Inauguration of Steven C. Currall, Ph.D.

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Inauguration of

STEVEN C. CURRALL, Ph.D. 7TH PRESIDENT UNIVERSITY of SOUTH FLORIDA

NOVEMBER 14, 2019

University of South Florida | Nov. 14, 2019

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Moon Echo, 2019, by Iva Gueorguieva Limited Edition Commemorative Print Iva Gueorguieva, an ongoing collaborator with USF’s Graphicstudio, was born in Bulgaria in 1974 and is known primarily as an abstract painter whose compositions are awash with color, movement and texture. President and First Lady Currall selected several of Iva’s works for their residence in the Lifsey House and have commissioned this piece to celebrate this historic Inauguration.

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Inauguration of Steven C. Currall, Ph.D.


Inauguration of

STEVEN C. CURRALL, Ph.D. 7TH PRESIDENT UNIVERSITY of SOUTH FLORIDA

NOVEMBER 14, 2019

University of South Florida | Nov. 14, 2019

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Steven C. Currall, Ph.D. UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA PRESIDENT AND CEO, PROFESSOR

Steven C. Currall became the seventh president of the University of South Florida on July 1, 2019.

mination of a 10-year research project on interdisciplinary research involving science, engineering and medicine. Previously, Dr. Currall served as provost and vice president for academic affairs at Southern Methodist University

DR. CURRALL BRINGS TO THE PRESIDENCY a broad range

in Dallas from 2016 to 2019. In that role, he oversaw all aca-

of academic leadership experience at high-performing

demic colleges/schools, as well as SMU Libraries, the Office

research universities and private institutions. He has held

of Research and Graduate Studies, the Division of Enrollment

appointments at institutions in the prestigious Association

Services, curriculum, Institutional Planning and Effectiveness,

of American Universities (AAU) – the group of top research

Institutional Research, International Center, Center for Teach-

universities in the U.S. and Canada to which USF aspires –

ing Excellence, the Cary M. Maguire Center for Ethics and

including the University of California, Davis; Rice University;

Public Responsibility, two satellite campuses and SMU Global

and the University of Chicago. He also has held appointments

and Online. Dr. Currall also was the David B. Miller Endowed

at universities with multiple campuses.

Professor and held academic appointments in the Cox School

He has conducted research and taught for three decades on organizational psychology topics such as innovation, emerging technologies, negotiation and corporate gover-

the Lyle School of Engineering. During his time at SMU, he served on the University Ad-

nance. At USF, he is a tenured professor. He is a Fellow of

visory Committee, Cancer Prevention and Research Institute

the American Association for the Advancement of Science,

(CPRIT) of Texas, a $3 billion statewide initiative to fund

elected in 2013 for the study of societal impacts of science

groundbreaking cancer research and prevention programs.

and engineering. In addition, he served as a member of the

Dr. Currall held a number of positions at the University

Nanotechnology Technical Advisory Group at the invitation

of California, Davis, from 2009 to 2016. He served as senior

of the U.S. President’s Council of Advisors on Science and

advisor to the chancellor for strategic projects and initiatives,

Technology.

which included co-chairing a campus-wide strategic visioning

Dr. Currall has been a grantee on $21.5 million in external

exercise to position UC Davis as a “University of the 21st Cen-

funding, of which more than 78 percent came from refereed

tury.” Dr. Currall also co-chaired a committee charged with

research grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF)

growing research expenditures from $780 million to $1 bil-

and National Institutes of Health. Dr. Currall was lead author

lion; this year, expenditures totaled $849 million. He also led

of a book on university-business-government collaboration

planning for an additional campus in the Sacramento region.

entitled, Organized Innovation: A Blueprint for Renewing

Prior to the chancellor’s office, Dr. Currall served as the dean

America’s Prosperity (Oxford University Press). The book,

of the Graduate School of Management for over five years.

which is based on a study funded by the NSF, was the cul-

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of Business, Dedman College of Humanities and Sciences and

Inauguration of Steven C. Currall, Ph.D.

From 2010 to 2015, Dr. Currall was vice chair of the board


of directors and member of the executive committee for the

neurship, which assisted in the launch of more than 160 new

10-campus University of California Global Health Institute.

technology start-up companies. Those firms raised in excess

During his time in California, he also served on the Board of

of $300 million in equity capital.

