2
20
168
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/930925781d487e41b620d7c104a79f09.pdf
75d7aee1ccea31553ab5c9dda1f45186
PDF Text
Text
,
. r
MJ1.::MOIRS
.
OF
'
,·_
..
DEOEA"
SED
.
ALUM-NI
OJ<'
> .....
ST .JOHN'S OOLLEGE1
A_~N.APOLTS'.
·
. -;
I
_ BY
1
.1
.J OilN H. PIWU D
AND
,JOHN S. \YIUT,
~ f I 8'JIOHIOGRAPFfF.H: ~-
! ,·
--
__......._....--- .
-
COMMENCE MENT DAY,
, r
B A L T 1 !II· 0 l{ E :
1879.
•J •
1878.
f
·1
!
_)
�:MEMOIRS
OF
DECEASED
ALUMNI
01<'
ST. JOHN 1S OOLLEGE 1 ANNAPOLIS 1
BY
JOHN G. PROUD
AND
,TORN S. WIR'l',
HTSTORIOGRAPHllRS.
COMMENCEME N T
DAY.
BALTIMORE:
1879.
1878
�NECROLOGY .
HEVEHDY .JOHNSON, LL. D.
} ' J. G. PROUD.
FHANCIS 'l'HOMAS, A . M.
N I N IAN PINKNEY, M. D., LL. D.
JOHN WAL'l'ER J,YNCH, L.B.
I
I
J.
s.
WIR'l'.
RICHARD SWAN, ESQ.
JOHN HIGGS BROWN, A. B.
PROF. HOPKINS.
PRI NTED BY REQUEST OF THE ASSOCIATION OF ALUMNI.
W I LLIA~{
K.
BOYLE, PRINTli:R,
BAI. TUfURK
�.. MEMO .LRS.
0.N the last occasion. of memorial remembrance
of our departed Alumni your. ai.tention was called
to notices of two of our number then recently
removed by sildden death. Both ·were taken in
the prime of life and in the mi~st of activ~ dutybut in both an insidious disease had iong been
sapping the vital functions, only at ~·ast t~) claim
its victim with a .s uddenness that was trnly startling.*·
Now, .our attention is arrested by providential
visitations still more iinpressi ve. .Two ·others of
our Alumni, full of years as of h01iors, robust in
constitution, vigorous in body · and mind, with
every prospect of years of corit.inued activity, without a moment's warning, were bot:ji inys_eriously
t
cut off, within twenty days of each other, by an
instantaneous and violent death.
You have already anticipated that reference is
made to the deaths of REVERDY JOHNSON and
FRANCIS THOMAS.
It is proposed to ask your attention to a brief
summary of the leading incidents in the life of
each in turn.
*Dr. John Thomas Hall.
J uclge Wm. Sprigg, Hall.
�REVERDY JOHNSON, LL. D.
eldest son of John Johnson, the first Chancellor of that name, was born
on the 21st of May 1796, in the City of Annapolis, within a stone's throw of the spot where he
met his lamentable end. Almost his entire educacation was received at St. John's, having entered
the Grammar School when very young, but it is
doubtful whether be ever took his degree. The
time at which he would have completed the ordinary course of collegiate study, was embraced in
the unhappy period in the history of the College,
when, by the unlawful withdrawal of its funds, it
was reduced in strength and shorn of academic
honor. No commencement trophies illumined the
darkness of those melancholy days. Not a few of
our Alumni, since eminent, left her halls during
the interrnl without the customary tokens of her
regard.
Mr. Johnson is said to have withdrawn from
College at sixteen- it is quite certain that he began
the study of the . law at an unusually early age,
under the direction at first of bis distinguished
Father, and afterwards, for a time at least, in the
office of .Tudge ~T ohn Stephen, of the Court of
Appeals.
I have heard from contemporary authority that
he early became familiar with the atmosphere of
the Court, and during the whole progress of his
REVERDY .JOHNSON,
�REVERDY JOHNSON.
5
preparation for the Bar attended the trial of causes
with remarkable regularity :- thus imparting to the
theory of the science a reality and practicalness in
application, which afterwards gave him that clear
perception and ready mastery of the principles of
the ]aw whicl1 excited the admiration alike of the
Bench and the Bar. His passion for it washereditary, and was manifested by a devotion which was
prophetic of success.
He was admitted to the Bar and began practice
at Upper Marlboi'o, Prince George County, in
1815, when only in his twentieth year. Not long
after he was appointed by the Attorney General of
the State, his deputy for that J11dicial District,
and performed the duties of the office with energy
and credit.
In N ovem her 1817 he sought a wider field for
the exercise of his talents, and removing to Baltimore, entered upon the brilliant career which has
rnade him one of the most eminent lawyers of bis
country. His rise in his profession was rapid and
steady, with no backward step, until the topmost
round of the ladder was reached.
It was not till 1821 that we see his name for the
first time, connected with public duties other than
those of .his profession. In that year, when only
twenty-five, he was elected to the State Senate for
a term of five years, and at its expiration was
re-elected for another term. Of the latter, however, be served only two years, and resigned the
office to devote himself more exclusively to his
practice.
In 1845, he was elected to the Senate of the
United States, where he at once .assumed a leading
�6
REVERDY JOHNSON.
,position, and took a prominent part in the discus..sion of the important questions which then en gaged the attention of Congress and the country.
This position he · resigned in 1849 to accept the
appointment of Atto1·ney General in the Cabinet
of General Taylor. Perhaps no official position
could have been rnol'e congenial to bis habits and
tastes, but he held it for little more than a year,
retiring, with most of thr Cabinet, on the death of
General Taylor and the accession of l\!l:r. Fillmore.
He now devoted himself to bis praetice almost
e:x;clusively, until the outbreak · of the unhappy
civil war which convulsed the land. His earnest
efforts were exerted to avert that calamity. He
was one of the delegates from Maryland to the
"Peace Convention" which met at Washington to
make a last attempt to compromise our seetional
di:fficul ties.
In that convention he b<lldly repudiated the
doctrine of secession, and avowed himself an un conditional Union man. When therefore all measures for that purpose failed and the strife became
inevitable, .M r ..Johnson, as is well known, defended
the use of thwrnilitary powei· of the General Government for the maintenance or restoration of the
federal Union. While ('Ontinuing to su~tain this
position, he s~rove by every means in his power to
allay the bitterness of .local feeling, and -watched
for the first opportunitr for conciliation and for
terminating the horrors of fraternal strife.
In 1861 he accepted a seat in the House of Delegates from Baltimore County ;- and in the wiilter · '
of 1862- 63, he was again elected to the United
States Senate,- resuming his seat in that body in
�REVERDY JOHNSON.
7
March ' 1863, after an inter--\ral of fourteen: yeats.
About this time be was deputed by President Lincoln as a special commissioner to visit the City of
New Orleans and revise the decisions of its military commandant (General Butler) in regard to
some important questions involving our relations
with other Governments. He found it ne<"essary
to reYerse those decisions, in wl1ich his course
receiYed the approval of the Government. While
in the Senate he voted for the constitutional amend~
ment abolishing slaYeIT- · having, in cornrno11 with
his great predecessor Wm. Pinkney, and other of
the older statesmen of Maryland, deplored tlrn
existence of that institution. He participated
large}~- in the debates of the period, arid evinced
that perfect independence in the formation of his
opinions upon public measures and in the advocac~'
of them, which was so marked a trait in his char
acter. Alwa~-s decided in his Yiews, as a publie
man he often found himself in conflict of opinion
with leading rneu of the party with which he
acted. The liberality of his mind and his habit of
bringing eYery subject to the test' of calm reasoning aud cool judgment, woi1kl have always prevei1ted him from becoming a bigoted partisan. '
'Ve eome nO'w to au important 'event in the
public life of J\/[r. Johnson. This ,,T~S l1is appointment a,s Arnbas1:<mdor to England, , with special
reference to tho differences '".'ith ~hat country, pa.r ticularly those growing out of what were known
a::; the "Alabam~ Olain~s." , Ile was 11ow to appear
in a new character, that of a diplomatist.
Coming as a minister of peace and with a repu- ,
tation of the highest distinction for ability, upright-
�8
REVERDY JOHNSON.
ness and candor, he was met by a reception, both
from government and people, never before accorded to an American minister. So general and
so marked was this sentiment, that Lord Clarendon
declared, in a letter to a friend in America, that
"Mr. Johnson was the only diplomatic representative which had ever brought out the true friendly
feeling of the British people for those of the
United States." There was about Mr. Johnson a
personal magnetism which drew and charmed the
English mind, and his blended geniality and dignity of manner was calculated to confirm his influence. Entering upon negotiations with a mutual
feeling like this, it is not surpTising that in the
course of a few months a treaty was framed that
embraced the main points in dispute.
As is well known, however, the Senate refused
to ratify it. It does not befit the occasion to consider the reasons assigned for its rejection. There
was at the time a condition of popular and pai·ty
feeling unfavorable for calm judgmei1t, and quite
sufficient to account for the senatorial action, with out disparaging either the merits of the treat~,, or
the skill and ability of the negotiator.
There are not a few unprejudiced men who think
that the subsequent treaty (which was ratified) did
not differ very· essentially from the former, as to
the value of the principles established or the
material advantages gained.
Mr..Johnson returned home in June 1869, and ·
resuming practice in the higher branches of hiR
profession, continued it,·with unabated ardor, clown
to the very clay of his lamented death.
�REVERDY JOHNSON,.
On the momjng of that day the 10th of February 1876, be bad come to Annapolis to argue, at the
opening of the Court of Appeals the next morning,
the first case upon the docket. Dining, witl1 other
distinguished guests at the Executive mansion, his
life was terminated suddenly, in the evening of that
day, by the melancholy accident, the incidents of
which are too well known to need repetition here.
Apart from a natural shock at its character and
yiolence, there would seem to be a happy fitness in
the place and the occasion of his death. ]'ull of
years and full .of honors, he had returned to his
~ative city to engage in another forensic contest in
the same old Statehouse which had been one of
the principal theatres of his fame, scarcely a hundred feet distant from the spot where he fell. Still
nearer, on the right, stands the ancient mansion
where his life began and his youth was nurtured,
and a few hundred yards distant in another direction, rise the classic halls of his Alma Mater,
where his education was received and he put on
the intellectual armor which was to fit him for
professional attainment.
At the height of his fame, in the full possession
of his faculties, with the devoted love of many
kindred, the affection of numerous friends, and
the uniYersal esteem of his countrymen, he passed
out of life, without the pangs of sickness or the
infirmities of decay,- by a painless death.
In the calm retrospect of such a life, the associations of its ·close seem in fitting harmony with its
history- the quiet sunset of an almost cloudless day.
Mr. Johnson's earthly life was an eminently succesRful one, and to outward observation a happy one.
•
�10
REVERDY JOHNSON.
I
•
Of calm and placid temperament, his disposition
was not easily ruffled by the koubles of the world.
Resolute in will, patient of results _
and of unusual
self-control, he seemed to . possess the faculty of
overcoming difficulties~ and of shaping events to a
happy issue. High-minded ;:i,nd honorable in all
his dealings, he never stooped to an unfairness.
With the instincts of the perfect gentleman, his
professional bearing was uniformly courteous and
respectful.
Amiable and kind-hearted, he was
gentle and considerate towards all men. In all
the relations of life he was exemplary. His heart
was the home of pure and noble im.pulses, and he
passed through life without a stain upon his reputation.
J\!Ir ..Johnson always manifested a high sense of·
the obligations of religion, and was a regular and
reverential attendant upon its services. It was
natural, therefore, and necessary to the completion
of such a character, that -in his later clays, he
should yield obedience to the requirements of the
Church by a hearty reception of its ordinances.
To my mind there is no more touching incident
in his history, . than that which . witnessed the
approach of the great lawyer and statesman, lean,.
ing on the arm of bis son, to the chancel-rail of
St. Paul's, and kneeling there with bowed bead to
receive from the Bishop "the laying on of hanch~"
in the holy rite of Confirmation.
That was th.e consummationi the crowning glory
of his life; . and from the spirit of 11umility and
the testimony .of faith which inspired .a nd accompanied it, may his , ft~iends derive ,sure hope and
consolation in his departure. ·
�REVERDY .JOHNSON.
11
NOTE.
Mr. Johnson's death was caused by a fall, the precise circumstances
of which are unknown. Dining at the Executive Mansion, he left the
table before the other guests and was conducted by the Governor to
the parlour for a short repose, as was his custom after dinner. About
a half hour afterwards he was found lying on the pavement near the
side of the house, bleeding and lifeless. It would seem that he had
gone out alone in the dusk of the evening, and misled by his imperfect
vision, had strayed from the path and fallen down an area connected.
with the building, striking his head against a projection of the basement wall.
Mr. Johnson had for several years been gradually losing his sight,
making it unsafe for him to walk out alone, and occasioning his friends
no little anxiety by his venturesomeness. For a long time he had been
unable to read a line, and was wholly dependent upon others for the
examination of authorities in the prepai·ation of bis arguments. But
bis increasing blindness was borne with uncomplaining submissiveness,
bis cheerfulness of spirit seemed never to leave him, and bis conversation was full of characteristic pleasantry and humour to the last.
There is another subject of which mention should be made. Mr.
J obnson took a deep interest in the welfare of bis Alma Mater, which
was shown in various ways. For several years past be rarely omitted
attending the exercises of Oommeucement, and his presence and
speeches made the most attractive feature of the Alumni banquet.
Those who were present will uot soon forget the occasion, upon which
be alluded in touching terms to a visit, while in England, to St. J obn's
College, Oxford; and how, as he wandered through its ancient Halls,
his thoughts reverted to his boyhood clays and to his own Alma Mater
so far away, until he gave utterance to bis feelings and told them of his
indebtedness for intellectual culture to another St. John 's College in his
native Janel.
�FRANCIS THOMAS, A. M.
FRANCIS THOMAS was born on the 3rd of February 1799 in Frederick County Maryland, where
the larger portion of his life was passed except
when absent in public duties.
He obtained his collegiate education at St.John's
and is credited on the records with having received
the degree of Bachelor of Arts, but in what year,
and with what class, does not appear upon the
books. This, and other similar instances of omission, would seem to indicate a lamentable carelessness in keeping the records of the College at that
period.
_
He at once entered upon the study of the law
and was admitted to the bar in 1820 when twentyone years of age. Of fine personal appearance
and agreeable manners, having a rich voice and a
ready command of the best language, he possessed
in a remarkable. degree the outward qualifications
for the orator. With a mind of great vigour imlffOved by high cultivation and varied reading, he
had the power to make his influence felt among all
classes of the community. He became at once an
unusually attractive speaker and a successful advocate. Not confining himself to his practice he soon
engaged in politics, and was sent to the Legislature
in 1822, and by successive re-elections represented
his district in the House of Delegates till 1~27.
Returned again in 1829, he was chosen its speaker.
�14
FRANCIS THOMAS.
In 1831 he was elected to Congress and continued
a member of the House of Representatives for ten
years, withdrnwing· from that body, or declining
a re-election, when, in 1841, he was elected Governor of the State. Previous to this period, in
1839, he was made President of the Chesapeake
and Ohio Canal Company.
It was about this time that the· domestic trouble
occurred which shadowed all his after life with
sadness. This was a difference between himself
and his wife, (a daughter of a distinguished citizen
of Virginia,*) which at last terminated in a divorce.
It attracted much attention and variety of opinion
at the time, and much feeling was manifested by
the friends of the parties on either side. The general impression, however, among disinterested persons was that there were no circumstances in the
case which a spirit of mutual forbearance and coneiliation might not have reconeiled, and thus have
prevented the lamentable result, affecting the happiness of both, a final separation.
This event produced a lasting influence upon the
character and the pursuits of l\ir. Thomas. A
morbid sentiment took possession of his mind
which crushed the impulses of ambition within
him, and caused him to withdraw from public life.
Fl'orn this 1·etirement he was re-called by the
excitement which preceded the late civil war. He
entered at once into the contest, and his popular
addresses in defence of the Union revived the
recollection of the eloquent efforts of his early
days, especially a speech of great power and brilliancy' deliveted before a large meeting in the City
of Baltimore.
*Governor McDowell.
�FRANCIS THOMAS .
15
His activity was not confined to popular appeals.
By his personal efforts and infhience he earlyraised
a considerable force, numbering at least a full regiDlent, the honour of 'c ommanding which he declined
' for the reason that he had no knowledge of military
tactics, and was therefore unwilling· to assume such
responsibility.
'
·
He SOOll . aftei· became a candidate foi; Oongr:ess
and was.· returned · to the House of Representatives, by su:ccessive elections, from the year 1861
.to the )~ea!· 1869. . The crisis atoused all his
energies 'and he participated ~argely in the debates
in the , ouse, advocating with great earnestness
H
the leading measures ~f . the ' Government and
yoting for the proposed · amen~ments to the Ooniltitution:
.
His speeches always connnanded mai-ked attention and were characterized by a breadth of view,
and a statesmanlike .comprehension 'of principles,
which went beyond the exigencies of the hour.
All his contemporaries bear testimony to the graces
of his oratory. In corinnanding presence, in voice
and tone and gesture, and in power of thought and
nervous elegance of langti.age, he ·w as unquestionably one of the most accoinplished orators that
Maryland has produced, and in whose fame, therefore, his Alma Mater may justly take pride. And
yet he himself seemed to attach but a subordinate
rn.lue to the reputation, in comparison with acts
and results. As he said to a fellow member, when
a vote was about to be taken upon a measure of
transcenden"t importance, in the defence of which
he had taken a prominent part,- " Words die as
men die; but the vote you are about to give will
' I
�16
FRANCIS THOMAS.
be recorded for all time, on the side of right or
against it."
In 1869, after the close of the 40th Congress, Mr.
Thomas was appointed by President Grant, Collector of Internal Revenue for the Fourth District of
Maryland, which included the place of his residence; a position which he held till April 1872,
when he resigned it to become Minister to the Republic of Peru. This was the first diplomatic post,
and the last public office, he ever filled. Returning from this mission in the summer of 1875, he
told a friend that he intended to take no further
part in politics, but to retire to his "mountain
home," and spend the rest of his days in peace and
tranquility.
But alas! his pleasant anticipations were doomed
to be suddenly extinguished. He did, indeed, resume the agricultural pursuits so congenial to his
tastes on his farm in Alleghany Oo1mty, but not to
continue them long. Absorbed ·in his plans of
improvement, he was one day walking from one
part of his estate to another on the line of the Rail
Road, when, perceiving a train approaching, he
stepped, to avoid it, on the other track, without
observing that another train was coming from the
opposite direction. All unconscious of his danger,
he was in a moment struck b~T the engine and violently hurled several feet from the track. A small
contusion on the back of the head and a larger
bruise upon the shoulder were the only marks of
the violence of the blow- but he "vas found to be
insensible, and was not known to haYe spoken
afterwards. Thus terminated, on the 22d of J anuary- 1876, the life of Francis Thomas, lawyer and
�FRANCIS THOMAS.
17
statesman, just nineteen days before that of his
compeer and friend, Revercly Johnson. How
strange the coincidence by which two aged men,
both eminent in the councils of their state and
country, during the same period of rare histOTic
interest, should meet their end by a fate so similar!
In the case of Mr. Thomas, death came at what
appeared to be a turning point in his career.
Years of mental depression bad passed away,
pecuniary embarrassments, which to a proud spirit
like bis, sensitive to every obligation, must have
been peculiarly irritating, had given place to a
condition of comparative prosperity and he was
relieved from future anxieties. He had brought
with him from Peru a stock of Alpaca sheep, with
the hope of being able to introduce the breed extensively, and bad formed various plans connected
with agricultural pursuits, which he fondly expected would employ bis energies of mind and
body for yet many years of vigorous life. And
thus we purpose, day by day, "whereas we know
not what shall be on the morrow."
Mr. Thomas was well fitted for rural enjoyment; he had been a close observer of men and
things, bad seen much of the world and realized
its hollowness. Fond of reading and retaining
what he read, his memory was stored with facts
and incidents, that made him a delightful companion to the few intimates whose society he preferred to general intercourse. To such · he was
wont to pour forth, in fluent words and animated
manner, the flood of recollections which can1e
welling up as from a copious fountain. · Nor "were
these . mental traits merely the charm of private
2
�18
FRANCIS THOM.AS.
life; they exerted a potent influence over men o
independent thought and action,- and men ii
high official station not unfrequently took counse;
from his well-trained and thoughtful mind. :Ever
President .Jackson himself is known to hav~
yielded him warm attachment and unboundec
confidence. Like him, too, J\/[r. Thomas was i:
man of imperious will, and as a politician ht
sometimes manifested an arrogance of manne1
which contradiction aroused into vehemence.
Holding it as a maxim that a leader should brook
no opposition to his sway, he assumed absolute
control over the inferior men of his party, and
when such claim naturally excited revolt, he did
not hesitate to ostracise the offender.
Decided in his own convictions, he was often
intolerant to the opinions of others. As a consequence of this lofty bearing he was perhaps more
generally feared than loved. There was no question, however, of his integrity in word and deed.
He believed ·w hat he asserted, and carried his belief into act. His conscientiousness was in some
things pushed to an extreme. It is said that he
would never accept any gift, however trifling, as
a recognition of public service. John Quincy
Adams himself was not more severely scrupulous
in this respect. A similar instance in the life of
each illustrates this characteristic of both. Some
friends of Mr. Thoinas procured a costly cane as
a token of their appreciation of his public conduct -which he respectfully declined! And the
writer was present when Mr. Adams refused to
receive a cane, made from an ash-tree cut at Ashland by Mr. Olay himself, which "the Young
�FRANCIS THOMAS.
19
Whigs'' of Maryland had prepared as a mark of
regard to "the old man eloquent," then a member
of the House of RepresentatiYes. It may be well
to add that the cane afterwards found a fitting
recipient in Mr. Johnson, who had (he assured
us) "no conscientious scruples against its acceptance."
Notwithstanding the peculiarities of cliaracter
to which allusion has been made, ]!fr. Thomas bad
many · warm personal friends, who cherish the
better qualities of the man while they admire the
ability of the orator and statesman. His long·
public services will be held in grateful remem brance by bis native State, and his name will ever
live in her history as of one of the most eloquent
and gifted of her sons.
·
�NINIAN PINKNEY, M. D., LL. D.
Medical Director NrNIAN PINKNEY, of the
United States Navy, the second son of Ninian
and Amelia Pinkney, and nephew of the celebrated lawyer and statesman William Pinkney,
was born in Annapolis, J)[aryland, on the 7th day
of June, 1811. At an early age he entered St.
John's College, and graduated with honor in the
class of 1830. Upon leaving college he decided
to adopt the profession of medicine, and after
spending some time in the office of Dr. Edward
Sparks, who was at that time ProfesRor of Ancient
Languages in St ..J ohn'R College, young Pinkne3~
attended a two 3 ears course of lectures at the
T
J)[edical College in Baltimore, and then removed
to Philadelphia, where he entered the .Jefferson
Medical College, and during his whole course· of
study at that institution, was noted for his enthusiastic love for his profession, as well as for bis
patient research and original inYestigations. He
graduated with high honor from that institution,
and soon after received an appointment in the
Medical Corps of the Navy, where he quickly rose
to eminence in his profession; the records of the
Navy showing many instances of his skill as a
surgeon, to which none but those learned in surgery are competent to do full justice. It is sufficient to say here that Surgeon Pinkney amply fulfilled the promise of his early professional life, and
�NINIAN PINKNEY.
21
w hen retired from the ~ervice at the age of sixtytwo, in the full possession of all his powers, he hacl
been promoted to the rank of l\!t:eclical Director,the highest grade in t.he service.
It was at this time that be received a letter from
Medical Direct.or Johnson, which is given below
as showing the estimation in which Dr. Pinkney
was held by his professional brothers, and as explaining his connection with an important invention in surgery during his residence in Lima in
the early years of his professional career. The
letter bears elate January 11th 1873, which was
about the time of Dr. Pinkney's retirement ..
"My DEAR DOCTOR:
I cannot allow you to. retire from the active service of the Navy without expressing to you the
high estimate I place on your skill as a surgeon.
In 1843 it was my pleasure to be present when
you removed a portion of the lower jawbone from
~ young man in Lima. The fleet surgeon of the
French Fleet was present on the occasion. The
question arose as to the mode of the operation.
The usual plan, as laid down by eminent surgeons
as Sir Astley Cooper and Velpeau, was to make
an incision along the lower portion of the jaw, and
then carrying the incision to the corner of the
mouth. I recollect well that you did not approve
of this mode of operation, for two reasons: First,
that the operation would be unseemly. Secondly,
the division of the seventh pair of nerves would
mar the expression of the face and leave an ugly
scar. For the first time in surgical history you
made a curvilinear incision below the lower border
�22
NINIAN PINKNEY.
of the jaw and extended it to the middle of the
chin. By this mode of operation there was no
disfigurement, and the operation was performed
in a manner which elicited commendation at the
hands of the French Fleet Surgeon, who had been
a pupil of the celebrated Velpeau of France. The
palm of originality was accorded to you, and you
richly deserve it.
(Signed,)
WM. JOHNSON,
Med. Director, U.S. Navy."
During the whole of his professional career, Dr.
Pinkney took a deep interest in the Medical Association, of which he was one of the founders. He
was at one time Vice-President of the Association,
a~d on t~o occasions was called upon to represent
it abroad, at Leeds and Florence, the second time
as chairman of the delegation from this country,
and his report excited general interest on account
of its exceptional ability and thorough carefulness.
But not alone as a professional man is Dr.
Pinkney deserving of our respect and admiration,
for there are abundant proofs that he was possessed
of that scholarly culture which graces the highest
stations in life, enlarging and strengthening the
intellectual powers, while it tempers the energies
of the mind with "sweetness and light." A_ prominent clergyman of the Episcopal Church the Rev.
Dr. Hutton, himself a scholar of no small attainments, and who was intimately acquainted vvith Dr.
Pinkney, says of him: "I can speak from my own
knowledge of his noble characteristics, and from
personal experience of his many kindnesses to me
�NINIAN PINKNEY.
23
and mine. I had a Ligh estimate of his great and
varied powers- of his vast erudition in medical
science- of his extraordinary learning outside of
his profession, even to a large .c ompass of corn;titutional law and political philosophy- of his special
gifts of oratory- and not least, of those genial
qualities which rendered him so delightful in the
social circle and made his presence so enjoyable to
his friends, whether at his own hospitable mansion
or elsewhere. I can never forget his kindnesses,
his marked characteristics his almost marvellous
'
powers and capacities." The Hon. Revcrdy John:son also entertained a, Yery hiu·h opinion of his
•
I"'.)
knowledge of constitutional and international law,
as well as of political philosopL,,:.
In 1873 Dr. Pinkney delivered the Annual Address befor~ the Soci~tics of St..John's College,
and on Commencement day the degree of LL. D.
was eonferred upon him. This was the second
address he had delivered at the College, having
alreadr filled the posit.ion of orator before the
Alumni somf\ years before. Be Wal'! an enthusiastic believer in the future
t ..John's College,
and a frequent and most
e guest at our
Commeneement Exercise
ht> enlivened
with his ready wit and
ompanionship.
Among the students of
e he was the
most popular of all the
ni, and the
annual banquet would ha
hem at least
a dull affair, without the
:0 Army and
Navv and Dr. Pinkney
d eloquent
resp~~se. I remem bel'
evening of
Commencement Day l
e number
of the students had
of Rum-
�NINIAN PINKNEY.
phrey's Hall for a :final jollification, that Dr. Pinkney being on the College green and hearing our
College glees, came up and joined us. We all
called upon him . f~r a s.peech, and after some
persuasion, he mounted a chair which some one
had provided and made a short ·address to the
boys, who crowded around him. Never could be
have had a more appreeiative audience, and the .
shoutR of laughter evoked by Rallies of wit, were
f0llowed by cheer after ch eer from lusty lungs
which made the campus ring- with merriment.
This incident of which the writer was a witness,
is mentione.d as indicative of ·wiiat he conceives to
have been a prominent trait in Dr. Pinkney's
character- his ready sympathy with the young.
Surely there is no better proof of the existence of
a kind heart than that this grey-hai"red veteran
sympathized with the aspirations of youth, and
loved the companionship of the young, and could
p~rticipate with as keen a zest as any of us in the
joyous mirth of our College life. The social qualities of Dr. Pinkney were indeed remarkable, and
there are those present to-day who can bear better
and fuller testimony than mine to his possession
of many qualities which made his companionship
fascinating to all who knew him. ·
By thus dwelling upon bis social characteristics
it is not intended to imply that be was deficient in
those more serious attributes which dignify and
ennoble manhood. During his long service in the
Navy Dr. Pinkney made hosts of friends among·
his associates, n1a11y of whom held high rank, and
his character was not only such as to win their
love, but to compel their respect and admiration.
�NINIAN PINKNEY.
25
His old friend and messmate Admiral 0. R. P.
Rodgers, · exp1·essed a general opinion, when he
said of him that he "was .as true as .steel and as
brave as his own sword."
Upon his retirern ent from actiYc service Dr.
Pinkney took up his residence on his beautiful
estate near Easton, Maryland, where he spent the
remaining years of his life. It was here that be
died on the 15th of December, 1877, in the sixtyseventh. year of his age, in the full communion of
the Episcopal Olmr<;h, and in the full possession
of all his powers.
[N. B.-I regret my inability to make a more perfect sketch of Dr.
Pinkney's life, but those of the Alumni who desire a more detailed
account aTe referred to a very foll and appreciative sketch prepared by
his brother the Right Rev. William Pinkney, which h as been largely
used in the pTeparation of this memoir.
J. S. W.]
,I
�JOHN W AJ_,TER LYNCH, L. B.
CLASS OF 1872.
JOHN ~r ALTER LYNCH was qorn in Richmond,
Indiana, on the 13th of January 1833, and at the
age of eight years, removed with his family to
Washington, D. C., his father having received an
appointment in I the Post Office Department. In
the early part of 1869 Mr. Lynch e.n tered St.
John's College as a mern her of tl1e l!'reshman
Class, and soon showed that he was endowed with
intellectual gifts of a high order. He was thoughtful beyond his years, and in all his studies he
displa~~ed originality and independent criticism.
His classmates soon learned to loTe his quiet
gentle nature, to appreciate his intellectual worth
and to admire his frank and manly character.
He ·was one of the best writers in College, and on
one occasion he read an essay on Tennyson which
Prof. Corson considered a most admirable critique,
and one which displayed remarkable originality,
as well t\.S a keen sympathy with poetic feeling and
expression.
At the end of his Sophomore year, ho felt compelled to return to W af3hington, ·w here for nearly
four years he held a position in the City Post
Office. He always manifested a deep interest in
the welfare of the College, though the duties of
his position often forbade him the pleasure of returning to take part in our celebrations and re-
�~rOHN
WALTER LYNCH.
27
unions. During bis residence in W asbington in
1873 and 1874, and while be held his position in
the City Post Office, he studied law, graduated at
the la"v school of the Columbian University, and
at the April Term 1874 was admitted to the bar
of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia.
In the summer of 187(j he went to Indianapolis,
furnished with excellent letters and animated with
bright hopes of success in his profession. Shortly
after his anival there his health, which had not
been strong for sometime before, began to giYe
way, and in the very beginning of his professional
career he was obliged to lay aside Lis books.
:From r.h is time he grew steadily worse until in
April 1877, he went to the Sanitarinm at Asheville, North Carolina, where bis sufferings were
ended by death on the 18th of July 1877.
,I
�RICHARD SWAN.
materials for a biographical notice of RICHSwAN are very meagre, though an effort has
been made to acquire more exact information.
Richard Swan was a Virginian by birth, and
when quite young removed with his family from
his native place, Alexanclria, to Annapolis. It
appears from our Catalogue of the College, p.uhlished in 1874, that J\i(r. Swan attended College
from 1830 to 1832, but did not graduate. During·
~his period of his life he lived with his brother,
who kept the Cit,1 Hotel in Annapofo;, and sometime afterwards he became proprietor of the hotel;
together with James Iglehart. In those days the
position was one which brought him into contaet
with many leading men of the 8tate, with whom
he was deservedly popular. Many lawyers from
all parts of the State would spend two or three
weeks at a time in Annapolis, waiting for the
argument of their cases in the Court of Appeals,
as the present custom of assigning a certain number of cases for each day of the term djcl not then
prevail.
It was probably during this time that 1\1.:r. Swan
laid the foundation of that popularity which he
possessed in after life. He was very much respected by the community in which he lived, and
was honored by his fellow-citizens with several
positions of public trust. He was J\!fayor of the
THE
ARD
�H,ICHARD s·wAN.
City of Annapolis, and served several terms in the
City Council. He also represented Anne Arundel
County in tbe lower House of the Legislature, and
for a number of years filled the position of State
Librarian. During many years of his life he was
a director of tb_ bank in Annapolis, and in 1850
e
he was appointed Commissary of the Naval Academy, and discharged the duties of the position with
fidelity, until his death on the 7th of May, 1877.
In all these positions of public trust Mr. Swan
was faithful in the discharg'e of their duties, and
bis conduct was such as to win the respect and
esteem of an who knew bim. A good citizen and
public-spirited man, he was equally respected in
private life as a man of integrity and generous
impulses.
I
'
'
,I
'
�.JOHN RIGGS BROWN,
JI~.,
A . .M.
FoR the third time are we called upon to chronicle the death of a member of the Class of 1859.
The first was that of Richard R. Goodwin of
Annapolis, the second of James Edgar Richardson
of Anne Arundel County; and now we have to add
to the roll that of .JOHN RIGGS BROViTN, who was
born at Ellicott City, Howard County, on the 14tl1
of November, 1840, and died November 19th, 1877,
in the 38th year of his age. He was the son of
John R. Brown, a prominent farmer and highly
esteemed citizen of Howard County, and a member of the House of Delegates of Maryland during
the sessions of 1860- 1861.
At an early age young Brown evinced a studiou:s
disposition and a decided fondness for books, and
after having received a good elementary education
at the primary 1schools of the County, he waH sent
to St. John's College, entering the Freshman Class
in 1856. His course at College was a very creditable and successful one in all the studies of a full
academic curriculum. B1it especially in linguistic
studies and in general literature was his proficiency
worthy of note. His attainments in these branches
won the respect both of Professors and of Students;
so that; although his class-standing at graduation
. was not so high as it would have been, had he
chosen to devote more time to mathematical and
I
�.JOHN RIGGS BROWN.
31
scientific studies, his literarr culture, ·we are
a8sured, was superior to that of any of his cla:-;smates, and his msthetic faculties in general had
received a development quite -unusual a.ruong- college graduates.
Three years after leaving College, namely in
1862, he joined the Confederate A1:my, enlisting
in Company A, First Maryland Cavalry, in which
he served until the close of the war. He then
returned to the residence of his father near Woodstock, Howard County, and engaged in agricultural pursuits unt il 1869, when he removed to
Ellicott City and founded the "Ellicott Citr
Times," a weekly newspaper, which he published
with marked ability until his death .
A friend and brother editor says of him: "l\1:r.
Brown was endowed with far more than ordinary
ability and intelligence. He was a keen observer
of passing events, and always clothed his thoughts
in graceful, pleasing and forcible language. For
the profession of journalism he was peculiarly
adapted, possessing, as he did, quick perceptions,
true intuitions, varied information, and a just
appreciation of the requirements of the people for
whom he always wielded an able pen. He was a
a young man of excellent judgment, and all that
emanated from him was read with careful attention by the community for whom he wrote. His
editorials were always seaso:i;ied with wholesome
humor and spatkling wit; and, when provoked to
recrimination, his caustic pen was used with telling effect. His talents gained him the respect
.and admiration of all who knew him even but
slightly, while his genial disposition and rare per-
,I
�32
JOHN RIGGS BROWN.
sonal fascination endeared him to all who knew
him well. He was generous to a ·fault, sincere
and ardent in his friendships,· warm and impulsive
in bis sympathies, ·and always gentle, courteous,
kind, and frank.''
[From notes of bis class-mate Prof. Hopkins.]
••
•j
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
32 pages
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Memoirs of Deceased Alumni, 1878
Description
An account of the resource
Memoirs of deceased alumni of St. John's College, Annapolis, by John G. Proud and John S. Wirt, historiographers. Commencement Day, 1878.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Proud, John G.
Wirt, John S.
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Baltimore, MD
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1878
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
Commencement Address-Memoirs of Deceased Alumni -John G. Proud and John S. Wirt. Proud and John S. Wirt
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
William K. Boyle, Printer
Alumni
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/3fcdcd4d51bf24fb4b98e2e3ac7e7d4f.pdf
741a7d5205c8d4cca9e7675e05d4ad3e
PDF Text
Text
�·1
MEMOIRS
OF
DElCEl.A.SElD .A.LUl\ILN"::C
OF
READ, BY APPOINTMENT OF 'l'HE ASSOCIATION, AUGUST 6r11, 1856,
BY
JOHN G. PROUD, JR., A. M .
ANNAPOLIS:
ROBERT F. BONSALL, PRlNTER,
1856.
I
I
�MEMOIRS OF DECEASED ALUMNI.
NECROLOGY.
TOBIAS WATKINS, M. D.
THOMAS BEALE DORSEY,
SAMUEL RIDOUT, M. D.
