comprehend the fundamental character of the world in which they are called to live and work.
The Gupta College ofBusiness Since the University opened in 1956, offerings in Business and Economics have been an important component of the curriculum. When the Braniff Graduate School was established in 1966, undergraduate business courses were phased out and graduate offerings in Business Management were instituted. The rapid growth of the Master of Business Administration led to the organization, in 1969, of the Graduate School of Management. Soon thereafter, a joint five-year bachelor and master program leading to the MBA was added. In 1988 an undergraduate concentration in Business was developed to complement liberal arts and sciences majors. Further recognizing the important role of business education to society, the University established the College of Business in 2002, which incorporated both graduate and undergraduate business study. In fidelity to the liberal arts foundation of the University, the newly formed college elected to offer a Bachelor of Arts in Business Leadership allowing the students to focus their major course work on business studies while developing the leadership capabilities that distinguish University of Dallas alumni. The mission of the undergraduate business programs is to
build a foundation for the students' life-long development of the intellectual, moral, and professional capacity necessary to effectively lead for-profit and not-for-profit organizations. Accordingly, the College'S programs foster an environment where the students learn the fundamentals of business in the context of becoming ethical and effective decision-makers. Appropriate to a liberal education, the College's programs strive to be innovative in their course and concentration offerings to provide opportunity for indepth study. The College 's undergraduate programs stand united with the Constantin undergraduate college in the shared mission to prepare students for a meaningful and fulfilling life' s work whether through immediate career entry or through further education in graduate and professional schools. The Graduate School of Management of the Gupta College of Business offers the Master of Business Administration and the Master of Science degrees in a variety of specialized areas. It holds separate commencement ceremonies three times a year.
The BraniffGraduate School The history of the University of Dallas is closely linked with the names of Braniff and Blakley. These are permanently enshrined with the William A. Blakley Library, the Braniff Graduate Building and Tower, and the Braniff Graduate School. Senator William A. Blakley, lawyer, statesman, and industrialist, was a member of the first advisory board of the University. Both Senator Blakley and Tom Braniff had been vitally interested in private higher education. Before their deaths in 1954, Tom and Bess Braniff knew of plans for a proposed University of Dallas and had expressed hope that it would become a reality. Efforts to found the University captured the interest and support of Senator Blakley.
The Blakley-Braniff Foundation was dissolved in 1964. Senator Blakley and the other directors of the Foundation chose the University of Dallas for the site of the Braniff Graduate School as the highest and best tribute to the memory of Tom and Bess Braniff in perpetuity. The Braniff Graduate School offered its first courses in 1966. The Braniff Graduate Building was completed in 1968, along with the mall and the Braniff Memorial Tower. In addition to offering several Master' s degrees in liberal arts disciplines, the Braniff Graduate School supports the doctoral program of the Institute of Philosophic Studies, and the Master and the Master of Fine Arts degrees in Art.
The School ofMinistry Begun in 1986, the School of Ministry currently offers degree and certificate programs in Theological Studies, Pastoral Ministry, Religious Education, Catholic School Teaching, and Catholic School Leadership. The School provides a program of formation that prepares graduates to engage in the Church's life and mission in a manner which is full, conscious, active, and effective. This formation is theological, pastoral, and spiritual in its orientation. The School of Ministry sponsors a Biblical School, taught in parishes throughout the Metroplex. The School of Ministry also teaches courses that fulfill the academic requirement of
Deacon Formation. Biblical School and Deacon Formation courses are listed under the General Studies section of the Bulletin. By the conclusion of their studies in the various programs of the School of Ministry, graduates have received the necessary education and formation that will specifically permit them to serve the Church in a variety of capacities as catechists, teachers, Catholic school administrators, pastoral leaders, lay ecclesial ministers, and deacons.
Undergraduate Honors and A wards Academic Honors: The baccalaureate degree with distinction is awarded to students who have maintained a high degree of scholastic excellence. It is of three grades: cum laude, which requires a cumulative average of 3.40 on a 4.0 point scale; magna cum laude, an average of 3.70; and summa cum laude, an average of 3.90. To be eligible for honors at graduation, transfer students must have earned 60 credits at the University of Dallas. The average, however, is computed on the basis of the fouryear program. Faculty Medals, First Honors and Second Honors, are presented to the two graduating seniors who have earned the highest cumulative grade point averages in the class. The Cardinal Spellman Award is named in honor of the late Francis Cardinal Spellman who presided at the University's first commencement in 1960. It recognizes a senior who is a model of the highest ideals of the University by awarding a stipend to assist the student in further studies. The Helen Corbitt Awards for Excellence recognize a senior
woman and man who have produced an outstanding body of work during their time at the University. Students nominated demonstrate excellence in academic pursuits, in student activities, and in service to the University. Helen Corbitt was a gifted chef and nutritionist, the recipient of national awards , and the head of the Neiman-Marcus restaurants. Her commitment to excellence is continued through an endowment which supports these awards and also provides for special Rome Program activities. The Ann Heller Maberry Award is presented annually to an outstanding senior woman. It is named in memory of the daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Frank Heller, longtime friends and patrons of the University. Valedictory. The "farewell address" is given at Senior Convocation by a senior elected by his or her peers to speak for the class. Chosen from a list of candidates who have earned cumulative averages of 3.5 and above, the senior is also invited to speak at Commencement.