Directors of the California Life Sciences Association. At University College London, where he served from 2005 to 2009, Dr. Currall was the founding chair of the

During 2003, Dr. Currall was a visiting scholar in the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business. He has served as a member of several editorial review

Department of Management Science and Innovation in the

boards, including Academy of Management Review, Academy

Faculty of Engineering Sciences, where he was also a vice

of Management Journal, and Organization Science. He has

dean. Dr. Currall also was the founding director of UCL

been quoted more than 600 times in a variety of publications,

Advances, an entrepreneurship center. During the same time

including the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington

period, he was a visiting professor of organizational behavior

Post, Financial Times, Business Week, British Broadcasting Cor-

and entrepreneurship at the London Business School, a joint

poration (BBC) television, and the Nightly Business Report on

appointment with University College London.

public television.

From 1993 to 2005, Dr. Currall served in a variety of

Dr. Currall earned a Ph.D. in organizational behavior from

faculty roles at Rice University in Houston, including the Wil-

Cornell University, a master’s degree in social psychology

liam and Stephanie Sick Professorship of Entrepreneurship, a

from the London School of Economics and Political Science,

$2.5 million endowed professorship in the George R. Brown

and a bachelor’s degree in psychology (cum laude) from

School of Engineering. He was also a tenured associate pro-

Baylor University.

fessor in the Jones Graduate School of Management. At Rice, he founded the Rice Alliance for Technology and Entrepre-

A native of Kansas City, Mo., he is married to Cheyenne Currall, Ph.D.

University of South Florida | Nov. 14, 2019

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University of South Florida

T

he University of South Florida, founded in 1956, is dedicated to empowering students to maximize their potential for lifelong success. USF is situated in the vibrant and diverse Tampa Bay region, with campuses in Tampa, St. Petersburg and Sarasota-Manatee. Together these three campuses serve more than 50,000 students and offer over 180 majors and concentrations leading to undergraduate, graduate, specialist and doctoral degrees. USF is the nation’s fastest-rising public university, moving from 88th in 2015 to 44th in U.S. News and World Report’s 2019 rankings. Also this year, USF earned a Higher Education Excellence in Diversity Award, which recognizes U.S. colleges and universities that demonstrate an outstanding commitment to diversity and inclusion. Nearly 52 percent of full-time USF students identify as non-white, and in recent years, USF has received national recognition for eliminating the graduation rate gap by race, ethnicity and socioeconomic status, a rare achievement in higher education. USF’s focus on student success also resulted in the 2019 American Council on Education/Fidelity Investments Award for Institutional Transformation. Beginning in 2010, USF Tampa launched a student success movement to elevate student retention and graduation rates. The addition of predictive analytics and case management by 2017 accelerated student performance, raising USF’s

six-year graduation rate from 51 to 73 percent between 2010 and 2018. High-impact, global research also is central to USF’s mission as the state’s only metropolitan Preeminent Research University, as designated by the Florida Board of Governors. In 2018, USF was ranked among the top 25 public universities for research expenditures, and 42nd in the nation overall among public and private universities. With total research expenditures of $568 million in 2016-17, USF is at the forefront of cutting-edge research in medicine, science, engineering, the arts and more. USF’s commitment to innovation and invention has a significant economic impact. The university’s innovation and economic development efforts generate more than $582 million in statewide impact each year, an increase of more than 45 percent over the last three years. Innovation efforts sustain more than 4,000 jobs and return more than $71 million in tax revenue to local, state and federal coffers. USF ranks seventh among public research universities and 16th among all universities worldwide in generating new patents. The ranking places USF in rare company among the more than 1,000 academic institutions generating new, novel and useful inventions granted intellectual property protection from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. USF has an overall annual economic impact of $4.4 billion.

UNIVERSITY LEADERSHIP Steven C. Currall, President and Chief Executive Officer Joseph Hice, Vice President for Communications and Marketing Karen A. Holbrook, Regional Chancellor, USF Sarasota-Manatee Michael Kelly, Vice President for Athletics David Lechner, Senior Vice President for Business and Financial Strategy Charles J. Lockwood, Senior Vice President for USF Health Paul R. Sanberg, Senior Vice President for Research, Innovation and Knowledge Enterprise Noreen Segrest, Interim Senior Vice President for University Advancement and Alumni Relations Gerard Solis, General Counsel Martin Tadlock, Regional Chancellor, USF St. Petersburg Ralph C. Wilcox, Provost and Executive Vice President

UNIVERSITY BOARD OF TRUSTEES Jordan B. Zimmerman, Chair Les Muma, Vice Chair Michael L. Carrere Britney Deas Stephanie E. Goforth Michael E. Griffin Oscar Horton Deanna Michael, Ph.D. Harold W. Mullis, Esq. John B. Ramil Byron E. Shinn Charles Tokarz Nancy H. Watkins

Where Excellence and O 6

Inauguration of Steven C. Currall, Ph.D.