OuR earlier Alumni are fast passing away. Year by year
they depart., and soon the place that once knew them shall
know them no more forever. Nor are 'our younger brethren
exempt from the universal law. Their ranks also, from time
to time, are being relatively thinned by the same impartial
summons. The record of the past year furnishes an illustration of this equal lot. Of the former class, death hath
stricken from our catalogue two names, in those of DR.
ToBIAS WATKINS and JuDGE THOMAS BEALE DoRSEY; and
of the latter, · one, in that of DR. SAMUEL RmouT. I ask
your attention to brief notices of each of them in turn:
DR. TOBIAS
wATKINS.$
DR. ToBIAS WATKINS died at his residence in the city of
Washington, on the 14th day of November, 1855. His life
was an eventful one, and presents many points of peculiar
interest. DR. WATKINS came of an old and respectable Maryland family: whose branches extend throughout the State.
He was born in Anne Arundel county, December 12th, 1780;
the only child of Thomas Watkins, and was yet a boy when
his father died.
Entered at an early age at St. John's college, he completed
his education within its walls, 1).nd graduatecl with the class of
" '.Phe present memoir is an expansion of a briefer one, prepared by the
writer, and published during the past winter in the National Intelligencer
and other papers .
I (
.
�MEMOIRS OF DECEASED ALUMNI
4
1798. His professional studies were pursued under the direction of Dr. Daniel, of Maryland, and he took his diploma
from the Medical College at Philadelphia in the spring of
1802. In the month of May of the same year he married
the eldest daughter of George Simpson, Esq., of Philadelphia,
cashier of the Bank of the United States; and shortly after
commenced practice at Havre de Grace, Maryland. In a few
years, however, he removed to Baltimore, and received t~e
appointment of physician to the Marine Hospital. He was m
active service during the war with England, having been, in
May 1813, appointed surgeon in the 38th regiment of infantry,
commanded by Col. Peter Little. His connexion with the
army continued after its reduction in 1815, and, in April 1818,
he was promoted to the post of Assistant Surgeon General,
which he held until June 1821, when, on a further reduction
of the army, he was disbanded.
He was not present at the attack on Baltimore, having
been sometime before ordered to Norfolk, to devise measures
for arresting a malignant disease, which was raging with terrible violence among the troops at that post. In a short time
after taking charge of the hospitals there, he had the satisfaction to find, that the means which he adopted were effectual,
materially to lessen, if they did not wholly arrest, the mortality.
While there he became a special favorite with the Officer
in Command, General Moses Porter, whom a distinguished
naval commander of the enemy characterized as "every inch
a soldier " and who admitted him to the most confidential
)
relations. The extent of this confidence was evinced in a
mission of peculiar delica~y which was entrusted to him. A
party of militia, through ignorance or mistake, fired upon
what proved to be a flag of truce, and the circumstance was
reported to the comrn111-nder as a gallant repulse of -the enemy.
Suspecting, but not certain as to its real charar.ter, and annoyed as everv soldier must be at such an occurrence, he
. '
immediately detennined to send a flag to the enemy to ascertain whether his suspicions were correct, and if so, to make
a suitable apology for the blunder. DR. WATKINS was
selected for this difficult office, with full discretion to act, and
embarked in a tender of the Frigate Constellfltion, then lying
'
.
OF ST. JOHN 'S COLLEGE.
5
in the harbor, for that purpose. His reception left him in little
doubt as to the true state of the case) being in his turn fired
upon as soon as he came within range of the enemy's guns.
He immediately let go his anchor, and lay to all night under
the guns of the huge 74. By the bold confidence thus
evinced, and by his adroit management in the mornino- he at
b)
length succeeded in getting on board of the British commander's ship,-where, after a satisfactory explanation of the affair,
he was treated with special courtesy and hospitality.
In 1821, upon his separation from the armv ' he was
.
appointed by President Munroe, Secretary to the Board of
Commissioners under the Florida Treaty, and removed to the
city of Washington to enter upon its duties, for the performance of which he was eminently qualifiecl. That he faithfully
and satisfactorily discharged them was evinced by his receiving,
upon their termination, in the year 1824, from the same chief
magistrate, a still more sig'nal mark of his confidence in his
appointment to the important post of Fourth Auditor of the
Treasury-an office which he held, in the enjoyment of the
most confidential relations with the Pre8ident, during the entire
administration of Mr. Adams, and from which he was removed,
with the change of administration, in March 1829.
Of the circumstances attending that event, it is not within
the design of the present notice to speak. It was the happy
fortune •of DR. WATKINS to outlive the political animosities of
that day, and the aspersions to which they had give• birth.
His life, previous and subsequent to that period, has fully
viBdicated that high and instinctive sense of honor which
was one of th e leading traits of his character.
He subsequently opened a school in Georgetown, which he
taught for a short time, and then commenced the apothecaiy
business in 'Washington, which be continued, in connection
with the practice of his profession, till 1842. About the year
1845, when the Public School system was established in that
city, he was elected the Principal of one oft he District Schools,
which situation he held till 1850, when he received a place in
the Census office,-which he retained till the force in that
office was reduyed, soon after the beginning of the present
administration. Since then; up to the period of his last illness,
�OF ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE,
6
MEMOIRS OF DECEASED ALUMNI
he was constantly employed in literary labor upon various
works of taste or public utility.
Of his literary labors we come now to speak. These were
commenced at an early age, and continued through life, either
as a stated occupation or as a relaxation from other and more
arduous duties. Few men of his day encountered more severe
or prolonged mental toil; few held a more prolific pen, or one
employed upon a greater variety of subjects. As early as
1809 he edited a professional journal, called " The Baltimore
Medical o/ Physical Recorder," to which he contributed
largely. In the year 1816, in conjunction with his brotherin-law, the late Stephen Simpson, of Philadelphia, he commenced the publication at Baltimore of a monthly journal, in
octavo form, under the title of " The Portico, a Repository of
Science o/ Literature,"-which was cond~cted with such
ability as to procure for it a reputation equal to that of any
similar periodical of the day.
About the same time he assisted in forming a literary society
called " The Delphian Club," of which he became the President; the late Dr. John Didier Readel, whose life -he has
sketched in an elegant memoir, being the Secretary. "Its
number was limited to nine, to correspond with that of the
Muses, and the character of its members was no less various,embracing law, physic and divinity; music, poetry and painting; history, philosophy, and criticism." Most of its original
memb~rs have since acquired fame in some department of
literature or science."' At its weekly meetings stated essays
or other voluntary contributions in prose or poetry were read,
many of which were afterwards published in " The Portico;''
and the flow of wit and genial humor, it is said, would have
done no discredit to the coteries of Curran or Garrick. It was
"Among those members, were, GEN'L WM. H. WrnDER, DR. McCcLLOH .
I
'
PAUL ALLEN, the editor of the Jlforni11g Chronicle, WM. GwYNN, the well
known editor of the Baltimore Gazette,-a man ,of great benevolence and
i,,nfinite humour,-at whose house in Bank L ane, known as " The Tripod,"
the club were wont to meet-the REV'n JoHN PIERPOINT, author of Jlirs
of Palestine, and other poems- and Jo1rn NEALE, the Editor, Orator, Poet,
and Novelist, the man of versatile 1genius and voluminous authorship.
Of these, only the last two survive, one resident in Maine and the other
in Massachusetts.
in congenial association like this, that our friend fostered and
cultivated. that ta~te for literature which distinguished him
through life, and imparted such peculiar grace and charm to
his conversation.
In the year 1821, he deiivered at the Baltimore College a
course of l~ctures on modern literature, illustrating in the
comp~ehensive range of its subjects, including belles-lettres,
rhetonc and eloquence, the varied extent of his reading. His
melodious elocution. and grace of manner made his delivery
uncommonly attractive, and he was noted as one of the most
elegant and accomplished readers of his day. Of the addresses
which upo~1 various occasions he was called upon to make, I
have a .pnnted .copy of an Anniversary discourse before the
.Columbian Institiite of Washington, in January 1826; which
i~ .charac~erized by his accustomed elegance of style and fertility of illustration. This society, of which he was one of
the founders, wa.s upon the plan, and may be considered as
the parent, of the present National Institute, of which he was
also a member.
While con~ected with the public schools at Washington,
he read a senes of lectures on Education, which were well
attend~d, and -highly appreciated. At a later period, while
Supermtendent of a Sunday School, he delivered a similar
course, before teachers, on Sunday School instruction. Both
~f these c.o~tained valuable practical suggestions for giving
0 reater .efficienc~ to the important work of the teacl~er, in
developmg and nnproving the mental and moral faculties of
the !oun~; a s~bject in which he always manifested a deep
an~ mtell1gent mterest.
In the latter capacity he also read a
senes of essays, in the form of a Commentary upon the Lord's
P:ayer, which evinced, not only an intimate acquaintance
wit~ the sa.cred writings, but an extent and variety of theological readmg not common in a layman.
,
At one time, and for several years he edited a political
.
' Decided in his own
pa~e.r m Washington with signal ability.
opm1ons, he was yet tolerant to those of others, and his editorial course was marked by uniform courtesy and moderation.
. In sh?rt, _his pen was n ever idle, being constantly employed
m contnbut10ns to the public press: or the literary pe1;odicals
' 1
�OF S'l". JOHN l>S COLLEGE.
8
g
MEMOIRS OF DECEASED 'ALUMNI
of the day, in articles as varied as his acquirements, especially
in the department of criticism, for which his refined and discriminating taste and comprehensive powers of generalization
and analysis peculiarly fitted him. All these, with his characteristic modesty, he published anonymously. Had they
been printed under his own name, they would have made it
conspicuously and favorably known among the writers of the
day. ·Besides all these he left behind him, in manuscript,
valuable papers on various subjects which never appeared in
print. A collection from his writings would form an attractive
volume, and is due to his literary reputation. It is to be
hoped that some competent hand may undertake the task.
At the time of his death he was engaged in prep~ring for
the press a history of the British invasion of the District and
capture of the city of Washington, with a narrative of the
events which preceded and followed that disastrous occurrence,
in connexion with an officer of the army of that period, and
from notes taken and collected by him. This work will be
an interesting and valuable addition to our national history,
and will throw new light upon the causes of the failure of the
American arms upon that memorable occasion, and show
where the responsibility of the disaster should properly rest.
But it was not the capacity which our departed friend
evinced in the discharge of the various public trusts which he
held, nor yet his ability and elegance as a writer, that his
friends delight to dwell upon, so much as those admirable
personal qualities which excited at once their confidence and
admiration, and made him the charm and ornament of the
social circle. In his domestic relations these secured for him
the most constant and devoted affection; and also inspired in
the hearts of many friends an ardent personal esteem, which
no vicissitudes of fortune could ever shake, and which will
keep his memory "green in their souls" with many tender
recollections.
There is yet another element to be mentioned, without
which no character can be considered complete, and which
formed the crowning beauty of his. The various trials that
he was called to endure were sanctified to him in the formation
of a deep,' earnest and consistent piety. With him the vital
truths of Christianity were a prnc t.ica l rea1. receiving the
.
. .
ity,
hom~ge of his v1_gorous intellect, embraced in his. inmost heart
and illustrated m all the latter days of l11s i·c
. 11e. F or many
'
.
years .m the communion ~f the Protestant Episcopal Church
he yielded to . her doctrmes and tenets an intelligent and
unwave1:ing faith. Nor was it merely the assent of his un
derstandmg. Besides other offi cial cl ut1es appertamnw to a
.,
.
. .
l
ayman, f 1was actively engaaed ' success1'vely ' m t wo congrehe
.
"
·
°
gat10ns o t1 church ' in the u sefu l an d h onorable position of
le
S
.
upenntenc en_t of the Sunday Schools ;-the duties of which
h
e was not .satisfied to 111 alrn a mere customary routine.
In
d the' faithful observance of tlle ora·mances of the church
. .
an the conscient10us discharge of every religious duty
f~u~~] a compen.sative solace amidst the trials and vicissit~des
o . is mortal life, and that peace and serenity in its close
which only they can bestow · A n d th us at 1
ast, at the ripe
f
age o seventy-five years ' ,vas our lamented friend "gathered
·
h"
to
.
t ( is fathers," as we firmly trust and bel1"eve , "lmvmg· t h e
f
ses imony o a good conscience," and "the cor:n"'o I·t of .a J.eabl
l" .
1'
ona e' re igwus and holy h ope, m f,avor with God and ·
.
.
' perfect charity with the world."
'
m
h;
JUDGE THOMAS BEALE DORSEY.
We ~ome no': to speak of JuDGE THOMAS BEALE DoRSEY
who graduated m the succeeding class of 1799.
'
h There ~re no names better known i11 Maryland than two of
t o~e wh1~h comp?se his own, BEALE and DoRSEY, both of
whl1ch _were prommently and favorably identified with th
ear y history of the State.
e
His father, John Worthington Dorsey of Elk·"d
A
A. d 1
'
II ge
nne
. m~ .eh ~ounty, was a volunteer in the Revolutionary,Army
m w i1c ie rose to the rank of captain · He b elonge d to th at
'
veter
l
an corps, t le famous (' Old Maryland L. " t h e term of
wl
l'
ine,
10se en istment was generally" for the war·" and h
. d
for nearly tl
·
.
'
e se1ve
Island Wl ~e entir~ penod, participating in the battles of Long
believ:d in l~tt:e~:a~~:: B;nd~wine :nd Morn~outh, and it is
memorable stru 1 ."
o ~ve ta en an active part in that
nobility which ~teeA1s t~e highest, and the only patent of
'
men can gentleman may claim.
2
'I
�10
OF ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE.
MEMOIRS OF' DECEASED ALUMN I
It was during the war, viz., in June 1778, that he married
Comfort dauohter of Samuel Worthington, of Baltimore
)
"
county; and of these parents, the subject of our sketch was
born, the second child, October 17th, 1780, on Elkridge.
The rudiments of his education were received at Newark,
Delaware, whence, at an early age, he entered St. John's
College, and graduated, as we have said, with the class of
1799, of which he was almost the last survivor.
The tradition is that his standing at college did not excite
any high expectations of a distinguished career. Not deemed
by his associates to possess much talent, he was yet noted for
his steady, plodding, persevering industry. His life, therefore,
adds another to the many examples, which prove that, while
precocious minds do not always fulfil the promise of their youth,
the intellect slowest in development is often the strongest and
most vigorous in action. It is an illustration, also, of the
reward which scarce ever fails to attend systematic perseverance and patient toil. After leaving college, he entered the
office.of Judge Walter' Dorsey, in Baltimore, as a student of
law, and was admitted to the bar in 1803. He at once commenced practice in Baltimore, whe:re he remained till 1811,
when the state of his health compelled him to suspend active
professional duties and to retire to his farm upon Elkridge.
The same habits of industry and systematic labor which dis·tinguished him as a student, were carried by him into his
·early professional life. The degree of success to which he
had attained, and th e high estimation io which he was held,
during this period, are evinced by the fact, that in 1807 he
was elected, with Robert Steuart, to represent the city of Baltimore in the House of Delegates;-and that in 1809 he was
chosen a member of the State Senate, where he served for
two years. His professional standing was still further shown
by his being appointed in 1809, the District Attorney of -the
.United States for the State of Maryland.
He resumed practice after his removal to Anne Arundel
county, and attended the courts of that circuit. He was al~o
again sent to the Legislature, repres.entin.g his native county_
m
the House of Delegates during the sessions of 1813 and 1814.
In the Legislature such a man was, of course; an useful
\
11
member,-bestowing faithful attention to the details of business in the committees and the house, and also dist.ingi1ished
by his readiness and ability in debate. He took a prominent
part. in the discussion of the more important measures of the
time; and in the session of 1813 he gained special credit by
his course in the investigation of the celebrated Alleghany
Contested Election Case; in which he was the principal
champion of the Democratic, as John Hanson Thomas was
'
of the Federal, party. In the bitterness of their disappointment at the result, some leaders of the Democratic party proposed extreme measures of a disorganizing character; but the
more' conservative counsels of Judge Dorsey even tu ally prevailed, and controlled their action 'to a wiser moderation.
He was always decided in his political opinions, and frank
in the avowal of them, and often took an active part in the
canvass; serving as one of the Electoral Candidates for De Witt
Clinton in the Pref'identia! contest of 1812. He subrnquently
took the hustings in the same capacity for John Quincy
Adams, in his first contest for that office, but resigned it to
accept a seat upon the bench.
Whatever ambition he may have had for political honors,
his devotion to the law was paramount; and his professional
career was active and laborious, and continued almost to the
close of his life. In February 1822, he was appointed Attorney General of Maryland; and one of his first official acts was
to take a prominent part in tbe trial of the Bank cases; noted
for the interest which they excited, and the importance of the
principles involved. Qn the 27th July 1824, he was elevated
to the bench, receiving the appointment of Chief Judge of the
Third Judicial District, which position gave him also a seat
upon the Bench of the Court of Appeals. Upon the death of
Judge Archer, Judge Dorsey was commissioned to succeed
him as Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals, on the 3rd July
1848, and held this highest point of professional eminence
until the reorganization of the judicial system of the State by
the;adoption of the n ew constitution in 1851.
Of the convention which met to remodel that instrument
'
Judge Dorsey was a prominent member, and was distinguished
therein, not only by his wise, conservative views, but by the
�12
MEMOIRS OF DECEASED
OF ST. JOHN'S
ALUMNI
ability with which be maintained thern; participating in the
discussion of most of the leading topics, especially upon the
elective franchise, the test oath, and the tenure of the judicial
office.
From the period of his leaving the bench to the time of his
death, he devoted himself to the congenial pursuits of agriculture. His health, which in his early life was delicate;-and,
notwithstanding his appearance and the activity and regularity
of his habits, was never very robust.,-became impaired, and
sinking by gradual decay, brought him to the close of a long
and useful life of seventy-five years, on the 26th December 1855.
JuDGE DoRsEY married, January 28th, 1808, Milcah Goodwin, daughter of William Goodwin, a prominent merchant of
Baltimore, by whom he had a family of nine children, six of
whorn survive him,-and of these, two are well known law yers of our State, and esteemed members of our fraternity.
To speak adequately of JuDGE DoRsEv's personal and
professional life, ·would require a chronicler more familiar with
both, and more competent than I can pretend to be.
His brethren at the bar can bear testimony to the fidelity
and research which characterized the performance of his duties
as a lawyer; the syslematic preparation, the zeal and earnestness, which he brought to the trial of his cases:-and the
records of our highest courts, through a long series of years,
illustrate the learning and ability, the logical acumen, :md
soundness of j udg1nent, which signalized his judicial career.
In the circnit courts, his prompt decisions, and· his capacity
and vigour in the despatch of business, will long be remembered. Cases were not allowed to slumber and grow musty,
nor could suitors often complain of'' the law's delay," where
he sat as judge. The case of Jarndyce and Jarndyce, would
have had but little chance to survive all the parties to it, and
to fee two generations of lawyers, had it been upon the docket
of one. of his courts. Decision and promptitude- were leading;
traits of his character, and they are those . which are most
potential in commanding success. His life may be considered
an eminently successful one. He attained a high position
among his fellow rnen ,-he won and maintained their respect.
and confidence,-he enjoyed the esteem and affection of his
13
family and a large circle of fr1
'e11ds. Wh at more of happiness
can fall to the lot of any man?
. 'l'o a life of irreproachable moral excellence, he added a
smcere and earnest reverence for the great. 11.u tl1s of 1e11g10n:- ·
. ..
.
he was a promment member 'c
and for many ye ais a vestryman,
.
.
.
of the congregatton t-0 which he belonged , a11 c1 t001{ an active
1
•
.
.
.
mt.~r~st m its. p~·osperi(y. As years gathered over him his
rehg1ous co'.1vict10?s became deeper, and he met the final
summon~ with the firmn ess of a Christian' and died in the
commumon of th e church.
DR. SAJ\IUEL RrnouT.
We turn now to a brief notice of one who did not lik th
th
.
'
e e
o er two, ~ti.am to a ripe old age, but was cut off in the
fl~we~- of l11S days. H'.s future seemed full of hope and
p10rrnse, and the domestic and social ties that bound him to
the world were of the most endearing cha1·acte1· · B u t d'
. .
1sease
laid it~ hand upon him, and he whose office it was to heal the
malache.s of others, was him self stricken by t11e de st.
.
·
royer. H e
1
~ece1vec . tl~e visitation as a mandate from Heaven, and bowed
m subn11ss10n to the Divine decree.
b DR. SAMUEL RrnouT, the son of Dr. John R'd ou t , was
. · l
.
i
on~ m t~e city of Annapolis, September 15th, 1824. He
received his early education at home, whence he entered the
Grammar School of St. John's, and having completed the
usual college course, was graduated in February 1842. Perhaps from a sort of hereditary bias, he followed t.he bent which ,
seer~s to have led so many of his name in the •choice of a prof~ss10n, .and .became a student of medi.cine. He prosecuted
his studies with ardour and industry, attended three courses of
lectures at tl.1e ~edical School of the University of Maryland,
and ~ool~ 111s diploma in 1846. He soon after commenced
pra:t1~e m c.unnection with his father, and gave promise of
attamm~ a. l~1gh rank in his profession. His natural gentleness
and am1~bihty of manner made him a welcome visitant by the
bed of. sickness, while his judgment and skill in the use of
remedies begat confidence in his professional advice
s But this c~re.e1: of u~efulness was soon interrup~ed. The
eeds of that ms1d10us disease, consumption; manifested them-
'1
\
COLLEGE.
�14
MEMOIRS OF' DECEASED ALUMNI
selves in a frame not naturally strong, and bafiling nll human
skill, gradually destroyed his life. His bitter trial was lengthened out through several years of painful suffering; but the
afflictions of the body produced a chastening and sanctifying
influence upon the spirit, and enabled him to commit himself
unreservedly t<? the will of his Heavenly Father. In the
realizing sense of his Saviour's presence, his last whispered
accents were, ''I am not afraid to die!'' And thus peacefully
did he enter into rest, June 11th, 1856.
In his character "the gentler elements" were blended in
beautiful harmony;-his life was one of unusual purity,-and
for at least six years before his death, his religiuus convictions
led him to an open confession of his faith before men ,-in
the Presbyterian Communion, to which his family belonged.
DR. RmouT married, in October 1850, Anne, daughter of
Mr. Jacob Winchester, and left a widow and three children.
�REGISTER
OF
ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE,
MDcooLVI.
Visito1·s and Governors chosen by the
original Su.bsc1·ibcrs in 1784.
Robert Denny, 1810,
N icholas Brewer, do.
Righ t Rev. Thos. J. Clagett, D. D.,
James Shaw, 1812,
Rev. William West, D. D.,
John Stephen, do.
Nicholas Carroll,
J ohn Ridgely, M. D., 18:t3,
John H. Stone,
George Mackubin, do.,
William l:leanes,
Lewis Neth, Jr., do.,
Richard Ridgely,
Henry M. Murray, do.
Sam uel Chase,
Henry Maynadier, 1816,
John Thomas,
Henry H. Chapma n, do.
Thomas Stone,
Addison Ridout, 1817.
Alexander C. Hanson, LL. D .,
William E. Pinkney, M. D., 1820,
Thomas Jennings.
Samuel Sprigg, do.,
W illiam H. Marriott, do.,
Visitors and Govemors elected by the Georrre Shaw, do.,
Tho~as H. Carroll, do.,
Board.
John N. Watkins, do.,
Gustavus Brown, M. D ., 1789,
Thomas F ranklin, do.,
John Allen Thomas, do. ,
William Kilty, do.
Charles Carroll of Carrolton, do.,
Ramsay Waters, 1821,
Jeremiah Townley Chase, do.,
Dennis Clau de, !\'[. D., do.,
Charles Wallace, do. ,
Jeremiah Hughes, do.,
James Brice, do, ,
John Johnson , do.,
Richard Sprigg, do.,
Nicholas Brewer, do.
Edward Gantt, do.,
Gideo n White, 1822,
Clement Hill, do.,
Thomas Beale Dorsey, do.
Right Rev, John Carroll, D. D., do. Reverdy J ohnson, 1824,
Thomas Harwood, 1790,
Thomas S. Alexander, do.,
Upton Scott, M. D., do. ,
Thomas H. Hall, do.,
John Davidson, do.,
Theodoric Bland, LL. D., do.
William Cooke, do.,
Alexander ·Randall, 1825.
Benjamin Ogle, do,
George Wells, 1826.
Joseph Kent, 1827.
James Murray, M. D., 1792,
Gabriel Duvall, do.
Joseph H. Nicholson, 1829.
William Pinkney, 1794,
Daniel Martin, 1831.
Philip Barton Key, do.,
James Thomas, 1833,
John Ridout, 1795.
Robert W. Howie, do.
Samuel Ridout, 1796.
Joseph E. Muse, M. D., 1837.
Horace Ridout, 1797.
Isaac Nevett Steele, 1839.
Arthur Shaaf, do.,
John Ridout, M. D., 1840.
John Johnson, do.
Richard W. Gill, 1842.
John Callahan, 1799.
Brice T. B. Worthington , 1846.
Allen B. Duckett, 1802,
Thomas G . Pratt, 1848,
Thomas Buchanan, do.,
l<'rancis H. Stockett, do.
John T. Shaaf, M. D., do.,
John Thomas, 1852.
James Mackubin , do.
Thomas Karney, do.,
John Kilty, 1803.
James Mackubin, do.,
James Murray, 1855,
Richard Harwood ofThos., 1804 ,
Lewis Neth, do. ,
Anthony Kennedy, do.,
William Price, do.,
Reverdy Ghiselin, M. D., do.
William McDaniel, do.,
John M'Dowe!J, LL. D., 1806.
John Muir, 1807,
Daniel M. Henry, do.,
Edward Hammond, do.,
Alexander C. Magruder, do.
Jonathan Pinkney, 1810,
William Williams, do.,
James Boyle, do.,
John R. Franklin, do.
'I
�REGISTER OF ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE .
T1'easure1·s.
Benjamin Harwood, 1784.
George Mackubin, 1826.
.Tames Mackubin, 1852.
Sec1·etaries.
Ephraim Ramsay, 1786.
Nicholas Brice, 1789.
Alexander C. Hanson, 1790.
Samuel Ridout, 1806.
George Shaw, 1820.
William E . Pinlmtly, 1821.
James Boyle, 1825.
Thoi;rias S. Alexander, 1826.
Lewis Neth, 1827.
George Wells, 1833.
Professors of .Modern Lang iiages.
Thomas Nyol De L'Allie, 1791.
Martin De Targney, 1802.
Thomas Bovey, 1805.
Joseph Berge , 1809.
Charles T . Flusser, 1824.
Charles Dumas, 1837 .
Frederick E. Zerl aut , Phil. D., 1837.
Lewis .I<'. Lemanowski, 1839.
Antonio Martino, 1841.
Thomas L'Hombral, A. M., 1843
Charles Edward Anthon, A . M., 1848.
Rev. Edward J. Stearns, A . M., 1849 .
A. N. Giranlt, 1853.
Rudolph L. Tafel, A . M., 1856.
Professors of Gram mm·.
Patrick Magrath , 1790.
Principals.
Owen Filz Gerald Magrath , 1791.
James Priestly, 1792.
John M'Dowell, LL. D., 1790.
Joseph Blake, 1782.
Rev. Bethel Judd, D. D., 1807.
·Rev. Henry Lyon Davis, D. D., 1820. Hugh H. M'K earne, 1794.
Rev. William Rafferty, D. D., 1824. Dennis Donlevy, 1795.
Rev. Hector Humphreys, D .D., 1831. John J acob Tschudy, 1800.
John Conn~!, 1815.
Edward Sparks, M. D., 1820.
Vice-Principals.
Sa muel Turney, 1822.
Ralph Higginbotham, A. M., 1792.
Rev . Henry Lyon Davis, D. D., 1816. R ev. John Decker, A. M., 1822.
Rev. William Rafferty, D. D., 1820. William B. Leary, A . M., l834.
Rev. Henry Elwell. A . M ., 1836.
David Stewart, M . D., 1855.
Rev. Joseph Trapnell, A. M., 1837.
Professors of .Moral Philosophy and His · William H. T hompson , A . M., 1839.
tory.
.assistant Professors of (h ammar.
Hector Humphreys, D. D., 1855.
Thomas Scott, 1792.
Hugh H. M'Kearne, 1794.
Profes.•ors of Chemist1'y and Natural· John Jacob Tschudy, 1794.
Philosophy.
Philip Curran, 1800.
David Stewart, M. D., 1855.
Rev. Henry Elwell, A . M., 1836.
William D. Greetham, 1847.
Professo1's of .Mathematics.
John M. Schwrar, B. A., 1853.
John M'Dowell, LL. D, 1789.
G1·aduates aud .!llumni of 1793.
Thomas H. Hanson, 1817.
Rev. Henry Lyon Davis, D. D., 1818. " Charles Alexander, B. A.
" John Addison Carr, B. A.
Thomas E. Sudler, A. M., 1826.
* William Long, B. A.
David J . Capron, A. M., 1840.
.assistant Professor of .Mathematics.
Richard Owen, 1790.
* Benjamin Dulany .
H enry Steele .
* Joseph E . Muse,
*
M . D., Visitor
and G overnor.
" Levin Campbell, Register of Wills
Ralph Higginbotham, A. M., 1789.
Dorchester County .
Patrick Magrath, 1792.
" Howes Goldsb orou rrh.
Owen Fitz Gerald Magrath, 1795.
" Benjamin Ogle.
William Duke, 1803.
'·' Clement Dorsey, J udge of the CirJohn Allen, 1815.
cuit Court of Maryland.
John Wylie, 1816.
* Daniel Clark e, Judge of the Circuit
Rev. William Rafferty, D. D., 1819.
Court of Ma 1·y land .
Edward Sparks, M. V., 1822.
*' James J\IJ 'Candless.
Rev. Russell Trevett, D. D., 1855 . ' N inian Pinkn ey, Clerk of the Council.
.assistant Pro
fessors of Langttages.
'' John Don e, Chi ef Jud ge 6th JudiHugh McGuire, 1795.
cial Dis ti ict.
William Bates, 1812.
" Christoph er Harr ison.
'thomas Hanson, 1813.
" William Hall Ha rrison .
Professors Df Languages.
0
REGISTER OF ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE .
:~
1794.
1797.
Chase, B. A .
" John Leeds Kerr, B. A., Senator
" John Bowie Duckett, B. A .
in Congresss .
" Richard Harwood, B. A., Adjutant
John Tayloe Lomax, B. A., LL.
General of Mary Janel.
D., Judge of Court of Appeals of
• John Carlisle Herbert, B. A.
Virginia, and Orator before the
" John J acob Tschudy, B. A.
Alumni.
" James Lowry Donaldson, B. A.,
.. Thomas Walley.
Member of the Legislature.
" John Hollidav.
John Rumsey, B. A.
" Thomas Higginbotham.
.. John Owen, M. D.
* Thomas Lunsford Lomax .
John C. Weems, Member of ConEdward Courtney,
gress .
* William Mnynadier.
.. Alexander Contee Magruder, Mem- * James West .
ber of the Senate of Maryland,
Lewis 8mith.
Vhitor and Governor , Reporter
William Patterson.
William Thomas .
of Decisions, and Judge of the
Court of Appeals, and memb er of
John Thomas, · Visitor and Gov·
the Executive Council of Md.
ernor.
John Seney, Member of Congress .
Samuel Bayly.
" Peregrine Warfield, M. D.
Thomas Blackburn.
" Richard Tilghman Cooke.
William Humphreys.
John Fowler.
" John Contee Herbert, Member of
Congress, Senator of Maryland,
and Orator before the Alumni ,
1798.
and Speaker of the House of Del- ''·' Willfam Campbell, B. A.
egates.
* John Claude, B. A.
• William Donaldson, B. A ., M. D .
1796.
Alexand er Hammett, B. A., Consul
· at Naples.
William Cooke, B. A.
" Robert H. Goldsborough, B. A .,
William Potts, B. A.
Member of the Legislature, Sena- * John Hanson Thomas, B. A., Memtor in Congress, Orator before
ber of the Legislature.
the Alumni.
" Francis Scott Key, B. A., District "' Daniel Martin, Governor of Mary·
Attorney of the United States,
land .
and Orator before the Alumni.
John Wilmot, Judge of the Orphans
" Daniel Murray, B. A.
Court, and Adjutant General of
" John Shaw', B. A., M. D .
Maryland .
" Carlysle F. Whiting, B. A.
* William Rodgers, M. D., U . S. N.
* Grafton Duvall, M. D.
" Trueman Tyler, Register of Wills " John Higginbotham .
of Prince George County.
John Harrison.
* John Ridgely, M. D ., Visitor and
Thomas U . P. Charlton, Chancellor
Governor.
of South Carolina.
,. Tobias Watkins, M. D., Auditor
* Joseph Hall, M. D .
. Archibald Lee, Member of the
United States Treasury, and As·
L egislature.
sistant Surgeon General, U.S. A.
" Horace Clarke.
*' Waller Wyvil, M. D.
Robert Tilghman .
' ' Charles S. Sewall, Senator of Mary·
* Ralph Higginbotham.
land.
.. Samuel Maynard .
*' Samuel Brown, Register of Wills
Anne Arundel County.
* John Claytor.
* Joseph Howard, Judge of the Or- Edmund Brice Duvall, Member of
the Legislature and of the Exephans Court.
Lloyd 'I'. Hammond, M. D.
cutive Council.
Thomas Gantt.
"' Gustavus Brown , M. D .
John C. Henry, Member of the
* Samuel Chase, Judge of the OrLe11islature and of the Executive
phans qourt. of the District of
Council.
Columbia.
Richard Galen Stockett, M. D. ,
Member of the Legislature.
Washington Van Bibber, Member
of Congress .
* Thomas
'I
�REGISTER OF ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE.
REGISTER OF ST, JOHN'S COLLEGE.
1799.
" Charles Sterrett Ridgely, Speaker
of the House of Delegates.
• Thomas Beale Dorsey, l3. A., Mr.,
William Gibson, M. D.
Senator of Mary land, Attorney
General of Maryland, Visitor * Charles Ridgely.
William Bowley.
and Governor, and Chief Judge
of the Court of Appeals.
1804 .
., Walter Farnandis, B. A., Mr.
" Thomas Rodgers, B. A., Mr., Clerk " Upton Scott Reid, B. A .
of the Senate.
Nicholas Carroll, B. A.
" James S. Grant, B. A., Mr.
' ' Robert C. Stone, B. A., Mr., Mem- * Christopher Hughes, Charge to
ber of the Legislature.
Sweden, and Member of the
Legislature.
Dennis Claude, M. D., Senator of
William Grason, Member of the
Maryland, Visitor and Governor,
Convention, Senator and Govand Treasurer of Maryland.
ernor of Maryland.
Philip W. Thomas.
* Enoch M. Lowe, Paymaster U.S.A.
" James Shaw, Member of the Exec- * Robert 0 . N. Maguire, M. D.
utive Council.
" Phil em on Chew, Member of the
G. W. P. Custis.
Executive Council and of the
Philip I. Thomas, Poet before the
Legis'ature.
Alumni.
John Hammond.
" Matthias Hammond, M. D.
Thomas Williamson, M.D., U.S.N.
,, Beale M. Worthington, M. D .
" Polydore O'Reilly, M . D.
Kensey Harrison, Member of the
John H . Brown, M. D.
Legislature.
* David R. Geddes.
James Cheston, M. D
Rev. Charles Mann, D. D.
'' Charles Stewart, M. D .
1800.
William Middleton.
" James Boyle, B. A., Mr., State's " Antony Diant.
Attorney, Visitor and Governor,
John Contee, Lieutenant U. 8. M.
Member of the Legislature and
Corps.
Executive Council.
1806.
Richard Brown, B. A., M. D.
Thomas J . Brice, B. A.
* Jo'lrn Guyer, B. A.
Rev. James Williams.
" James Harwood, B. A.
~, George Carr G1undy.
" James Thomas, Governor of Mary- * George Mackubin, B. A., Visitor
· and Governor, Treasurer of St.
land.
John's and Treasur·e r of Mary" William Mann.
land, and Member of the Legisohn Patterson.
lature.
" · esse Eichelberger.
* John Mercer, B. A., Member of
Russel Lee.
the Legislature ,
"Nicholas Harwood,M. D ., U.S. N.
* Henry Maynadier Murray, B. A.
1802.
" Lewis Neth, B. A., Secretary of
" Richard Lockerman, B. A.
the Visitors and Governors:
James Murray, B. A., Member of " William E. Pinkney, B. A., M.
· the Legislature, Commissioner of
D., Visitor and Governor.
the Land Office.
" Jesse Ray, B. A.
* Hyde Ray, M. D., U. S. N.
* James F. Brice.
" Charles W. Hanson, Judge BaltiJohn Thomas, Member of the Lemore County.
gislature.
"! Alexander C. Hanson, Member of * William T. Wooton, Member of
Congress, and of the United States
the Legislature, and Secretary of
Senate.
the State of Maryland.
John Gibson.
John R. Shaw, Purser, U. S. N .
" Allen 'Thomas, M. D., Member of " John \V. Thomas, Member of the
' the Legislature.
Legislature.
* Nichola3 Thomas.
* Samuel Sweetzer.
" Jarrett H. Snowden.
* Seth Sweetzer, Consul to Guaya" David Hoffman, LL. D., Visitor and
quil.
Governor, and Professor of Law
John R andall.
in the University of Maryland.
Nathaniel Burwell.
j
" George Mann, Lieutenant U. S. N.
" Daniel Randall, LJeputy Paymaster
General, U. S. A.
" John Gwinn, Captain U. S. N.