BraniffGraduate School For the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in Literature Matthew Tracy Mehan The Life, Death, and Art of Good Counsel in Sir Thomas More Stephen Francis Shivone Donne 's Songs and Sonnets: The Forms and Deformations ofHuman Love For the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in Philosophy Allison Ann Postell What Comes Naturally: The Metaethical Foundations o/Virtue Ethics For the Degree
Doctor of Philosophy in Politics
Christina Elwell Villegas
Reshaping the Federal Response to Violence: The Theoretical Foundations and Legislative History of the Violence Against
Women Act
For the Degree Master of Fine Arts in Art - Ceramics
For the Degree
Master of Arts in English
Lori Ellen Phillips Cultivating Conversations
Shannon Brooker Blatt
RoseMary C. Johnson
Kenneth George Marchetti
Jared Andrew Oakes
Leah Joanna Shepard Traces
For the Degree
Master of Fine Arts in
Art - Printmaking
Socorro Rico Te Cantare Mis Recuerdos
(/ Will Sing You My Memories)
Maiko Shioda Let Me Dream
For the Degree Master of Fine Arts in Art - Sculpture Austin Robert Deal Left to My Own Devices Seth Andrew Trent American Objectivity
For the Degree
Master of Arts
in Art - Painting
For the Degree
Master of Arts in Humanities
Michael Bryce Connell
Mariana Nino
Matthew Joseph Schultz
For the Degree
Master of Arts in Philosophy
John V ernon James
John Marshall Loving
For the Degree
Master of Arts in Politics
George David Alecusan
Emily Katherine Ferkaluk
Brandon David Garcia
Pavlos Leonidas Papadopoulos
For the Degree
Master of Arts in Theology
Nathaniel Joseph Maresh
Radoslaw Michal Markiewicz
Eliana Raquel Miranda
For the Degree
Master of Arts in Art - Printmaking
Michael Anthony Farmer
Jessica Grace Martinez
For the Degree
Master of Arts in
Art - Sculpture
Rachael Rachelle Anderson
For the Degree
Master of American Studies
Catrona Ann Lanctot
John Edward McKeown
Jennifer Stewart Venable
Rebecca Jean Weiss
For the Degree
Master of English
Michael C. Horan
Geral yn J anea Rea
For the Degree
Master of Humanities
For the Degree
Master of Politics
Gregory Gene Coleman
Peter Anthony Geromel
Molly Elizabeth Gittemeier
Jessica J. McCaleb
Roland Ranz Nelson
Raissa Lorin Nickelson
Jacob Peter Schaner
Amy Sheppard Scott
Renee Therese Talamantez
Kristin Michelle Taylor
John Patrick Vaughan
Daniel Shawn Zimmerman
Bruno Souza Cortes
Robert Laverne Gove
David Chad Niederkorn
David Benjamin Rost
David Cole Simmons
Woodrow Wilson Wagner II
For the Degree
Master of Psychology
Ingeborg Marie Saenz For the Degree
Master of Theology
Philip David Blaxton
Ryan Andrew McNamara
Angela Jean Redford
Angela Gayle Toohey
School ofMinistry
For the Degree Master of Catholic School Leadership
For the Degree
Master of Theological Studies
Maryjo Miller Reding
Daniel Jan Smith
Charles Addai-Kankam
Brandon Patterson Barker
Patrick Michael Dmytriw
Megan Margaret Dubee
Michael Henry Genewick
Charles Gorantla
Ronette Nicole Hoffart
Donald James Kremer
Michele Marie Meny
Mark Earl Omvig
Jennifer Lynn Riordan
Daniel M. Scofield
Laney S. Sherburne
Linda Marie Wagner
Elizabeth Ann Wright
For the Degree
Master of Pastoral Ministry
Scott Allen Chuchla
Kevin S. Dougherty
Maria Jacinta Gamez
Douglas William Tooke