Investiture

Program PRESIDING Dr. Ralph Wilcox, USF Provost and Executive Vice President PROCESSIONAL USF Faculty Brass Quintet WELCOME Provost Ralph Wilcox PRESENTATION OF COLORS USF ROTC Color Guard NATIONAL ANTHEM Ms. Dana Clark, Graduate Student, USF School of Music USF Faculty Brass Quintet INVOCATION Dr. Maria Dixon Hall, Senior Advisor to the President for Cultural Intelligence Initiatives and Altshuler Distinguished Teaching Professor and Associate Professor of Organizational Communication, Southern Methodist University GREETINGS TO THE PRESIDENT Mr. Jordan Zimmerman, Chair, USF Board of Trustees SPEAKERS Mr. Ned Lautenbach, Chair, Florida Board of Governors Dr. Charles Stanish, Professor, USF College of Arts and Sciences and Executive Director, Institute for the Advanced Study of Culture and the Environment Ms. Britney Deas, President, USF System Student Advisory Council Rev. Ronnie Osborn, Pastor, St. Charles Presbyterian Church, Missouri Dr. Jack M. Gill, The Gill Foundation of Texas; Co-Founder Vanguard Ventures, Palo Alto, CA; Faculties: Harvard Medical School, MIT, Rice University INTRODUCTION OF PRESIDENT STEVEN C. CURRALL, Ph.D. Sir Malcolm Grant, former President and Provost, University College London; former Chairman, National Health Service England; current honorary Chancellor, University of York INSTALLATION AND PRESENTATION OF THE CHAIN OF OFFICE Chair Jordan Zimmerman INAUGURAL ADDRESS President Steven C. Currall USF ALMA MATER USF School of Music Chamber Singers RECESSIONAL USF Faculty Brass Quintet

OpportunityConverge Campus and Community Inauguration Reception immediately following the ceremony at the Muma College of Business Atrium

University of South Florida | Nov. 14, 2019

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The Symbols of Higher Education

M

odern academic regalia evolved from the kinds of apparel worn by monks and students in the 11th and 12th centuries to keep warm in the medieval castles and halls in which they studied. Academic life as we know it today began in the Middle Ages — first in the church, then in the guilds. The teaching guild was the Guild of the Master of Arts, and the Bachelor was the apprentice of the Master. Their dress was the outward sign of stature and responsibility. Academic regalia was thus a visible manifestation — in color, pattern and design — that unified those of common discipline and like purpose. In later centuries, to preserve the regalia’s dignity and meaning, universities set rules of academic dress. American universities agreed on a definite system in 1895, establishing a code of approved attire. In 1932, the American Council on Education revised this code, which, for the most part, governs the style of academic dress today. The principal features of academic dress are three: the gown, the cap and the hood.

THE GOWN — The gown has become symbolic of the democracy of scholarship, for it completely covers any dress of rank or social standing. The sleeves of the gown indicate the level of the degree held by the wearer. A long, pointed sleeve indicates the bachelor’s degree. The master’s gown has an

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Inauguration of Steven C. Currall, Ph.D.

oblong sleeve cut in an arc, with a slit at either the upper arm or wrist. The USF doctor’s gown has bell-shaped sleeves and three black bars on the sleeve. The doctoral robe also has the seal of the university on the velvet facing. THE CAP— The freed slave in ancient Rome won the privilege of wearing a cap, and so the academic cap is a sign of the freedom of scholarship and the responsibility and dignity with which scholarship endows the wearer. Old poetry records the cap of scholarship as a square symbolizing the book, although other authorities claim that it is a mortar board, the symbol of the masons, a privileged guild. The color of the tassel on the cap denotes the discipline. The tassels on the caps (mortar boards) worn by the faculty may be black or a color indicating the degree. Those who hold a doctoral degree may wear a gold tassel. It is traditional for degree candidates to wear their tassels on the right and for those holding degrees to wear them on the left. Graduates transfer their tassels to the left after conferring of the degrees by the President. THE MACE — The USF mace is a ceremonial staff similar to those used by many institutions of higher learning to show the right to grant degrees to graduates. The mace is used during all Commencement ceremonies and is carried by the