1810.
Thomas. R~ndall, B. A., Judge of
the District Court in Florida
John Ridout, B. A., M. D,, Vi;itor
and Governor.
-
" Richard Marriott, M. D.
Joh" M. S. Macubbin M D
Member of the Legislat~re . .,
John Denny, M, D., U. S. N.
Jo~n N. Watkins, Clerk of the
. Mnati8, and Adjutant General of
y. and,
J ohnaRr1dout. Visitor and Governor.
*
John Johnson, Member of the Legislature, Visitor and Governor,
Chancellor of Maryland Orator
before the Alumni.
'
John Carroll, Member of the Legislature.
Thomas H. Carroll, Member of the
Legislature, Visitor and Governor.
Nicholas Brewer, Visitor and Governor, and Judge of the Circuit
Court.
David Ridgely, State Librarian.
William Greenbury Ridgely, Chief
Clerk in the Navy D epartment
at Washington.
" Landon Mercer, Lieutenant U.S.N.
* Waldon Middleton.
" Frederick Mackubin, M. D.
GLrge G. Brewer, Reo-ister of the
and Office.
"
1822.
Hugh Mercer Patton.
" John Carville Howard, B. A.
John M..' Patton, Member of the
Alexander Randall, B. A. Member
Executive Council of Virginia
of the House of Representatives
,. and Member of Congress.
'
U. S., and of the Convention
Ramsay Waters, Register in ChanVisitor and Governor and Ora to;
ce.ry, Visitor and Governor.
before the Alumni.
David Crawford M D
" William Denny, 0M. D. ·
" Philip Barton Key, State's Attorney.
George Shaw, Visitor and Gov~r~or, and Secretary.
John A. Magruder, M. D.
,. Wilham Latimer, Captain u. s. N.
Joseph H. Nicholson, Clerk of
John Wesley Peaco, M. D., U.S.N.
Senate and of An ne Arnndel CirGovernor of Liberia.
cuit Court, Visitor & Governor.
George Reid Pierce, M. D.
1811.
George L . Magruder.
" John Gwinn, B. A., M. D.
William Brewer, M. D.
,. Joh~ Marbury, B. A.
James Buchanan.
· Addison Ridout, B. A., Member of
Thomas Buchanan.
the Legislatnre.
John Stephen Sellman, Senator of
Maryland.
Francis Thomas, Member of ConBurton Randall , M. D., U. S. A.
gress, Member of Legislature and
Robert K. Matlack.
of the Convention, and Governor
Benjamin Watkins, M. D.
of Maryland.
1827.
Richard Randall, M. D., u. s. A.,
and Governor of Liberia.
John H enry Alexander,B. A., Mr.,
Henry Randall.
LL. D., Chief of the TopograReveif v Johnson, Senator of Maryphical Survey of Maryland.
Thomas Archer, B. A., Mr.
lan~Senator and Attorney General of the United States.
William Harwood, B. A., Mr,,
State Librarian.
George Wells, Visitor and GovEzekiel Hughes, B. A., Mr.
ernor and Secretary, Member of
Rev. William Pinkney, B. A., Mr. ,
the Convention of 1851, and Senator of Maryland.
J?. _D., Orator before the Alumni.
W1lham . H. Tuck, B. A., Mr.,
" William ~· Marriott, Member of
the Legislature, Visitor and GovSpeaker House of Delegates,
ernor, Collector of Baltimore
Member of the Convention
Judge of the Court of Appeals'
: John B_. Wells, _M. D., u. s. A:
.. Frederrnk Lewis Grammar M D
and Orator before the Alumni. '
" Somerville Pinkney.
' · ·
* John Bowie, Lieutenant U. S . N.
" William baton, M. D., u. s. N.
Jonathan Pinkney, Clerk of the
Thomas S_. Alexander, Member of
Senate.
the Legislature, and Visitor and
Governor.
Nicholas H. Green, Clerk of the
Circuit Court.
,.
'I
5
�6
B. L. Bird, M. D.
Charles H. Stephen, M. D.
lt:\29 .
John T. Archer, B. A.
Hyde Ray Bowie, B. A.
, James Boyle, B. A.
,.. Daniel Clarke, B. A.
" Robert Emmet Culbreth, B. A.
* John Harcastle Culbreth, B. A.,
Member of the L egislature.
Thomas John Franklin, B. A., Mr.,
and M. D.
John Randall Hagner, B. A., Mr.,
and Paymaster U . S. A.
Ellis Hugh es, B. A., M. D .
Thomas Karney , B. A., Mr., Professor of Ethics United States
Na val Academy, and Visitor &
Governor.
Edward Pannel, B. A.
Ninian Pinkney, B. A., Mr., M.
D., U . S. N., and Orator before
the Alumni .
"' Nicholas John Watkins, B. A.
1836.
George Grundy, B. A.
Thomas Granger, B. A., Mr.
William R . Hayward , B. A.
George Johnson , B. A.
* Joshua Dorsey Johnson , B. A
* Edward Muse, :B. A.
George H. Reeder, B. A.
Willi am 0 . Reeder, B. A .
William Henry Thomas , B. A .
Franklin Weems, B. A.
Ni cholas Brice Worthington, B.A .
William P . Williams , M. D.
R ev. Samuel Ridout , M. D .
* William Levely, M. D., U.S. A .
*
Robert Franklin, M. D.
* Gabriel Duvall, Member of the
_ Legislature.
Sprigg Harwood.
" James B. Stephens, M. D.
John H. T . Magruder, State Librarian.
Augustus Bowie, M. D., U.S. N.
Richard Swann, State Librarian,
and Member of the Legislature.
George E . Franklin .
1837.
John M. Brome, B. A., M. D .,
Frederick S. Brown, B. A.
John W. Martin, B. A.
Rev . Jos eµh Traµnell, B. A., Mr.
" Trueman Tyler, B. A., State's Attorney for Prince George County, Md.
Philip L ansdale, M. D., U . S. N ·
Thomas R. Kent.
1838.
William T ell Claude. B. A., Mr.
Rev . Savington W. Crampton ,
B. A.
" Henry H. Goldsborough, B . A.,
States Attorney for Talbot CounJames Sands Holland, B. A., Mr.
ty, Md.
James West Thompson, B. A.,Mr.
Charles Nicholas Mackubin, B. A.
William Henry Thompson, B. A_.,
1834.
Mr., Professor of Grammar in
Rev. Orlando Hutton, B. A., Mr.
St. John' s.
John Greene Proud, B. A., Mr.,
Edward Worthington, B. A.
Poet before the Alumni, and
Rev. William Henry Trapnell,
Chronicler.
B. A.
* Rev. Lucien Buonaparte Wright,
James P. Archer, English DiB.A.
ploma .
Charles H. Steele, M. D.
William R . Goodman , M . D .
F . W. Green, Member of ConEstep Hall, M. D .
gress.
1832.
1839 .
1835.
Samuel Chamberlaine, B. A.
Philip Culbreth, B. A .
William Henry Goodwin Dorsey,
B. A.
John T homas Beale Dorsey , B.
A., Member of the Legislature,
State 's Attorney for Howard Co .
'' Worthin gton R oss , B. A.
Frederick Stone, B. A., Codifier of
th e Laws of Md.
B. T. B. Worthington , B. A., VisCharles W. Hanson, Member of
itor and Governor.
Brice John Worthington, B. A .
the Legislature.
Richard Weems, M. D .
Edwin Boyle, B. A., Visitor and
Governor.
Abram Claude, B. A ., Mr., M. D .
Richard Culbreth , B. A.
" Thomas Holme Hagner, B. A.,
Mr., Member of the Legislature
of Florida.
Richard C. Maclmbin, B. A., Mr.
M.D.
7
REGISTER OF ST, JOHN'S COLLEGE.
REGISTER OF ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE.
P. W. Hawkins, M. D.
Charles Baer, M. D.
" Benjamin Gray, M. D .
1840.
John M. Brewer, B. A.
Benjamin F. Bohrer B A
M. D.
'
·
"
M
r.,
" Jeremiah L . Hughes, B. A.
Rev. Thomas W. Win ch ester, B.
A., Mr.
1841.
Luther Giddings
B A
M:o:jor U. S. A. '
· " Mr.,
W1ll_1am Giddings B A
• Damel Maynadie~ H ., Mr.
Mr .. , Memherofth eLry! B. A.,
and Visitor and Ge eg1slature,
" George Stephen H overnor.
A M ~.
umphreys B
., . r., .u1eutenant U S ' .
Frai;lC_s H. Stockett B . . A.
1
V1s1tor and Gove rnor.· A., Mr.,
'
Marius DuvallM
Benjamin Har~ood DM UD. S. N.
1842.
.
'
John Basil, B. A., Mr
George Betton B A .
Rev. Jonatha p'10 ·
· ·k
"
B. A., Mr.n
neyHammond,
Samuel Ridout, B. A., Mr., M. D.
John G. Garn~M. D.
1844.
Lle"."ellynn Boyle B A
Lieutenant U s' A.
., Mr:,
hrarian.
· · ., State L1Alexander H am11ton Gambrill, B.
.
A., Mr.
John Thomas Hall
B
· A., Mr.,
Jam es Kemp Harwood
Mr., Purser U. s. N ' B. A.,
ThMomas A. McParlin B A M
•
. D., U. S. A , . .,
r.,
. Basil S. Murdoch . B A M
Henry M ayna d' ' Murray r . A
M
ier · ., B
Cr., States Attorney f~r
_A'
J aunty.
· ·
ohn Shaaff Stockett, B. A., Mr.
M. D .
'
A
Wll!iam H y - .
ma Stat·, An g , English DiploTheodore Ws ' Rttorlnley Baltimore.
· eve , M. D.
1846.
Nicholas Brewer J
Marbury B.
' r., B. A., Mr.
M. D.
iewer, B. A., Mr ,
" Richard H. Cowman
M. D., u. s. N ' B. A., Mr.,
Joh~ Decker, Jr., ·B A
Dame] Murra Th . ., Mr.
Theodore Lin{hic~:,aM.Bo~·· Mr.
1847.
Robert Chandler, B. A., Mr.
Elizur Lance! Foote, B. A., Mr
"John R. P. Forbes, B. A., Mr. ·
James ~haw Franklin, B. A., IMr.,
State s Attorney for Anne Ai:u~del Co., Maryland.
Wilham Henry McParlin ' B. A. , .
M
r.
John Mullan, B. A., Mr., Lieutenant U.S. A.
Charles S. Parran, Member of the
Legislature.
Charles S. Winder, Captain U .
S. A.
1849.
Thomas B. Chase, B. A., Mr. ,
M.D.
William Q. Claytor, B. A., Mr.,
M.D.
Harwood Iglehart, B. A., Mr.
Jam_e~ Mackubin, B. A., Mr.,
V1s1tor and Governor, and Treasurer of St. John's.
James Revell B A Mr
John Ridout,'B.°A. "Mr. M D
Thomas Jones Wils~n i' A . M.
States Attorney for'A.' A:'co.r.,
H. Roland Wal ton M D
ChArles F. Goldsb'oro~gh°, States
M~~rney for Dorchester Co.,
1850.
Dennis Claude Jr B A M
JoMhn McMaho~ Holl~nd" Br.A
r M
b
f
'
. .,
of M.' : em er 0 the Legislature
mnesota.
Thomas Richard Stockett B
Mr.
' ·A.,
1852.
Charles Brewer B A M M
U . S. A.
' · ., r., . D.
WMilliam Saunders Green ' B . A .,
r.
William Sprigg Hall B A M
James Iglehart, Jr. B A 'M: r.
JoMnathan Pinkney Sp;rks"B r.A
r.
'
.. ,
William W. Childs, M. D.
1853.
Richard Henry Brewer
A M
J ohn . Grant Chapman 'BB .A "Mr.
W11!1am H en dry Gassaway B.
' · ., r.
A . , Mr.
' '
Ri~fr~rd Harwood Greene, B. A .,
John Grant Harris B A M
Charles Edward Hu'tto~ ' · j'. A ., r.
j r.M
.
�8
REGISTER OF ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE .
William Thomas Iglehart, B. A.,
1836.
Mr.
" Rev. Henry Elwell, A.M.
George Palmer Keating, B. A., • Rev. David F. Shaeffer, D. D.
Mr.
Daniel Randall Magruder, B. A.,
1839.
Mr.
Rev. Joseph Wolff, D. D.
John Miller Schwrar, B. A., Mr.,
Assistant Professor of Grammar
1840.
in St. John's.
Washington Greene Tuck, B. A.,
Rev. George F. Worthington, A. l\J .
Mr.
Edward Hazen, A. M.
Lemuel Flannigain, English Di. 1841.
ploma.
Right Rev. George Washington
1855.
Doane, Bishop of New Jersey,
LL.D.
Isaac Williams Brewer, B. A.
Edward McCeney, B. A.
1844.
Osborn Sprigg Iglehart, B. A.
Philip Randall Voorhees, B. A.
John Tayloe Lomax, Judge of the
Supreme Court, Va., LL. D.
Edward Augustus Welch, English
Diploma.
1850.
Rev. Gordon Winslow, D. D.
1856.
Rev. Edward J. Stearns, A. M.
Marshall Chapman, B. A.
Hammond Claude, B. A.
1852.
Philip G. Clayton, B. A.
Dr. William Sands, A. M.
John A. Conner, B. A.
Dr. William W. Duvall, A. M.
Louis G. Gassaway, B. A.
Dr. Marius Duvall, A. M.
Thomas B. Kent, B. A.
William G. Ridout, B. A.
1856.
Alvan C. Wilson, B. A.
Rev. Peter Van Pelt, D. D.
Honorary Degrees.
Rev. Edwin M. Van Deusen, D. D.
Rev. James A. McKenney, D. D.
1827.
Nou BENA.-The names of the GRADUATE•
" Theodorick Bland, Chancellol'. of
are taken from the Record of the Visitors and
Maryland, LL. D .
dates are authentic and
Sylvanus Thayer, U.S. A., LL. D. Governors and the in which other Classical
correct. The years
1834.
Nathan C. Brooks, A. M.
Scholars left before the course was completed,
who are called .ALUMNI, in this list, cannot be
determined from the books ;-and they may
not, in some instances have been placed in
the proper periods.
'
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
14 pages
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Memoirs of Deceased Alumni, 1856
Description
An account of the resource
Memoirs of deceased alumni of St. John's College. Read, by appointment of the Association, August 6th, 1856, by John G. Proud, Jr., A. M. To which is added a register of St. John's College, for 1856.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Proud, Jr., A.M., John G.
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Robert F. Bonsall, Printer
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1856-08-06
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Watkins, M.D. Tobias
Dorsey, Thomas Beale
Ridout, M.D., Samuel
Relation
A related resource
<a title="Commencement Address" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/show/3619">Commencement Address</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
Register and Memoirs of Deceased Alumni of St. John's College by John G. Proud 1856-08-06
Alumni
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/34e0330781f68213af5a573344a6058f.pdf
e9d2ac771038830eb458306165d7f852
PDF Text
Text
SIJOHN'S
College
A N N A P O L I S • SANTA FE
COMMENCEMENT
EXERCISES
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
SUNDAY, MAY ELEVENTH
Two THOUSAND AND FOURTEEN
�PROGRAM
FOR THE Two HUNDRED TWENTY-SECOND
COMMENCEMENT IN THE
THREE HUNDRED EIGHTEENTH YEAR
OF THE COLLEGE
PRELUDE
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
ACADEMIC PROCESSION
THE NATIONAL ANTHEM
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
FRANCIS SCOTT KEY, ALUMNUS, CLASS OF 1796
WELCOME
CHRISTOPHER B. NELSON, SFyo
PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
ANNOUNCEMENT OF PRIZES AND AWARDS
PRESIDENT NELSON
PAMELA KRAUS
DEAN OF THE COLLEGE
ADDRESS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS
MR. ANDREW KRIVAK, A86
CONFERRING OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
DEAN KRAUS
CONFERRING OF GRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
JEFF J.S. BLACK
DIRECTOR OF THE GRADUATE INSTITUTE
ACADEMIC RECESSION
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
�BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
(with title of essay)
ARTHUR CHRISTOPHER ACKERMAN
Hume's Empirical Mathematics
JUNEAU, ALASKA
JOSEPH JAMES ALICEA
A Poet as Hero in "The Waste Land"
LA GRANGE, ILLINOIS
DEZIREE GEORGEANNA ARNAIZ
WOODBRIDGE, VIRGINIA
The Story of a Story: Exploring Imitation in Don Quijote
DANIEL THEODORE BADGIO
MERION STATION, PENNSYLVANIA
Structures of Mathematical Thought: An Essay on Kant's
Philosophy of the Mathematical Mind
MAIA SCOTT BANKS
Thou Mayest Try to Be Perfect: A Study of Perfection
CHAGRIN FALLS, OHIO
ERIKA MARGARET BERG
Good Manners and Good Judgments in Jane Austen's
Pride and Prejudice
CENTREVILLE, VIRGINIA
CALEB BRUCE BERNARD
The Charm of Impossibilities
KATY, TEXAS
BlGYAN BlLASH BHANDARI
JHAPA, NEPAL
Macbeth's Tragedy: How Macbeth's Choice to Trust His
Imagination Over His Reason Leads to His Downfall
COLE ALEXANDER BLAUGHER
CABOT, PENNSYLVANIA
Empty Spaces: Holistic Readings of Fragmentary Thoughts
NUTCHAPOL BOONPARLIT
BANGKOK, THAILAND
Pride and Prejudice: A Judge of Character
ALEXANDRA LEIGH BORAKS
The Straw Worker: Marx's Rhetoric of
Working Class Unification
WASHINGTON, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
�JULIANA BOZHICH
In Quest of an Ideal Language
Moscow, RUSSIA
THOMAS WILLIAM BRAITHWAITE
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
Together They Go Astray: The Family of Anna Karenina and
Alexei Vronsky in Tolstoy s Anna Karenina
MAXIMILIAN ARION BROSSY
Los ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
The Security of Liberty: An Examination of the American
Identity in the American Founding Documents
ADAM WILSON BROWN
Here I Am
WEST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
YITIAN CAI
Restoring the Humility of Reason: A Rethinking of Spinoza
ZHUHAI, CHINA
PHILIP JOHN CALINDA
CHESTER, NEW JERSEY
Finding Home: Man's Journey in Beethoven s Ninth Symphony
CONNOR WILLIAM CALLAHAN
GENESEO, NEW YORK
A Figure of an Indefinite., Indeterminate Sort: Alyosha, the
Karamazovian Force, and the Resolution of the Dual Abyss
CURTIS HENRY CAMPBELL
An Argument for the Defense of Liberty
CLARKSVILLE, MARYLAND
LAURA ALEXANDRA CLEVELAND
Both Whole and Distinct: An Inquiry with Plato's Republic
MOLLY ROSE COHEN
On Piety, Poetry, and the Meaning of Suffering
PORTLAND, OREGON
SOUTHAMPTON, PENNSYLVANIA
BRENDAN MICHAEL CONNOLLY
BARRINGTON, RHODE ISLAND
Home at Last: Deception and Revelation in the Odyssey
BLAIR ELIZABETH COPPAGE
Nature's "One Long Argument": On the Role of Man's
Ignorance in Charles Darwin's Origin
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
�SUSANNAH GRACE COWAN
The Bloom of Well-Being: The Beginnings of a Good and
Happy Life
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA
DOUGLAS TANNER DOXSEY
The Worlds We Have Built: An Exploration into
Man as Deinos
ERIC STEVEN EVANS
Achilles and the Devastation of Learning
CINCINNATI, OHIO
WASHINGTON, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
i
* JAMES PACKING
BANGOR, PENNSYLVANIA
ERIN THERESE FITZPATRICK
That Both Are Valid and Inseparable: A Searchfor a
Psychophysically Reconciled Theory of Life and the Role of
Distance Within It
LIVONIA, MICHIGAN
NOAM EARL FRESHMAN
ST. Louis PARK, MINNESOTA
S/he Had it Coming: A Murder but Not a Crime? Seeing Justice
Done in Aeschylus's Oresteia
GRAHAM PATRICK GALLAGHER
ASHEVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
The Masses Rising: An Exploration of the Desire for
Republican Government
MADELINE ELIZABETH GARNER
Singer of Stories and Teller of Songs
EASTON, MARYLAND
AMANDA CHARLOTTE GLASGO
LOUDONVILLE, OHIO
The Necessity and Use for Rights: The Universal Declaration of
Human Rights as a Means to Promote Common Goals of
Freedom, Security, Prosperity, Justice, and Peace
ETHAN SCOTT GODDARD
MOULTONBORO, NEW HAMPSHIRE
Revenge and the Permanence of Tragedy in The Virgin Spring
NATHANIEL LEONARD GOLDMAN
The Poetics of Dwelling: Martin Heidegger's "The Origin of the
Work of Art" and John Ashbery 's "The Skaters "
FAIRWAY, KANSAS
�JOHNATHAN WOODROW GoOCH
WlMBERLEY, TEXAS
The Social Swerve: On Morality in a Material World
ANYI Guo
On Greatness in Plutarch's Lives: Alexander the Great
andPompey
SHANGHAI, CHINA
NICHOLAS LAKE HARNER
A Model Error: A Scientific Problem Seen in
Ptolemy's Almagest
OAKWOOD, OHIO
BRENNAN REED HARRIS
DENVER, COLORADO
Sleeping Disciples, Sleeping Sins, and the Final Rest in Death:
A Textual and Musical Thread in Bach's St. Matthew Passion
CHRISTOPHER EVAN HOBART
SAN MATEO, CALIFORNIA
The Story of Job: The Book of Job, Analyzed as a Human Tool
MICHAEL JOSEPH KALKAVAGE
Through the Looking Glass: Plutarch's Exploration of
Alexander, the Man Behind the History
ALEXANDER KIELMANSKI
Love—A Hero and a Villain: An Exploration of Love in
Shakespeare s Romeo and Juliet
JESSICA MAJA KJELLBERG
Love, Power, and Self-Knowledge: Edmund in King Lear
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
PARLIN, NEW JERSEY
NEW YORK, NEW YORK
CHARLIE ANN KLINE
MISSION HILLS, KANSAS
Gee, I Wish I Were a Man - I'd Join the Angels: The Tragedy of
Eve in Milton's Paradise Lost
HALIL UGUR KUPELI
Embodiment: Reconciliation of Artistic Drives Within
Mystery and Searchfor Mother in Hermann Hesse's
Narcissus and Goldmund
TOVA RUTH LECUYER
A Matter of Fiction: Judgment and Vilification in
The Brothers Karamazov
ISTANBUL, TURKEY
SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO
�LAWRENCE EDWARD LEIBOWITZ
REISTERSTOWN, MARYLAND
Why Does Ahab Perish Whilst Ishmael Survives? An
Exploration of Ishmael and Ahab's Struggle with Chance,
Free Will, and Necessity
DAVID COLIN LEW
COLUMBIA, MARYLAND
The Political Advantages of Christianity in a Commonwealth
CHANG Liu
What is Nature? Examining Animal Life: The Process of
Assimilation and the "Genus-Process " in Hegel's
Philosophy of Nature
GUANGDONG, CHINA
MICAELA KAYE MACDOUGALL
ABINGTON, PENNSYLVANIA
"lam not madefor perilous quests ": What Makes a Lowly
Hobbit Greater Than the King?
NICOLETTE MAUDE MAIMONE
So, Wives
FAIRFAX, VIRGINIA
SARAH JUDITH MARX
CHEVY CHASE, MARYLAND
The Gardener's Bible: Land Use, Moral Choice, and the
Cultivation of a People
MARGARET LOUISE MATTHEWS
On Truth and the Whole in Hegel's Science of Logic
MOORESTOWN, NEW JERSEY
TIMOTHY SOLOMON MCCLENNEN
Making Mythology from History: The Truths that Tacitus Can
Only Convey by Lying
MIAMI, FLORIDA
CHRISTOPHER SCOTT MCPHERSON
TOWSON, MARYLAND
Is Revolution Justifiable? Abraham Lincoln and the Right to
Revolution
CHRISTOPHER KARL MELLON, JR.
Intuition and Intellection: A Theory of Parallels
CHEVY CHASE, MARYLAND
BENJAMIN A. MISHKIN
OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON
For I Am Become Death, Destroyer of Worlds: In Search of an
Ethics Commensurate with Our Power
�CATHERINE MARY MOON
WOLCOTT, CONNECTICUT
Finally a Drop to Drink: How Jesus 9s Blood Fulfills the Law
and Frees Man from Sin
KEVIN WILLIAM MORRIS
CROFTON, MARYLAND
Can Purity of Heart Be Taught? Kierkegaard's View ofMeno's
Old Question
DANIELLE PAIGE NELSON
STAFFORD, VIRGINIA
"A kingdom for a stage, princes to act, and monarchs to behold
the swelling scene! " The Many Roles of Prince Hal and His
Journey to the Throne in Henry IV Part One
WOLFE CASSEL NELSON
Homeric Happiness: Four Portraits ofAchilleus,
Three Views of the Iliad
SANTA CRUZ, CALIFORNIA
MAXWELL DUNNING NORTH
SARASOTA, FLORIDA
The Friction Between Two Worlds: A Look at the Conflict
Between the Mind and the Spirit in The Brothers Karamazov
SOREN ABRAHAM OLEGNOWICZ
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA
The Moments of Man: A Brief Psychology of Nietzsche's
On the Advantage and Disadvantage of History for Life
EVGENIA ARKADYEVNA OLIMPIEVA
We Are What We Make
AIMEE MIGNON PAPPAS
By Force or by Freedom: Ivan's Transformation in
The Brothers Karamazov
ST. PETERSBURG, RUSSIA
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON
FRANK JEANPAUL PECORARO
ELLICOTT CITY, MARYLAND
No More Than a Dream: The Relationship of Art and Death
CAMERON PELTZ
MALVERN, PENNSYLVANIA
Mixed Feelings: What the Enjoyment of Farce and Laughter at
Suffering Say About Ethical Judgment
�HAYDEN EUGENE PENDERGRASS
Jesus and Jurisprudence: Love as the Fulfillment of the Law of
Moses
EL PASO, TEXAS
ELIZABETH MARY PETERSON
WEST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
The War of Every Man Against Himself: On the Nature and
Character ofKleinias in Book One of the Laws
CASSIE ELEANOR PETTIT
CHATTANOOGA, TENNESSEE
The Center Cannot Hold: An Exploration on the Disharmony
Within Us
CYNTHIA MICHELE PIERCE
To Be God to You and Your Offspring After You
FORT WALTON BEACH, FLORIDA
ALEXANDRIA MICHELLE PLUNKETT
Harmonizing Souls: An Examination of
The Souls of Black Folk
HOUSTON, TEXAS
MICHELLE NICOLE PORCELLI
On the Motions of the Soul in Plato 9s Phaedo
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
JOANNA JANE PURPICH
Ivan 7s Torment: His Struggle for the Reconciliation of Suffering
and Faith in The Brothers Karamazov
HOUSTON, TEXAS
ALEK PUSHKA
SALISBURY, MARYLAND
Living and Living Well in Nietzsche 9s On the Advantage and
Disadvantage of History for Life
CANEEL RADINSON-BLASUCCI
Skin, Saints, Soldiers, Simpletons, and Second Wives:
An Examination of Pierre's Journey to Happiness and
Self-Knowledge in War and Peace
CHADWICK ALLEN RAINES
A Treatise on Rights and Constitutions
WILMINGTON, DELAWARE
DENVER, NORTH CAROLINA
ALEXANDRA MAUDE RAUDONIS-BLICKER
DERRY, NEW HAMPSHIRE
Agape in the Form of Art: An Analysis of Andrei Tarkovsky 's
Andrei Rublev
�VINCENT LEANDRO REESE
On the Lord and Bondsman in the Phenomenology of the
Spirit
COLUMBUS, OHIO
JOHN HENRY FAHEY REILLY
BALTIMORE, MARYLAND
The Scientific World/view: The Epistemological Basis of the
Scientific Method
MARGARET ALAPHAIR REITZ
"Grant me Lord to know and understand": An Exploration of
Augustine's Confessions
WOOSTER, OHIO
REBECCA ALEXANDRA RIPPERTON
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA
A Place i' the Story: On the part ofEnobarbus in Shakespeare's
Antony and Cleopatra
SEAN CHRISTIAN SABELLA
From Inquiry to Devotion
PLYMOUTH, MASSACHUSETTS
BAXTER STEPHEN SAPP
Say I Play The Man I Am
GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA
ANDREW MICHAEL SCHULMAN
AVON, CONNECTICUT
The Internal Act of Believing: Aquinas on Intellect and Witt
GORDON EDWARD SELTZ
Mankind's Labor: From Alienation to Species Being
BALTIMORE, MARYLAND
REBECCA MAE SEXTON
WOODINVILLE, WASHINGTON
Such as Occurs Only Between Women: An Exploration of the
Relationship Between Natasha andMarya in War and Peace
JOHN VALENTINE SITZMANN
ZIONSVILLE, INDIANA
Salvation in the New Testament and Innocence in the Garden
of Eden
JONATHAN TURNER SOSEBEE
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
Analyzing Characters Through Examined Conversations
�CAMERON LEIGH SPIRO
The Universal Will: Suffering's Role in the Life of the
Individual
VIRGINIA BEACH, VIRGINIA
JORDAN ZACHARY STEARNS
The Clement Savage: Rousseau's Proof of Man's Natural
Goodness
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
CHARLOTTE EMILY STEINECKE
One of the Dark Places of the Earth
LAUREL, MARYLAND
MORGAN LINDSEY STEPHENSON
Taming the Typhon: An Inquiry into the Relation of "Self and
"Other" in Hegel's Phenomenology and Sophocles s Antigone
LINDSAY ANN SWIFT
An Examination of Nietzsche's Views on Morality
ANDREW JOHN TRISTER
The Path of Faith
AUSTIN, TEXAS
ALAMOSA, COLORADO
RIVERSIDE, CONNECTICUT
IAN PATRICK TUTTLE
The Burden of Reality: Redeeming Time in T.S. Eliot's
Four Quartets
OJIUGO UCHE
Brooding Over an Inscrutable Intention: Natural Symbolism
and Narrative in Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness
SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS
ABUJA, NIGERIA
HANNAH ELIZABETH UPCHURCH
ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA
A Choice of Nightmares: Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness
HUGH HANSARD VERRIER, JR.
NEW YORK, NEW YORK
Death Hath No More Dominion: Law and Body in Paul's
"Letter to the Romans "
MARGARET MACKENZIE WAGGAMAN
MT. WASHINGTON, MASSACHUSETTS
Re-Inventing Gulliver: The Struggle to Maintain Self-Identity
�SAMUEL ROBERT WEINBERG
Beyond Both the Old World and the New: A Look into
Baconian Science
ALEXANDRA RUBINOVA WELM
It is Just a Matter of Casting
I
(
MANHASSET, NEW YORK
PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY
CASEY JAMES WHITNEY
WARRICK, NEW YORK
Falling Apart, Rising Together: Shame and Self-Sacrifice in
Paradise Lost
ELLIOT JONATHAN WOOTEN
IRVINE, CALIFORNIA
The Tyranny of Private Property: an Essay on the
Relationship Between the Economic Principles of Adam Smith
and Karl Marx
ALI ClHANSIN YlLDIZ
"I am legion, for we are many": On Ideological Possession and
Idolatry in Dostoevsky's Demons
*Upon completion of requirements
ISTANBUL, TURKEY
�MASTER OF ARTS IN LIBERAL ARTS DEGREE
GRADUATE INSTITUTE IN LIBERAL EDUCATION
MARGARET JOSEPHINE BAIR
Bowie, Maryland
MELISSA ANN BALCH
Santa Fe, New Mexico
JESSICA ALYSA BANGEL
Citrus County, Florida
CAMDEN CHASE BOWDREN
Annapolis, Maryland
ERIC ALLEN BROTHERTON
Sweetwater, Tennessee
RYAN ANDREW BURNETT
Sacramento, California
JEAN ELIZABETH CHASE
Woodbine, Maryland
Lois GARDINER CLARK
Washington, DC
RICHARD JAMES FINK
* ESTER AN FREEMAN
BRADY JOSEPH LEE
DONALD ROBERT LEOPOLD
Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania
Miami, Florida
Baltimore, Maryland
Concord, Massachusetts
JUDITH FENN MCGEORGE
Ellsworth, Maine
JASON ALAN MENZIN
Roslyn, New York
MOLLY KATHARYN MEYER
SARAH LACUGNA MILLER
JOHN ROBERT NEYLAN
MALLORY BROOKE PALMER
AARON MICHAEL PELOT
JODY GENE SHEETS
GABRIELLE SIOBHAN STANTON
JEREMIAH DAVID SWANSON
THOMAS JONATHAN THIGPEN
Davidsonville, Maryland
Seattle, Washington
Morgan Hill, California
Orlando, Florida
Dublin, Ohio
Canyon, Texas
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Coshocton, Ohio
Gainesville, Georgia
BRIAN STEWART WILSON
Rising Sun, Maryland
ANNE ELIZABETH ZOLKOWER
Annapolis, Maryland
*Upon completion of requirements
�PRIZES AND AWARDS
COMMENCEMENT 2,014
To the member of the Senior Class who has written the best senior essay.
Offered in memory of Susan Irene Roberts, of the Class of 1966
The Gardener's Bible: Land Use, Moral Choice, and the
Cultivation of a People
SARAH JUDITH MARX
HONORABLE MENTION
Both Whole and Distinct: an Inquiry with Plato 's Republic
LAURA ALEXANDRA CLEVELAND
To the member of the Junior Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered by Mrs. Leslie Clark Stevens in memory of her
daughter-in-law, Kathryn Mylroie Stevens
Givenness, Multiplicity, and the Authentic Unity of Objects
RENWICK ELLIS HUDSON
HONORABLE MENTION
Seeing is Believing: A Leibnizian Interpretation
Qiu LIN
To the member of the Sophomore Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered under the will of the late Judge Walter I. Dawkins,
of the Class of 1880
A Study in Optimism: On Suicide
Finding the Deep, Secret Root ofPolydorus 's
Murder and the Forest of Self-Violence
MARINA AUD-JEAN WEBER
�HONORABLE MENTION
"This time does not require those sights ":
Duty, Desire, and Images in Virgil's Aeneid
EMILY FREDA GRAZIER
To the member of the Freshman Class who has written the best annual essay.
"You will know the sky and how necessity fettered it to hold the
limits of the stars ": Plato 's Parmenides as Ineffable Microcosm
ZACHARY WILLIAM GOLD
HONORABLE MENTION
The Lasting Value ofThucydides 's Peloponnesian War
NATHAN MICHEL HUEY
The Democracy in Speech: Is Philosophy Possible?
SOPHY CORDELIA SCHULMAN
To the Graduate Institute student who has written a
distinguished preceptorial essay in the year 2013.
Offered by the Alumni Association
Coming Home
CARLIN FELT
and
On Suffering and Death in The Odyssey
JASON ALAN MENZIN
�To a member of the Senior Glass, for excellence in speaking.
Offered in memory of Senator Millard E. Tydings of Maryland
BENJAMIN A. MISHKIN
To the student who submits the best English version of a Greek text.
Offered in memory of John S. Kieffer, President Emeritus
MICAELA KAYE MACDOUGALL
To the student who submits the best English version of a French poem.
Offered by the Board of Visitors and Governors
HAYDEN EUGENE PENDERGRASS
To the student who submits a fine original English poem.
Offered by Dr. George Austin in memory of his brother, Henry
"Crepe-Myrtle (End of Summer Flowers) "
SARAH MARX
To the student who submits a fine original musical composition.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap, President of the
Caritas Society 1987-1991
"If it is Eternal "
ERIK GUSTAF NEAVE
�To the student who submits a fine essay on a piece of music.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap, President of the
Garitas Society 1987-1991
Finding Home: Man 's Journey in Beethoven 's Ninth Symphony
PHILIP JOHN CALINDA
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of a synthetic problem.
Offered by the Class of 1986 in honor of Bryce Jacobsen, of the
Glass of 1942, Tutor and Director of Athletics Emeritus
Smut MA
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of an analytical problem.
Offered in memory of James R. McGlintock, of the Glass of 1965
NOT AWARDED
To the student who carries out a fine laboratory project.
Voltage, Current, and Resistance
SlDHARTH SUBODH SHAH
To the senior man and woman who, through participation, leadership, and
sportsmanship, have contributed most to the SJC athletic program, a special blazer.
HAYDEN EUGENE PENDERGRASS
CHARLIE ANN KLINE
�To the member of the Senior Class who has contributed outstanding
service to the Greater Annapolis Community.
Offered by the Caritas Society of St. John's College
HUGH HANSARD VERRIER
)K
To the member of the Senior Class who has demonstrated the greatest care
for and service to youth who reside in the City of Annapolis.
Offered by the friends and family of Marvin B. Cooper,
of the Class of 1969
CHARLIE ANN KLINE
To the member of the Senior Class who submits the best work of visual art to the
Community Art Exhibition, the Charles Vernon Moran Prize
Caesar, digital painting
ALEK PUSHKA
To the Senior who has demonstrated excellence
in the arts, literature, or sciences, the Walter S. Baird Prize.
"Duet for Violin and Cello "
PHILIP JOHN CALINDA
�ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Leslie Milton Abrams,
1954
Richard F. Cleveland,
H54
Harry Golding, Graduate
Institute
Dr. Granville Q. Adams,
1929
Bernard Clorety, 1950
George A. and Eveline T.