For the Degree
Bachelor of Arts
Christine Marie Allen
Jonathan Andrew Allison
Jose Rodrigo Alonso Gonzalez
Juan Rafael Alvarez
Daniel Blake Anderson
Kell y Eileen Anderson
Patrick Thomas Archer
Andrew D. Assinesi
Caeli Elizabeth Austin
Alexander McDonald Bachik
Abigail Elise Bagby
Paul James Baker
Lauren Jane Baldau
Michael Anthony Ball
John Gunter Barber
John William Beasley
Joseph George Beatty
Matthew Francisco Bellet
Luke Douglas Berg
Vallery Laurette Bergez
Megan Elayne Best
Kathleen Abigail Bird
Justin Michael Blan
Brian Gerard Bland
James Anthony Bogdan
I vanna Marie Bond
Andrew Philip Bossert
Michael Alan Smith Bowden
Cory Ryan Boyd
Margaret Mary Boylan
Michael Augustine Braga-Henebry
Andre Francis Hanriot Brassil
Joshua Thomas Bravo
Caleb Rhett Brawner
Akiko Marie Bremar
Tanner James Bruffey
Christopher Michael Burns
Sean Francis William Byers
Gloria Cabrera
Mark F. Carlson
Michele Kaitlin Carpenter
Nicholas Edward Catanese
Jessica Chavira
Alexandra Therese Cohill
Olivia Grace Cole
Justin Michael Cormie
Caroline Elizabeth Creasman
Mitchel Thomas Cruz
Rachel Marie Daly
Carey Jackson Davies
Sergio Omar Davila
Tess Gisele DeRocher
Elizabeth Anne Dobak
Elizabeth Anne Drybread
Catherine Daos Dugyon
Catherine Therese Duplant
Clare Elizabeth Elfelt
Mary Bernadette English
Brittany Marie Eppich
Jessica Estrada
Melissa Catherine Farris
Katherine C. Feiler
Mariah Kelsey Ficek
Erich Michael Fields
Paul James Fiesel
Catherine Ann Hetcher
Jorge Emilio Hores
Paul Joseph Fojut
Helen Clare Furton
Jude Philip Galbraith
Judy Elizabeth Gallagher
Alexa Renae Garcia
Erica Catalina Garcia-Jasso
Matthew Stephen Garcia
Stephanie Rose Garcia
Christina Marie Gardner
Joseph Carmelo Giallombardo
Mary Eliza beth Gilstrap
Kyle Lars Gjolberg
Danielle Elizabeth Gontarz
Brendan Mark Goodspeed
John Robert Goodwin
Jonathan Charles Guedalia
Olivia Marie Gulino
Elizabeth Marie Guzman
Sarah Denise Hales
Catherine Anne Hand
Brigid Mary Hasson
Patricio Andres Healy Montalvo
\Villiam Hunter Heath
Duncan Todd Henderson
Kathryn Brigid Hennessy
James Andrew Hernandez
Monica Cecilia Hernandez Garza
Maria Pia Herrera Septien
Evan Michael Hierholzer
Keith Adam Higginbotham
Rachel Marie Hiser
Julie Ann Holly
Monica M. Holman
Catherine Marguerite Hotard
Cierra Alyse Houchins
Morgan Marie Hoyle
Joseph Robert Hrbacek
Mary Katherine Hulseman
David Joseph Janicki
Thomas Michael Janik
Martha Andrea Jauregui Vazquez
Chandler Nicole Johnson
Paul Gerard Johnson
Robert Mace Johnson
Mary Joanne Jones
Thomas Jay Jones
Clarissa P. Jugo
Stephanie Denise Jung
Anne Marie Kaplan
Rebecca Anne Kee
Michelle Christine Keshishian
Lily Marie Key
Reese Alexander Kiker
qrace Ellen Kilgore
Michael Paul Kuemmerlein
Jamie Lynn Kuntz
Stephanie Veronica Kurth
Lindsey Marie Landgrover
Ryan Denis Landry
Brien Christopher Lank
John Rodney Le
Jessica Elizabeth Ann Leaf
Nicolas Joseph Lee
Tracy Marie Lee
Christian George Lenczowski
Gianna Veronica Lenzen
Andrea Leigh Lindsay
Liz Erika Llamas
Jose Lucas Lanzarini Lopes
Gwen Schaberg Lorei
James Henry Schweiter Lowe
Lorena Luis Gomez Sandoval
Alexander Robert Macdonald
Mary Sarah Mackenzie
Ashley Nicole Magana
Patrick Elder Malone
Patrick Gerard Mangan
Marcos Ruben Martinez
Samantha Noel Mason
Daniel Francisco Matamoros