President of the Faculty Senate. Our mace includes a gold pine cone at its top to represent growth and continuity. Eight silver semicircles, which support the pine cone, stand for the eight colleges in existence at USF when the mace was commissioned in 1998. When not in use, today’s mace is displayed in the foyer of the President’s office. The original university mace is on display in the Alumni Center. THE MEDALLION — The medallion worn by candidates for the bachelor’s degree identify those graduating with honors based upon GPA. THE SASH — The golden-colored sash is made available to students who are members of university honors societies. The sash is embroidered with the university seal and the student’s honors society. International students may choose to wear a special sash honoring their home country. The colors of their sash reflect the colors of their native flags. THE HOOD — The hoods are lined with the official colors of the institution conferring the degree. They are edged and bound with velvet of the color appropriate for the degree. At USF, the lining of the hood is green with a gold chevron, representing the university’s colors. THE COLORS — In regalia, academic disciplines are noted by color. These colors can be found on undergraduate and masters tassels and on master and doctorate hoods on the velvet edging. • Apricot — Nursing • Blue (dark) — Philosophy (doctorate) • Blue (light) — Education • Blue (peacock) — Public Administration • Blue (Rhodes) — Audiology • Brown — Visual and Performing Arts • Citron — Social Work, Rehabilitation and Mental Health Counseling • Crimson — Advertising, Journalism and Mass Communications • Copper — Economics • Drab — Business • Green (Kelly) — Medicine • Green (olive) — Pharmacy • Green (sage) — Political Science (masters) • Orange — Engineering • Pink — Music • Salmon — Public Health • Scarlet — Religious Studies • Science Gold — Anthropology, Biology, Biomedical Sciences, Chemistry, Communication Sciences and Disorders, Criminology, Cybercrime, Environmental Science, Geography, Geology, Gerontology, Health Sciences, Information Technologies, Medical Science (masters), Medical Technology, Mathematics, Marine Science, Physics, Speech Pathology, Statistics • Silver — Speech Communications • Teal — Physical Therapy • Violet — Architecture • White — Arts and Letters and Humanities, including African Studies, American Studies, Applied Linguistics, Art and Art History, Classics, English, Foreign Language, General Studies, History, Interdisciplinary Social Science, International Studies, Liberal Studies, Linguistics, Political Science, Psychology, Sociology, Women’s and Gender Studies • Yellow (lemon) — Library Science • Yellow (pineapple) — Hotel and Restaurant Management

USF TAMPA

USF ST. PETERSBURG

USF SARASOTA-MANATEE

University of South Florida | Nov. 14, 2019

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Delegates from Colleges and Universities Institution, Founded

Delegate

University of Oxford, 1096 La Sorbonne, 1257

University of Utah, 1850

Sara Smith

University of Tübingen, 1477

Andreas Seyfang

University of Edinburgh, 1582 Harvard University, 1636 Lund University, 1666

Kristina H. Schmidt

Yale University, 1701

Kathleen D. Durdin

Columbia University, 1754 Brown University, 1764

William Murray

Clint Randles

Auburn University, 1856

Jessica L.Worley

Michael Fountain

Heewon L. Gray

Illinois State University, 1857

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1861

Gallaudet University, 1864

SaLisa L. Berrien

Cornell University, 1865

McArthur Freeman, II

Lehigh University, 1865

Kathy L. Bradley-Klug

The University of Kansas, 1865

University of Vermont, 1791

School of the Art Institute of Chicago, 1866

Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, 1794 Ronnie Osborn University of Tennessee, 1794 Christopher L. Schellman

Howard University, 1867

University of South Carolina, 1801

Oregon State University, 1868

Saint Mary’s University, 1802 Ohio University, 1804

Susan S. Bell

K. Doreen MacAulay

Kiersty Cox

Miami University, 1809

Saint Louis University, 1818

Diana M. Hechavarria

Jochen Braunmiller John N. Gathegi

Sheeba Varghese Gupta

Alan R. Hevner

Syracuse University, 1870

Christopher Passaglia

The Ohio State University, 1870

Brianne L. Reck

Indiana University Bloomington, 1820

Anand Kumar

The University of Akron, 1870

Thomas E. Becker Andrew Carroll

Texas A&M University, 1871

Tapas K. Das

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1824

Jose L. Zayas-Castro

University of Arkansas, 1871

Alya Limayem

Case Western Reserve University, 1826

Babu Joseph

University of Toledo, 1872

George Washington University, 1821

University College London, 1826

Laurie Lahey

Jerome Timothy Galea

KTH Royal Institute of Technology, 1827

Kebreab Ghebremichae

Michael J. Berson

Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 1872 Vanderbilt University, 1873