Greenleaf
Mildred Alexander
Philip L. Alger, 1912
Alter Graduate Institute
Scholarship
Alumni Scholarship
Annapolis Graduate
Institute
Aretei Fund
Bradley G. Arms
George M. Austin, 1908
Walter S. Baird, 1930
Betty Beck Bennett, 1960
Fred and Marian Billups
Jeff Bishop Memorial
FordK. Brown, H70
Dr. Charles C. Cook
Marvin Brent Cooper,
1969
The Joseph and Robert
Cornell Memorial
Foundation
Eugene N. (1929)and
Robert G. (1963)
Cozzolino
Wiley and Helen
Crawford
Cpl. George E.
Cunnifflll
Helen Lee DeAloia
Donna Marie Delattre
Clarence L. Dickinson,
1911
Richard A. Duhan, 1963
Caritas Society of
St. John's College
Martin Dyer Book Fund
Casasco Family Fund
Ahmet Ertegun
Education Fund
Michael Chiantella
Chicago Regional
Faculty Scholarship
Mrs. Clyde Alvin Clapp
Ronald and Donna
Fielding
James T. Clark, 1928
James H. Frame, 1950
Class of 1897
Friends of St. John's
Class of 1898
Nancy Gannon Gearing
Edna G. and Roscoe E.
Grove, 1910
John T. and Gertrude L.
Harrison, 1907
John T. Harrison, Jr.
Charles W. Hass, 1927
Henry B. Higman, A48
Richard H. Hodgson,
1906
The Hodson Trust
Alfred and Ruth Houston,
1906
Houston Regional
John Isaacs
J. Seward Johnson, Jr.
Jesse H. and Mary Gibbs
Jones
Col. Robert E. and
Margaret Larsh Jones,
1909
Robert E. Kanode, 1939
Dr. Simon and Fanny
Kaplan, H84
Francis A. Katz, 1929
William R. Kenan, Jr.
Trust
�John Sp angler Kieffer,
H70, and
Roxana White Kieffer,
H84
Marie Klebe Memorial
Jacob Klein, H76
Korshin Family Fund
Tom and Cathryn Krause
Arthur E. and Hilda
Combs Landers, 1930
Joseph LaPides
Michael Littleton
John D. Mack
Massachusetts Regional
James Matthews, H99
Thomas A. and Julia
McDonald
Middendorf Foundation
Martin Conrad Miller
(1981) Book Fund
Paul Miller
Philip A. Myers II, 1938
NationsBank Foundation
(Bank of America)
Christopher B. Nelson
Scholarship
Endowment
Rev. Theo O'Brien
O'Grady Memorial
Oklahoma Regional
Norman G. Owens
Jules O. Pagano Memorial
Scholarship Fund
Dr. Thomas Parran and
Thomas Parran, Jr.
Passin Family Fund
J. Winfree Smith, H80
The Duane and
Clementine Peterson
Charitable Fund
James S. Spirer, 1970
LD and Paula Pickens
Pittsburgh Regional
Reader's Digest
Foundation
J. Douglas Ramsey, 1937
C.V. Starr Foundation
Harry S. and Vivian B.
Spectre Book Fund
Raymond and Richard
Starke
Jean Roberts Staylor
Lenore B. Rinder
Andrew and Lenore
Steiner Book Fund
Cleo Ritz
Clarence W. Stryker
Susan I. Roberts, 1966
Bert Thorns
Clifton C.Roehle
Karl and Evelyn Van
Tassel
Joan and Bela Ronay
Murray Joel and Julius
Rosenberg, 1938
G. D. Searle/John E.
Rob son
Rob son Family
Rosse Family
St. John's College Alumni
Association
J. J. Salovaara
Lawrence Saporta, PhD
Flora Duvall Sayles
Scholarship Fund 2013
Hazel Norris and J.
Graham Shannahan,
1908
Frederick J. Von
Schwerdtner
Mr. and Mrs. William J.
Vanous
Pattie Bourne Turner
Walker, 1966
Irving and Loretta
Wasserman
Charles H. Watts
Richard D. Weigle, H49
John L.Williams, 1950
Thomas J. and Marvil F.
Williams
Frank K. Wilson, 1935
Winiarski Endowment
Fund
Doug E. Sherr( 1972)
Memorial
Delores and Stephen Wolf
Rudy Simeone
Kathy and Jerry Wood
.r oundation
Thomas J.,H94, and
Marion K. Slakey
Andrew Smith Memorial
�ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
BB&T Charitable
Foundation
Davey Commercial
Grounds
Maryland Capital
Management
Decisive Data Systems
McGladrey & Pullen
Booz Allen Hamilton
Ronald Fielding
Christopher B. Nelson
Baines & Group
ICFM
PhotoLab Services
Bunting Family
Foundation
Invotex Group
Estate of Vernon Smith
Isadore and Bertha
Gudelsky Family
Foundation
State Farm Insurance
Companies
Alba Audiovisual
Caritas Society
Morris & Gwendolyn
Cafritz Foundation
CareFirst BlueCross
BlueShield
Clark-Winchcole Fund
Clifton Larson Allen
Council of Independent
Colleges
Estate of Clifford Jackson
Ensign C. Markland
Kelley Jr. Memorial
Foundation
Kelly & Associates
Kiplinger Foundation
Estate of Gene Thornton
UPS
Peter Weiss
Wells Fargo
Winiarski Family
Foundation
Arthur E. and Hilda
Combs Landers Trust
Gifts received after April 15, 2014 are gratefully acknowledged
and will be listed in the 2015 Commencement Program.
�CONGRATULATIONS, ALUMNI.
Stay in touch. Get involved. Give back.
www. stj ohnscollege. edu/alumni
410-626-2531
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
22 pages
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
St. John's College
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2014-05-11
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
CommencementExercises2014
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Description
An account of the resource
Program for the two hundred twenty-second commencement in the three hundred eighteenth year of the college.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Commencement (St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Program, 2014
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/ff8ea5a60a7bcd72ea1370f444d9148e.pdf
870a10d85ed940f93fe7f86200436307
PDF Text
Text
STJOHN'S
College
A N N A P O L I S • S A N T A FE
COMMENCEMENT
EXERCISES
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
SUNDAY, MAY TWELFTH
Two THOUSAND AND THIRTEEN
�PROGRAM
FOR THE Two HUNDRED TWENTY-FIRST
COMMENCEMENT IN THE
THREE HUNDRED SEVENTEENTH YEAR
OF THE COLLEGE
PRELUDE
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
ACADEMIC PROCESSION
THE NATIONAL ANTHEM
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
FRANCIS SCOTT KEY, ALUMNUS, CLASS OF 1796
WELCOME
CHRISTOPHER B. NELSON, SFyo
PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
ANNOUNCEMENT OF PRIZES AND AWARDS
PRESIDENT NELSON
PAMELA KRAUS
DEAN OF THE COLLEGE
ADDRESS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS
JAMES SCHAMUS
CONFERRING OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
DEAN KRAUS
CONFERRING OF GRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
JEFF J.S. BLACK
DIRECTOR OF THE GRADUATE INSTITUTE
ACADEMIC RECESSION
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
�BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
(with title of essay)
MAGGY ROSE BARNES
Centreville, Virginia
The Abstinent Lover: The Artist 's Searchfor Knowledge, Unity,
and Wholeness in Virginia Woolf's To The Lighthouse
JONATHAN DAVID BARONS
Waterbury, Vermont
Going Against the Groan: The Stoic in Society
REBEKAH LYNN BENTUM
Seeing God Face to Face: An Inquiry into Jacob's Striving with
God and Man in the Book of Genesis
Caribou, Maine
HEATHRYN ALETHIA BERRY
Realism, Idealism, and Onions: Faith and Love in The Brothers
Karamazov
Reston, Virginia
THOMAS ANTHONY BONN
Wisdom in the Whirlwind
LYDIA ELISE BOOZ
Towson, Maryland
Brooklyn, New York
A Taciturn Historian: The Merit of Trivialities in the Annals
CHARLES DAVID BRANAN
Beauty, Necessity, and Shame: Choice in an Aristotelian
Framework
BONNIE JOY BRUMBAUGH
Sandersville, Georgia
Stevensville, Maryland
Song of Myself: Whitman's Examination of Identity Through
Poetry
JASON MICHAEL CARRIER
Weimar, California
Self-Mastery and Man's Creative Power
CRYSTAL CATHERINE CLAWSON
Souffrance: Existence du Poete et le Pouvoir deUart
Waialua, Hawaii
ANTHONY ALAN COLE
In Search of God: Philosophy's Role in Augustine's Confession
Bowie, Maryland
�WILLIAM GORBELL COTTEN-POTTER
Newport News, Virginia
Morality and Sacrifice: An Exploration of the Inside Narrative
in Billy Budd
HUNTER WlLLIAM Cox
Freedom Through Obedience
Hartland, Vermont
RACHEL LOUISE Cox
Spartansburg, Pennsylvania
Knightley Must Marry Her: Discovering the Heart in Jane
Austen's Emma
DRESDEN DENEYS CRAIG
Against Epistemology: On Plato's Theaetetus
Greencastle, Pennsylvania
AlsfNE THERESA CULPEPPER
Sin and Evil in Baudelaire's Fleurs du mal
Providence, Rhode Island
JENNIFER HOPE DALTON
Create in Me a Clean Heart: The Meaning of Prayer Through
David's Psalms
Holland, Michigan
MARC O FRANK DAMIANO
Make 'Em Laugh: As You Like It and the Value of Comedy
Bronxville, New York
LlLLIAN ELLEN DATCHEV
Reawakening the Pendulum of History
Annapolis, Maryland
ClNAR DoRUK
The Birth and Death of the Myth of Human Nature in a Prison
of Word and Flesh
Istanbul,Turkey
BENJAMIN PERRY DOUTHWAITE
Thinkingof Thought: Being, Nothing, and Becoming in Hegel's
Logic
Jessup, Maryland
MATTHEW PETER DUDIK
Vancouver, Washington
Turning the World Inside-Out: Why the Newtonian Theory of
Planetary Motion Supersedes the Ptolemaic
�VIRGINIA CASTOR EARLY
The Self-Focused Yet Free Citizen: A Searchfor Active
Citizenship in Tocqueville's Democracy in America
Bethel, Connecticut
NlMA ESHRAGH
Rogers, Arkansas
Seeing Face to Face: An Exposition on Man's Need for Escape
and its Resolution in an Ethical Relationship
EMILY CARROLL EZELL
Rationality for the Hopeless: The Federal Government's
Attempt to Save Us from Ourselves
JOHN MACE FABISZEWSKI
Middletown, Virginia
Virginia Beach, Virginia
Beats, Rhymes, and Life: A Poet's Journey
JOHN CHARLES FARRELL
For All Time: The Negotiation Between Adaptation and
Retention of Identity in Thucydides' History of the
Peloponnesian Wars
Hatfield, Pennsylvania
MADELINE CATHERINE FERGUSON
Annapolis, Maryland
Overcoming in Nietzsche's Thus Spoke Zarathustra: A Story of
Self-Destruction and Redemption
MICHAEL WALTON FOGLEMAN
Knowing Phaedrus, Remembering Ourselves
LEONARD ISAAC FRANKS
If You Have Good Will, You Shall Lack for Nothing: Can
Christian Virtue Be Unrelated to Deeds?
Hingham, Massachusetts
Santa Fe, New Mexico
DANIEL FELDMAN GILLES
West Hartford, Connecticut
The Dragons of Philosophy and the Rebirth of Metaphysics
PETER HIGH GILLIES
"About, My Brains!" Hamlet's Artistic Unconscious
EMILY CATHERINE GORMAN
The Role of Self-Knowledge in Shakespeare's King Lear
Wilton, Connecticut
Hudson, Ohio
�GORDON BRUCE GREER, III
Can Capitalism Survive? An Examination of Socialist and
Capitalist Systems in Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy
Chesterfield, Missouri
RACHEL ELIZABETH HAHN
The Journey to Moriah: Infinite Resignation in Abraham
Sebewaing, Michigan
BRITTANY ANN HANKINS
The Cracked Seed: An Examination of Ivan Karamazov
Wilmington, Delaware
SARAH Coco HARTZELL
"For the Poets are Dearest to the Muse Who Puts Upon Their
Lips the Ways of Life ": Why the Man of Many Ways Must be
His Own Poet
ANDREW PETER HASTINGS
War is Peace: or, The Death of the Republic in Machiavelli's
Discourses on Livy
SAMUEL LAURENCE HYMAN HEMMENWAY
The Nature of Vision
HAU HoANG
Close Your Eyes and Learn Geometry: Embracing Radical
Ideas in Lobachevskian Geometry
Houston, Texas
Columbia, Maryland
Los Angeles, California
Hai Phong, Vietnam
JOHN TYLER WALSH HOGAN
Buena Park, California
A Nice Guy Having a Bad Day: Tragic Characters in Sophocles'
Antigone
CATHERINE MARIE HOISINGTON
Society and Insanity in Dostoevsky's The Idiot
Kenai, Alaska
JOSEPH FRANCIS HORNER
Dedalus Defined: The Song of the Father, and Woman '«$• Dance
Grove City, Ohio
RuOXUAN Hu
What is the Ultimate End of Man? On Happiness, Morality
and Freedom
Shanghai, China
�CHENGHAN JING
There They Talked of Revolution., There They Lit the Flame:
Marx's Quest for the Glory of Man
CHRISTOPHER EARL JOHNS
Deyang, China
Sewickley, Pennsylvania
The Paradox of Originality: A Study of Metaphysical Desire
and Creative Maturation in Dostoyevsky's Notes from
Underground
MARY ELIZABETH JOHNSON
Manhattan Beach, California
"The Artist Arrives at the Gas Chamber": An Exploration of the
Effects of Education Upon the Artist's Return Home
CHRISTINA WERNETT KATAOKA
Santa Fe, New Mexico
Relating Space and Geometry: The Necessity of Spatial
Experience in Association with Multiple Versions of Geometry
DANIEL JACOB KRAFT
God's Chosen People: A Whale of a Tale
Owings Mills, Maryland
BRIAN SANFORD LEE
Colorado Springs, Colorado
Kantian Self-Consciousness and Self-Knowledge
ROBERT SAUL LEIKEN
Washington, District of Columbia
Denial and Deception in The Death of Ivan Ilyeh
WILLIAM ALFRED LIPINSKI
Vanity and Vexation of Spirit
CHAZAQ LLINAS
Stratford, New Jersey
Berlin, Maryland
Reflecting on the Generation of Knowledge
DANIELA LOBO DlAS
Berlin, Connecticut
The Tension Between Reason and Desire: How Gulliver
Unknowingly Teaches Us to Avoid the Extreme and Seek
Moderation
WILLIAM READ LODER
Optima dies.. .primafugit: Memory, Time, and the Land in
Willa Gather's My Antonia
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
�ADAM MATTHEW MARASCHKY
Chaos and Quanta: Two New Hypotheses in Max Plank's
Theory of Heat Radiation
PILAR ISABEL FRANCISCA MARTINEZ-FRAGA
The Significance of Human Existence and Freedom in Soren
Kierkegaard's Philosophical Fragments
Shaker Heights, Ohio
Miami, Florida
Jefferson, Massachusetts
MAURA JOAN McCuiSKEY
From Poetry to Philosophy and Back Again: Book X of Plato's
Republic
REECE JORDAN McDEvnr
The Searchfor Virtue, Beauty, and Unity within the Self: An
Exploration of Friendship in Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics
PALMER LEE McMATH
We Speak and It Lives: Bridging the Gap Between an
Individual and the Process of Language Change
JENNIFER ANN McNuury
Of Men, Whales, and Myths: An Exploration of the Creation of
Narrative in Moby-Dick
Evansville, Indiana
Purcellville, Virginia
Chicago, Illinois
DREW DONNALLY MENZER
On the Use and Abuse of Philosophy: An Inquiry into Truth
and Morality in Beyond Good and Evil
Granville, Ohio
CHRISTOPHER HEZEL MOORE
Romancing Excellence: The Art of Instruction in Rousseau's
Emile
Kearney, Missouri
HENLEY ELIZABETH MOORE
A New Kind of Noble: An Exploration of Antony in
Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra
Cambridge, Maryland
ANDREW JAMES MORAN
The Eye of the Storm: Origin, Narrative, and Law in
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Norwalk, Connecticut
�HAREL WARD NEWMAN
The Picture of the Closet: Two Reading of The Picture of
Dorian Gray
Chicago, Illinois
MARIA MACARENA PALLARES
Between the Limits of the Two Abysses: Equality and Freedom
in Tocqueville 's Democracy in America
EMILIA MACKENZIE PICKARD
Emilia or On My Education
Wellington, Florida
Fort Collins, Colorado
Louis ALEXANDER PISHA
The Final Antithesis: Experience and Knowing in Hegel's
Phenomenology of Spirit
Nanuet, New York
DANIEL ALEXANDER POPOV
Irvington, New York
Through the Wind and the Rain: An Exploration of Comedy in
Shakespeare's Twelfth Night
DYLAN KNIGHT ROGERS
The Apotheosis of the Dance: Nietzsche's Defense of the Senses
in Twilight of the Idols
Chicago, Illinois
JOHN CHRISTOPHER ROPOULOS
Fremont, California
Experiencing the Dionysian Folk Artist in Nietzsche's The Birth
of Tragedy and Robert Johnson's Gross Road Blues
PHILIP JEFFREY SCHIFFRIN
Wynnewood, Pennsylvania
The Last Full Measure of Devotion: A Rhetorical Analysis of
the Gettysburg Address
TlMOTHY ROBERT SCHUM
Waukesha, Wisconsin
The Seeker and the Sought: An Exploration ofQur 'anic
Guidance
ESA GlANNA SCLAFANI
Worcester, Vermont
To Flee a Sinking Ship: Fear of Death in Epictetus' Discourses
CAMERON DOUGLAS SHARP
What is Beyond Good and Evil?
Los Angeles, California
�ERIC ANDREW SHLIFER
How Our Conscience Brings Us Closer to God: A Look at
Morality in The Brothers Karamazov
SARAH LEONA STALTER
Poulsbo, Washington
Bethel Park, Pennsylvania
A Life About Nothing: On "The Myth of Sisyphus "by Albert
Camus
ALICIA NlCOLE STANLEY
Glarksville, Maryland
Shakespeare the Artist: Corruption, Forgiveness, and the
Theatrical Experience in The Winter's Tale
JESSICA GENEVIEVE STEER
Virginia Beach, Virginia
All's Well That Weds Well: Love and Order in Shakespeare's
As You Like It
AMY BRENEMAN STEWART
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Rafting with Huck Finn: Navigating Life's Rivers
KURT THEODORE STROM
Jefferson, Massachusetts
Hony Soyt Qui Mai Pence: Sir Gawain in the Castle and the
Forest
MANUEL ANDRES LUCAS SY-QuiA
Pasig City, Philippines
Not for My Sake, but for My Servant's: The Faith of the Roman
Centurion o/"Luke 7:1-10
MANISH JUNG THAPA
Dadeldhura, Nepal
The General Will, the Consensus Problem, and the Legislator
in Rousseau 's Du Contrat Social
CATHERINE ALEXANDRA TRORICH
Charlotte, North Carolina
Musical Theology: Bach's Interpretation of Human Sin and
God's Mercy in the St. Matthew Passion
GRACE ANN TYSON
Pensacola, Florida
Hurrah for Kolya! The Soul's Education in The Brothers
Karamazov
CARLIN MARIE VAN SCHAIK
On Sin and Friendship
Lubbock, Texas
�DHIDHAT VANICHSTIAN
A Man's World: But It Wouldn't Be Nothing, Nothing Without
a Woman
ELIZABETH GRACE VAUGHN
Ordered and Perfected Love in Dante's Paradise
Gaithersburg, Maryland
BRIAN LEE WARCZINSKY
Understanding the Understanding: An Inquiry into Hume's
Account of Human Nature
NICOLAS MARTIN FRANCOIS WEINSTEIN
Peace is a Boot, War a Flame: Hobbes' Leviathan
Midland, Michigan
London, United Kingdom
ZACHARY WRIGHT WELLS
An Essay of the Value of Ideas
TREVOR DAVID WORTHEY
Fyodor Pavlovich Karamazov: The Fool's Role in the Theatre
of the Self
JlDAN Xu
Bangkok, Thailand
Saint Paul, Minnesota
Corning, New York
Shenzhen, China
Imaginary Geometry and Our Understanding of Space
YUAN XUE
Encounter the Beautiful with Kant
AUDRA LAUREN ZOOK
Choosing Faith: An Examination of Augustine's Journey to
Conversion
JlNYAO ZOU
Kant on Our Experience
Chengdu, China
Pahrump, Nevada
Haikou, China
�MASTER OF ARTS IN LIBERAL ARTS DEGREE
GRADUATE INSTITUTE IN LIBERAL EDUCATION
BENJAMIN AARON BELL
GORBYN RICHARD BERRYMAN
DIANA PAGE BROWN
ABIGAIL RUTH GLEVENGER
MATTHEW HOWELL COOK
MARK JOSEPH DALY
Rome, Georgia
Fuller ton, California
Palmer Lake, Colorado
Fostoria, Ohio
Beaumont, Texas
Cordova, Maryland
MARIANO JOSE DE DOMPABLO
Madison, Wisconsin
ERIN EVELINE DESMOND
Garden Valley, Texas
COLE DONOVAN
Churchton, Maryland
ALVARO ENRIQUE DURAN*
Rockville, Maryland
STEVEN MICHAEL ELLERD
Georgetown, Texas
JOHN RICHARD FARRIS
Crofton, Maryland
CARLIN FELT
GRAHAM WILLIS GORDON
TIANLU JIA
MICHAEL THOMAS KAUDER
SUSAN JANE LAROCCA
GAITLIN MOLLY McGuiRE
ENRICO NASSI
DAVID MICHAEL OLDHAM
Ogden, Utah
Christiana, Tennessee
Guangdong, China
Greensboro, North Carolina
Morrisville, Pennsylvania
Davidsonville, Maryland
Washington, District of Columbia
Nashville, Tennessee
OSCAR ORTIZ DUARTE
Tegucigalpa, Honduras
JASON MARK POARCH
Lenoir, North Carolina
JAMES PATRICK REDMON
Knoxville, Tennessee
EVERETT FRENCH REESE
Annapolis, Maryland
SHAUN PATRICK RIELEY
Millsboro, Delaware
MICHAEL EVAN STAHLY
Germantown, Maryland
*Upon completion of requirements
�PRIZES AND AWARDS
COMMENCEMENT 2013
To the member of the Senior Class who has written the best senior essay.
Offered in memory of Susan Irene Roberts, of the Class of 1966
Kant on Our Experience
JINYAO Zou
To the member of the Junior Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered by Mrs. Leslie Clark Stevens in memory of her
daughter-in-law, Kathryn Mylorie Stevens
A Problematic Concept: On the Thing-In-Itself in Kant's Critique of Pure Reason
NATHANIEL LEONARD GOLDMAN
The Birth of Don Quixote: Madness, Poetry, and Transformation
LAURA ALEXANDRA CLEVELAND
To the member of the Sophomore Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered under the will of the late Judge Walter I. Dawkins,
of the Class of 1880
Flesh
SOPHIA JEANNETTE DILLARD
HONORABLE MENTION
Understanding the Reason Behind the Spheres in Dante 's Paradiso
LESLIE MAE HOWARD
�To the member of the Freshman Glass who has written the best annual essay.
Offered in memory of Jacob Klein, Tutor Emeritus, and his wife,
Else, by Dr. Stuart and Frances Walker
Myth in the Mind of Man
MATTHEW MARQUIS KATCHER
HONORABLE MENTION
Self-Division and Self -Covernance
KELLI ANN ZINN
The Whole Risk: Can the Myth of Er Save Us?
ERIK GUSTAF NEAVE
To the Graduate Institute student who has written a
distinguished preceptorial essay in the year 2012.
Offered by the Alumni Association
One and Many: Political Order and Friendship in The Odyssey
JAMES PATRICK REDMON
To a member of the Senior Class, for excellence in speaking.
Offered in memory of Senator Millard E. Tydings of Maryland
CAMERON DOUGLAS SHARP
To the student who submits the best English version of a Greek text.
Offered in memory of John S. Kieffer, President Emeritus
Cyropaideia, Xenophon
MICAELA KAYE MACDOUGALL
�To the student who submits the best English version of a French poem.
Offered by the Board of Visitors and Governors
Circonspection, Paul Verlaine
HAYDEN EUGENE PENDERGRASS
To the student who submits a fine original English poem.
Offered by Dr. George Austin in memory of his brother, Henry
Sonnet for Redemption
DANIEL JACOB KRAFT
The Muse
JEZEBEL ST. JOHN
To the student who submits a fine original musical composition.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap, President of the
Caritas Society 1987-1991
24 Preludes
DYLAN KNIGHT ROGERS
HONORABLE MENTION
Finalefor String Quartet
Louis ALEXANDER PISHA
To the student who submits a fine essay on a piece of music.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap, President of the
Garitas Society 1987-1991
No AWARD
�To the student who submits the most elegant solution of a geometrical problem.
Offered by the Class of 1986 in honor of Bryce Jacobsen, of the
Glass of 1942, Tutor and Director of Athletics Emeritus
YITIAN GAI
HONORABLE MENTION
JlDAN Xu
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of an analytical problem.
Offered in memory of James R. McClintock, of the Class of 1965
HAU HOANG
HONORABLE MENTION
XIAOQIAN Hu
)K
To the student who carries out a fine laboratory project.
Joseph Black 's Super Cooling Experiment
SlDHARTH SUBODH SHAH
To the senior man and woman who, through participation, leadership, and
sportsmanship, have contributed most to the SJC athletic program, a special blazer.
THOMAS ANTHONY BONN
RACHEL ELIZABETH HAHN
�To the member of the Senior Class who has contributed outstanding
service to the Greater Annapolis Community.
Offered by the Caritas Society of St. John's College
No AWARD
To the member of the Senior Class who has demonstrated the greatest care
for and service to youth who reside in the City of Annapolis.
Offered by the friends and family of Marvin B. Cooper,
of the Class of 1969
REBEKAH LYNN BENTUM
To the member of the Senior Class who submits the best work of visual art to the
Community Art Exhibition, the Charles Vernon Moran Prize
ADAM MATTHEW MARASCHKY
)K
To the Senior who has demonstrated excellence
in the arts, literature, or sciences, the Walter S. Baird Prize.
Finalefor String Quartet
Louis ALEXANDER PISHA
�ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Leslie Milton Abrams,
1954
Richard F. Cleveland,
H54
Harry Golding, Graduate
Institute
Dr. Granville Q. Adams,
1929
Bernard Clorety, 1950
George A. and Eveline T.
Greenleaf
Mildred Alexander
Philip L. Alger, 1912
Alter Graduate Institute
Scholarship
Alumni Scholarship
Annapolis Graduate
Institute
Aretei Fund
Bradley C. Arms
George M. Austin, 1908
Walter S. Baird, 1930
Betty Beck Bennett, 1960
Fred and Marian Billups
Jeff Bishop Memorial
Ford K. Brown, H70
Dr. Charles C. Cook
Marvin Brent Cooper,
1969
The Joseph and Robert
Cornell Memorial
Foundation
Eugene N. (1929)and
Robert G. (1963)
Cozzolino
Wiley and Helen
Crawford
Cpl. George E.
Cunnifflll
Helen Lee DeAloia
Donna Marie Delattre
Clarence L. Dickinson,
1911
Richard A. Duhan, 1963
Caritas Society of
St. John's College
Martin Dyer Book Fund
Casasco Family Fund
Ahmet Ertegun
Education Fund
Michael Ghiantella
Chicago Regional
Faculty Scholarship
Mrs. Clyde Alvin Clapp
Ronald and Donna
Fielding
James T. Clark, 1928
James H. Frame, 1950
Class of 1897
Friends of St. John's
Class of 1898
Nancy Gannon Gearing
Edna G. and Roscoe E.
Grove, 1910
John T. and Gertrude L.
Harrison, 1907
John T. Harrison, Jr.
Charles W. Hass, 1927
Henry B. Higman, A48
Richard H. Hodgson,
1906
The Hodson Trust
Alfred and Ruth Houston,
1906
Houston Regional
John Isaacs
J. Seward Johnson, Jr.
Jesse H. and Mary Gibbs
Jones
Col. Robert E. and
Margaret Larsh Jones,
1909
Robert E. Kanode, 1939
Dr. Simon and Fanny
Kaplan, H84
Francis A. Katz, 1929
William R. Kenan, Jr.
Trust
�John Sp angler Kieffer,
H70, and
Roxana White Kieffer,
H84
Marie Klebe Memorial
Jacob Klein, H76
The Duane and
Clementine Peterson
Charitable Fund
LD and Paula Pickens
Pittsburgh Regional
Korshin Family Fund
Reader's Digest
Foundation
Tom and Gathryn Krause
J. Douglas Ramsey, 1937
Arthur E. and Hilda
Combs Landers, 1930
Lenore B. Rinder
Joseph LaPides
Michael Littleton
John D. Mack
Massachusetts Regional
Harry S. and Vivian B.
Spectre Book Fund
Raymond and Richard
Starke
Jean Roberts Staylor
Susan I. Roberts, 1966
Clarence W.Stryker
Clifton C. Roehle
Bert Thorns
Joan and Bela Ronay
Karl and Evelyn Van
Tassel
Thomas A. and Julia
McDonald
G. D. Searle/John E.
Robson
Middendorf Foundation
Rob son Family
Martin Conrad Miller
(1981) Book Fund
Rosse Family
Paul Miller
St. John's College Alumni
Association
Philip A. Myers II, 1938
J. J. Salovaara
NationsBank Foundation
(Bank of America)
Lawrence Saporta, PhD
O'Grady Memorial
C.V. Starr Foundation
Andrew and Lenore
Steiner Book Fund
Murray Joel and Julius
Rosenberg, 1938
Rev. Theo O'Brien
James S. Spirer, 1970
Cleo Ritz
James Matthews, H99
Christopher B. Nelson
Scholarship
Endowment
J. Winfree Smith, H80
Flora Duvall Sayles
Scholarship Fund 2013
Hazel Norris and J.
Graham Shannahan,
1908
Oklahoma Regional
Doug E. Sherr( 1972)
Memorial
Norman G. Owens
Rudy Simeone
Dr. Thomas Parran and
Thomas Parran, Jr.
Thomas J.,H94, and
Marion K. Slakey
Pas sin Family Fund
Andrew Smith Memorial
Frederick J. Von
Schwerdtner
Mr. and Mrs. William J.
Vanous
Pattie Bourne Turner
Walker, 1966
Irving and Loretta
Wasserman
Charles H. Watts
Richard D.Weigle,H49
John L.Williams, 1950
Thomas J. and Marvil F.
Williams
Frank K. Wilson, 1935
Winiarski Endowment
Fund
Delores and Stephen Wolf
Kathy and Jerry Wood
Foundation
�ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Alba Audiovisual
BB&T Charitable
Foundation
Davey Commercial
Grounds
Maryland Capital
Management
Decisive Data Systems
McGladrey&Pullen
Booz Allen Hamilton
ICFM
Christopher B. Nelson
Baines & Group
Invotex Group
PhotoLab Services
Bunting Family
Foundation
Isadore and Bertha
Gudelsky Family
Foundation
Estate of Vernon Smith
Caritas Society
Morris & Gwendolyn
Cafritz Foundation
CareFirst BlueGross
BlueShield
Clark-Winchcole Fund
Clifton Larson Allen
Council of Independent
Colleges
Estate of Clifford Jackson
State Farm Insurance
Companies
Estate of Gene Thornton
Ensign C. Markland
Kelley Jr. Memorial
Foundation
Peter Weiss
Kelly & Associates
Wells Fargo
Kiplinger Foundation
Winiarski Family
Foundation
Arthur E. and Hilda
Combs Landers Trust
UPS
Gifts received after April 15, 2013, are gratefully acknowled
and will be listed in the 2014 Commencement Program.
�CONGRATULATIONS, ALUMNI.
Stay in touch. Get involved. Give back.
www. stj ohnscollege. edu/alumni
410-626-2531
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
21 pages
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
St. John's College
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2013-05-12
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
CommencementExercises2013
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Description
An account of the resource
Program for the two hundred twenty-first commencement in the three hundred seventeenth year of the college.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Commencement (St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Program, 2013
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/eb014df2d729777c1d4ef2a46d61ebad.pdf
b1b1ed772c99c81cf009ca4366283c9b
PDF Text
Text
SIJOHN'S
College
A N N A P O L I S • SANTA FE
COMMENCEMENT
EXERCISES
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
SUNDAY, MAY THIRTEENTH
Two THOUSAND AND TWELVE
�PROGRAM
FOR THE Two HUNDRED TWENTIETH
COMMENCEMENT IN THE
THREE HUNDRED SIXTEENTH YEAR
OF THE COLLEGE
PRELUDE
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
ACADEMIC PROCESSION
THE NATIONAL ANTHEM
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
FRANCIS SCOTT KEY, ALUMNUS, GLASS OF 1796
WELCOME
CHRISTOPHER B. NELSON, SF7O
PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
ANNOUNCEMENT OF PRIZES AND AWARDS
PRESIDENT NELSON
PAMELA KRAUS
DEAN OF THE COLLEGE
ADDRESS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS
SALVATORE SCIBONA, SFg7
CONFERRING OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
DEAN KRAUS
CONFERRING OF GRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
JEFFREY BLACK
DIRECTOR OF THE GRADUATE INSTITUTE
ACADEMIC RECESSION
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
�BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
(with title of essay)
CHELSEA ELIZABETH ADAMS
Language as the Existence of Spirit in Hegel's Phenomenology
New Concord, Ohio
SHIKSHYA ADHIKARI
Kalikasthan, Kathmandu, Nepal
Maiestatem Imperatoriam: An Inquiry into the Concept of
'Imperial Majesty' in The Annals of Tacitus
MARIAM ADUASHVILI
You Can 'tPray a Lie: Looking at the Moral Development of
Huck in the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Tbilisi, Georgia
MANAAN VALERIE LUBIN MAYS ALEXANDER
Gamden, Maine
"For Inferior Who Is Free?" The Relationship between Love
and Equality in Paradise Lost
GENEVIEVE JOAN DUFOUR ALLEN
Albuquerque, New Mexico
"Out of Bondage ": Learning to Live Ethically in Unethical
Times
KYLE DAVID AMANN
Portrait of a Greek Warrior: Why the Tale of Achilles
Exemplifies the Trojan War
SYDNEY MARIE ANDREWS *
KAITLYN EMILY ASHER
The Prophet and the Pig: An Exploration of Characters and
Grace
WADE WINSTON ATKINS
Differences That Are None: Experiencing Self-Identity in
Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit
Jesup, Georgia
St. Louis, Missouri
Decatur, Georgia
Gary, North Carolina
JACOB BENJAMIN LIPSITZ BALDWIN
New Haven, Connecticut
In Pursuit of the Soul: On the Difficulty of Living in the Modern
World
�DOMENICK MlCHAEL BAUER
West Orange, New Jersey
The Lifecycle of Capitalism: An Inquiry into Capitalist
Economics Through the Works of Karl Marx
ERIC MICHAEL BAUER
Longing for the Octave: Words, Music, and Body in Britten's
Death in Venice
Park Ridge, Illinois
PATRICK ALFRED BEEBY II
A Cheerful Philosophy: Education by Experience in
Montaigne's Essays
Dallas, Texas
AALIN REBECCA BELLINGER
The Friendship of Quixote andSancho in Part II of Don
Quixote
Groveland, Massachusetts
NICHOLAS DANTE BENDER
Edgewater, Maryland
Aristotle's Book on Comedy: "I Wouldn 't Really Say I'm
Missing It."
JULIA ANNE BERGGREN
Washington Island, Wisconsin
Reason Which Reason Knows Not: Viewing the World through
Mathematics and What It Means to Do So
ROBERT JEREMY BINDER
Sex and the Citizen; or, Whether or Not Education Can Make
Man Happy?