Mary Christina McCarthy
Anthony Michael McFarland
Brittany Elizabeth McIntyre
Brigid Maureen McMahan
Nicholas Patrick McMahon
Benjamin Andrew Mena
Hunter Niland Mills
Andrew James Moon
Erin Henley Moore
Yesica Estrella Moran
Zachary Joseph Moritz
Mary Clare Mulhern
Joseph Felix Mullen
Katharine Elizabeth Muth
Rosalyn Judith Nash
Gordon Newman
Meredith Michelle Noe
Summer Amanda Northern
Michael Kevin O'Donnell
James Edward O'Toole
Francisco Javier Onate-Vargas
John Trevor Owen
Valerie Anne Pasket
Skyler Maryl Patton
John Christian Petersen
James Andrew Petros
David Joseph Petticrew
Matthew John Pierick
Lizeth Evelyn Pineda
Stephen James Platts
Catherine Elizabeth Pool
Taylor Butler Posey
Jill Noel Prososki
Antonia Elta Pugliese
Hannah Rebecca Celia Quigley
Shelby Peyton Quitta
Rachel Lynn Redford
Madeline Marie Respeliers
Ricardo Reyes-Mata
Hayley Lynn Reynolds
Brian Douglas Roberts
PatIick Quentin Robertson
Emily Michelle Rogers
Tanya Frances Roggenbuck
Rebecca Kirstin Rosen
Julia Clare Rossini
Frances Marie Ruiz
Richard Joseph Rutz
Veronica Louise Rybicki
Evan Matthew Sadasivan
Camille Carino Salazar
Pheby Ann Samuel
Zachary Chris Santonil
Elizabeth Anne Santorum
Daniel William Schmidt
Monica Joy Schooley
Abigail Marie Schreiber
Jillian Grace Schroeder
Charles Vincent Schuberg
Taran James Schwartz
Mark Anthony Seitz
Jonah Jacob Selner
Julian Shiun Seoh
Madeleine Skaggs
Claire Alexis Slowey
Ansel Harris Smith III
Albert M. Solis
Rebekah Lynne Spearman
Zebediah Ambrose Stearns, Jr.
Julia Jeanne-Marie Steigerwald
Shea Ellyse Stevens
Logan Neal Stryk
Rose Elizabeth Sweeney
La ura Mary Tal bot
William Joseph Teller
Alexander Thornton
Stan Logan Tinsley
Gillian Elizabeth Tishuk
Catherine Ngoc Tien Tran
Tiffany Thienkim Tran
Elizabeth Marie Troxler
Mary Katherine Twetten
Bethany Brianne Underhill
Michael Thomas Unterberger
Stephanie Nicole Uy
Brian Mathew Vallone
Rachel Mary Vaske
Brigid Therese Vaughn
Julia Catherine Vaughn
Candice Gilian Vermeulen
Arielle Kristen Villanueva
Charmi Ellaine Cruz Vince
Sarah Lianne Vukalovic
Anne Elise \Vadsworth
Anthony John Wagner
Austin Clark Walker
Rebekah Ann Wallace
Valerie Marie Wark
Caryn Elena Warnert
Caroline Kay Watanabe
Matthew Harold Wisnoski
Christina Marie Witkowski
Laura Rae Y okell
Arianna Jahan Zeb
Jane Frances Ziolkowski
Isabel T. Zubillaga
Maria Lucia Zubillaga Sahagun
For the Degree
Bachelor of Science
Philip John Anderson
John Richard Bredemann
Kelsey Anne Clary
Angie Stephanie De La Cruz
Erin Elizabeth Dinehart
Omar Kamal Faour
Anthony Francis Guerra
Nicholas J. Hedlesky
Richard K. Jackson III
Jean-Luc Kalonda Kabangu
Adam Patrick Kaftan
Nicholas Alexander Kanakis
Olivia Rachael LaFond
Alexander Carl Lemke
Amy Michelle Lindberg
Emily Kathryn McKinnon
Matthew Melendez
Emily Ann Michael
Samantha Lyn Mulcahy
Sarah Elizabeth Nicholson
Vance Scott Nygard
Emily Marie Schuler
Sebastian Luke Scofield
Claire Marie Sexton
Elizabeth Lynn Sizemore
Michael James Wadle
Christian Fournier vValker
Narine Ellen-Jade Wandrey
Benjamin Joseph vVebster
Alexandra Kathleen \\Tilson
Dominic Francis Zuniga
This program reflects information determined to be correct at the time ofprinting, but it is not the official list ofdegree candidates certified for graduation.