Brigham Young University, 1875

Ryan Henry

Sara E. Green

Johns Hopkins University, 1876

Elizabeth Jordan

Emory University, 1836

Daniel Lende

University of Bristol, 1876

Duke University, 1838

Gary L. Lemons

Elizabeth Hordge-Freeman

University of Missouri, 1839 Queen’s University, 1841 Baylor University, 1845

James Cavendish

State University of New York at Buffalo, 1846

University of Rochester, 1850

Nancy Romero-Daza

Timothy Heath

University of Wisconsin–Madison, 1848

Subhra Mohapatra

Stetson University, 1883

Kathleen de la Peña McCook

Ponrathi Athilingam

Inauguration of Steven C. Currall, Ph.D.

University of Cardiff, 1883 Temple University, 1884

Mohsen Milani

Chris P.Tsokos

Jay Wolfson

The University of Texas at Austin, 1883

Bill Campbell

The University of Iowa, 1847

University of Manitoba, 1877 University of Connecticut, 1881

Kevin Mackay

University of Notre Dame, 1842

Manh-Huong Phan

University of Southern California, 1880

James Andrews

Robert Gardner

Gabriel Picone

Tulane University,1834

New York University 1831

Michael Bowen

University of Otago, 1869 Malcolm Grant University of Nebraska–Lincoln, 1869 John M. Belohlavek

Annette Christy

University of Virginia, 1819

Wallace Wilson

Sylvia W.Thomas

University of California, Berkeley, 1868 Purdue University, 1869

Michael Speigl

University of Cincinnati, 1819

Gerald D. Luedke

University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, 1867

Wayne State University, 1868

Bonnie Billick Jones

University of Michigan, 1817

Steven A. Murawski

Amy Davis

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1789 Joseph William Seivold Milton Goggans

Thomas R Unnasch

Bliss Kohlmyer

University of Massachusetts Amherst, 1863

Dahlia Robinson

University of Pittsburgh, 1787

Anthony Michael Fiorita

Catherine Batsche

University of Washington, 1861

Charles Connor

University of Georgia, 1785

10

Michigan State University, 1855

Jianping Qi

University of Maryland, College Park, 1856

Brian Connolly

Dartmouth College, 1769

Ryan Toomey

Kent Fuchs

Marvin Karlins

Kandethody Ramachandran

Rutgers University, 1766

University of Minnesota Twin Cities, 1851

The Pennsylvania State University, 1855

Daniel Belgrad

Princeton University, 1746

David K. Johnson

Washington University in St. Louis, 1853

Stefan Huber

University of Pennsylvania, 1740

Sallie McRorie

Northwestern University, 1851 University of Florida, 1853

Deni Elliott

College of William & Mary, 1693

Xiaomei Jiang

Florida State University, 1851

Abdelwahab Hechiche

Brad J. Gemmell

Peter Stiling Elizabeth Aranda

Michigan Technological University, 1885

Qiong (Jane) Zhang

Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University, 1887

Maurice Edington


McMaster University, 1887

Philip Van Beynen

North Carolina State University, 1887 Utah State University, 1888

Ashok Kumar

The University of Texas at Dallas, 1961

Trina Spencer

Clemson University, 1889

University of Sussex, 1961

Rajiv Dubey

The University of Chicago, 1890

Golfo Alexopoulos

University of Oklahoma, 1890 Stanford University, 1891

University of Victoria, 1963

Amy Stuart Amelia Shevenell

University of North Carolina at Greensboro, 1891 University of Rhode Island, 1892

The University of Texas at Arlington, 1895 Simmons University, 1899

Amanda Tritsch

Robert H.Weisberg

University of Northumbria at Newcastle, 1894 Wichita State University, 1895

Phyllis Jones

Karin Braunsberger

Mariann Suarez

Western Michigan University, 1903

David Naar

Liliana Rodríguez-Campos

University of California, Davis, 1905

University of California, Irvine, 1965

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis, 1965

Delroy M. Hunter

University of Bradford, 1966

John J. Sullivan

Karen Murcia Alison Willing

University of British Columbia, 1908

Patricia Kruk

Florida Polytechnic University, 2012

University of Nebraska Omaha, 1908

Stephen Aikins

Bowling Green State University, 1910

Michael Brannick

Southern Methodist University, 1911

Peter K. Moore Boris Galperin

Laura Lee Swisher Burt Anderson

Western New England University, 1919

Scott E Rimbey Catia Cividini-Motta

Lamar University, 1923 Jack Gill Rashtrasant Tukadoji Maharaj Nagpur University, 1923 Yashwant Pathak University of Miami, 1925