ALEXANDER IVANOVICH BOBROW
Lombard, Illinois
Silver Spring, Maryland
In Search of Something Left Behind: Aristotelian Causality
Revisited
BARRETT McNEIL BROOKS
Alexandria, Virginia
"An Adventure in Mortality": An Investigation of Life as a
Progression
GANDACE RENE BRYAN
Speech Impediment: Examining the Role of Language in
Coming to God
Memphis, Tennessee
�CHARLES DARWIN GARGAL
On Sense and Sentiment: Causality, Morality, and Belief in the
Mind ofHumean Man
BRANDON DANIEL CARNEY
Nietzsche's Response to Hegel in Terms of the Artist
La Mesa, California
Agoura Hills, California
TAWNY ROSE CASE
"O, there has been much throwing about of brains ": Truth,
Fiction, and Madness in Hamlet
Seattle, Washington
EMALIE MARTHE CLAMAGE
Mansfield, Massachusetts
Morality, Autonomy, and the Surprising Character of the
Good-Willed Man in Kant's Grounding for the Metaphysics of
Morals
HERBERT TUCKER COBEY
Gloucester, Massachusetts
Prima Ratio Regum: Strength as the Sole Source of Virtue in
Machiavelli's The Prince and Discourses on Livy
STEPHANIE ELISE CONNOLLY
The True Patriot, in Word and Deed
PRENTICE BLAKE COOPER
A Man after God's Own Heart: Why Abraham Is Willing to
Sacrifice the Son Whom He Loves as a Burnt Offering to the
Lord
Manchester, Missouri
Manassas, Virginia
JORDAN LEE COUCH
Look What I Did: Don Quixote's Relationship with the World
Billings, Montana
LEAH MARIE CREAMER
Food from Excrement?: The Nature of Reason in Gulliver's
Travels
Honolulu, Hawaii
TAYLOR PATRICK CRYAN
Abandoning Earthly Armor for Eternal Amour: How Antony
and Cleopatra Come to Leave Their Kingdoms in Life for Love
in Death
Houston, Texas
�HENRY PATRICK DE SIMONE
The Countenance of the Heavens: Ptolemy's Almagest as
Theological Artwork
Blue Ridge, Virginia
JOSHUA CHRISTIAN DfiSlLVA
Kansas City, Missouri
Rousseau's Developmental Psychology: Imagination and SelfLove in Emile
MARIA PATRICIA DlGlOVANNI
All About Eve, According to Milton
Ghico, California
SARAH ANNE LiNDA DOTY
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Man's Path to Scientific Divinity in Bacon's New Organon:
Smashing Idols, Acquiring Discipline, and Reigning Over
Nature
NATALIJA DOBROVIC
Podgorica, Montenegro
Guidebook with No Rules: An Exploration of Freedom Based
on Being in Heidegger's Being and Time
ANDREW J. BONDERS
The Tyrant's Exchange: Wealth and Luxury in the Descent of
Polities
Brooklyn, New York
LOGAN QUINN DWYER
You Are John Gait: The Great and the Human in Ayn Rand's
Atlas Shrugged
Flagstaff, Arizona
MEGAN FAULKNER
"A Thing to Break Your Jaws with Laughter": The Aggressive
Comedy ofMachiavelli's Mandragola
Meridian, Idaho
LlNUS HENRY FEDER
Thought in Action
Montclair, New Jersey
LUCY MARGARET FERRIER
Santa Paula, California
Mark the Music: Reflections on Music audits Power to Move
Us toward God
�Signal Mountain, Tennessee
CATHERINE VIRGINIA FIELDS
The Face of a Hero: Alexei Fyodorovich Karamazov, Lover of
Mankind
JAMES MICHAEL FLAIM
Legitimacy of Authority in Plato's Meno
Chesapeake Beach, Maryland
JOHN STEWART FLEMING
Completing the Dialectical Circlefrom Plato to Hegel
Gaithersburg, Maryland
ANNA MARIE FLIES
Cherry Blossoms Must Fall
SAMUEL XAVIER FRANK
Matter over Mind: How the World Controls Our Will
Puyallup, Washington
Kennett Square, Pennsylvania
DONALD JOHNATHAN FRANKLIN
The Kiss and Sunken Shoulder
JACOB DANIEL GARRETT
Space, Time, and Capital
Lakeland, Florida
Houston, Texas
ANNE DEVEREAUX GEITZ
New Canaan, Connecticut
Mistaken Revenge and Miscarried Revenge: The Tragic Paths
of Othello andlago
HARLIN JAMES HOGH GLOVACKI
Greenfield, Massachusetts
The Order and Connection of Spinoza's Ethics and Spinoza's
Ethics (Are One and the Same)
ALEXANDRA KAYLEE GOETZ-WEISS
"ButAbraham Had Faith ": Paradox and the Absurd in
Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling
EMMA HANNAH GOLD
Prosecuted, Banished, & Shot: Motive, Moral, and Plot in
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
AMANDA MARIE GRIGGS
An Inquiry into the Self-Organization of Markets
State College, Pennsylvania
Maplewood, New Jersey
Odenton, Maryland
�SEE EUN HA
Seeing Love Makes You Blind, Showing Love Lets You See: A
Question about the Role of First Corinthians Chapter Thirteen
MOSHE DAVIDSON HAMO
Reflections on Qohelet- An Attempt at Herding Wind
Busan, South Korea
Denver, Colorado
KATHERINE MELISSA HAVARD
Beverly Hills, California
The Maker ofMonarchs: The Beginning of the End of Chivalry
in Henry V
HONORE JEAN-JACQUES HODGSON
Creation beyond Tragedy
St. Paul, Minnesota
BENJAMIN MlLLER HOOKER
Albuquerque, New Mexico
"He who had been lost to the world... ": Creating the Life Worth
Living in The Three Metamorphoses
LYDIA MARIE HOVEY
III Met by Moonlight: The Problem with Love in Shakespeare s
A Midsummer Night's Dream
Naperville, Illinois
SAMUEL JOSEPH HUGHES
Free Will and Society in War and Peace
Chattanooga, Tennessee
MICHAEL ROSS JANAKIS
Why Are Flowers Beautiful?
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
JANE ELIZABETH JEFFRIES
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Swept Up in the Song: Relationship With God Through Music
inf. S. Bach's St. Matthew Passion
LlYU JlANG
Into Time and Free Wilk4 New Way of Perceiving Ourselves
MARIA SANGIRARDI JUNG
Chengdu, China
New York, New York
"We only know that he burns the blood like a poultice of broken
glass ": A Hot Pursuit ofDuende in Lorca 's Blood Wedding
BRITTANY LAUREN KEEHAN
"Desire with Thee Still Longer to Converse"
Signal Mountain, Tennessee
�SAMANTHA MARIE KIFFER
RealPeople:The Nature of Man in The Federalist Papers and
Its Use in the Regulation of the Government
KATHERINE ELIZABETH KOLODZIE
And the Dead Man Came Forth:The Sickness, Death, and
Resurrection of Raskolnikov in Dostoevsky's Grime and
Punishment
Strongsville, Ohio
Walnut Greek, California
AARON DANIEL KUBARYK
The Lives ofKaramazovs
Atlanta, Georgia
GRANT AARON KUNING
Being Good and Fearing Death in War and Peace
Columbia, Maryland
MICHAEL THOMAS LACY
Woman—The Image of God: Why uGreat Men" Are the Problem
and How Women, Androgyny, and Vulgarity Are the Solution
in Shakespeare's Gymbeline
ALEX WINSTON HANSEN LANKFORD
"Let the Forest Judge ": Comedy and Nature
Oakton, Virginia
Milwaukie, Oregon
HANNA JUNE LAUER
WestBoylston, Massachusetts
Fame Fulfilled: A Study of Fame in Plutarch's Life of Gaesax
JUSTIN ANDREW LEISHMAN
Bacon's New Instrument
Annapolis, Maryland
ALEXANDER JOSEPH LEONE
Filling in Hegel: An Illustrated Guide to the First Five SelfConsciousnesses
?
Lake Elmo, Minnesota
ALTON PARKER LIND
The Stories We Tell Each Other: (Why We Must Share Our
Lives)
Issaquah, Washington
NOAH JACOB LITVIN
Creativity in Mathematics
Mamaroneck, New York
�YUNZHANG Lu *
Shanghai, China
SARAH ELIZABETH MACGREGOR
Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada
Fact and Fiction: Analogy in Maxwell's Electromagnetism
GALEN VITTORIO MANCINO
Silver Spring, Maryland
•How Does Huck Learn How to Live?An Essay on Mark
Twain's the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
BARBARA DUNHAM McClAY
Signal Mountain, Tennessee
Little Odious Vermin: Satirizing the Satirist in Gulliver's
Travels
MATTHEW JAMES McMuLLEN
Bowie, Maryland
The Miseducation of Lemuel Gulliver: Learning How Not to
Get along in Gulliver's Travels
SOPHIE LYNN MICHELEWICZ
Nelson, New Hampshire
Motion and Being in Aristotle's Physics
THOMAS LAWRENCE MILLS, JR.
Authority in The Master and Margarita
Douglas, Alaska
ANDREW PAUL MlZE
Versailles, Kentucky
Craftsmanship in The Old Man and the Sea.- An Historical and
Literary Understanding
MARGARET LLOYD MOHR
Cato the Younger: Freedomfrom Virtue
KALI LORRAINE MUNRO
Columbus, Ohio
Crawfordsville, Indiana
Primitivism and Violence: An Analysis of Anger in TwentiethCentury Man
ELIZABETH GRACE NATTERMAN
I Am Not What I Am: logo's Motives and Villainy in
Shakespeare's Othello
Baltimore, Maryland
ASHLEY MICHELLE NEFF
Doylestown, Pennsylvania
On Virgin Ground: A Consideration of Modern Physics Using
Bacon's Novum Organum
�TESSA COLLEEN NELSON
A Mirror up to Nature: On the Function of the Mimetic Art
Centennial, Colorado
LAN Tin HUONG NGUYEN
The Yearning of a Saint in Middlemarch
Hanoi, Viet Nam
KELSEY SUZANNE O'BRIEN
Morality in The Brothers Karamazov: An Analysis of Ivan and
Integrity
CAROL RENEE PARTONEN
Admit Impediments; Love Is Not Love: Ideal and Imbalanced
Love in Shakespeare's Sonnets
HANNAH ESTHER PASTERNAK
ulam there as lam there ": An Investigation into Life as
Understood in Martin Buber's I and Thou
SARAH O 'MALLEY PEARLMAN
Laughing at Poor Clueless Suckers: The Casefor the Comic in
Moliere's The Misanthrope
ANTHONY AUGUSTINO PECORARO
The Living Poetry o/Turgatorio as a Map to Artistic Eden
Davie, Florida
Waldorf, Maryland
Livingston, New Jersey
Teaneck, New Jersey
Ellicott City, Maryland
WILLIAM AUSTIN PECORARO
Ellicott City, Maryland
A Conflict of Interests: On the Religious and Political Powers of
the Papal States audits Effects
KAMILLA TAMAR POLLOCK
"I Feared for My Sanity": Unraveling the Labyrinth of
Memory, Poetry, and Personal Identity in the Short Fictions of
Jorge Luis Borges
RUSSEL ALLEN PROVOST
Incommensurable Man
CHRISTINA ELIZABETH RAINES
"What you want, above all things, on a raft, isfor everybody
to be satisfied, and feel right and kind towards others "
Honolulu, Hawaii
Hyattsville, Maryland
Clovis, California
�JAY WESLEY ROHRER
A Strange Justice: Jesus and Jubilee Ethics
JONATHAN JOSEPH ROSSE
The Use and Abuse of Language for Life
EMILY CAROLYN SEE ELL
The Conflict Between the Public Life and the Private Life in
Homer's The Odyssey
Annapolis, Maryland
Concord, Massachusetts
Wayland, Maine
ERIN MICHELLE SHADOWENS
Hooking Leviathan: Job's Challenge to Justice in the City
Grand Rapids, Michigan
GILBERT IRVING SHANK
All the World's a Stage: The Inception of Don Quixote
Bloomington, Minnesota
MARIN MlCHAEL SKOKANDIC
Better Payment for the Slave: Who Profits in Political
Economy?
Santa Monica, California
ELIZABETH MARIE SPAGNOLETTI
"Look only at what belongs to you." On the Boundaries
between Human Beings in The Histories of Herodotus
Voorhees, New Jersey
PHILLIP LEE STALEY
North Charleston, South Carolina
Better Than Fiction: On the Analogies Underlying Maxwell's
Electromagnetic Field Equations
ALLANAH CECILIA STEEN
Our Great Need
Paris, France
XlAOKANG TANG
The Ethical Defense in the Art of Rhetoric
Jinan, China
JONATHAN JAE TINCHER
Laughter and Self-Knowledge: An Inquiry into the Relation
between the Comic and Philosophy
RHIANNA KRISTINE TONER
A Travel Guide: The Education of Lemuel Gulliver
Dunbar, West Virginia
Baltimore, Maryland
�MARY CATHERINE TOPIC
A Searchfor Justice in the World o/"King Lear
Falls Church, Virginia
NATHANIEL DAVID TORREY
Southern Pines, North Carolina
For He So Loved the World: Love, Faith, and Folly in Paul's
Letters and the Gospels
JOSEPH KEENAN TROTTER
Living it Through: Experience in The Recognitions
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
SHANNON GERVOIS VAUGHN
The Tolstoyan Spirit
Oxford, Maryland
LUKE ARAKEL WAKEEN
An Amoeba, a Man, and an Anthill
Wilton, Connecticut
Li AM EDWARD KRETZ WALLACE
Teaching and Learning Virtue
Stony Brook, New York
JESSE ADAM WANG
"All right, then, I'll go to heir
Keysville, Virginia
MICHELLE ELIZABETH WEINMANN
To Reverie is to Lose Oneself in a Flower and Rediscover the
Youth of the Human Race
Northport, New York
PETER JULIAN WHITE
An Investigation of Knowledge in Plato's Theaetetus
Gary, North Carolina
JOSEPH ANDREW WOOD
Carnality and Communion: The Nature of Love in the Pauline
Letters
RICHARD MATTHEW YOUNG
Sunrise on the Horizon of the Human
"Upon completion of requiremen
Moraga, California
Wellesley, Massachusetts
�MASTER OF ARTS IN LIBERAL ARTS DEGREE
GRADUATE INSTITUTE IN LIBERAL EDUCATION
HOWARD BLAIR ANDREWS
DANIEL TIMOTHY BABCOCK
JUSTIN ALAN BROWN
BRANDON SCOTT GAIN
RYAN THOMAS CAMPBELL
Severn, Maryland
Rochester Hills, Michigan
Huntsville, Alabama
Fresno, California
Olathe, Kansas
BENJAMIN SCOTT CHAMBERS
Uniontown, Pennsylvania
LUKE PHILLIPS DOUGHERTY
Baltimore, Maryland
GEORGE SELAS DOUGLAS, II
Alexandria, Virginia
KRISTA MARIE EHASZ
DEVIN CAROLYN FROST
Shady Side, Maryland
Edmond, Oklahoma
MATTHEW JOSEPH FULONE
Millis, Massachusetts
KRISTEN ERICA GODWIN
Annapolis, Maryland
CHRISTINE MARIE IVORY
Poolesville, Maryland
CHASE LANE KITCHEN
ALEX TY KUN
WESLEY JOHN SCHANTZ
Fort Wayne, Indiana
Big Bear Lake, California
Gaithersburg, Maryland
ALEXANDER ELIOT SCHMID
Atlanta, Georgia
LAUREN ELIZABETH SMITH
1\ilsa, Oklahoma
VICTORIA ANN STATTEL
SCOTT PEARSON STEWART
BENNETT TANSEY
VICTORIA ALEXANDRA WILEY
MECAEL LEE HUA YUAN
Franklin Square, New York
Winston-Salem, North Carolina
Falmouth, Massachusetts
Phoenix, Maryland
Wez, Belgium
�PRIZES AND AWARDS
COMMENCEMENT 2,012.
To the member of the Senior Glass who has written the best senior essay.
Offered in memory of Susan Irene Roberts, of the Glass of 1966
Longing for the Octave: Words, Music, and Body in Britten's
Death in Venice
ERIC MICHAEL BAUER
Little Odious Vermin: Satirizing the Satirist in Gulliver's Travels
BARBARA DUNHAM McCiAY
HONORABLE MENTION
Language as the Existence of Spirit in Hegel's Phenomenology
CHELSEA ELIZABETH ADAMS
To the member of the Junior Glass who has written the best annual essay.
Offered by Mrs. Leslie Clark Stevens in memory of her
daughter-in-law, Kathryn Mylorie Stevens
No prize awarded
To the member of the Sophomore Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered under the will of the late Judge Walter I. Dawkins,
of the Class of 1880
The Sweetness of Chaos
JOSEPH JAMES ALIGEA
"They Shall Be One Flesh ": Human and Godly Love in Genesis
SARAH JUDITH MARX
�HONORABLE MENTION
Playing with Leviathan: On Myth in the Book of Job
NATHANIEL LEONARD GOLDMAN
To the member of the Freshman Glass who has written the best annual essay.
Offered in memory of Jacob Klein, TYitor Emeritus, and his wife,
Else, by Dr. and Mrs. Stuart Walker
The Body and the Soul: How "Popular Music "Is in the
Philosophy Business
LESLIE MAE HOWARD
To the Graduate Institute student who has written a
distinguished preceptorial essay in the year 2012.
Offered by the Alumni Association
Green-blue Chinamen: An Exploration of "Lapis Lazuli"
by W.B. Yeats
ERIN EVELINE DESMOND
The Confessions byJ.J. Rousseau
DANIEL STUART RANDLETT
To a member of the Senior Glass, for excellence in speaking.
Offered in memory of Senator Millard E. Tydings of Maryland
CHELSEA ELIZABETH ADAMS
To the student who submits the best English version of a Greek text.
Offered in memory of John S. Kieffer, President Emeritus
Plato's Laws
MIGAELA KAYE MAGDOUGALL
�To the student who submits the best English version of a French poem.
Offered by the Board of Visitors and Governors
The Lyre of Orpheus by Louise-Victorine Ackermann
JOHN STEWART FLEMING
DANIELA LOBO DIAS
To the student who submits a fine original English poem.
Offered by Dr. George Austin in memory of his brother, Henry
Our Family Tree like Wallpaper Shows Us
SOPHIE LYNN MIGHELEWIGZ
HONORABLE MENTION
When I think about the universe . . .
EVGENIA ARKADYEVNA OLIMPIEVA
To the student who submits a fine original musical composition.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap, President of the
Garitas Society 1987-1991
Scherzofor String Quartet
Louis ALEXANDER PISHA
HONORABLE MENTION
Allegro and Minuet for String Quartet
CHELSEA ELIZABETH ADAMS
Sinfonetta in D Major
BRENNAN REED HARRIS
�To the student who submits a fine essay on a piece of music.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap, President of the
Garitas Society 1987-1991
Swept Up in Song: Relationship With God Through Music in
J. S. .Bach's St. Matthew Passion
JANE ELIZABETH JEFFRIES
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of a geometrical problem.
Offered by the Glass of 1986 in honor of Bryce Jacobsen, of the
Class of 1942, Tutor and Director of Athletics Emeritus
BlGYAN BlLASH BHANDARI
HONORABLE MENTION
HAU HOANG
JlNYAO ZOU
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of an analytical problem.
Offered in memory of James R. McClintock, of the Class of 1965
No prize awarded
HONORABLE MENTION
LINUS HENRY FEDER
To the student who carries out a fine laboratory project.
SlDHARTH SUBODH SHAH
HONORABLE MENTION
ANDREW J. DONDERS
�To the senior man and woman who, through participation, leadership, and
sportsmanship, have contributed most to the SJG athletic program, a special blazer.
LEAH MARIE CREAMER
JOHN STEWART FLEMING
To the member of the Senior Glass who has contributed outstanding
service to the Greater Annapolis Community.
Offered by the Garitas Society of St. John's College
MICHAEL Ross JANAKIS
To the member of the Senior Class who has demonstrated the greatest care
for and service to youth who reside in the City of Annapolis.
Offered by the friends and family of Marvin B. Cooper,
of the Class of 1969
SHIKSHYA ADHIKARI
To the member of the Senior Class who submits the best work of visual art to the
Community Art Exhibition, the Charles Vernon Moran Prize
Family Portrait, watercolor
SARAH O'MALLEY PEARLMAN
X
To the Senior who has demonstrated excellence
in the arts, literature, or sciences, the Walter S. Baird prize.
MICHELLE ELIZABETH WEINMANN
�ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Leslie Milton Abrams,
1954
Dr. Granville Q. Adams,
Mildred Alexander
Philip L.Alger, 1912
Alter Graduate Institute
Scholarship
Alumni Scholarship
Annapolis Graduate
Institute
Aretei Fund
Bradley G. Arms
George M. Austin, 1908
Walter S. Baird, 1930
Betty Beck Bennett, 1960
Bernard Clorety, 1950
Dr. Charles C. Cook
George A. and Eveline T.
Greenleaf
Marvin Brent Cooper,
1969
Edna G. and Roscoe E.
Grove, 1910
The Joseph and Robert
Cornell
Memorial Foundation
John T. and Gertrude L.
Harrison, 1907
Eugene N.( 1929)and
RobertG. (1963)
Cozzolino
John T. Harrison, Jr.
Charles WHass, 1927
Henry B. Higman, A48
Wiley and Helen
Crawford
Richard II. Hodgson,
1906
Cpl. George E.
Cunnifflll
The Hodson Trust
Helen Lee De Aloia
Alfred and Ruth Houston,
1906
Donna Marie Delattre
Houston Regional
Fred and Marian Billups
Clarence L. Dickinson,
1911
John Isaacs
Jeff Bishop Memorial
Richard A. Duhan, 1963
J. Seward Johnson, Jr.
Ford K. Brown, H70
Martin Dyer Book Fund
Caritas Society of
St. John's College
Ahmet Ertegun
Education Fund
Jesse H. and Mary Gibbs
Jones
Casasco Family Fund
Faculty Scholarship
Chicago Regional
Mrs. Clyde Alvin Clapp
Ronald and Donna
Fielding
James T.Clark, 1928
James H. Frame, 1950
Class of 1897
Friends of St. John's
Dr. Simon and Fanny
Kaplan, H84
Class of 1898
Nancy Gannon Gearing
Francis A. Katz, 1929
Richard F. Cleveland,
H54
Harry Golding, Graduate
Institute
William R.Kenan, Jr.
Trust
Col. Robert E. and
Margaret Larsh Jones,
1909
RobertE. Kanode, 1939
�John Spangler Kieffer,
H70, and
Roxana White Kieffer,
H84
Marie Klebe Memorial
Jacob Klein, H76
The Duane and
Clementine Peterson
Charitable Fund
LD and Paida Pickens
Pittsburgh Regional
Korshin Family Fund
Reader's Digest
Foundation
Tom and Gathryn Krause
J. Douglas Ramsey, 1937
Arthur E. and Hilda
Combs Landers, 1930
LenoreB. Hinder
Joseph LaPides
Michael Littleton
Memorial
John D. Mack
Massachusetts Regional
James Matthews, H99
Middendorf Foundation
Martin Conrad Miller
(1981) Book Fund
Paul Miller
Philip A. Myers II, 1938
NationsBank Foundation
(Bank of America)
Christopher B. Nelson
Scholarship
Endowment
Rev. Theo O'Brien
Cleo Ritz
Susan I. Roberts, 1966
Clifton C. Roehle
Joan and Bela Ronay
Murray Joel and Julius
Rosenberg, 1938
G.D. Searle/JohnE.
Robson
Robson Family
Rosse Family
St. John's College Alumni
Association
J. J. Salovaara
Flora Duvall Sayles
Hazel Norris and J.
Graham Shannahan,
1908
O'Grady Memorial
Doug E.Sherrf 1972)
Memorial
Oklahoma Regional
Rudy Simeone
Norman G. Owens
Thomas J.,H94, and
Marion K. Slakey
Dr. Thomas Parran and
Thomas Parran, Jr.
Andrew Smith Memorial
Passin Family Fund
J. Winfree Smith, H80
James S. Spirer, 1970
C.V. Starr Foundation
Harry S. and Vivian B.
Spectre Book Fund
Jean Roberts Staylor
Andrew and Lenore
Steiner Book Fund
Clarence W. Stryker
Bert Thorns
Karl and Evelyn Van
Tassel
Frederick J. Von
Schwerdtner
Mr. and Mrs. William J.
Vanous
Pattie Bourne Turner
Walker, 1966
Irving and Loretta
Wasserman Memorial
Scholarship
Endowment
Charles H. Watts
Endowment Fund
Richard D. Weigle, H49
John L. Williams, 1950
Thomas J. and Marvil F.
Williams
Frank K. Wilson, 1935
Winiarski Endowment
Fund
Delores and Stephen Wolf
Kathy and Jerry Wood
Foundation
�ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
THE ASSOCIATED:
Jewish Community
Federation of Baltimore
Richard and Rosalee C.
Davison Foundation,
Inc.
AT&T
Dietz & Watson, Inc.
Dr. Frank C. Marino
Foundation Inc.
BB&T
Dixon Valve & Coupling
Company
Maryland Capital
Management, LLG
Dynamics Research
Corporation
Douglas K. Mayer
Estate of James
Bienemann
Estate of Margaret Blaker
Board of the Friends of
St. John's College
Booz Allen Hamilton
Bunting Family
Foundation
The Eliasberg Family
Foundation, Inc.
Gallagher Evelius &
Jones LLP
Harris CapRock
Communications
CACI International, Inc.
The Campbell
Foundation, Inc.
CareFirst BlueCross
BlueShield
Caritas Society of
St. John's College
Rana Choi
Peter Vance Clark Trust
Computer Sciences
Corporation
Lauren Connolly
Council of Independent
Colleges
Henderson-Webb, Inc.
The Hodson Trust
Hurley W. Howell
Charitable Foundation
The Huether-McClelland
Foundation, Inc.
Ensign C. Markland
Kelly, Jr. Memorial
Foundation
Arthur E. and Hilda
Combs Landers
Charitable Trust
Lockheed Martin
Corporation
National Philanthropic
Trust
Christopher B. Nelson
The RCM&D Foundation,
Inc.
SAIC
Serco Inc.
John A. Simmons
Marsha Sirkin
William D. Shafer
Tech USA
Mynydd Teg Foundation
UPS
Verizon
TheWliiting-Turner
Contracting Company
Barbara Zelley
John J. Leidy Foundation
Gifts received after April 15, 2012, are gratefully acknowledged
and will be listed in the 2013 Commencement Program.
�CONGRATULATIONS, ALUMNI.
Stay in touch. Get involved. Give back.
www. stj ohnscollege. edu/alumni
410-626-2531
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
23 pages
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
St. John's College
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2012-05-13
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
CommencementExercises2012
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Description
An account of the resource
Program for the two hundred twentieth commencement in the three hundred sixteenth year of the college.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Commencement (St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Program, 2012
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/dfa2121678397dcee391eb896506ba35.pdf
66b22505058dcb1ecf14b4e441a0cb8a
PDF Text
Text
SIJOHN'S
College
COMMENCEMENT
EXERCISES
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
SUNDAY, MAY FIFTEENTH
Two THOUSAND AND ELEVEN
�PROGRAM
FOR THE Two HUNDRED NINETEENTH
COMMENCEMENT IN THE
THREE HUNDRED FIFTEENTH YEAR
OF THE COLLEGE
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
PRELUDE
ACADEMIC PROCESSION
THE NATIONAL ANTHEM
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
FRANCIS SCOTT KEY, ALUMNUS, GLASS OF 1796
WELCOME
CHRISTOPHER B. NELSON
PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
PRESIDENT NELSON
ANNOUNCEMENT OF PRIZES AND AWARDS
PAMELA KRAUS
DEAN OF THE COLLEGE
ADDRESS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS
LEO PICKENS
DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS
CONFERRING OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
DEAN KRAUS
CONFERRING OF GRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
MARILYN D. HIGUERA
DIRECTOR OF THE GRADUATE INSTITUTE
ACADEMIC RECESSION
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
�BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
(with title of essay)
NINO ADUASHVILI
Fears, Hopes and More Fears: Examining American
Democracy with Tocqueville
Tbilisi, Republic of Georgia
BRIAN PAUL ANDERSON
The Return to God in Augustine's Confessions
Portland, Oregon
DOUGLAS JAKOB ANDERSON
My Sin, My Soul: Morality and the Nature of Fiction in
Nabokov's Lolita
St. Paul, Minnesota
GHARMAINE PRISCILLA BENHAM
To Forgive is Human: The Struggle Between God and Man in
Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit
Oakland, California
RUTH ANNE BROWN
South Hadley, Massachusetts
"Now have I understood all the happiness of life ": Freedom,
Necessity and Contentment in War and Peace
NICHOLAS KEEFE GALLAHAN
Can We Actually Learn Anything About Ourselves by
Comparing Ourselves to Typhon?
Natick, Massachusetts
NATASHA SUN CARLYON
Deception Leads to Discovery
Seoul, South Korea
MARINA CHERNIKOVA
The Man Who Prized History
Kharkov, Ukraine
JUNIA ROSABEL GHO
War and Peace: Understanding Life Through the Horrors of
Death and One's Consciousness of the Infinite
Laurel, Maryland
JEFFREY PATRICK GOLGAN
The Students and the Song of Nietzsche; Or, the Instinct for
Freedom and the Human Necessity of Perpetual Enslavement
Beaumont, Texas
�TIMOTHY PHILLIP GOOVER
Upper Montclair, New Jersey
The King of Infinite Space: The Conflict Between Thought and
Substance, Contemplation and Action in Shakespeare's Hamlet
KAREN KATHLEEN GORDERO
God, Games, and Gargantua; Or, How to Princify the
Princeliest Prince the World Ever Princed
Glenside, Pennsylvania
ERIN ELIZABETH GURZIO
The Marxism Colleges Should Be Teaching: Humor and SelfAwareness, A Defense of Comedy
ELIZABETH ALEXANDRA DANIELS
Forgiving Eve: Companionship in Paradise Lost
Glen Ellyn, Illinois
Pacific Palisades, California
DANIEL PAUL DAUSMAN
Brookeville, Maryland
An Investigation into the Supposed Conflict Between NonEuclidean Geometry and the Doctrine of the Transcendental
Ideality of Space
ANNE GLARE DEGER
Santa Fe, New Mexico
"A duty stern and delicate ": Education's Role in Culture and
Society
THOMAS FRANCIS DONAHUE
Havertown, Pennsylvania
A Joint-Stock World: Philosophical Foundations of Democracy
in Moby Dick
LIAM DANIEL DOUGHERTY
The Living God
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
JOHN DAVID MATHER DUSENBURY
Grand Junction, Colorado
Can Rocks have Adequate Ideas? On Mind and Body in
Spinoza's Ethics
ALEXANDRA ELISE FERNANDEZ-BROWN
Harrisonburg, Virginia
"Mainly I wanted to put in the time": Laziness, Play, and
Adventure in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
�KEVIN MICHAEL FINSON
Limitation of the People's Power: Rule by the Few and the
Many in the Constitution and Federalist Papers
Glen Arm, Maryland
COLIN MICHAEL FORHAN
Hippolyte 's Struggle with Monstrosity in Phedre
Takoma Park, Maryland
WILLIAM DANIEL FRASER
Teleology on the Level of Vertical Tonal Gravity
Fleetwood, Pennsylvania
CHRISTINE CAROLYN FULLER
Harmonizing Existence with Essence: An Examination of
Marx's Portrayal of Man in Society
Safety Harbor, Florida
ELIZABETH RUTH FULMER
"Moi,je ne suispas Marxiste!": Understanding the Riddle of
History as Presented by Karl Marx
Houston, Texas
VICTORIA FOSTER GIBSON
Woodstock, Vermont
"All Is Connected, All Flows Like an Ocean ": Discovering the
Beauty of Love in Fyodor Dostoevsky's The Brothers
Karamazov
KELSEY LYNN GILMORE
Garden Grove, California
Faciendi Liberos exLiberis Ratibus etFluminibus: Making Free
Adults Out of Children by Means of Rafts and Rivers -An
Essay on The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
ANNA SEELE GOOLD
Open Thou My Lips: A Realization of Self in the Psalms
Beachwood, New Jersey
MATTHEW DWIGHT GORE
Lindenhurst, Illinois
This Land is My Land, That Land is Your Land: An Essay
Examining the Role of Private Property and the Foundation of
Government
HARRY THOMPSON GREEN
Slippery Rock, Pennsylvania
Looking to the End - Why is Socrates Happy in the Face of
Death?
�MARTIN LUKE GREENWALD
Bethesda, Maryland
What is the Self?: An Account of'Consciousness, Ego, and the
Soul in Beyond Good and Evil
VIRGINIA ELIZABETH HARNESS
A Divided Land: Conflict, Destruction and Endurance in
The Sound and the Fury
Lynchburg, Virginia
ZACHARY VICTOR HARRINGTON
Certainty, Genealogy, Morality: Nietzsche's Genealogy of
Morals and The Gay Science
Mukilteo, Washington
JULIE ANN HENSON
One True City: Learning Charity in the Terrace of Envy
DIMITAR Ivov INDZHOV
Using Arts and Sciences Without the Harm
Gainesville, Florida
Haskovo, Bulgaria
WILLIAM CRAIG KUNKEL
Glenn Dale, Maryland
So Prone in Every Way to Transmutation: A Study of Dante's
Journey Through the Afterlife
KATHRYN MAXWELL LEWIS
In Black Ink: Gender and Creation in Shakespeare's Sonnets
Wyoming, Ohio
JENNIFER MARGARET LIND
Seattle, Washington
Not Without Reason: An Examination of the Role of Reason for
Faith in the Life and Book of Job
KELLEY ELIZABETH LITTLEFIELD
South Hamilton, Massachusetts
Teaching Faith: Moses'Instruction of the Israelites
TESSA ANA LTVADAS
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
On the Convergence of Comedy and Tragedy in The Bacchae
JACK MCGREGOR LYNN
Gorrales, New Mexico
Transcending Human Nature: Spirituality, Philosophy, Art
and Schopenhauer
�KAURA ELIZABETH MACKEY
Kingston, Washington
For the Good of Others: The Importance of Morality for the
Soul and Society in Tolstoy's War and Peace
DAVID JOHN MAKER
Falls Church, Virginia
The Pre-Paradigm State and the End of Crisis: Lessons from
the Quantum Revolution
ANNE MARA MALONE
On Feelings in A Sentimental Journey
RICHARD BRADLEY MAXHAM
The World of Chivalry
BRENDAN J. McGiVNEY
In Defense of Man: An Exploration of Lying, Reason and
Desires in Gulliver's Travels
SAMUEL ANDREW MERTEN
Being and Thought
Ridgeley, West Virginia
Lynchburg, Virginia
Wilmington, Delaware
Dublin, Ohio
SARAH ELIZABETH MILLER
Bethesda, Maryland
No Place Fd Rather Be: The Importance and Power of Being on
the Mississippi River in Mark Twain's The Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn
ANNA MIRZAYAN
Storytelling in Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling
San Ramon, California
GILLIAN CAMPBELL MOLONEY
Rockville, Maryland
On Reason, Morality, and Faith in Faulkner's The Sound and
the Fury
STEPHEN RAFAEL MONTEIRO, JR.
A Thoughtful View of Life
SHANNON MULLOY
Will Beauty Save the World? Faith and Suffering in
Dostoevsky's Idiot
Woodstock, Connecticut
Gaithersburg, Maryland
�BLAKE STUART MYERS
Santa Fe, New Mexico
Engaging the Faculty of the Heart in A Sentimental Journey by
Laurence Sterne
THOMAS PETER MYERS
Ellicott City, Maryland
In the Quiet County, in Simplicity: Searching/or an Idyllic
Eudaemonia
SANDRA KATHRYN TuoNcVi NGUYEN
Calvin andHobbes: On State Religion
LAURA LEE NIEUSMA
Faith Motivating Works in the New Testament
MICHAEL THOMAS O 'BRIEN
The Downfall of the Understanding in Hegel's Dialectic
ANDREW DAVID OLSEN
Man's Unconscious
Fallbrook, California
Okemos, Michigan
Westbury, New York
Mineola, Texas
ACACIA MAY PAPPAS
San Luis Obispo, California
Faith: The Courage of Humility in the Face of Paradox
MAXWELL WISTER PARROTT
South Glastonbury, Connecticut
If These Words Could Talk: The Provocation of Conscious
Ignorance in Plato's Protagoras
CLAYTON READ PASLEY
San Antonio, Texas
Of Fancies and Racehorses, Prisms and Parabolas: Concerning
the Possibility of Universal Scientific Knowledge
JOSHUA WAYNE PAUL
The Tongues of Men and Angels: The Transformation of
Language in Paradise Lost
Fort Meade, Maryland
ANDREW MICHAEL PEAK
Louisville, Kentucky
A Dream of Comic Fancy: The Transformation of Artifice into
Nature in Bergson 's Laughter
�BROOKS S. PENDERGAST
Greenwich, Connecticut
The Manifestation of the Soul in Appearance, Speech, and
Action
ANNA CATHERINE PERRY
Humor & Sympathy in Societal Life
Napa, California
KRISTIN LILY PETERSON
The Incomprehensible Boiler: Completing a Reality in Heart of
Darkness
Owego, New York
KATHERINE PHILLIPS
Castro Valley, California
The Interconnection and Fundamentality of Mathematical
Systems: An Inquiry into the Relations of Arithmetic,
Geometry, and Mechanics
JOSEPH MATTHEW POPE
The Other Tree
PAUL ANTHONY POVLOCK, JR.
Buck the Zeitgeist
Buffalo, New York
Saunderstown, Rhode Island
JASON ANTHONY STOLBA RITZKE
The Revolutionary Wife
Marion, Iowa
ROGER JOHN ROBERTSON, JR.
Chambersburg, Pennsylvania
More Texvrj, Less Techno: Making Things in the Modern Age
FREDERICK GORE ROCKWELL
Dese Kings O' Ourn Is Reglar Rapscallions: Travel and
Transformation in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
JAMES ABRAHAM RUSSELL
Aeneas: A Man Distinguished in Piety?