Undergraduate Semor Projects In order to graduate, all undergraduate students must pass a comprehensive. The form of the examination varies by department. In many majors the senior project (exhibit, one-act play, thesis, research), usually followed by an oral defense , is part of that concluding experience. The following list of such projects includes those submitted in time for publication. Jose Rodrigo Alonso Gonzalez (Philosophy and Letters) BeJore I Jormed you in the womb I knew you: Understanding the Experience oj Loneliness in the Person with Same Sex Attraction and his Encounter with the Gospel. Kelly Eileen Anderson (Drama) These Heavenly Lines Philip Anderson (Biochemistry) Optimization oj Efficacy and Drug-Like Qualities ojNovel Aminopyrimidine Series against Tuberculosis Caeli Austin (Drama) The Eagle with Two Heads Abby Bagby (Art, Sculpture) Senior Art Exhibit: Havisham Matthew F. Bellet (Classics) Virtue on the Acropolis: Art in Plutarch 's Lite otPericles Vallery Bergez (French, English) French: La Communaute, I'Eucharistie, et la Vierge Marie: La theologie eternelle du pere Henri de Lubac, S.J. English: "Wild Strawberries": Craving Wholeness in Robinson's Housekeeping Megan Best (History) The Christian Responses to the Women's Liberation Movement Abby Bird (Politics) Catholic Theories on Social Welfare in the United States Justin Blan (Theology) "Do This in Memory ofMe": A Study in the Eucharistic Writings oj St. Ignatius oj Antioch and St. Justin Martyr Ivanna Bond (English) The Charlatan and the Peacemaker in Dinesen 's Anecdotes otDestiny Michael Alan Smith Bowden (Philosophy) Dwelling in Suburbia
Olivia Cole (Art, Painting)
Senior Art Exhibit: Encounters from Inner Space
Justin Cormie (Philosophy and Letters) Life: After Death - Against a Presumed Consent Policy oj Organ Donation Rachel Daly (English) "Not a Moral, but a Mystic Concern ": Nesting Narrative Structures in Dinesen 's Anecdotes otDestiny Carey 1. Davies (Biology) Behavioral Genetics in Apis Mellitera: Reversible Gene Expression in Honey Bee Behavioral Phenotypes Angie De La Cruz (Biology) Latency-Associated Degredation oj the MRPI Drug Transporter during Latent Human Cytomegalovirus Injection Tess DeRocher (English) The Elusive Lady in James's The Portrait ot a Lady Anne-Marie Dhooghe (English) Anecdotes otDestiny and the Art oj Enchantment: Don 't Try This at Home Elizabeth Anne Dobak (English) Inversion and Conversion: The Power ofDialect in Twain's Connecticut Yankee Joshua Lee Elzner (Philosophy) Portraying the Form oj Christ: The Glory of the Lord and Sacred Arc hitec ture Mary English (Art, Ceramics) Senior Art Exhibit: Memento Homo Jessica Estrada (Psychology) "Who Am 1?: A Phenomenological Inquiry into the Development oj Bicultural 1denti ty "
Maggie Boylan (History) Beyond the 38Th Parallel: An Examination oj North Korean Juche Ideology
Mariah Ficek (Spanish, Politics) Spanish: La Mujer Autoritaria en las obras de Benito Perez Gald6s y Federico Garcia Lorca Politics: The Human Rights Revolution: A Challenge to the Realist Account oj International Politics
Akiko Bremar (English) Nelly's Choice Interventions: The Struggle ofAuthority in Bronte 's Wuthering Heights
Elizabeth Anne Finley (Human Sciences in the Contemporary World) A Knowing Unknowing: The Perception and Reception oj Genetically Modified Organisms in the Food Supply.
Christopher Burns (Classical Philology-Latin) Rome's Decentralized Takeover ofSyria
Paul Fiesel (History) The Evolution oj the Roman Army: Emphasis on Marius and Augustus
Nicholas Catanese (Drama) Red Carnations by Glenn Hughes Kelsey Anne Clary (Biology) Dengue Virus Subverts the InterJeron Induction Pathway via N5ZB13 Protease - IKBE Interaction
Jude Galbraith (Philosophy) This Wide and Universal Theater: Modernity and the Architecture oj the Playhouse Alexa Garcia (English) Framing Joyce 's Windows in the Dubliners
Stephanie Garcia (Theology) The Destruction oj Faith through the Face oj Moral Relativism Christina Gardner (Philosophy) Synthesis and Transcendence in the Temple Expiatori de la Sagrada Familia : An embodiment oj Modern Ideals Danielle Gontarz (Psychology) Look at Me: A Phenomenological Inquiry into the Experience oj Vanity Olivia Gulino (Philosophy) Make Yourselj at Home: The Necessity oj Ethics in Architecture jor the Facilitation oj Existential and Phenomenological Dwelling Kathryn Brigid Hennessy (History) Winston 's Words: The Rhetorical Impact ofChurchill's Speeches on
British Morale during their Finest Hour
James A. Hernandez (Philosophy and Letters , English)
Philosophy and Letters: The Spirit ofEvangelization, "The Son of
Man came not to destroy the lives ofmen but to save them. "
English: The Snares oj the Fowler in Greene 's The Quiet American