Tonjua Williams

University of Houston, 1927

Prahathees Eswara

Ruiliang Pu

James Llorens Randy K.Avent

Participants Marshals Savannah Bennett, Robert Bertini, Christy Chefalas Frank Cunningham, Robert Herron, Boniswa Joseph Jack Lynch, Gina Lombardi, Gary Oliver

USF Faculty Brass Quintet

Kristin Arnold Ruyle

Salve Regina University, 1934 Barry University, 1940

Ricardo Izurieta

Arthur R. Miller

St. Petersburg College, 1927 Brooklyn College, 1930

Alessandro Anzalone

University of Alabama at Birmingham, 1969 Florida Gulf Coast University, 1991

University of California, Los Angeles, 1919

Cecilia N. Nunes

Hillsborough Community College, 1968

Pamela Hallock Muller

Georgia State University, 1913

Mohamed Elhamdadi

University of Warwick, 1965

University of Hawai’i at Monoa, 1907

Tennessee State University, 1912

Sara DuCuennois Kevin Yee

University of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, 1978

Mark Rains

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, 1912

Wendy H. Updike

Catholic University of Portugal, 1967

Andee Scott

Scripps Institute of Oceanography, 1903

George W. Burruss

John Sinnott

Florida International University, 1965

University of Calgary, 1966

Fenda A.Akiwumi

Texas Woman’s University, 1901

Elizabeth Dooley

Brent Small

Nova Southeastern University, 1964

Curtin University, 1966

Brittany Hay

Texas State University, 1899

Kevin A.Yelvington

University of Central Florida, 1963 University of South Alabama, 1963

Elias Stefanakos

University of California, Santa Barbara, 1891

Ashok Upadhyaya

University of Missouri–St. Louis, 1963

Pat Daniel Jones

Washington State University, 1890

The Graduate School and University Center of the City University of New York, 1961 Richard E. Plank

Lora Kosten

Heather MW Petrelli

Universidad Veracruzana, 1944

Alexandro Castellanos

Australian National University, 1946

Shyam S. Mohapatra

State University of New York at Binghamton, 1946 Brandeis University, 1948

Natasha Jonoska

Raymond Arsenault

George Mason University, 1949

Cynthia Patterson

State College of Florida, Manatee–Sarasota, 1957 University of Hartford, 1957

Matthew Kennedy

New College of Florida, 1960

Barbara Feldman

University of California, San Diego, 1960

Carol Probstfeld

Timothy H. Dixon

Tom Brantley, Professor of Trombone Jay Coble, Professor of Trumpet Joseph Alvarez, Instructor of Tuba and Euphonium Andrew Karr, Adjunct Instructor of Horn Bradlee Brown, Graduate Student, MM in Trumpet Performance

USF Chamber Singers Natalie Mallis, Director of Choral Studies Soprano: Pragati Adesh, Marian-Elise Cayabas, Natalia NewVille, Sravani Pathuru, Sara Skinner, Alexandra Torres Alto: Kathiana Dargenson, Samantha Lane,Tala Rippin, Gabriela Shephard Tenor: Mitchell Broadwater, Andrew Dennis, Logan Mies Bass: Zachary D’Onofrio, Luis Fabián González Nieves, Maxwell Goldstone, Daniel Robles, William Rojka

University of South Florida | Nov. 14, 2019

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University of South Florida Hall of Presidents

Alma Mater Hail to thee, our Alma Mater May thy name be told, Where above thy gleaming splendor, Waves the green and gold. Thou our guide in quest for knowledge Where we all are free University of South Florida,

STEVEN C. CURRALL

Alma Mater, hail to thee!

2019 -

Be our guide in truth and wisdom As we onward go, May thy glory, fame and honor Never cease to grow, May our thoughts and prayers be with thee through eternity, JUDY GENSHAFT

BETTY CASTOR FRANCIS BORKOWSKI

2000 - 2019

1994 - 1999

1988 - 1993

JOHN LOTT BROWN

CECIL MACKEY

JOHN S. ALLEN

1978 - 1988

1971 - 1976

1957 - 1970

University of South Florida, Alma Mater, Hail to thee!


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