RON SADAN
Forces in the World and the Soul in War and Peace
KAITLYN RITA SCHULER
The Beautiful Soul: A Chapter in the Life of God
Richmond, Virginia
Annapolis, Maryland
Carlisle, Massachusetts
Lake Worth, Florida
�JACOB SLOAN SIMON
Mercersburg, Pennsylvania
Never Trust a Greek Bearing Gifts: The Difference Between a
False Prophet and a True One in Dante's Divine Comedy
ANNA CATHERINE SITZMANN
Unveiling Identity: On the Importance of the Experiential
Process and the Inadequacy of Historical Truth
Zionsville, Indiana
STEPHANY Rossi SNYDER
Shepherdstown, West Virginia
Bringing Napoleon to His Knees: Raskolnikov 's
Transformative Journey in Crime and Punishment
MEAGAN ROSE SPICER
North Conway, New Hampshire
A Man, a Woman, and Freedom: On Freedom and Love in
William Faulkner's If I Forget Thee, Jerusalem
HANNAH ELIZABETH STAHL
Prevailing Uncertainty: Life of the Man Without Qualities
Baltimore, Maryland
MICHAEL VINCENT TAVANI
Phoenixville, Pennsylvania
No One Pours New Wine: The Difficulty of Faith; An
Examination of Kierkegaard's Philosophical Fragments
TIEMAR M. TECLEMARIAM
uThe robe does not make the man ": Interpretation in
Gargantua
CAMERON STUART THOMPSON
In Pursuit of Something More: Human Self-Definition
Silver Spring, Maryland
Lorton, Virginia
KELLY LAUREN TROP
Macungie, Pennsylvania
What's with Matter? Or How I Stopped Worrying and Loved
theBohm
RACHEL MARY ULRICH
Socrates and His Images: A Display of the Philosopher's
Relation to the City
JOHN CECIL BLUE VINING
Perspective and Accuracy in Ptolemy's Almagest
Carnation, Washington
Studio City, California
�KATE WYLIE WALDEN
The Transformation of Jacob and the Genesis of Israel: The
Fulfillment of God's Will in the Realm of Man
Rye, New York
BABAK AKBARI ZARIN
Fredericksburg, Virginia
A Loving Gaze: Socrates, Alcibiades, and What it Takes to
Know Yourself
�MASTER OF ARTS IN LIBERAL AUTS DEGREE
GRADUATE INSTITUTE IN LIBERAL EDUCATION
JOSHUA IAN AcKERMAN
SERENA ALAMI
EVAN CHESTER BEARD
GHARLOTTA ELIZABETH BEAVERS
MICHAEL CHRISTOPHER BRYAN
ABIGAIL ELIZABETH BUTCHER
BRUNO S. CORTES
SARAH CHRISTINE CULVER
JEROME FRANK DAUSMAN
ALEXANDER MAURICE FENCZIK
JOAN CATHY FOGEL
ADAM JOSEPH FRANZ
ROBERT HARRIS COMBINER
ANNA LEIGH GREEN
JONATHAN CHRISTOPHER HAWK
BRIAN DANIEL HowrON
DAVID WAYNE HYSONG, JR.
DAVID LEE JONES
GRANT JACOB KETTERING
Baltimore, Maryland
Brandon, Florida
Youngstown, Ohio
Los Angeles, California
Greencastle, Pennsylvania
Augusta, Georgia
Waterbury, Connecticut
Eugene, Oregon
Brookeville, Maryland
Bourbonnais, Illinois
Chevy Chase, Maryland
Mill Hall, Pennsylvania
Seattle, Washington
Galveston, Texas
Baltimore, Maryland
Lafayette, Louisiana
Annapolis, Maryland
Endwell, New York
Cherry Hills Village, Colorado
JONATHAN DAVID RNAUP
SARAH JANE LINHARDT
SAMUEL MATLACK
BRIAN ERIC MERRIWEATHER
Long Beach, California
Annapolis, Maryland
Schwoich, Austria
Huntsville, Alabama
PAUL MUSONDA MwANSA
LEE THOMAS NuTINI
Laurel, Maryland
Cookeville, Tennessee
MELISSA CHRISTINE BOUDRIE PETERSON
Easton, Maryland
ELIZABETH HELEN PlNCUS
Minneapolis, Minnesota
JANE FRANCES POLCEN
MARK WILLIAM PURCELL
RANDAL CALVIN PYERS
WILLIAM BRIAN RAMSAY
BRETT KYLE SHOEMAKER
Bowie, Maryland
Normal, Illinois
Martinez, Georgia
Waldorf, Maryland
Dillsburg, Pennsylvania
TARA LYNN SMITH
CHARLES CLAYTON STEWART
ROBERT COLLIN WELSH
LAURA ELENA WILLWERTH
Laurel, Delaware
Point Marion, Pennsylvania
Baltimore, Maryland
Manchester, Massachusetts
�PRIZES AND AWARDS
COMMENCEMENT 2011
To the member of the Senior Class who has written the best senior essay.
Offered in memory of Susan Irene Roberts, of the class of 1966
I
'
An Investigation into the Supposed Conflict Between
Non-Euclidean Geometry and the Doctrine
of the Transcendental Ideality of Space
DANIEL PAUL DAUSMAN
To the member of the Junior Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered by Mrs. Leslie Clark Stevens in memory of her
daughter-in-law, Kathryn Mylorie Stevens
Art, Science, and Compassion in George Eliot's Middlemarch
EMMA HANNAH GOLD
Excavating Babel; Or, How Hobbes Establishes a New Science of
Man and Changes Everything
ERIN MICHELLE SHADOWENS
To the member of the Sophomore Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered under the will of the late Judge Walter I. Dawkins,
of the Class of 1880
An Investigation of Order and Place in Shakespeare's King Lear
DRESDEN DENEYS CRAIG
HONORABLE MENTION
Contemplation: A Fruitful Endeavor
MAURA JOAN MCCLUSKEY
�To the member of the Freshman Glass who has written the best annual essay.
Offered in memory of Jacob Klein, TVitor Emeritus, and his wife,
Else, by Dr. and Mrs. Stuart Walker
Finding Fulfillment in the Shadow-land: The Role of Odysseus'
Descent to Hades in The Odyssey
IAN PATRICK TUTTLE
HONORABLE MENTION
Plato Says Our Souls Are Swollen: An Exploration of the City of
Pigs in Comparison with Plato's Republic
SEAN CHRISTIAN SABELLA
To the Graduate Institute student who has written a
distinguished preceptorial essay in the year 2011.
Offered by the Alumni Association
Moby Dick as a Work of Democracy
ANDREW BENES VLCEK
HONORABLE MENTION
"It's Not You; It's the Beautiful": An Inquiry into the Plight of the
Abandoned Beloved
NICOLE ELAINE ELLIS
To a member of the Senior Glass, for excellence in speaking.
Offered in memory of Senator Millard E. Tidings of Maryland
HANNAH ELIZABETH STAHL
�To the student who submits the best English version of a Greek text.
Offered in memory of John S. Kieffer, President Emeritus
The Taking of Coriolifrom Plutarch's Life of Goriolanus
ADAM MATTHEW MARASCHKY
To the student who submits the best English version of a French poem.
Offered by the Board of Visitors and Governors
Brise etTempete by Marie Pape-Carpantier
DANIELA LOBO DIAS
To the student who submits a fine original English poem.
Offered by Dr. George Austin in memory of his brother, Henry
The Smell of Skin and Dried Leaves
MICHAEL VINCENT TAVANI
To the student who submits a fine original musical composition.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap, President of the
Garitas Society 1987-1991
Fantasy #2 for String Quartet
Louis ALEXANDERPISHA
HONORABLE MENTION
Out of the Depths
CHELSEA ELIZABETH ADAMS
�To the student who submits a fine essay on a piece of music.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap, President of the
Garitas Society 1987-1991
Desiring in Sicut Cervus
MARIA SANGIRARDI JUNG
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of a geometrical problem.
Offered by the Glass of 1986 in honor of Bryce Jacobsen, of the
Glass of 1942, Tutor and Director of Athletics Emeritus
ANYiGuo
HONORABLE MENTION
DAVID JOHN MAKER
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of an analytical problem.
Offered in memory of James R. McGlintock of the Glass of 1965
YUAN XUE
To the student who carries out a fine laboratory project.
A Measure of Universal Gravitation
ANDREW!. DONDERS
To the senior man and woman, who, through participation, leadership, and
sportsmanship, have contributed most to the SJG athletic program, a special blazer.
CLAYTON READ PASLEY
RACHEL MARY ULRICH
�To the member of the Senior Glass who has contributed outstanding
service to the Greater Annapolis Community.
Offered by the Caritas Society of St. John's College
MEAGAN ROSE SPICER
To the member of the Senior Class who has demonstrated the greatest care
for and service to youth residing in the City of Annapolis.
Offered by the friends and family of Marvin B. Cooper,
of the Class of 1969
KAURA ELIZABETH MACKEY
To the member of the Senior Class who submits the best work of visual art to the
Community Art Exhibition, the Charles Vernon Moran Prize
Koi, sculpture
KELLY LAUREN TROP
To a Senior who has demonstrated excellence
in the arts, literature, or sciences, the Walter S. Baird prize.
In the Fear of Love, poetry
MICHAEL VINCENT TAVANI
��ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Leslie Milton Abrams,
1954
Dr. Granville Q. Adams,
1Q9Q
JL J ju J
Mildred Alexander
Philip L.Alger, 1912
Alter Graduate Institute
Scholarship
Alumni Scholarship
Annapolis Graduate
Institute
Aretei Fund
Bradley G. Arms
George M. Austin, 1908
Walter S. Baird, 1930
Betty Beck Bennett, 1960
Dr. Charles C. Cook
George A. and Eveline T.
Greenleaf
Marvin Brent Cooper,
1969
Edna G. and Roscoe E.
Grove, 1910
The Joseph and Robert
Cornell
Memorial Foundation
John T. and Gertrude L.
Harrison, 1907
Bernard Clorety, 1950
John T. Harrison, Jr.
Eugene N.( 1929) and
Robert G. (1963)
Cozzolino
Henry B. Higman, A48
Wiley and Helen
Crawford
Richard H. Hodgson,
1906
CpL George E.
Cunnifflll
The Hodson Trust
Helen Lee De Aloia
Alfred and Ruth Houston,
1906
Charles W. Hass, 1927
Donna Marie Delattre
Houston Regional
Fred and Marian Billups
Clarence L. Dickinson,
1911
John Isaacs
Jeff Bishop Memorial
Richard A. Duhan, 1963
J. Seward Johnson, Jr.
Ford K. Brown, H70
Martin Dyer Book Fund
Caritas Society of
St. John's College
Ahmet Ertegun
Education Fund
Jesse H. and Mary Gibbs
Jones
Gasasco Family Fund
Faculty Scholarship
Chicago Regional
Mrs. Clyde Alvin Clapp
Ronald and Donna
Fielding
James T. Clark, 1928
James H. Frame, 1950
Class of 1897
Friends of St. John's
Dr. Simon and Fanny
Kaplan, H84
Class of 1898
Nancy Gannon Gearing
Francis A. Katz, 1929
Richard F. Cleveland,
H54
Harry Golding, Graduate
Institute
William R. Kenan, Jr.
Trust
Col. Robert E. and
Margaret Larsh Jones,
1909
Robert E. Kanode, 1939
�John Spangler Kieffer,
H70, and
Roxana White Kieffer,
H84
Marie Klebe Memorial
Jacob Klein, H76
The Duane and
Clementine Peterson
Charitable Fund
LD and Paula Pickens
Pittsburgh Regional
Thomas J.,H94, and
Marion K. Slakey
Andrew Smith Memorial
J. Winfree Smith, H80
James S. Spirer, 1970
Korshin Family Fund
Reader's Digest
Foundation
C.V. Starr Foundation
Tom and Gathryn Krause
J. Douglas Ramsey, 1937
Harry S. and Vivian B.
Spectre Book Fund
Arthur E. and Hilda
Combs Landers, 1930
Lenore B. Hinder
Joseph LaPides
Michael Littleton
Memorial
John D. Mack
Massachusetts Regional
James Matthews, H99
Middendorf Foundation
Martin Conrad Miller
(1981) Book Fund
Paul Miller
Philip A. Myers II, 1938
NationsBank Foundation
(Bank of America)
Rev. Theo O'Brien
O'Grady Memorial
Oklahoma Regional
Cleo Ritz
Susan I. Roberts, 1966
Andrew and Lenore
Steiner Book Fund
Clifton C. Roehle
Clarence W.Stryker
Joan and Bela Ronay
Bert Thorns
Murray Joel and Julius
Rosenberg, 1938
Karl and Evelyn Van
Tassel
G. D. Searle/John E.
Robson
Frederick J. Von
Schwerdtner
Robson Family
Mr. and Mrs. William J.
Vanous
Rosse Family
St. John's College Alumni
Association
J. J. Salovaara
Flora Duvall Sayles
Hazel Norris and J.
Graham Shannahan,
1908
Norman G. Owens
Doug E.Sherr( 1972)
Memorial
Dr. Thomas Parran and
Thomas Parran, Jr.
Rudy Simeone
Passin Family Fund
Jean Roberts Staylor
Pattie Bourne Turner
Walker, 1966
Richard D. Weigle, H49
John L. Williams, 1950
Thomas J. and Marvil F.
Williams
Frank K. Wilson, 1935
Delores and Stephen Wolf
Kathy and Jerry Wood
Foundation
�ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
BB&T
H.A. Hammond
Susan M. Bishop
Henry B. Higman
Melanie and David
Bradley
Independent College
Fund of Maryland
Nancy Buchenauer and
Francis Rowsome
James M. Johnston Trust
Carefirst BlueCross
BlueShield
Garitas Society of St.
John's College
Ann and Bryant Cruse
Constance and Paul Dry
Deborah R. Fialka
Christine Fotos
Tamara L. Friedler
Gudelsky Family
Foundation
Ensign C. Markland Kelly
Jr.
Emily Legum
John J. Leidy Foundation,
Inc.
Judith Seeger
Wanda and William
Shafer
John A. Simmons
Marylou and Craig
Symonds
T. Rowe Price
Mynydd Teg Foundation
Janet and Howard Levine
Linda and Jonathan Tuck
C.L. McCarthy
Patricia Watts
Abigail Milner
Curtis and Rebecca
Wilson
National Philanthropic
Trust
The Odyssey School
William D. O'Neal
Katherine H. Haas
PNC Financial Services
Group
John T. Pittman
Robin Weiss and Michael
Dink
Verizon
Richard and Lois Zelina
Gifts received after April 15, 2011, are gratefully acknowledged
and will be listed in the 2012 Commencement Program.
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
22 pages
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
St. John's College
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2011-05-15
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
CommencementExercises2011
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Description
An account of the resource
Program for the two hundred nineteenth commencement in the three hundred fifteenth year of the college.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Commencement (St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Program, 2011
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/8823d9d4384488d8f1dca881e5464b0a.pdf
f4401fa2d62bf71bae40df7435fde63c
PDF Text
Text
SIJOHN'S
College
A N N A P O L I S • S A N T A FE
COMMENCEMENT
EXERCISES
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
SUNDAY, MAY SIXTEENTH
Two THOUSAND AND TEN
�PROGRAM
FOR THE Two HUNDRED EIGHTEENTH
COMMENCEMENT IN THE
THREE HUNDRED FOURTEENTH YEAR
OF THE COLLEGE
PRELUDE
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
ACADEMIC PROCESSION
THE NATIONAL ANTHEM
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
FRANCIS SCOTT KEY, ALUMNUS, CLASS OF 1796
WELCOME
CHRISTOPHER B. NELSON
PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
ANNOUNCEMENT OF PRIZES AND AWARDS
PRESIDENT NELSON
MICHAEL DINK
DEAN OF THE COLLEGE
PRESENTATION OF AWARD TO WARREN P. WINIARSKI, AS^,
AS HONORARY FELLOW OF THE COLLEGE
PRESIDENT NELSON
ADDRESS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS
WARREN P. WINIARSKI
VISITOR EMERITUS, ST JOHN'S COLLEGE
BOARD OF VISITORS AND GOVERNORS
CONFERRING OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
DEAN DINK
CONFERRING OF GRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
MARILYN D. HIGUERA
DIRECTOR OF THE GRADUATE INSTITUTE
ACADEMIC RECESSION
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
�BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
(with title of essay)
ROBB MATTHEW ALEXANDER
Theomachy: Confronting Gods Within and Without
Syracuse, New York
MARGARET EMILY ANSELL
Behind Infinity, Before Eternity: Augustine's Spatio-Temporal
Transcendence
JAMAAL SPENCER BARNES
Of Things Unspoken and Unseen: Friendship, Society, and
Solitude in Book One of Montaigne's Essais
Lake Worth, Florida
Sanfbrd, North Carolina
ELLEN KATHLEEN BARNHART
Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania
The Greatest Prince Loves Both His Country and His Queen:
Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra
JESSE NATHANIEL BATES
Abstraction and the Intelligibility of Nature
CATHERINE YOLANDE BERUBE
"There is no difficulty in speaking about what virtue is."
Or, The Importance of Opening Questions
ALLEGRA JUDITH BISBEE
On Behalf of the Tax Collector: An Attempt to Reconcile
Abraham with the Modern Man of Faith in Kierkegaard's
Fear and Trembling
JOHN EDWARD BLECHL
The Epistemological Oedipus: An Optimistic View of Tragedy
Dallas, Texas
Rolle, Switzerland
Ridgefield, Washington
Dallas, Texas
CATERINA BELLA MARIA BONACINI
Oakland, California
Polymath Love's Androgynous Advocate: An Investigation into
Examining Our Pasts in William Faulkner's Absalom,
Absalom!
ETHAN AARON BROOKS
Continuity and the End of Creation in Richard Dedekind's
Essays on the Theory of Numbers
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
�MARIANNA BROTHERTON
Bartlett, New Hampshire
From the Pear Tree to the Garden... Hesitation in Augustine's
Confessions
NOLAND WlLLIAM BROWN
Concord, North Carolina
"7b the things themselves!" The Role of Critique in Ontological
Investigation
THOMAS WEST BROWNING
Who Mixes Wisdom's Wine?: Learning and Ripping in
Euripides' Bacchae
Austin, Texas
VIRGINIA JEAN BUESCHER
Annandale, Virginia
Finding the Way to Theophany Street: Identity in Dostoevsky's
Demons
ALEXANDER BUNNELL
Alexandria, Virginia
Epictetus 's Stoicism and Human Nature
KATHERINE ELIZABETH BURKE
Wilmington, North Carolina
Confronting Unity: A Reckless Flight to the Unknowable
DAVID MICHAEL CAMPBELL
Akira Kurosawa's Ikiru: To Live as a Light in a Dark World
RAPHAELA DORIS CASSANDRA
Hope, Love, and the Hero: An Examination of the Self in
Nietzsche's Thus Spoke Zarathustra
THEA AMES CHIMENTO
Freedom in Service? The Question of the Franklin's Tale
CAMERON COATES
The Wholeness of Human Life in Aristotle's Nicomachean
Ethics
DANIEL SNYDER CONNELLY II
The Quest for the Eternal: An Inquiry into St. Augustine's
Confessions
Alexandria, Virginia
Garden City, New York
Rockville, Maryland
Chicago, Illinois
West Chester, Pennsylvania
�LAUREN ADELE COOPER
Erotic Transfiguration as the Inward Ascent to Numinous
Beauty in Dante andPlotinus
Aurora, Colorado
THOMAS ANTHONY CROMER
Berwyn, Pennsylvania
Faith and the Transcendent Will: A Eulogy on Ahab
ANDREW THOMAS DAVENPORT
Pascal & Marx: The Transformation of Religion into Politics;
or, An Atheist's Apology
San Rafael, California
KAYLA ZOE DfiLoY
Georgia, Vermont
"Crack Nature's Molds: "King Lear's Changing View of Nature
KELLY LAUREN DIAZ-ALBERTINI
Doylestown, Pennsylvania
Facing Up to the Hero: An Exploration of Heroism in The Iliad
ALLISON MICHELLE DiETZ
Bethesda, Maryland
Acting i(Here Upon This Bank and Shoal of Time"
ANNA CATHERINE DIRKSE
The Role of Duration and Disorder in the Evolution of Life
Jenison, Michigan
ELSABE CORNELIA DIXON
The Art of Seduction: Power and Persuasion in Plato's
Phaedrus
Chatham, Virginia
KlRSTIE NlCCOLE DODD
Sanford, Florida
On the Purpose of History
SEAN GRAIN DONAHUE
Beaver, Pennsylvania
Reason's Role in Action and Aristotle's Ethics
LlNDEN ANNE DUFFEE
Birmingham, Alabama
"Parker's Back: "An Artistic Examination of Christian Art;
or, In Defense of the Imagination
NORA SOFIA EDGE
An Examination of Pierre's Quest for Peace: Tolstoi's
War and Peace
Leverett, Massachusetts
�JONATHAN DAVID ENGLISH
Roslyn, Pennsylvania
The Meaning of Life in the Philosophy of Leibniz: An Inquiry
into the Nature of Animals and Living Substances
TYLER Ross FANNING
Certainty andSureness in Descartes' Meditations on First
Philosophy and Plato ys Theaetetus
Amity, Oregon
MICHAEL VINCENT FELDMAN
On the Ontological and Epistemological Entanglements of
Quantum Mechanics
Virginia Beach, Virginia
MEGAN CATHERINE FIELD
Unearthing the Weathered Edifice of Man's Nature in
Rousseau's On the Origin and the Foundations of Inequality
Among Men
Richmond, Virginia
LAUREL ALEXANDRA FISCHER
Of Man's First Disobedience, and the Fruit of that Forbidden
Tree
La Quinta, California
ELIZABETH EMILY FLEMING
Gaithersburg, Maryland
The Incommensurability of Mind and Matter: An Examination
and Evaluation of William James' Physiological Psychology
ELEIS LESTER FORTI
The March Toward Species Being
ANNE MARIE FRAZIER
Chester, Virginia
Fort Wayne, Indiana
The End of Desire: The Reconciliation of Tristan and Isolde
CHELSEA MARIE FROST
We Think, and We are Free: An Investigation of Stoicism
South River, New Jersey
SARAH ELIZABETH FRY
Ignorance is not Bliss: The Development of Morality and
Humankind's Independence from the Divine
Buda, Texas
ZACHARY FRYER-BIGGS
The Origins and Necessity of Doubt
New York, New York
�DONALD FRANKLIN GEORGETTE
What am I Doing? A Critical Examination of I, Me, Ego and
the Operations of Consciousness in Sartre's Transcendence of
the Ego
Avon, Indiana
PHILLIPA LEE GOWDY-JAEHNIG
Is Economics Natural? An Investigation of Adam Smith's
"Natural System "
Decorah, Iowa
ABRAHAM JACOB GREENSTINE
Reason and the Transformation of Transcendental Idealism
into Absolute Idealism
Glenside, Pennsylvania
PATRICK RYAN HALTER
An Exploration of Conscience Through HegeVs
Phenomenology of Spirit
Palm Bay, Florida
MATTHEW JESSE HARRIS
Needham, Massachusetts
Promoting Perfection in Maimonides' Guide of the Perplexed
CHRISTOPHER HEARSE
Knight-Errants and Giants: Truth in Fiction
Severna Park, Maryland
MlRANDA ARIANNA HELCK
The Predominant Passion of the Youthful Beginner:
An Exploration of the Aesthetic Life
JEANA JOY HICKLING
Reconstructing Rousseau's Self-Centered Family Man:
An Essay on Natural Love and Virtue
Granbury, New Jersey
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
ALEXANDRIA MEADOWLARK HINDS
Pride, Lust and Fear: Symptoms of a Spiritual Illness
Gortland, New York
JEAJN MARIE HOGAN
Language and the Soul in Shakespeare's Hamlet
San Jose, California
ERIC ANDERSON HONOUR
Shuffling Off This Moral Coil: Steadfastness, Blasphemy and
Judgment in Moliere 's Don Juan
Fairfax, Virginia
�KATHERINE NICOLE HUELS
Beauty Will Set You Free: A Discussion of How Beauty and the
Aesthetic Lead to the Ideal Man and Society
BENJAMIN SWAN HUTCHINS
On Mass: How Newton Finds God in the Principia
Winnetka, Illinois
Stowe, Vermont
PATRICK RUDDEN JACOBS
Transferring Trains of Thought: Abstractions from the
Language ofHobbes
Hopkinton, Massachusetts
MATTHEW ROBERT KALKAVAGE
These Were Men: Internal, External, Other and Self in
Shakespeare's Julius Caesar
Annapolis, Maryland
JOHN IRA KENNEDY
Birmingham, Alabama
Is Faith a Virtue? An Exploration of Faith in Martin Luther's
The Freedom of a Christian
MEGAN MARIANNE KENNEDY
Love as the End of Reason: On Dostoevsky's Notes From
Underground
Camden, Maine
CHARLOTTE SEIDELMAN LICKER
Worlds Apart: The Influence of Society on the Fantastical
World of Don Quixote de la Mancha
New Rochelle, New York
GABRIEL THOMAS LuziER
Brandywine, Maryland
A Person's Conscience Ain 't Got No Sense: Unarticulated
Meaning and Morality in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
KATHERINE ROSE MAHAN
A Man and His Dreams: An Introspective Look at the Life of
William Butler Yeats, An Idealistic and Principled Man
Trapped in the Rational Modern World, through His Works of
Poetry
CHASE ROARK McKELVY
Philosophy and Eros: Aristophanes in the Symposium
Arcadia, Oklahoma
Memphis, Tennessee
�BROOKE HOLLAND MEYER
Alexandria, Virginia
Insects to Onions: An Exploration of One Man's Transition
from Shame to Joy in The Brothers Karamazov
KELSEY ALANA MlLLER
Hanover, Pennsylvania
Morality Through Beauty: An Inquiry into Humanity
MAGDALEN EDITH MILLMAN
Subjective Truth and Existential Suffering: Kierkegaard
on Suffering
Green Brook, New Jersey
PHILIP THOMAS MOHR
Developing the Hermeneuticfor the Whole
Bath, New York
MACALL YAVNER MORAN
Lutherville, Maryland
"What is Found so Rarely Must be Hard:" On God and Human
Freedom in Spinoza's Ethics
PAUL DOUGLAS MORRILL
East Palo Alto, California
The Possibility of the Absurd; or, On the Importance of Telling
Abraham's Boring Story
MICHAEL ANDREW MOWERY
University Park, Maryland
On the Relationship Between Work and Happiness in Tolstoy's
Anna Karenina
CALEB THOMAS NOLEN
Gaithersburg, Maryland
Safeguarding the Possibility of Poetry in a Technological Age
DANIEL BRANDON OSBORNE
The Metaphysics of Art and Suffering: The Beautiful in Hegel's
Account of Painting
Lafayette, Louisiana
PAVLOS LEONIDAS PAPADOPOULOS
Natick, Massachusetts
The Long Creation Story: The Genesis of Fraternity and the
Development of Humanity; or, Reading the Book of Genesis as
a Whole
SAMUEL PETER PASKEWITZ
Kant, Hume and the Existence of God
New York, New York
�SHANNON ELIZABETH QUIRK
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Why John Marshall is the True Founder of Justice in the United
States: Exploring a Government of Men versus a Government
of Laws Through Marbury v. Madison
JON MICHAEL RAGSDALE
A Look at the Philosopher and Poet in Johannes de Silentio 's
Fear and Trembling, and Their Fascinating Struggle to Answer
the Great Question: Is Abraham a Murderer or the Greatest
Man to Ever Live?
TAYLOR KENT REESE
Chicago, Illinois
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
Kant on Our Sublime Nature
ELYSSA JORDAN REID
Fresno, California
The Past, Present, and Future as an Argumentfor the
Constitution of the United States
EVERETT WILLIAM MORENO ROBERTS
A Man and Arms: Aeneas' Journey from Trojan to Roman
Bellingham, Washington
GEORGE EDWARD ROBINSON IV
Bring Me a Higher Love: Finding a Higher Power in
Kierkegaard's The Sickness unto Death
Austin, Texas
DREW ALEXANDER RoBISON
Baltimore, Maryland
The Supreme Fictions of Life: An Essay About Reality and the
Imagination
JESSE BLAKE RUNDLE
Manhattan, Kansas
Thrasymachus v. Madison: Justice in The Federalist's Republic
ROBERT ANDREW SALE
Lawrenceville, Georgia
Kant Goes to Copenhagen: Quantum Mechanics and the
Possibility of Free Will
CHARLES SAMUEL SALEM
Imagine That! Thinking and Imagination in Aristotle's
On the Soul
Annapolis, Maryland
�EUGENE E. SAMARIN
Moscow, Russian Federation
We The People: Does the US Constitution Achieve the Promises
Made in the Preamble?
ALEXANDER JAMES SHAEFFER
Examining the Sophist
DANIEL PAUL SHIPLEY
Being, Becoming & The Will to Power: An Interpretation of
"On Old and New Tablets"
JUSTIN PAUL SNYDER
Why You Think You Have Free Will
Issaquah, Washington
Baltimore, Maryland
Little Rock, Arkansas
JOSIAH NATHANIEL STEPHENS
Binghamton, New York
What is the Benefit of a Liberal Education to a Free Market
System According to the Economic and Moral Theory of Adam
Smith?
SARAH ELIZABETH STITES
Kansas City, Missouri
Space, Force, and Body in Newtonian and Leibnizian Physics
JENNIFER GAITLIN SWANSON
Fictions and Falsehoods
San Diego, California
ROWENNA BETH THORSON
Germantown, Wisconsin
A Royal Freedom: On the Futility of Man's Free Will in Martin
Luther's The Bondage of the Will
HANNAH ELIZABETH VANHOOSE
Highwood, Montana
"Life Does Not Stop, and One Has to Live:" The Tension
Between the Individual and the Universal in Tolstoy's War and
Peace
BRADLEY JOHN VAN UDEN
Thousand Oaks, California
The Other is Our Friend: The Taming of Socrates in Plato's
Parmenides
�MATTHEW AARON VlTLIN
San Francisco, California
In Search of Geneva: An Examination of Whether Men Need
Civil Society and What the Roots for this Need Are
MOLLY MABEL MC£NROE WATERS
Transformation and Healing in Natasha's Prayer
JOHN THOMAS WELSH
A Perspective on the Origins of the Scientific Method
SARAH MARIE WHITE
Social Tyranny and Individual Sovereignty: An Inquiry into
the Philosophy of Political Liberty
Annapolis, Maryland
Summit, New Jersey
Brentwood, Tennessee
�MASTER OF ARTS IN LIBERAL ARTS DEGREE
GRADUATE INSTITUTE IN LIBERAL EDUCATION
ANNE G. BARENKAMP
St. Louis, Missouri
PEYTON LEE BEARD
Bremerton, Washington
DEREK FORBES BITTER
Santa Glarita, California
RICHARD BOLTE III
Voorhees, New Jersey
ALEXANDER WESLEY BRADY
Annapolis, Maryland
LORETTE LOUISE CAMERON
Pelham, New York
ASHLEY ALBERTINE COLLINS
AARON CHRISTOPHER DUKETTE
Manchester, Connecticut
Montpelier, Vermont
CRYSTAL MARIE EBERT
Allentown, Pennsylvania
STEPHEN DAVID ENGEL
Los Angeles, California
GIANNA DOMINIQUE ENGLERT
JOSHUA CHASE ALAN HARRIS
JULIA DOWNEY HART
New Kensington, Pennsylvania
Washington, District of Columbia
Alexandria, Virginia
JOHN EDWARD KANE
McLean, Virginia
ARRON MATHEW KAU
Lebanon, Oregon
SHANNON S. KIRKPATRICK
Portland, Oregon
DARYL ZHIZHANG Li
Singapore
KYLE A. LONG
Crown Point, Indiana
CHRISTIANA REED MOLLIN
Annapolis, Maryland
MEGAN DAY VALLEAU PAPPAS
Sarasota, Florida
BRADLEY DENTON REESE, JR.
Auburn, Illinois
QUAY ALEXANDER RICE
URAYNAB SAID
VICTORIA HESTER SMITH
KYLE CRAIG STEWART
SEAN BRENDAN STEWART
Augusta, Georgia
Columbia, Maryland
Davidsonville, Maryland
Annapolis, Maryland
Cape Canaveral, Florida
�PRIZES AND AWARDS
COMMENCEMENT 2010
To the member of the Senior Glass who has written the best senior essay.
Offered in memory of Susan Irene Roberts, of the class of 1966
Who Mixes Wisdom's Wine?Learning and
Ripping in Euripides' Bacchae
THOMAS WEST BROWNING
HONORABLE MENTION
"Parker's Back ": An Artistic Examination of Christian Art; or,
In Defense of the Imagination
LINDEN ANNE DUFFEE
The Other is Our Friend: The Taming of
Socrates in Plato's Parmenides
BRADLEY JOHN VAN UDEN
To the member of the Junior Glass who has written the best annual essay.
Offered by Mrs. Leslie Clark Stevens in memory of her
daughter-in-law, Kathryn Mylorie Stevens
From Words to Warfare: The Obligation of the
Man of Letters to Pursue the Life of Arms
ANNA CATHERINE SITZMAN
�To the member of the Sophomore Glass who has written the best annual essay.
Offered under the will of the late Judge Walter I. Dawkins,
of the Glass of 1880
The New Love: Light, Love, and the Vision of the
Mind in Dante's Paradiso
BARBARA DUNHAM McCLAY
The Resurrection of Lazarus: A Certain Man in Uncertain Death
ELIZABETH MARIE SPAGNOLETTI
To the member of the Freshman Glass who has written the best annual essay.
Offered in memory of Jacob Klein, Tutor Emeritus, and his wife,
Else, by Dr. and Mrs. Stuart Walker
Seven Definitions in the Ancient World
LEONARD ISAAC FRANKS
HONORABLE MENTION
Perfection and Imperfection in Plato 's Symposium
MAURA JOAN MCGLUSKEY
To the Graduate Institute student who has written a
distinguished preceptorial essay in the year 2010.
Offered by the Alumni Association
The Pity and The Way: Ugolino
GIULIANA DE GRAZIA
Time as Problem and Solution
JESSE L. MAXWELL
�To a member of the Senior Glass, for excellence in speaking.
Offered in memory of Senator Millard E. Tydings of Maryland
CAMERON GOATES
To the student who submits the best English version of a Greek text.
Offered in memory of John S. Kieffer, President Emeritus
Pappus Synagoge
BRADLEY JOHN VAN UDEN
HONORABLE MENTION
THOMAS WEST BROWNING
To the student who submits the best English version of a French poem.
Offered by the Board of Visitors and Governors
"D'ou viennent les mots?" by Venus Khoury-Gata
KlRSTIE NlCCOLE DoDD
To the student who submits a fine original English poem.
Offered by Dr. George Austin in memory of his brother, Henry
"Almanac"
KlRSTIE NlCCOLE DoDD
To the student who submits a fine original musical composition.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap, President of the
Caritas Society 1987-1991
"Fantasy for String Quartet"
Louis ALEXANDER PISHA
�To the student who submits a fine essay on a piece of music.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap, President of the
Garitas Society 1987-1991
''Scarborough Fair"
JANE JEFFRIES
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of a geometrical problem.
Offered by the Glass of 1986 in honor of Bryce Jacob sen, of the
Glass of 1942, Tutor and Director of Athletics Emeritus
NO PRIZE AWARDED
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of an analytical problem.
Offered in memory of James R. McGlintock of the Glass of 1965
ETHAN AARON BROOKS
To the student who carries out a fine laboratory project.
NO PRIZE AWARDED
HONORABLE MENTION
Sound as Influence in the Growth of Bacteria Cultures
GALEN ANDREW COOK-THOMAS
�To the Senior man and woman who by their participation,
leadership, and sportsmanship have contributed most to the
College's athletic program, special blazers.
Offered by the Alumni Association of St. John's College
MARGARET EMILY ANSELL
JUSTIN PAUL SNYDER
To the member of the Senior Class who has contributed outstanding
service to the Greater Annapolis Community.
Offered by the Caritas Society of St. John's College
PHILLIPA LEE GOWDY-JAEHNIG
To the member of the Senior Class who has demonstrated the greatest care
for and service to youth residing in the City of Annapolis.
Offered by the friends and family of Marvin B. Cooper,
of the Class of 1969
BROOKE HOLLAND MEYER
To the member of the Senior Class who submits the best work of visual art to the
Community Art Exhibition, the Charles Vernon Moran Prize
Inner Sanctuary, painting
KELSEY ALANA MILLER
HONORABLE MENTION
Rocks at Great Falls, painting
MICHAEL ANDREW MOWERY
�To a Senior who has demonstrated excellence
in the arts, literature, or sciences, the Walter S. Baird prize.
Inner Sanctuary, oil on canvas painting
KELSEY ALANA MILLER
�ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Leslie Milton Abrams, 1954
Cpl. George E. Cunniff III
Dr. Granville Q. Adams, 1929
Helen Lee De Aloia
Mildred Alexander
Donna Marie Delattre
Philip L. Alger, 1912
Clarence L. Dickinson, 1911
Alter Graduate Institute Scholarship
Richard A. Duhan, 1963
Alumni Scholarship
Martin Dyer Book Fund
Annapolis Graduate Institute
Ahmet Ertegun Education Fund
AreteiFund
Faculty Scholarship
Bradley G. Arms
Ronald and Donna Fielding
George M. Austin, 1908
James H. Frame, 1950
Walter S. Baird, 1930
Friends of St. John's
Betty Beck Bennett, 1960
Nancy Gannon Gearing
Fred and Marian Billups
Harry Golding, Graduate Institute
Jeff Bishop Memorial
George A. and Eveline T. Greenleaf
Ford K. Brown, H70
Edna G. and Roscoe E. Grove, 1910
Garitas Society of St. John's College
John T. and Gertrude L. Harrison, 1907
Casasco Family Fund
John T. Harrison, Jr.