Evan Michael Hierholzer (English) "For are they not conjoined opposites? ": Blake, Rushdie, and The Satanic Verses Keith Higginbotham (Philosophy and Letters) A Consideration oj the Significance oj Human Laughter Rachel Hiser (Art History) Pollock 's Poetry: An Artist's Expression of the American Tradition Julie Holly (Spanish) El Inca Garcilaso de la Vega y su injluencia de la opinion de los incas Monica Holman (Art History) West Coast State oj Mind: Art in Los Angeles 1957-1969
Erin Kleiber (Drama, English) Drama: Miss Julie English: "Aesthetics & Morality: Indictment ofthe Artist in Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray Michael Kuemmerlein (History) Runner in the Woods: A Study oj the Origins oj American Guerilla Warjare Jamie Kuntz (English) Rediscovering the Myth ofProserpina in A. S. Byatt 's Possession Stephanie Kurth (Spanish, Politics) Spanish: Las hue lias hacia el jeminismo de Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz en la ipoca colonial Politics: Foreign Policy Decision Making Olivia LaFond (Biochemistry) Synoptic Role oj the Major Vault Protein in Developmental Disorders John Le (Philosophy and Letters) The Conjlicts between Individualism and Vietnamese Communitarianism in America Tracy Lee (Theology) Gratia: "A Sweet Violence Done to the Heart " Augustine's Theology oj Grace as Demonstrated in Book VIII oj the Confessions Alexander Lemke (Chemistry) Alcohol Transjormations with Sodium Hypochlorite Dependent on PH, Alcohol Environment, and PTC Amy Lindberg (Chemistry) Evaluating p53 Binding to DNA using Microjluidic Devices Andrea Lindsay (Psychology) Projound Missing as Experienced by Women 1. Lucas Lopes (History)
David Janicki (Economics, History, Spanish) History: A Monetary History oj the Historical Episodes Preceding the Creation oj the Federal Reserve Spanish: Las consecuencias politicas y economicas de la desamortizacion espanola
The High Road to Reason: Abraham Lincoln 's Rhetorical Notion of Friendship
Martha Andrea Jauregui Vazquez (English, Interdisciplinary Studies) Unveiling Truth in Fiction in Jonathan Safran Foer 's Everything is Illuminated
Alexander Macdonald (History) The End oj Order: The Eastern Question and the Instigating Factors
oj the Crimean War
Chandler Johnson (Psychology, Interdisciplinary Studies) Phenomenological Inquiry into the Selj- Understanding oj the Experience oj Being Ashamed
Mary Sarah Mackenzie (English, History)
English: Gothic Desire in Waugh's A Handful of Dust
History: Struggle jor Community in an Age oj Individualism:
Columbia College 's Core Curriculum Debate, 1966
Mary Jones (History) A Historical Evaluation of Vincent T. Lombardi 's Classical, Heroic Character: "A Manfor all Football Seasons " Annie Kaplan (Psychology) Parental Bereavement and the Meanings oj Spousal Relationship: A Mother's Perspective Lily Key (Theology) A Comparison oj the Sanctification oj the Blessed Virgin Mary According to St. Thomas Aquinas and Blessed John Duns Scotus
Stephen Lopke (History) History oj American Whiskey in the Twentieth Century
Patrick Malone (Philosophy) A Heideggerian Understanding oj How Man Dwells in the Liturgy oj the Eucharist Daniel Francisco Matamoros (Psychology, Philosophy) Psychology: Recovering from Unjaithfulness : A Phenomenological Study on Coping with Unjaithfulness by Those Cheated-on in a Committed Relationship Philosophy: On Projane Architecture: A Secular Response to Sacred Architecture
Anthony Michael McFarland (Philosophy and Letters) Ecce Agnus Dei: Man 's Bodiliness and the Use oj His Senses in Relation to the Most Holy Sacrifice oj the Mass
Madeline Respeliers (Interdisciplinary Studies, Spanish) Santo Domingo de Guzman, jundador de la Orden de Predicadores: Deudor de un legado castellano
Brittany McIntyre (History) Articles ofConfederation: "The Destruction ofLiberty "
Patrick Robertson (History) Predicting the Fall oJ an Empire: Nizam al-Mulk 's Book of Government in Context
Brigid McMahan (History) "A Tighter Framework for Imperial Administration ": The Effects oj the American Revolution Upon the British Empire Matthew Melendez (Physics) Blazhko Effect in a Newly Discovered and a Known RR Lyrae Star
Emily Rogers (History) Foreign Policy Prompts the Establishment oj Centralized
Government under the American Constitution: An Examination oj
John Jay 's InJluence in the Drafting oj the Constitution
Benjamin Mena (History) The Influence oj Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar in the Development ofSpain 's National Identity
Rebecca Rosen (Biology)
Beta-Aminoisobutyric Acid includes Browning oj White Fat &
Hepatic Beta - Oxidation is Inversely Correlated with Cardio Metabolic Risk Factors
Emily Michael (Biology) Microbial Exposure during Early Life Has Persistent Effects on Natural Killer T Cell Function
Julia Rossini (Psychology) The ConJlict oj Self during and after Failing to Resist Temptation: A Phenomenological Study
Hunter Niland Mills (Comparative Literary Traditions) Get Ready to Stay Dead a Long Time: Addie Bundren, Antigone, and the Desire Jor Death
Zachary Chris Santoni I (Physics) Gamma Ray Spectroscopy oj Iron-56
Andrew Moor (History) Who Shall Enter? Zachary Joseph Moritz (History) The Vietnam War and Protest: How Popular Music was Used to Fight the War Mary Clare Mulhern (English) Pride in Austen's Persuasion Katherine Elizabeth Muth (German-Linguistics) Deutsch & Englisch: Eine Untersuchung der zwei Sprachen Rosalyn Nash (Human Sciences in the Contemporary World) The Influence oj Online Advertising on the Attitudes and Behaviors oj Online Consumers Gordon Newman (Classics) Democracy at Arms: How the Battle oj Marathon changed Western Civilization
Camille Salazar (Theology, Spanish) Theology: On Holiness oj the Church: An Analysis oj Why it is Right to Conclude that the Church is Holy despite the Sins oj her Members. Spanish: El analisis de los simbolos, las paradojas, y los temas de la literature mistica en Las Moradas de Santa Teresa de Avila Peter Sampson (English) Reflection and Connection in E.M. Forster's A Passage to India Emily Schuler (Biology) Stimulation oj Inflammation in Alzheimer's Disease Taran Schwartz (Theology, Philosophy) Theology: The Atonement Considered in Light oj Luther Philosophy: Abstracting Meaning in Architecture, American Appropriation oj Classical Form Jonah Selner (Business, History) History: Why are we Jighting? Truman, MacArthur, and America's Painjul Transition to Limited War in Korea
Sarah Nicholson (Mathematics) The Enumeration oj One-Singular Knots
Julian Seoh (Psychology) Reflected Pride: A Phenomenological Study ofPride in Another's Achievement
Vance Nygard (Chemistry) SyntheSis ojpoly-(3-alkyl)-thiophenes and Characterization oj Their Optical and Magnetic Properties
Madeline Skaggs (English) Narrative and the Death ofApathy in Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms
Francisco 1. Onate-Vargas (Philosophy and Letters) One Family under God: The Migrant Catholic Church United with One and Jor All
Claire Alexis Slowey (History) Architecture in the Machine Age: The Redefinition oj Architecture and the SearchJor an Authentic American Style 1880-1920
James Petros (Politics) Judicial Philosophy and Political Reality: President George W. Bush's Appointments to the United States Supreme Court
Albert Solis (Philosophy and Letters) Strength and Weakness: SI. Paul's Theology of Weakness Applied to Chronic Illness
Hannah Quigley (English) The Limitations ofIdealized Memory in Welty's The Optimist 's Daughter
Rebekah Spearman (Classical Philology) Penelope's "Steadfast Heart"
Shelby Quitta (English) "Loneliness is an absolute discovery" : Searchingfor Intimacy in Robinson's Housekeeping
Shea Stevens (Theology) That They May Be One: Responding to David Power on Sin, Suffering, and the Sacrifice oj the Mass
Aaron Stolle (Physics, Theology) Physics: The Black Hole Destroyer: Hawking Radiation Simulation Theology: The Problem oj Divine Goodness
Valerie Wark (Psychology) A Phenomenological Investigation into Experiential Dimensions oj Meaning oj Flow during Peak Music PerJormance
Rose Elizabeth Sweeney (English) Co-authoring Jonathan Safran Foer 's Everything is Illuminated
Caroline Watanabe (Psychology) Finding Oneself Outcast in an Alienating Regard: A Phenomenological Inquiry into the Experience oj Social Exclusion
Laura Talbot (Psychology) Role Conflict in Social Encounters: Phenomenological Inquiry into the Experience oj Confronting Multiple Roles Bethany B. Underhill (Art-Sculpture) AndJor a Time I am without Myself, Lulled into Warmth Stephanie Uy (History) War without Fighting Rachel Vaske (Art)
Senior Art Exhibition: From Empty Hands
Arielle Villanueva (Classics) The Legend and Legacy oj Coriolanus Charmi Ellaine Cruz Vince (English) "Fear no more the heat ofthe sun " Gifts ofConsolation in Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway Anthony Wagner (Biology) The Inhibition oj Tissue Transglutaminose Reduces Fibrosis and the Progresszon oj Human Renal Scarring Narine Wandrey (Biology) Immunocytochemical Studies oj Mineralocorticoid Receptors, Lymphoma Protein Expression Induced by Cyclic AMP, and Characterization oj Pseudomonas Aeruginosa Signal Transduction Systems
Benjamin Webster (Biochemistry) Purity Verification oj Phospholipase D from Streptomyces SpeCies Jor Subsequent Sequencing Analysis Alexandra Wilson (Biology) You are What your Parents Ate: Mechanisms oj Acquired Phenotype Transmission Christina Witkowski (English) Jim Burden's "Sweet Teachers ': The Making ofan Artist in Cather's My Antonia Laura Y okell (Psychology) Feeling Valued in the Workplace : A Phenomenological Investigation oj Organizational Behavior Jane Ziolkowski (English) Saving Gratitude in Mark Twain's A Connecticut Yankee
Board ofTrustees
The Most Reverend Kevin J. Farrell, Chancellor
Francis P. Hubach, Jr., Chairman ofthe Board
Walter E. Adams
Charlie Baumann, '88
Win Bell
Joanne Stroud Bilby, '75, '80
Christopher R. Bright, 78
Thomas W. Codd, Jr.