Chicago Regional
Charles W.Hass, 1927
Mrs. Clyde Alvin Clapp
Henry B. Higman, A48
James T. Clark, 1928
Richard H. Hodgson, 1906
Class of 1897
The Hodson Trust
Class of 1898
Alfred and Ruth Houston, 1906
Richard F. Cleveland, H54
Houston Regional
Bernard Clorety, 1950
John Isaacs
Dr. Charles C. Cook
J. Seward Johnson, Jr.
Marvin Brent Cooper, 1969
Jesse H. and Mary Gibbs Jones
The Joseph and Robert Cornell
Memorial Foundation
Col. Robert E. and Margaret Larsh
Jones, 1909
Eugene N. (1929) and Robert G. (1963)
Cozzolino
Robert E. Kanode, 1939
Dr. Simon and Fanny Kaplan, H84
Wiley and Helen Crawford
Francis A. Katz, 1929
�William R. Kenan, Jr. Trust
Clifton C. Roehle
John Spangler Kieffer, H70, and
Roxana White Kieffer, H84
Joan and Bela Ronay
Marie Klebe Memorial
G. D. Searle/John E. Robson
Jacob Klein, H76
Robson Family
Korshin Family Fund
Rosse Family
Murray Joel and Julius Rosenberg, 1938
Tom and Gathryn Krause
St. John's College Alumni Association
Arthur E. and Hilda Combs Landers,
1930
J. J. Salovaara
Joseph LaPides
Flora Duvall Sayles
Michael Littleton Memorial
Hazel Norris and J. Graham Shannahan,
1908
John D. Mack
DougE. Sherr (1972) Memorial
Massachusetts Regional
Rudy Simeone
James Matthews, H99
Thomas J., H94, and Marion K. Slakey
Middendorf Foundation
Andrew Smith Memorial
Martin Conrad Miller (1981) Book Fund
J. Winfree Smith, H80
Paul Miller
James S. Spirer, 1970
Philip A. Myers II, 1938
C.V. Starr Foundation
NationsBank Foundation (Bank of
America)
Harry S. and Vivian B. Spectre Book
Fund
Rev. Theo O'Brien
Jean Roberts Staylor
O'Grady Memorial
Andrew and Lenore Steiner Book Fund
Oklahoma Regional
Clarence W.Stryker
Norman G. Owens
Bert Thorns
Dr. Thomas Parran and
Thomas Parran, Jr.
Karl and Evelyn Van Tassel
Passin Family Fund
The Duane and Clementine Peterson
Charitable Fund
Frederick J. Von Schwerdtner
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Vanous
Pattie Bourne Turner Walker, 1966
LD and Paula Pickens
Richard D. Weigle, H49
Pittsburgh Regional
John L. Williams, 1950
Reader's Digest Foundation
Thomas J. and Marvil F. Williams
J. Douglas Ramsey, 1937
Frank K. Wilson, 1935
Lenore B. Hinder
Delores and Stephen Wolf
Cleo Ritz
Kathy and Jerry Wood Foundation
Susan I. Roberts, 1966
�ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
BB&T
Larry Katz
CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield
Davis United World College Scholars
Program
Ensign J. Markland Kelly, Jr.
Memorial Foundation
John J. Leidy Foundation
R. R. Evans Foundation
Estate of Eugene F. Martin, Jr.
Isadore & Bertha Gudelsky Family
Foundation
Henry B. Higman
Henry M. Robert
T.Rowe Price
UPS
James M. Johnston Trust
Verizon
Gifts received after April 15, 2010, are gratefully acknowledged
and will be listed in the 2011 Commencement Program.
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
23 pages
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
St. John's College
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2010-05-16
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
CommencementExercises2010
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Description
An account of the resource
Program for the two hundred eighteenth commencement in the three hundred fourteenth year of the college.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Commencement (St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Program, 2010
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/9e3555ef5e89fc265b1d04640c81c640.pdf
060902675c04c54bdbf42e655d71b5d8
PDF Text
Text
SIJOHN'S
College
A N N A P O L I S • S A N T A FE
COMMENCEMENT
EXERCISES
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
SUNDAY, MAY SEVENTEENTH
Two THOUSAND AND NINE
�PROGRAM
FOR THE Two HUNDRED SEVENTEENTH
COMMENCEMENT IN THE
THREE HUNDRED THIRTEENTH YEAR
OF THE COLLEGE
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
PRELUDE
ACADEMIC PROCESSION
THE NATIONAL ANTHEM
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
FRANCIS SCOTT KEY, ALUMNUS, GLASS OF 1796
WELCOME
CHRISTOPHER B. NELSON
PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
PRESIDENT NELSON
ANNOUNCEMENT OF PRIZES AND AWARDS
MICHAEL DINK
DEAN OF THE COLLEGE
ADDRESS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS
ANITA L. KRONSBERG
TUTOR AND ASSISTANT DEAN
CONFERRING OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
DEAN DINK
CONFERRING OF GRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
MARILYN D. HIGUERA
DIRECTOR OF THE GRADUATE INSTITUTE
ACADEMIC RECESSION
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
�BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
(with title of essay)
SETH GREGORY APPELBAUM
Baltimore, Maryland
The Confrontation Between Divine Inspiration and Human
Worth in Plato's Ion (With Frequent Reference to the Apology
of Socrates)
KATHERINE MAE ARMITAGE
Hold onto the Concrete
Tacoma, Washington
PlOTR MAURYCY AxER
Portland, Oregon
Man Alone: An Examination of the Underground Man in
Dostoevsky's Notes From Underground
SUSANNAH PORTER BALL
Vincy Vincit: A Study of Provincial Life
Glen Ellyn, Illinois
RACHEL MICHELLE BARTGIS
To Love, Honor, and Obey: Grisilde and Her Marriage Vow
CHRISTOPHER ANDREW BARTOS
Where Are We Going? Directionality in Natural Selection
Millersville, Maryland
Clifton Park, New York
MlCAH JORDAN BECK
Lansing, New York
On the Transition of Political Power in Ancient Israel into
Monarchy: That it Was Both a Necessity and a Sin, and That
David was the Ideal of the Compromise
KELLY ELISABETH BECKER
The "Somewhat Expanded" Don Quixote and His Discoveries
of Part One and Part Two
MEGHAN JACOBSON BENSON
Baring Lear: A Study of the Loss and Retrieval Of Lear's Titles
ALYSSA GAIL BERNANKE
Arlington, Virginia
Saline, Michigan
Washington, District of Columbia
The Loss of Natural Selection: A Darwinian Approach to
Domestication and Breeding
�CHRISTOPHER MICHAEL BORCHERT
Hagerstown, Maryland
Ending It When It's Over: An Investigation into Turnus'Death
and the Last Scene of the Aeneid
CHRISTOPHER PIERCE BORDERS
Abraham and Kierkegaard's Moment
Annapolis, Maryland
TIMOTHY GRANT BRISNEHAN
"Comme les exiles, ridicule et sublime," The Poet in the City
in Charles Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du Mai
NOEL RALPH BROCKETT
The Music of Plato: An Inquiry into the Best Education
Through the Works of Plato
New Britain, Connecticut
SCOTT TERRENCE BULLARD
Education Through Dialectic in Speech and Action in Plato's
Republic
* MATTHEW NEELY BUTLER
CHELSEA PANTALONE CARPENTER
God, the Joy Giving and Sole Saving Diversion
MELINDA LEE CARRERA
Music, Fire and the Feminine Soul: Natasha's Education into
Womanhood
MATTHEW KAI CARTER
The Castaway and Immensity
Aurora, Colorado
Westport, Connecticut
Columbia, Maryland
Manasquan, New Jersey
Camarillo, California
Dagsboro, Delaware
KELVIN WAYGID CHUNG
Garden Grove, California
An Attempt to Understand Hegel's Account of the Unhappy
Consciousness
JOSEPH ANTHONY CIUMMO
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
"Fighting the Fight." Strife, Truth, and History: The Essence of
Art in Martin Heidegger's The Origin of the Work of Art
�THOMAS JOSEPH CLEVELAND
The Beautiful and Good: On Plato's Hippias Major
Norfolk, Virginia
MICHAEL ANDREW COONEY
Rockport, Massachusetts
Fates Past Counting: The Life and Death of the Warrior Soul
CECELIA ELLIOTT CORRIGAN
Into the Labyrinth: An Exploration q/Dessein in Racine's
Phedre
JOHN MICHAEL GRADES II
Flowers of Antimony by Any Other Name: Lavoisier and the
Language of Learning
TIMOTHY MARK CREIGHTON
The Habit of Being
Delmar, New York
Hanover, Pennsylvania
Gap, Pennsylvania
CAITLIN GAIL CURTIS
Self Awakening and the Pursuit of Marriage in Pride and
Prejudice
Seattle, Washington
HANNAH CUSTIS
"Thesefragments I have shored against my ruins ": Form,
Content, and the Mythical Method in The Waste Land
Cambridge, Maryland
ROXANNE ELIZABETH DARNTON
Education and the Divine: Exploring the Motivation Behind
Echeis Moi Eipein, O Sokrates
KRISTINA DIMITRIJEVIC
On Human and Divine Union
JOHN ZACHARY DORNBERGER
The Death of the Man of La Mancha
El Segundo, California
Largo, Florida
Winston-Salem, North Carolina
KlERAN PATRICK DOWDY
Why Am I Here? What Am I Doing? Pierre's Search for
Meaning in Tolstoy's War and Peace
Huntsville, Alabama
�JOAO PEDRO SANTA-RITA FERNANDES
Freedom and the Spartan Character
Fayetteville, Arkansas
ASHLEY RENEE FETTEROLF
L'Amant, 1 Ami, et le Misanthrope
Earleville, Maryland
JOSEPH FlLVAROF
Silver Spring, Maryland
Belief and Experience in the Book of Jonah
TAMARA LYNNE FRIEDLER
The Fall of the House ofSutpeniAn Exploration of Innocence
in Faulkner's Absalom, Absalom!
DAVID THOMAS FUHRMAN
Annandale, Virginia
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Heart of Darkness: The Changes Take Place Inside, You Know
JAMES WILLIAM FULMER
The God of the Adversary and the Malefactor on the Cross
Troubles Job, Living on theFrontier of Experience: When Job is
Naught, Then He is a Man
PAMELA JOAN GARDNER
Dorothea's Pursuit of Greatness in Middlemarch
NATHAN SHOLES GATES
Houston, Texas
Fairfield, Connecticut
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
"To Join in Love, Not Hate ": The Magnificent Failure of
Friendship in Antigone
LlNDEN KATE GEIGER
West Chester, Pennsylvania
Kirillov andShatov: Paths of Belief
CLAIRE MURPHY GRIFFIN
Richmond, Minnesota
Embodied Experience: On Maurice Merleau-Ponty's
Phenomenology of Perception
KATHERINE ELAINE HALE
Durham, North Carolina
"Whatever the man called every living creature, that was its
name ": Scientific Classification in Aristotle, Darwin and
Lavoisier
�TABITHA RAE HALL
Fearful Humans, Loved by God: An Essay on the Nature of
God's Love and Humans' Response to It
ANNA ELIZABETH HARVEY
Division and Identity in Macbeth
Akron, Ohio
Yorktown Heights, New York
WYNNE HEDLESKY
How to Philosophize After Nihilism: A Not-So-Easy Guide for
the "Predisposed and Predestined"
Dublin, Virginia
PATRICK AuER JONES
Catonsville, Maryland
Socratic Piety and the Discovery of Political Philosophy in the
Minos
JULIA WELLS JOYCE
The Searchfor Freedom: The Extent of Man 9s Freewill in
Tolstoy's War and Peace
Peacham, Vermont
KRISTOPHER STEVEN KLOTZ
Montoursville, Pennsylvania
God as Consequent and Superject: Examining Religious
Prehensions in Alfred North Whitehead's Process and Reality
NATHAN GERALD KROSS
Death in War and Peace
Washington, Pennsylvania
EDWARD JOHN KUENZI
On Predestination, Free Will and Two Love Stories in Leo
Tolstoy's War and Peace
MICHAEL JOHN LEBLANC
A Paradigm/or the Properly Governed: Thucydides'Response
to Glaucon
ROSE KATHERINE LIMANNI
"Into the World ofLoneness": The Conflict Between Reason
and Desire in William Blake's The Book of Ahania
Sharpsburg, Georgia
Lyndhurst, Ohio
Dallas, Texas
�IAN KENNETH LINDQUIST
Unionville, Connecticut
Between Beast and God: Human Cultivation, Tradition and
Community in Homer's Odyssey
DALTON LOBO DlAS
The Baconian Revolution and the Rise of the Scientific Animal
FABIO HULLEY LOMELINO
The Amnesiac: Extracting Meaning from the Earth
SARA CHRISTINE LUELL
"The king is not himself: The Character of Richard II
I
MARIA NlCOLE LUNSFORD
Mercy and Defeat in Flannery O 'Connor 9s "The Artificial
Nigger"
BRITTANY RAE McBRIDE
The Importance of the Sense Education in Rousseau's Emile
OWEN J. McGLAIN
Defending Don Quixote: A Jester's Place Among the Giants of
Philosophy
Berlin, Connecticut
Sao Paulo, Brazil
Friendswood, Texas
Brookeville, Maryland
Mitchellville, Maryland
Lincoln, Vermont
MARK FREDERICK McCLAY
Signal Mountain, Tennessee
The Problem of Silence: Aeschylus's Agamemnon and the
Meaning of the Unspoken
JOHN PAUL LUCIEN MclNTYRE
The Salute to the Creator in Newton and Darwin: Divinity in
the Principia andThe Origin of Species
ERIN MICHELLE McMuLLIN
Iphigeneia and the Horror of War
LAUREN ELAINE MOONEY
Self-Knowledge in Love: The Construct of Self in Pursuing
Romantic Relationships
Baltimore, Maryland
Eatonton, Georgia
Rockville, Maryland
�DANIEL ROCHE MUENZER III
Francis Bacon's Theory of Knowledge
Cincinnati, Ohio
ALEXANDRA ELAINE MUNTERS
Thought Seeing: Perception and the Intellect in Aristotle's On
the Soul
Alexandria, Virginia
MY THUY NGUYEN
"Experience had embittered his heart to the world":
Understanding Poverty, Paralysis, and Epiphany in James
Joyce's Dubliners
Mabelvale, Arkansas
AUBREY LEE NIGHSWANDER
How Man Stands Now: An Exploration of the Paths Man
Pursues that Lead Him to Unintended Weariness
Port Clinton, Ohio
NATHAN JEFFREY OESCH
A More Perfect Union: The Foundations of Politics as a Science
in The Federalist
LAUREL SlERRA PAPPAS
Bethesda, Maryland
San Luis Obispo, California
Signatures of the Divine: Nature and Morals in Immanuel
Kant's The Critique of Pure Reason and Charles Darwin's The
Descent of Man
JULIA CATHERINE PATTERSON
Man of Many Names: Some Epithets of Odysseus in Odyssey
XIII
MELISSA ANNE PEISER
,
Fairfax, Virginia
Owings Mills, Maryland
The Virtue of Friendship: The Friendship of Don Quixote and
Sancho Panza
JESSICA LYSHOJ PERRY
Mill Valley, California
Brother, Lover, Master: Sexual Imagery in William Faulkner's
Absalom, Absalom!
STEFFANIE MARIE PETERSON
Mortal Thoughts as Mortals Should
Crookston, Minnesota
�SAMUEL PORTER
Saratoga Springs, New York
"The rigging lived... ": The Pequod as a Character in Moby-Dick
LAUREL KATHLEEN PRICE
Those Beautiful Vessels: So Many Shrouded Ghosts: A Look at
the Rhetoric of Frederick Douglass
Quincy, California
CLINT ALLAN RICHARDSON
East Lansing, Michigan
Why Rule? An Inquiry into the Actions of the Philosophic Man
as Embodied by Cicero
PATRICK LAWRENCE RIEDER
The Education of Cyrus
KATHARINE NOELLE RlOS
Albany, Oregon
Wildomar, California
"But what then am I?" Essence and Experience in Descartes'
Meditations
MARY REBECCA ROACH
Newark, Delaware
Why Does it Have to Hurt? Violence and Revelation in
Flannery O 'Connor's "The Lame Shall Enter First"
MOLLY FRANCES ROTHENBERG
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Less Elevated, More Just: The Threat and Promise of Equality
in Democracy in America
LUKE ANTHONY RUSSELL
Annapolis, Maryland
The Ancient and Modern View of Man and Political Rule: An
Essay Concerning Hobbesian Man
VIRGINIA JEANETTE RUSSOM
Nikolai Stavrogin: A Character Study from Dostoyevsky 's
Demons
Chama, New Mexico
CHAD ETHAN SALECKER
Charlottesville, Virginia
Distinguishing Humanity from the Darkness Within: Fyodor
Dostoevsky's Notes from the Underground
�THEODORE JAMES SALWEN
The Part of Us That is Not Submerged: The Overman, the
Absolute, and Individual Choice
JOHN HENRY SCHLEY
The Will to Life
JOHN STEVEN SCHULER
Political Memory at the Close of the Age of Heroes: The
Cosmopolitan Nature of Man
New York, New York
Jersey City, New Jersey
Lake Worth, Florida
ROBERT GAIUS SHAVER
Falmouth, Massachusetts
Wealth of Nations, Wealth of Faiths: The Interrelation of
Wealth, Politics, and Faith in Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations
JESSE CLAYTON SHEARER
Subjectivity and the Evasion of Historical Suppression: On
Spontaneity, Ethics, and Erotic Love in Emmanuel Levinas'
Totality and Infinity
Boston, Georgia
TABITHA ROSE SILVER
From Abysmal Thought to Burden-Song: The Redemption of
Zarathustra
New York, New York
DAVID COLE SlMMONS
"This will be a divided kingdom; yet it will have some of the
strength of iron in it": An Inquiry into the Divisive Effects of
Locke's Toleration and the Christian Church
Harrisonburg, Virginia
PAULINE CECILE STACCHINI
"Beauty laid bare ": A Discussion of the Boundaries of Beauty
in Baudelaire
Versailles, France
ROBERT ALLAN STEWART
Winston-Salem, North Carolina
The Second Tree of Knowledge: How Can Philosophy be a
Living Thing?
MICHAEL JOSEPH STINNETT
Downers Grove, Illinois
Reading Adventures: Understanding the Notice in Adventures
of Huckleberry Finn
�JENNIFER ANN STOCKLIN
Civilizing Experience: Solitude and Story telling in Conrad's
Heart of Darkness
Lancaster, Ohio
MICHAEL ALBERT STOKLEY
The Hidden and Their Discovery
Longmont, Colorado
AlSfDREW TiESSEN SUTTON
Altadena, California
On the Possibility of Moral Development
ROBERT DRAKE TALLEY
On Becoming One Out of Many
Memphis, Tennessee
EMMANUEL EARL THOMAS
Beginnings in Plato's Phaedrus
Chicago, Illinois
PAUL ANTHONY THOMPSON
Clearfield, Pennsylvania
All Men Must Die, But First Let Us Live
CHRISTOPHER SCOTT THORN
Davidsonville, Maryland
Life: All for One or Onefor All?'An Investigation of the Good
for Organic Life
MlRANDA MARIA ToMIC
Port Washington, New York
Resignation as a Means to Faith
ASHLEY BROOKE TYLER
Annapolis, Maryland
Maxwell and Method
CAROLYN MARIE WALSH
Ridgefield, Connecticut
"Without knowing what I am and why I'm here, it is
impossiblefor me to live ": The Searchfor Meaning in Tolstoy's
Anna Karenina
KATHERINE LEIGH WALTER
Poetry and Mathematics: A Love of Rhyme and Reason
WARREN SCOTT WEBER
"I Reckon It's So ": A Study of Morality in Huckleberry Finn
Westminster, Maryland
Haverhill, Massachusetts
�KELLY MARIE WILSON
The Discipline of Angels: An Examination of the Creative Act
in Three Stories by Jorge Luis Borges
SAMUEL MAXWELL ENGLAND YELTON
Herodotus and the Meaning of History
YUHUAI ZHOU
Chagrin Falls, Ohio
Charlotte, North Carolina
Guangzhou, Republic of China
From Sympathy to Morality
JESSICA MOON ZIMMERBERG-HELMS
Nature and the Language of the Sense: An Illumination of
"Tintern Abbey" Through the Works of Edmund Husserl
* Upon completion of requirements
Santa Fe, New Mexico
�MASTER OF ARTS IN LIBERAL ARTS DEGREE
GRADUATE INSTITUTE IN LIBERAL EDUCATION
ANDREW EVAN ACHTER
Greensboro, North Carolina
JOHN HARRISON AKINS
Maryville, Tennessee
ERIC ANDREW ALLISON
Winston-Salem, North Carolina
JOHANNA LORRAINE ANDERSON
Smithfield, Rhode Island
BERNARDO APARICIO GARCIA
Ft. Lauderdale, Florida
DAVID NICHOLAS BAHR
Kensington, Maryland
BRENT WALKER BEAUMONT
Birmingham, Alabama
STEPHEN DOUGLAS BECK
NATHAN ANDREW BETZ
THOMAS REES BEVAN
CHRISTOPHER JAMES BISHOP
JENNIFER ANNE BOYD
DARRIN SHANE BROADWATER
KATHARINE MARIE GEREZO
NATHANIEL JAMES GOCHRAN
CAROLYN DONNA COMMER
ALESSANDRO COTA
SARAH JOAN CROKER
Chattanooga, Tennessee
Irvine, California
Allison Park, Pennsylvania
Ramsey, New Jersey
Baltimore, Maryland
LaVale, Maryland
Annapolis, Maryland
Fairfax, Virginia
Grosse Pointe, Michigan
Curitiba, Parana, Brazil
Atlanta, Georgia
GIULIANA SAGE DE GRAZIA
Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania
JARED ALEXANDER FAVOLE
Annapolis, Maryland
SABRINA IRENE FRANK
KEVIN DAVID GURUBATHAM
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Silver Spring, Maryland
�LAUREN E. HAMILL
ROSEMARY HARTY
WILLIAM EDWARD HOARD
NICHOLAS SOLWAY JAN HONDRUM
JONATHAN ADAM JACKSON
CHRISTOPHER DANE MENGES
LISA MARIE MOSCATIELLO
COLIN ANDREW JOSEPH MURPHY
APRIL DAWN PIERMAN
JEFFREY SCOTT POUSHTER
MATTHEW LEE REPPERT
NICOLE KRISTY RIZKALLAH
Arlington, Texas
Annapolis, Maryland
Aiken, South Carolina
Baltimore, Maryland
North Richland Hills, Texas
Amarillo, Texas
Takoma Park, Maryland
Baltimore, Maryland
Grasonville, Maryland
Washington, District of Columbia
Grand Rapids, Michigan
Simi Valley, California
AMY RENEE SANDEFUR
Abilene, Texas
JAMES EDWARD SAVAGE
Southfield, Michigan
ARNOLD RANDOLPH STERLING, III
MARISSA RUTH WALSH
JOHNNY LEE YOUNG
Duncanville, Alabama
Atlanta, Georgia
Severn, Maryland
�PRIZES AND AWARDS
COMMENCEMENT 2,009
To the member of the Senior Glass who has written the best senior essay.
Offered in memory of Susan Irene Roberts, of the class of 1966
Nature and the Language of the Sense: An Illumination of
"Tintern Abbey " Through the Works of Edmund Husserl
JESSICA MOON ZIMMERBERG-HELMS
«/
HONORABLE MENTION
Embodied Experience: On Maurice Merleau-Ponty 's
Phenomenology of Perception
CLAIRE MURPHY GRIFFIN
ir
To the member of the Junior Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered by Mrs. Leslie Clark Stevens in memory of her
daughter-in-law, Kathryn Mylorie Stevens
Transcendental Deduction: Not what, but how? /
BRADLEY JOHN VAN UDEN
HONORABLE MENTION
Swift's Noble Lie: Pride, Irony, and the Horses Which Are Not
KlRSTIE NlCCOLE DODD
To the member of the Sophomore Glass who has written the best annual essay.
Offered under the will of the late Judge Walter I. Dawkins,
of the Class of 1880
Moving Toward Stillness; Eternity in Augustine's Confessions
SHANNON MULLOY
v
�To the member of the Freshman Glass who has written the best annual essay.
Offered in memory of Jacob Klein, Tutor Emeritus, and his wife,
Else, by Dr. and Mrs. Stuart Walker
Socrates in the Apology: Guilty As Charged?
GILBERT IRVING SHANK
^
HONORABLE MENTION
Natural Slavery and Moral Virtue
JONATHAN JAE TINCHER
I/
To the Graduate Institute student who has written a
distinguished preceptorial essay in the year 2008.
Offered by the Alumni Association
Battling the Untamable Lion of Storytelling
JENNIFER ANNE GAVIN
/
HONORABLE MENTION
Flaming Generations: An Exploration of Passion in the Aeneid
GIULIANA SAGE DE GRAZIA
To a member of the Senior Glass, for excellence in speaking.
Offered in memory of Senator Millard E. lydings of Maryland
THOMAS JOSEPH CLEVELAND
To the student who submits the best English version of a Greek text.
Offered in memory of John S. Kieffer, President Emeritus
Homer's Odyssey, Book 23, lines 181 - 204
BRADLEY JOHN VAN UDEN \f
NATHAN SHOLES GATES ^
I
�To the student who submits the best English version of a French poem.
Offered by the Board of Visitors and Governors
"Non, 1'amour n'est pas mort" by Robert Desnos
KlRSTIE NlCCOLE DODD ^
To the student who submits a fine original English poem.
Offered by Dr. George Austin in memory of his brother, Henry
"He Would Not Hear My Heart"
KELLY MARIE WILSON ^
To the student who submits a fine original musical composition.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap, President of the
Garitas Society 1987-1991
Sonata
LUKE ANTHONY RUSSELL *
HONORABLE MENTION
Prelude in A-flat Major f
JESSE BLAKE RUNDLE
To the student who submits a fine essay on a piece of music.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap, President of the
Garitas Society 1987-1991
Music Enhancing the Words in Mozart's Ave Verum Corpus
JOHN IRA KENNEDY III ^
HONORABLE MENTION
Mystery and Expectancy
LUKE ANTHONY RUSSELL
�To the student who submits the most elegant solution of a geometrical problem.
Offered by the Glass of 1986 in honor of Bryce Jacobsen, of the
Class of 1942, Tutor and Director of Athletics Emeritus
ALEXANDER JAMES SHAEFFER </
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of an analytical problem.
Offered in memory of James R. McGlintock of the Glass of 1965
ELIZABETH EMILY FLEMING ^
To the student who carries out a fine laboratory project.
"A Sincere Hand and a Faithful Eye ":
Experiences with Robert Hooke's Micrographia
KATHERINE ELAINE HALE >]/
To the Senior man and woman who by their participation,
leadership, and sportsmanship have contributed most to the
College's athletic program, special blazers.
Offered by the Alumni Association of St. John's College
JOAO PEDRO SANTA RITA FERNANDES
CECELIA ELLIOTT CORRIGAN
To the member of the Senior Glass who has contributed outstanding
service to the Greater Annapolis Community.
Offered by the Caritas Society of St. John's College
MATTHEW KAI CARTER
�To the member of the Senior Class who has demonstrated the greatest care
for and service to youth residing in the City of Annapolis.
Offered by the friends and family of Marvin B. Cooper,
of the Class of 1969
RACHEL MICHELLE BARTGIS
To the member of the Senior Class who submits the best work of visual art to the
Community Art Exhibition, the Charles Vernon Moran Prize
Dwelling Place, painting
JOSEPH ANTHONY CIUMMO
The Fish, painting
KRISTINA DIMITRIJEVIC
To a Senior who has demonstrated excellence
in the arts, literature, or sciences, the Walter S. Baird prize.
"Sentinel", short story
KELLY MARIE WILSON
�ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Leslie Milton Abrams,
1954
Dr. Granville Q. Adams,
1929
Mildred Alexander
Philip L. Alger, 1912
Alter Graduate Institute
Scholarship
Alumni Scholarship
Annapolis Graduate
Institute
Aretei Fund
The Joseph and Robert
Cornell
Memorial Foundation
Richard H. Hodgson,
1906
The Hodson Trust
Eugene N . ( 1929)and
Robert G. (1963)
Cozzolino
Alfred and Ruth Houston,
1906
Houston Regional
Wiley and Helen
Crawford
Cpl. George E.
Cunnifflll
Helen Lee De Aloia
Donna Marie Delattre
Bradley G. Arms
Clarence L. Dickinson,
1911
George M. Austin, 1908
Richard A Duhan, 1963
Walter S. Baird, 1930
Martin Dyer Book Fund
Betty Beck Bennett, 1960
Ahmet Ertegun
Education Fund
Faculty Scholarship
Fred and Marian Billups
Jeff Bishop Memorial
Ford K. Brown, H70
Ronald and Donna
Fielding
Caritas Society of
St. John's College
James H. Frame, 1950
Gasasco Family Fund
Friends of St. John's
Chicago Regional
Mrs. Clyde Alvin Clapp
James T. Clark, 1928
Class of 1897
Nancy Gannon Gearing
Harry Golding, Graduate
Institute
George A. and Eveline T.
Greenleaf
John Isaacs
J. Seward Johnson, Jr.
Jesse H. and Mary Gibbs
Jones
Col. Robert E. and
Margaret Larsh Jones,
1909
Robert E. Kanode, 1939
Dr. Simon and Fanny
Kaplan, H84
Francis A. Katz, 1929
William R. Kenan, Jr.
Trust
John Spangler Kieffer,
H70, and
Roxana White Kieffer,
H84
Marie Klebe Memorial
Jacob Klein, H76
Korshin Family Fund
Tom and Cathryn Krause
Dr. Charles C. Cook
John T. and Gertrude L.
Harrison, 1907
John T. Harrison, Jr.
Marvin Brent Cooper,
1969
Charles W. Hass, 1927
Arthur E. and Hilda
Combs Landers, 1930
Joseph LaPides
Michael Littleton
Memorial
John D. Mack
Massachusetts Regional
Henry B. Higman, A48
James Matthews, H99
Class of 1898
Richard F. Cleveland,
H54
Bernard Clorety, 1950
Edna G. and Roscoe E.
Grove, 1910
�Middendorf Foundation
Martin Conrad Miller
(1981) Book Fund
Paul Miller
Philip A. Myers II, 1938
NationsBank Foundation
(Bank of America)
Rev. Theo O'Brien
O'Grady Memorial
Oklahoma Regional
Norman G. Owens
Dr. Thomas Parran and
Thomas Parran, Jr.
Passin Family Fund
The Duane and
Clementine Peterson
Charitable Fund
Pittsburgh Regional
Reader's Digest
Foundation
J. Douglas Ramsey, 1937
Lenore B. Rinder
Cleo Ritz
Susan I. Roberts, 1966
Clifton C. Roehle
Joan and Bela Ronay
Murray Joel and Julius
Rosenberg, 1938
G. D. Searle/John E.
Robson
Robson Family
Rosse Family
St. John's College Alumni
Association
J. J. Salovaara
Flora Duvall Sayles
Hazel Norris and J.
Graham Shannahan,
1908
Doug E.Sherr( 1972)
Memorial
Rudy Simeone
Thomas J.,H94, and
Marion K. Slakey
Andrew Smith Memorial
J. Winfree Smith, H80
James S. Spirer, 1970
C.V. Starr Foundation
Harry S. and Vivian B.
Spectre Book Fund
Jean Roberts Staylor
Andrew and Lenore
Steiner Book Fund
Clarence W.Stryker
Bert Thorns
Karl and Evelyn Van
Tassel
Frederick J. Von
Schwerdtner
Mr. and Mrs. William J.
Vanous
Pattie Bourne Turner
Walker, 1966
Richard D.Weigle,H49
John L. Williams, 1950
Thomas J. and Marvil F.
Williams
Frank K. Wilson, 1935
Delores and Stephen Wolf
Kathy and Jerry Wood
Foundation
ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
AAI Corporation
AT&T
The Associated: Jewish
Community Foundation
of Baltimore
Baltimore Community
Foundation
Baltimore Sun
Bank of America
BB&T
Beachley Foundation, Inc
Estate of Frederick J.
Beardsley
Bon Appetit
Booz Allen Hamilton
Bunting Family
Foundation
CACI
Cafritz Family
Foundation
The Campbell
Foundation, Inc.
CareFirst BlueCross
BlueShield
Caritas Society of St.
John's College
Chevy Chase Bank
�Chimes Foundation, Inc.
Citi Foundation Smith
Barney Compass Group
Computer Sciences
Corporation
Constellation Energy
Group
Richard &RosaleeC.
Davison Foundation
Delaplaine Foundation,
Inc.
Dixon Valve and Coupling
Company
R.R. Evans Foundation
Saul Ewing LLP
Estate of Charlotte
Fletcher
Estate of Mary Fletcher
France-Merrick
Foundation
Gallagher Evelius & Jones
LLP
General DynamicsAdvanced Information
Systems
Gudelsky Family
Foundation
Laverna Hahn
Foundation
Catherine Haigney
JJ. Haines Foundation
Hecht-Levi Foundation
The Hoffberger
Foundation, Inc.
Huether-McClelland
Foundation
IBM
James M. Johnston Trust
KCI Technologies, Inc.
Ensign J. Markland Kelly,
Jr. Memorial
Foundation
Kiplinger Foundation
KPMGLLP
Lalley Charitable Fund
Arthur E. & Hilda Combs
Landers Trust
Legg Mason
John J. Leidy Foundation
Henry H. Lewis
Contractors, LLC
Lockheed Martin
Lord Baltimore Capital
Corporation
Vanni Lowdenslager
M&T Bank
Lois & Philip Macht
Philanthropic Fund
Marlen Maier
ManTech International
Dr. Frank C. Marino
Foundation
Estate of Eugene F.
Martin
Maryland Capital
Management
Harvey M. Meyerhoff
Fund
Joseph Meyerhoff Fund
National Security Agency
The Newman Family
Charitable Trust
Otsuka America
Pharmaceutical, Inc.
The P&G Fund
The Passano Foundation,
Inc.
Albert F.Peters
PNC
T. Rowe Price
Raytheon Systems
RCM&D
SAIC
Serco, Inc.
Shockley Honda
Shoppers Food
Warehouse
John A. Simmons
Sinclair Broadcast Group,
Inc.
SRA International
SunTrust Bank
Travelers Foundation
UPS
Venable Foundation
Verizon Foundation
Verizon-Federal Network
Systems
Victor Graphics
VPC Inc.
Wachovia Foundation
WBFF/WNUV
Weis Markets
Whiting-Turner
Contracting Co.
Janet Youkeles
Gifts received after April 15, 2009, are gratefully acknowledged
and will be listed in the 2010 Commencement Program.
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
24 pages
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
St. John's College
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2009-05-17
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
CommencementExercises2009
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Description
An account of the resource
Program for the two hundred seventeenth commencement in the three hundred thirteenth year of the college.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Commencement (St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Program, 2009
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/5c8f301c7a42a7695568f3dc3e4cf86b.pdf
9c67ae6a5261f2beec8238904da3fbff
PDF Text
Text
*f-H
STJOHN'S
College
A N N A P O L I S • S A N T A FE
COMMENCEMENT
EXERCISES
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
SUNDAY, MAY ELEVENTH
Two THOUSAND AND EIGHT
�PROGRAM
FOR THE Two HUNDRED SIXTEENTH
COMMENCEMENT IN THE
THREE HUNDRED TWELFTH YEAR
OF THE COLLEGE
PRELUDE
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
ACADEMIC PROCESSION
THE NATIONAL ANTHEM
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
FRANCIS SCOTT KEY, ALUMNUS, CLASS OF 1796
WELCOME
CHRISTOPHER B. NELSON
PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
ANNOUNCEMENT OF PRIZES AND AWARDS
PRESIDENT NELSON
MICHAEL DINK
DEAN OF THE COLLEGE
ADDRESS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS
BRUCE COLE
CHAIRMAN, NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES
CONFERRING OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
DEAN DINK
CONFERRING OF GRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
JOAN E. SILVER
DIRECTOR OF THE GRADUATE INSTITUTE
ACADEMIC RECESSION
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
�BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
(with title of essay)
NATHANIEL PHILIP ADKINS
Conversion and Constancy in Pascal's Memorial
GABRIELLE ANNE AINES
Amazing Grace: Pride, Knowledge, and Revelation in
Flannery O 'Connor's Short Stories
EMILY TRAEGER ANDREWS
"Tramp - tramp - tramp; that's the dead... ": The Angel
of Death in Huckleberry Finn
MEGAN ANN ATHERTON
On Habit and Practical Thought
DAVID RIVERA AUDELO
Reflections of the Absolute in Finitude
Durham, North Carolina
Manassas, Virginia
Blythewood, South Carolina
Greensburg, Pennsylvania
Bakersfield, California
CAROLINE WALD BARRY
All Things Conspire to Hurt Me: On the Identity of the
Tragic Figure in Jean Racine's Phedre
Baltimore, Maryland
JOSHUA AARON BECKER
Reason and Consciousness in Tolstoy's War and Peace
Hatfield, Pennsylvania
SOPHIE ELIZABETH BENNEWITZ
Behind Those "Fine Eyes ": Observation in Pride and
Prejudice and The Theory of Moral Sentiments
ANNA RACHEL BIEGELSEN
Confronting Mortality in Baudelaire's "Une Charogne''
RACHAEL NOEL BOYCE
The Education of Emma Woodhouse: A Lesson in
Satisfaction
ANNA WEINGAST BROWN
Truth, Beauty, and Geometric Certainty
Manteo, North Carolina
Hollywood, Florida
Westminster, Maryland
Baltimore, Maryland
�JOHN FREEMAN BROWN
Under the Indifferent Heaven: The Desert's Impact on
Modern Prophets
ELIZABETH MCDOWELL BURLINGTON
From Sacred to Mundane: On the Kingdom of God
and the Sovereign in Hobbes' Leviathan
SAMUEL CHARLES CANDLER
Abandoning Reason
ASHLEY ELIZABETH CARDIFF
King Richard II
STEPHEN FRANKLIN CLARK
Understanding Childhood in the Lamentation
of "Fern Hill"
BRENDAN JAMES CLAY
Speaking to Nature: Beauty and Imagination in
Scientific Study
ERIC CARL CLOSS
On the Love of Beatrice to the Love of God: An Essay
on Dante's Journey in The Divine Comedy
GEORGE SLADE COLE, JR.