John A. Gates
David S. Gruber
Patrick E. Haggerty, Jr., '67, '68
Kevin "Seamus" Hasson
Michael Hasson, NAB President
Gregory Hoelscher, '77
Richard Husseini, '88
Thomas W. Keefe, President
Rev. Msgr. Gregory Kelly
Mary Manning
J. Patrick McLochlin
Joseph C. Murphy, Vice Chairman
Joseph o. Neuhoff, Jr.
Nathaniel Parker, '93
Dwight R. Riskey
Mary Ritter, '85
Timothy P. Rooney
Len C. Ruby, Secretary
Nicholas T. Serafy, Jr.
Patrick V. Stark
Charles Tusa, '74
Bridgett Wagner
Donna Arp Weitzman
Thomas M Zellers, MD., '79
America the Beautiful Oh beautiful for spacious skies, For amber waves ofgrain For purple mountain majesties Above the fruited plain. America! America! God shed His grace on thee. And crown thy good with brotherhood From sea to shining sea.
Oh beautiful for pilgrim feet
Whose stern impassioned stress
A thoroughfare for freedom beat
Across the wilderness
America! America!
God mend thine ev 'ry flaw .
Confirm thy soul in self-control,
Thy liberty in law.
Music by Encore Brass. Hag Bearers: Alexander C . Lemke and Brigid M . McMahan. Marshals: Dr. John Plotts and Dore Madere.
Order ofCeremonies Procession Macebearer, Vice-Chair of the Faculty Senate, Robert Kugelmann
Flagbearers, Marshals
Students
Administrators, Faculty
Members of the Board of Trustees, Special Guests
Dean ofthe Braniff Graduate School, Joshua Parens
Dean of Constantin College, Charles W. Eaker
Dean of the Gupta College ofBusiness, Robert T. Scherer
Dean of the School ofMinistry, Mark Goodwin
Provost, J. William Berry
Representing the National Alumni Board, John M. Lynch
Chairman, Board ofTrustees, Francis P. Hubach, Jr.
Associate Provost, John M. Norris
Mr. Joel T. Williams
Mr. George Weigel
President, Thomas W. Keefe
Bishop Michael F. Olson
Chancellor, Bishop Kevin J. Farrell
Invocation Bishop Farrell Greetings John M. Lynch
Francis P. Hubach
President Keefe
Presentation ofHonorary Degrees Joel T. Williams
George Weigel
Commencement Address George Weigel Presentation ofCandidates for BraniffGraduate School ofLiberal Arts and School ofMinistry Degrees The Provost and the Associate Provost
Conferral ofGraduate Degrees
The President and the Chancellor
The Dean of the Braniff Graduate School and the Dean ofthe School ofMinistry
A warding of Undergraduate Academic Honors
The Dean of Constantin College, the Dean ofthe Gupta College ofBusiness
For the Class of2014 Evan M. Hierholzer Presentation of Candidates for the Constantin College ofLiberal Arts,
The Gupta College ofBusiness, and the School ofMinistry Degrees
The Provost and the Associate Provost
Conferral ofConstantin College, Gupta College ofBusiness, and School ofMinistry Degrees
The President and the Chancellor
The Dean of Constantin College, the Dean ofthe Gupta College ofBusiness, and the Dean ofthe School ofMinistry
Benediction Bishop Olson America the Beautiful The Assembly