Discussing Happiness and Friendship in Aristotle's
Ethics
JOHN GORDON COOKE VI
On a Definition of Beauty
Cle Elum, Washington
New Bloomfield, Pennsylvania
Atlanta, Georgia
Sebastopol, California
Virginia Beach, Virginia
Lansdowne, Pennsylvania
Kennett Square, Pennsylvania
Savannah, Georgia
Upper Marlboro, Maryland
RANDALL GEORGE DARLING, JR.
Unity and the U. S. Constitution: An Understanding of
Balance in Political Science
Chardon, Ohio
RACHEL TARA DAVISON
Against the Tide of Tyranny: Voluntary Associations
in Alexis de Tocqueville 's Democracy in America
Houston, Texas
�LARISSA LIDDELL DEATON
Germanicus and the Logos of Violence
Great Falls, Virginia
ANNELIES DEGROOT
All She Wants to Do is Dance or How Natasha's Joyful
Dancing Brought Me Joy
Bethesda, Maryland
JOHN JOSEPH DONAHOE, JR.
"Though He Slay Me, Yet Will I Hope In Him":
Transformative Suffering, Unconditional Fear, and the
Case Against God in the Book of Job
Portola Valley, California
GARRET CHARLES DREXLER
Look to the West: Equality, Liberty, and Independence
in American Individualism
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
SAMANTHA MARIE ENNS
Oedipus as a Paradigm
Winston-Salem, North Carolina
FELICIA MARIE ENRIGHT
Ecstasy of Affliction: Mourning in War and Peace
TRISTAN WILLIAMS EVANS-WILENT
Accost Means Woo Her: An Essay on Shakespeare's
Twelfth Night
STEVEN ROBERT FAIRCHILD
Descartes, le plus grand democrate: Tocqueville on
Theory, Practice, and the Grandeur of the Democratic
Self
Chicago, Illinois
Laguna Beach, California
Troy, Michigan
SARAH KATHRYN FARY
Filling the Silence: The Role ofDiegesis and Dialectic
in Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling
Silver Spring, Maryland
ANNE SEAVER FLEMING
L'inconstance fatale: The Passion and Suffering
Phedre
Gaithersburg, Maryland
of
�CHARLES HENRY FLEMING
"Free and Easy and Comfortable ": Life on the River in
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
KAYLA JEAN GAMIN
Neither Slave Nor Tyrant: The Education of a Free
Man in Rousseau's Emile
Gaithersburg, Maryland
Lakewood, Ohio
KATRINA THERESE GERSIE
Socrates on Trial: A New Politician's Farewell
Wantage, New Jersey
CHARLES PETER GILLMARTEN
Jousting at Windmills? How Our Love of Don Quixote
Tests Our Faith
Alexandria, Virginia
STAGEY LYNNE GOGUEN
Kantv. Hume: The Battle Over Knowledge, Certainty,
and Science
Leominster, Massachusetts
LAUREN MICHELLE GOODMAN
Six Circles, One Triangle, and a Field: The Conflict of
Virtue and Ethics in Shichinin no Samurai
PETER ARA GUEKGUEZIAN
Liberte, Fraternite, et Egalite! Freedom and the
Citizen in Jean-Jacques Rousseau's On The Social
Contract
Naples, Florida
Fresno, California
CHARLES WILLIAM HAMM
The Revolution o/Traternite: Love and Duty in Les
Miser able s
Bethesda, Maryland
IAN JOSEPH HANOVER
All this Chaos is the Winds
New York, New York
ANDREW SCOTT FORBES HARRISON
On Nihilism: Being an Account of the Suicide of
Philosophy and What Growsfrom its Ashes
Summerville, South Carolina
�ALLISON CHARLOTTE HAUSPURG
Finding Faith in Philosophical Fragments
MAGGIE ARINA HEIM
Kierkegaard's Challenge to Philosophy Through the
Possibility of Faith
MARGARET CARPENTER HENNESSEY
Imagination, Reason, and Geometry
THOMAS BRADFORD HIGGINS
On the Vinteuil Sonata
Potomac, Maryland
Indian Harbor Beach, Florida
Middletown, Connecticut
New York, New York
BENJAMIN Ross HOFFMAN
Is Truth Valuable? The Relation Between Context and
Meaning: A Treatise of Hume and Nietzsche
Stamford, Connecticut
SUSAN AUDREY HOLCOMB
A Tale as Dry as Esparto Grass: A True History of the
Author, the Lover, and the Ingenious Gentleman
Dallas, Texas
WILLIAM SEAN HOLLINGSWORTH
An Elegant Weapon for a More Civilized Age: Science
and the Civil Polity in Sir Francis Bacon's The New
Atlantis
Eugene, Oregon
SAMUEL RHYS JONES
On The Creative Soul: Baudelaire, Art and Suffering
Boston, Massachusetts
TIMOTHY RUSSELL JONES
Maxwell's Geometrical Argument
ADAM HARRIS HUNTER JUSKEWITCH
""Only the Good Man Is Free and All Bad Men Are
Slaves ": An Examination of the Death ofCato the
Younger
TAMMIE DENISE KAHNHAUSER
A Sacrifice and a Gold Ring: Crisis and Reconciliation
in the Book of Job
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Portland, Maine
Setauket, New York
�PAMELA RACHEL KESSLER
Explaining the Persian Defeat
WILLIAM AINSWORTH KNIGHT
The Lord Reckoned it to Him as Righteousness: Faith
and the Ethical in S0ren Kierkegaard's Fear and
Trembling
MATTHEW ALAN LANCER
Stephane Mallarme: The Absent Signified
PHILIP JOSEPH LAZZARA
The Biological Problem of Mind: An Examination of
Mental Qualities and Their Development in The
Descent of Man
JUSTIN CHUN LEE
Truth and Transcendence in CormacMcCarthy's
The Crossing
ALDEN THOMAS MACKEY
The Poetry q/The Peloponnesian War: Thucydides'
Use of Poetic License in the Context of the Historical
Narrative
SHUNJI MATSUZAWA
Do We Have an Eschatological and Pleromatic
Imperative to Know Ourselves and Each Other?:
Jung's Integrative Psychology of Religion
ELISABETH RENEE McCLURE
"Merde!" in Victor Hugo's Les Miserables
WILLIS KESTREL WRIGHT McCuMBER
Beautiful Action and the Repudiation of Ownership in
Faulkner's The Bear
JEFFREY RYAN MC!LVAIN
Building Bridges and Burning Them: On Greece's
Failure to Destroy the Persian Empire
Shelburne, Massachusetts
Burke, Virginia
Princeton, New Jersey
Burr Ridge, Illinois
Mililani, Hawaii
Bainbridge Island, Washington
Tokyo, Japan
Georgetown, Texas
Unity, New Hampshire
Westminster, Maryland
�BRYAN PATRICK MCNEILLY
On the Unspeakable Atmosphere of Joseph Conrad's
Heart of Darkness
Woodway, Washington
LAURENT DANIEL MERCERON
Friendship Between Montaigne and His Reader
Bloomington, Indiana
ADAM Ross MEYERS
"Is there a sound addressed not wholly to the ear?":
Music and the Poet's Task in W. C. Williams'
The Desert Music
Kansas City, Missouri
JOHN NEWTON
The Union Shall Not Fail: Trying to Justify the
Suspension of Habeas Corpus
Oakland, California
NICHOLAS JOSEPH NOVITSKI
The Quest of the Philosopher in War and Peace
Miami, Florida
ClARAN SUALDAM O'BRIEN
South Salem, New York
The Beauty and Tragedy of Wildness in Shakespeare's
Romeo and Juliet
NATHANAEL DEHAUS OKHUYSEN
Notions of Equilibrium: Balance, Tension, and Ethics
SEAN GRANT PENNY
Artistic Dualities and Uncertainties of Sight and Being
in Mann's Death in Venice
CORINNE DRUFFEL PETERS
Affirming Existence in Kierkegaard's Fear and
Trembling
KARL LEE PETRICK
Excellence Fallen: Heroism in the Aeneid and Paradise
Lost
Portsmouth, New Hampshire
Ocala, Florida
Cincinnati, Ohio
Clearfield, Pennsylvania
�* DAVID MICHAEL PINEDO
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
JOHN TRAVIS PITTMAN
The Way to God in the Gospel According to John
Williamsburg, Virginia
LYDIA SPRAGUE PUTNAM
The Man Behind the King: The Apprenticeship of
Prince Hal
Hatfield, Pennsylvania
SANDRA IVELISSE QUINTANA
Death is Beautiful: A Study of Contraries in Plato's
Phaedo
San Juan, Puerto Rico
DANIEL STUART RANDLETT
Self and State: Rousseau, The Arts, and Virtue
Gainesville, Virginia
DANIEL PHILIP REKSHAN
Searchingfor the Spiritual Basis of a Painting: A
Textual and Pictorial Inquiry into Kandinsky's On the
Spiritual in Art, Improvisation 7, and Composition 6
Marquette, Michigan
AURORA DARE RIVENDALE
Wind, Women and Water
Annapolis, Maryland
LAUREN ELIZABETH ROBERTSON
"Something Rich and Strange": Time, Place, and the
Liberal Arts in The Tempest
ASHLEY SABRINA ROURKE
First Impressions: Which is Right and Which is an
Illusion
CLARE MYERS SAUNDERS
Looking for Truth: The Role of Observation in
Relativity and Quantum Theory
CLARKE MATHEW-THOMAS SAYLOR
Suffer An Hour, Live For An Age: The Struggle for
Internal Peace in Tolstoy's War and Peace
Sturgis, Michigan
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Athens, Georgia
Garrison, Maryland
�STERLING ALEXANDER SCHLEGEL
"A voice! a voice!": An Investigation of Narration
within Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness
ALEXANDRA VICTORIA SCHWAB
Faith and Free Will in Tolstoy's War and Peace
JESSICA CAROLINE SEILER
The Failure of Reason and the Triumph of Philosophy
SHANT RAFFIE SHAHRIGIAN
The Hawthorn and the Orchid: On Love and Art in
Swann's Way
MATTHEW Louis SHEAR
By the Dog, Socrates is Wrong: The Evolution of
Tragic Art in Nietzsche's Birth of Tragedy
DYLAN Ross SHERRY
A World of Seduction: Examining Philosophy Using
Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations
VISHAL JITEN SHETH III
Faith as Habit in Fear and Trembling: Or, How to
Become a Bourgeois Philistine
ANDREW PAUL CORCORAN SHIELDS
Morality and Divinity
JON KARA SYLVESTER-JOHNSON SHIELDS
The Heart of a Hebrew King: An Analysis of the Story
of David andBathsheba
GREGORY Ross SINGER
Cyclopes, Witches, and Fairies: co JLIOI eyco! Variations
on oiTOCpccyoi in Homer's Odyssey: An
Anthropological Inquiry
GIOVANNI LYON ROGERS SMEDLEY
Into Freedom 'sAir: Magic Mountain's Morals
West River, Maryland
Richmond, Virginia
Los Angeles, California
Annandale, Virginia
Larchmont, New York
Amherst, New Hampshire
Bombay, India
Willow Park, Texas
Roanoke, Virginia
Annapolis, Maryland
Silver Spring, Maryland
�BRYAN ARTHUR SMITH
The Killing Ideal: Love and Art in Baudelaire's "Une
Charogne"
Americus, Georgia
MAX BENTON SOCOL
Gentleman, Fool: Changing Roles in As You Like It
Greensboro, North Carolina
ERICA LYNN STRATTON
What Breeds About the Heart
Morgantown, West Virginia
THOMAS SCHUYLER STURM
Aspects of War and Peace in Aristophanes' Peace,
Hesiod's Works and Days and Thucydides'
Peloponnesian War
Lyndonville, Vermont
HAYLEY VIRGINIA THOMPSON
Heroics in History: A Study of Greatness and Heroism
Looking at the Lives of Alexander, Cato the Younger,
and Caesar
Seattle, Washington
ZACHARY DAN THROOP
To the Elements: Freedom and the Dissolution of Art
in The Tempest
Woodstock, Georgia
* ASHLEE DAWN TURNBULL
Roeland Park, Kansas
AMANDA MOORE VOELKER
The Journey to Happiness: A Look at Society's
Influence on Personal Happiness in Middlemarch
Santa Rosa, California
SARA MARIE WAGNER
Copyrighted Material All Rights Reserved: ImageReflection and Authority in Milton's Eden
JOHN PATRICK WELLER
Metabolism and Mind: A Quantitative Irrelevancy of
Cosmic Importance
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Quakertown, Pennsylvania
�DANIEL WILHELM WHEATLEY
Once You 've Made Your City, You 'II Have to Lie in It:
The Treatment of Lies in the Republic
JENNIFER ASHLEY WRIGHT
The Picture of Beauty: The Moral Implication of a
Book on Dorian Gray
SARA!EAN MARIE WRIGHT
The Significance of Childhood
* Upon completion of requirements
Baltimore, Maryland
Glencoe, Illinois
Fort Collins, Colorado
�MASTER OF ARTS IN LIBERAL ARTS DEGREE
GRADUATE INSTITUTE IN LIBERAL EDUCATION
BRIAN RICHARD BECKER
Washington, District of Columbia
TALITHA BENJAMIN
Washington, District of Columbia
JUSTIN SCOTT BIELER
DONALD NEWTON BRIGGS
KEVIN ARNOLD BROOKS
FRANKLIN LER.OY CARROLL IV
WALTER RODERICK COFIELD, JR.
ZEBULIN Louis CULVER
CARLY PHYSIOC Fox
BILLI JACQUELYN LONDON GRAY
MIRIAM SHULAMIT JACOBS
AMY LEIGH LAUGHLIN
JOHN TALBOT MANVEL, JR.
Cincinnati, Ohio
Emmitsburg, Maryland
Rochester, Minnesota
Fullerton, California
Salisbury, Maryland
Eugene, Oregon
Fort Belvoir, Virginia
Wylie, Texas
Severna Park, Maryland
Ada, Michigan
Annapolis, Maryland
LlSA MlCHELE McCoRKELL
T\ilsa, Oklahoma
CASEY DAVID McCoY
Eugene, Oregon
JOHN DAVID MC&NTY
TRACI LEEANN MELLOR
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Reston, Virginia
NICOLE PATRIECE MILLER
Washington, District of Columbia
DANIEL LOREN PETERSON
West Chester, Pennsylvania
MATTHEW DOUGLAS SANDWISCH
LOUISE EUPHEMIA THOMAS
GARETH THOMAS WILLIAMS
Oak Harbor, Ohio
Chicago, Illinois
Towson, Maryland
�PRIZES AND AWARDS
COMMENCEMENT 2,008
To the member of the Senior Class who has written the best senior essay.
Offered in memory of Susan Irene Roberts, of the class of 1966
"Merde!" in Victor Hugo's Les Miserables
ELISABETH RENEE McCuiRE
The Killing Ideal: Love and Art in Baudelaire's "Une Charogne"
BRYAN ARTHUR SMITH
HONORABLE MENTION
A Tale as Dry as Esparto Grass: A True History of the Author,
the Lover, and the Ingenious Gentleman
SUSAN AUDREY HOLCOMB
To the member of the Junior Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered by Mrs. Leslie Clark Stevens in memory of her
daughter-in-law, Kathryn Mylorie Stevens
Kantian Synthesis and Hume 's Chimera:
The Unity of the Manifold
•
CLAIRE MURPHY GRIFFIN
To the member of the Sophomore Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered under the will of the late Judge Walter I. Dawkins,
of the Class of 1880
"What Is My End, That I Should Be Patient?"
TAYLOR KENT REESE
�HONORABLE MENTION
Will and Faith in Augustine's Confessions
RAPHAELA DORIS CASSANDRA
To the member of the Freshman Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered in memory of Jacob Klein, Tutor Emeritus, and his wife,
Else, by Dr. and Mrs. Stuart Walker
Loving the Corruptible
KAITLYN RITA SCHULER
To the Graduate Institute student who has written a
distinguished preceptorial essay in the year 2007.
Offered by the Alumni Association
Rereading Proust
ABIGAIL FOOTE THOMAS
HONORABLE MENTION
Dante's Game ofHide-and-Seek
DIAN OWEN VANDEMARK
To a member of the Senior Class, for excellence in speaking.
Offered in memory of Senator Millard E. Tydings of Maryland
ELISABETH RENEE MCCLURE
�To the student who submits the best English version of a Greek text.
Offered in memory of John S. Kieffer, President Emeritus
Text: Opening of Aeschylus 'Prometheus Bound
JULIA CATHERINE PATTERSON
HONORABLE MENTION
BRADLEY JOHN VAN UDEN
)K
To the student who submits the best English version of a French poem.
Offered by the Board of Visitors and Governors
Text: Andre Chenier, "Hymne a la nuit"
KAYLA JEAN GAMIN
To the student who submits a fine original English poem.
Offered by Dr. George Austin in memory of his brother, Henry
"'Christine ' - 1 said, but you had closed the door "
RACHEL MICHELLE BARTGIS
To the student who submits a fine original musical composition.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap
"Serenade "
LUKE ANTHONY RUSSELL
�To the student who submits a fine essay on a piece of music.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap
On Repentance: An Examination and Comparison of the
Repentance Arias of Judas and Peter in Bach 's
St. Matthew Passion
LUKE ANTHONY RUSSELL
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of a geometrical problem.
Offered by the Class of 1986 in honor of Bryce Jacobsen, of the
Class of 1942, Tutor and Director of Athletics Emeritus
ELIZABETH EMILY FLEMING
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of an analytical problem.
Offered in memory of James R. McClintock of the Class of 1965
No PRIZE AWARDED
HONORABLE MENTION
JOHN STEVEN SCHULER
To the student who carries out a fine laboratory project.
Making the Perfect Slide: Or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying
and Love Chromosome Microscopy
KATHERINE ELAINE HALE
Metamorphosis o/'Abystoma Mexicanum: Experiment Using
Thyroid Hormone Immersion
JOHN THOMAS WELSH AND JEAN M. HOGAN
�To the Senior man and woman who by their participation,
leadership, and sportsmanship have contributed most to the
College's athletic program, special blazers.
Offered by the Alumni Association of St. John's College
CHARLES HENRY FLEMING
HAYLEY VIRGINIA THOMPSON
To the member of the Senior Class who has contributed outstanding
service to the Greater Annapolis Community.
Offered by the Caritas Society of St. John's College
No PRIZE AWARDED
To the member of the Senior Class who has demonstrated the greatest care
for and service to youth residing in the City of Annapolis.
Offered by the friends and family of Marvin B. Cooper,
of the Class of 1969
NO PRIZE AWARDED
To the member of the Senior Class who submits the best work of visual art to the
Community Art Exhibition, the Charles Vernon Moran Prize
3 Pieces of Cloth, 2 Apples, 1 Mango, oil on panel
DANIEL PHILIP REKSHAN
HONORABLE MENTION
Untitled, ceramic
SAMANTHA MARIE ENNS
�Walter S. Baird Prize-for a Senior who has demonstrated excellence
in the arts, literature, or sciences
Untitled, digital photograph
JUSTIN CHUN LEE
�ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Leslie Milton Abrams, 1954
Helen de Aloia
Dr. Granville Q. Adams, 192,9
Donna Marie Delattre
Mildred Alexander
Clarence L. Dickinson, 1911
Philip L. Alger, 1912
Richard A. Duhan, 1963
Alter Graduate Institute Scholarship
Fund
Martin Dyer Book Fund
Faculty Scholarship
Alumni Scholarship
Ronald and Donna Fielding
Annapolis Graduate Institute
James H. Frame, 1950
Annapolis Self-Help
Friends of St. John's
George M. Austin, 1908
Harry Golding, Graduate Institute
Walter S. Baird, 1930
George A. and Eveline T. Greenleaf
Betty Beck Bennett, 1960
Edna G. and Roscoe E. Grove, 1910
Fred and Marion Billups Fund
John T. and Gertrude L. Harrison, 1907
Ford K. Brown, Hyo
John T. Harrison, Jr.
Garitas Society of St. John's College
Charles W. Hass, 1927
Gasasco Family Fund
Richard H. Hodgson, 1906
Chicago Regional
The Hodson Trust
Mrs. Clyde Alvin Clapp
Alfred and Ruth Houston, 1906
James T. Clark, 1928
Houston Regional
Class of 1897
John Isaacs
Class of 1898
J. Seward Johnson, Jr.
Richard F. Cleveland, H54
Jesse H. and Mary Gibbs Jones
Bernard Clorety, 1950
Dr. Charles C. Cook
Col. Robert E. and Margaret Larsh
Jones, 1909
Marvin Brent Cooper, 1969
Robert E. Kanode, 1939
The Joseph and Robert Cornell
Memorial Foundation
Dr. Simon and Fanny Kaplan, H84
Eugene N. (1929) and Robert G. (1963)
Cozzolino
John Spangler Kieffer, H7O, and
Roxana White Kieffer, H84
Wiley and Helen Crawford
Jacob Klein, H76
Cpl. George E. Cunniff III
Korshin Family Fund
Francis A. Katz, 1929
�Tom and Cathryn Krause
Murray Joel and Julius Rosenberg, 1938
Arthur E. and Hilda Combs Landers,
G. D. Searle/John E. Robson
193°
Joseph LaPides
Robson Family
J. J. Salovaara
Michael Littleton Memorial
Flora Duvall Sayles
Massachusetts Regional
Hazel Norris and J. Graham Shannahan,
1908
James Matthews, Hgg
Middendorf Foundation
DougE. Sherr (1972) Memorial
Martin Conrad Miller (1981) Book Fund
Thomas J., H94, and Marion K. Slakey
Paul Miller
J. Winfree Smith, H8o
Philip A. Myers II, 1938
James S. Spirer, 1970
NationsBank Foundation (Bank of
America)
C.V. Starr Foundation
Rev. Theo O'Brien
Harry S. and Vivian B. Spectre Book
Fund
O'Grady Memorial
Jean Roberts Staylor
Oklahoma Regional
Andrew and Lenore Steiner Book Fund
Norman G. Owens
Clarence W. Stryker
Dr. Thomas Parran and
Thomas Parran, Jr.
Karl and Evelyn Van Tassel
Frederick J. Von Schwerdtner
Passin Family Fund
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Vanous
The Duane and Clementine Peterson
Charitable Fund
Pattie Bourne Turner Walker, 1966
Richard D. Weigle, H49
Pittsburgh Regional
John L. Williams, 1950
Reader's Digest Foundation
Thomas J. and Marvil F. Williams
J. Douglas Ramsey, 1937
Frank K. Wilson, 1935
Lenore B. Hinder
Delores and Stephen Wolf
Cleo Ritz
Kathy and Jerry Wood Foundation
Susan I. Roberts, 1966
St. John's College Alumni Association
Clifton C. Roehle
Joan and Bela Ronay
�ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Estate of Eugene Adkins
Huether-McClelland Foundation
Maria Baker
James M. Johnston Trust
Baltimore Sun Media Group
Larry Katz
BB&T
KAWG&F
Beachley Foundation
KCI Technologies, Inc.
Bunting Family Foundation
Campbell Foundation
Ensign J. Markland Kelly, Jr. Memorial
Foundation
GareFirst BlueCross BlueShield
KPMGLLP
Garitas Society of St. John's College
Lalley Charitable Fund
Center for Funds & Foundations
John Larson
Chevy Chase Bank
Legg Mason, Inc.
Chimes International Limited
John J. Leidy Foundation
Comcast Cable
Harvey M. and Lyn P. Meyerhoff Fund
Lauren Connolly
Estate of Paul Miller
Richard & Rosalie C. Davison
Foundation
Number Ten Foundation
Arthur & Isadora Dellheim Foundation
Josephine and Harvey Poe
Dixon Valve and Coupling Company
Eliasberg Family Foundation, Inc.
Procter & Gamble Cosmetics
Foundation
FOX45
RCM&D Foundation, Inc.
Amy McConnell Franklin
T. Rowe Price Associates Foundation
Isadore and Bertha Gudelsky
Foundation
United Parcel Service
PNC/Annapolis Banking and Trust
LaVerna Hahn Charitable Trust
Venable, Baetjer and Howard
Foundation
Henderson-Webb
Victor Graphics
Hoffberger Foundation
The Whiting-Turner Contracting
Company
Harley Howell Charitable Foundation
Henry H. Lewis Contractors, LLC
Gifts received after April 15, 2008 are gratefully acknowledged
and will be listed in the 2,009 Commencement Program.
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
24 pages
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
St. John's College
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2008-05-11
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
CommencementExercises2008
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Description
An account of the resource
Program for the two hundred sixteenth commencement in the three hundred twelfth year of the college.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Commencement (St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Program, 2008
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/c6a1ba28e3dce72a0cdabb74fca5f0c9.pdf
840beb1bb5e9f5bd42d06349e8f28a99
PDF Text
Text
STJOHN'S
College
A N N A P O L I S • S A N T A FE
COMMENCEMENT
EXERCISES
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
SUNDAY, MAY THIRTEENTH
Two THOUSAND AND SEVEN
�PROGRAM
FOR THE Two HUNDRED FIFTEENTH
COMMENCEMENT IN THE
THREE HUNDRED ELEVENTH YEAR
OF THE COLLEGE
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
PRELUDE
ACADEMIC PROCESSION
THE NATIONAL ANTHEM
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
FRANCIS SCOTT KEY, ALUMNUS, CLASS OF 1796
WELCOME
CHRISTOPHER B. NELSON
PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
PRESIDENT NELSON
ANNOUNCEMENT OF PRIZES AND AWARDS
MICHAEL DINK
DEAN OF THE COLLEGE
ADDRESS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS
LEON KASS
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
CONFERRING OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
DEAN DINK
CONFERRING OF GRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
JOAN E. SILVER
DIRECTOR OF THE GRADUATE INSTITUTE
ACADEMIC RECESSION
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
�BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
(with title of essay)
CHRISTOPHER MICHAEL BAIR
A World of Words: The Treacherous World of "Love"
and "Nothing"in King Lear
Basalt, Colorado
CHELSEA RACHEL BATTEN
Lyrical Absurdity: An Essay on Fear and Trembling
San Diego,California
CHRISTOPHER JOSEPH BEA
Adventurous Beyond their Power and Daring Beyond
their Judgement: The Athenian Character in
Thucydides' Peloponnesian War
Alexandria, Virginia
ERICA MARIE BEALL
"At War 'Twixt Will and Will Not": The Psychology of
Politics and Human Justice in Measure for Measure
Columbia, Maryland
Li A ANNA MARINA BOYLE
The Deluge: Man and the Tragic Experience
LAURA LEE BRANNER
Dreams of an Ingenious Gentleman:
Zozobra inBorges' "The Other"
GILLIAN BROCKETT
Everything That Rises Must Converge:
Wavicles and the Demise of Determinism
COLIN DOUGLAS BROWN
Honor in the Iliad: An Examination of Its Human Cost
KATHERINE ANNE BRUBAKER
An Investigation into the Foundations
and Use of Equations
Owings Mills, Maryland
Athens, Ohio
New Britain, Connecticut
St. Charles, Illinois
Santa Fe, New Mexico
�PAUL ARNOLD BURKS
The Correction of Necessity by Reason
in Machiavelli's Discourses
Norwood, Ohio
ERIKA JAYNE BUSH
How Are We to Understand Such a Man?
A Journey through Moliere 's Misanthrope
Tryon, North Carolina
ASCHELY VAUGHAN CONE
An Enquiry into the Work of Paul Cezanne
with a Close Consideration of The Birth of Tragedy
byFriedrich Nietzsche
Fr e der icksburg, Texas
RACHEL REBECCA COONCE
An Exploration of Prince Andrey 's Idealism
in Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace
MARGARET ELEANOR CORTRIGHT
"Man Was Made a Rebel; Can Rebels Be Happy?''
An Investigation into Ivan Karamazov 's
Searchfor Suffering
Gainesville, Florida
Vallejo, California
BENJAMIN DONALD CRANE
The Pursuit of Happiness:
What Is Fine Shines Through
Springfield, Oregon
MICHAEL TODD CROKER
Hegel's Way of Despair: An Analysis of the
Unhappy Consciousness
Springfield, Oregon
CHRISTOPHER CLAYTON CUDWORTH
Listening to Bartok 's Concerto for Orchestra
ELIZABETH RUTH CURRY
"A Word Fitly Spoken ": Augustine on the
Use and Abuse of Words
Litchfield, Connecticut
Windsor, Nova Scotia, Canada
�RANJAN KUMAR DAS
The World as Will to Power: An Exploration of
Aphorism Thirty-six ofFriedrich Nietzsche's
Beyond Good and Evil
Katonah, New York
ADA PEARL DAVIDOFF
Don Quixote: The Tales of Christianity and the
Religion of Knight Errantry
Morristown, New Jersey
ESTHER WRIGHT DAVIDOFF
A King's Transformation to a Man:
The Storm in King Lear
Morristown, New Jersey
ISAIAH KESEM DAVIDSON-WEISS
An Attempt to Speak about Emerson's "Experience *
JOHN CONSTANTINE BfiNTLY DODGE
Somerville, Massachusetts
Denver, Colorado
Moliere Unmasked: The Comedic Lesson of
Self-Portrayal in The Misanthrope
* BRADLEY GALEN DOLLARD
Cincinnati, Ohio
SARAH MUELLER ELSE
Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
"Faith begins precisely ivhere thinking leaves off. "
An Essay on Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling
DAVID FREDERICK ERDMAN
Truth and the Work of Art in the
Thought of Martin Heidegger
AMY JOY FALK
No Farther than Faith: Abraham's Journey
to Mount Moriah
Flat Rock, North Carolina
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
DAVID LUKE FERRELL
Who Do You Say I Am?
Maineville, Ohio
CHRISTOPHER ANDREW FLETEZ-BRANT
Who is 'Lear'?
Phoenix, Arizona
�JACQUELYN ERIN FRADETTE
"Laugh to Scorn the Pow 'r of Man:'
Macbeth and Man's Limitations
LUKAS KARL GOODMUTH
Beauty and Ennui in Les Fleurs du Mai
RACHEL FRANCINE GOTTLIEB
How Wretched Am I, Really? Grappling with
Faith and Fear and Trembling
RICHARD KEVIN GRAPE, JR.
A Decryption of Stoic Doctrine and Its Necessity
within Our Modern Society... "To stop talking about
what the good man is like, and just be one. "
ALAN LOCKHART HANDLEY
Wholly at Liberty to Choose: Lobachevski and the
Viability of Non-Euclidean Mathematics
HILARY GERI HAWLEY
The Power of the Educated Man
NIKOLAS ROBIN HILGERDT
Huckleberry Finn and the Searchfor the
American Spirit
Framington, Massachusetts
Woodstock, Maryland
Kernersville, North Carolina
Brick, New Jersey
Arlington, Virginia
Manitowoc, Wisconsin
Chestnut Ridge, New York
GAITRIN REBECCA HILL
Good and Evil: Which Is Better?
Princeton, New Jersey
SARAH ELIZABETH HOGAN
The Temptation of the Novel: Anna Karenina 's
Imitation of Art in Life
Boston, Massachusetts
MATTHEW THOMAS HORST
World as Music, Music as World: Music in the
Philosophical System of Arthur Schopenhauer
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
ROBERT MICHAEL JOHNSON HURST
The Idolatrous Mind
Morgantown, West Virginia
�BRIAN PATRICK HUWE
Being, Seemir* <*. and Consciousness: Scientific Thought
and Explanation <,,„ Hegel's "Force and
Understanding " and Quantum Mechanics
Murfreesboro, Tennessee
BRANDON GHAISON JANES IV
Vision of Xanadu: A Poetic and Psychological
Investigation of Samuel Taylor Coleridge's Imagination
Austin, Texas
ANNA LEE JOHNSON
Taking Life Seriously: The Role of Humor in
Moliere 's Le Misanthrope
MIRA CAITLYN JOHNSON
Guilty Woman: Penance, Penitence, and Hope in
The Scarlet Letter
Orrtanna, Pennsylvania
Middletown, Pennsylvania
EVELYN ANNE JOHNSTON
"It is Impossible to Say Just What I Mean!":
/ AlfredPrufrock Asks an Overwhelming Question
Atlanta, Georgia
ANN KEATING
The Murder of Don Quixote: The End of Myth in a
Cartesian World
Chicago, Illinois
MIRIAM JOANNA KEIM
The Devil and Ivan Karamazov
WILLIAM RYAN KELLY
Quantum Strangeness or How I Learned to Stop
Worrying and Love the Uncertainty Principle
CHARLES WESLEY KITCHEN
Of Spartans and Savages: An Attempt at
Understanding the Place of Sparta in
Rousseau's Politics
CHRISTOPHER REINHARDT KRUEGER
Fundamental Interest, Proper Attention, and the
Choice of a Companion: Adam's Change of Focus
in Paradise Lost
Salisbury, Maryland
Westborough, Massachusetts
Vienna, Virginia
Chocowinity, North Carolina
�NATHAN ABRAHAM LANDE
Knowledge of Paradox and the Paradox of Knowing
Arlington, Virginia
ANNA LOUISE LARSON
Bending the Mind: The Curved Lines ofApollonius
ofPerga and Sir Isaac Newton
Durham, North Carolina
REHANA YASMINE MANEJWALA
On the Nature of the Transfer of Electricity and
Magnetism in Faraday's Experimental Researches
Memphis, Tennessee
MARCOS ALAN MAR
"The Stream of Thought" and Pure Experience:
The Foundations of Psychology as the Science
of Intelligent Life
MATTHEW CHRISTIAN McCLAY
Cause and Skepticism: Classicism, Indeterminacy,
and the Scientific Mind
MATTHEW CHARLES McLEAN
Transcendental Truth: Reasoning Beyond Experience
in Hume's Dialogues
TIMOTHY LEE MEWMAW
Fear, Honor, and Interest: Motives for Empire
CARTER WUERTENBAECHER MOORE
Benito Cereno and the Deeper Shadows
CHRISTOPHER RYAN MULES
"Our souls are like those orphans:"
Deprivation and Isolation in Melville's Moby-Dick
JESSICA CHRISTINE NOHA
Dostoevsky on Suffering, Morality, and God
CHARLES FREDERICK OPALAK
The Fruits of Suffering: A Study of the Unhappy
Consciousness in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit
San Antonio, Texas
Northport, New York
Lansdale, Pennsylvania
Annapolis, Maryland
St. Louis, Missouri
Westminster, Maryland
Swampscott, Massachusetts
Fairneld, Connecticut
�NATALIE ANN CROCKER PALEY
A Matter of I ^ and Death: An Exploration of the
Path to Universal JLove in War and Peace
JUSTIN KEENELAND PHELPS
Role of the Babel Incident in Genesis
EMMA KATRINA PLAUT
Something More Noble: Descartes' Triumph:
A Look at the Method and the Math
GEORGE JOHN POGIATZIS
What Is Justice?
BENJAMIN DANIEL RICHEDA
The Outrageous Rapture: Baudelaire's Poet
Oak Hill, Virginia
Cincinnati, Ohio
Longmeadow, Massachusetts
North Hills, New York
San Francisco, California
MICHELLE LOUISA ROBBINS
Consciousness Objectified: How Man Is Reflected
in Time; A Reading of Kant's Anthropology
Newton, Massachusetts
ANDREW JOSEPH ROMITI
The Symbolic Conceptualization of Modernity:
Jacob Klein on the Rise of the General Number Concept
Ellicott City, Maryland
ANNA MICHAEL RUBIN
Living Fragments and Happy Accidents:
The Poetics of Paul Valery
TOBIAS JOSEPH RUSSELL
From Myth to Paradox, or, The Road to London:
An Examination ofSoren Kierkegaard's
Philosophical Fragments
ANNA LEE SCHALL
Boundlessness, Fear and Faith
ELLEN HELM SCHEUERMANN
Aesthetics, Tragedy and the Value of Suffering
Neavitt, Maryland
Annapolis, Maryland
Maplewood, New Jersey
Bethesda, Maryland
�PAUL ROBERT SCHIEFFER
Hope and the Toads of Reason
DUSTIN ADAM SEBELL
The Groundwork for Nietzsche's Theism
FortWorth,Texas
Wayland, Massachusetts
REILLEY MARIE SHANNON
Navigating the Labyrinth: Duty and Desire
in Racine's Phedre
Seattle, Washington
APRIL NICHELLE SHARP
Race, Sex, Fate, and Joe Christmas:
Maybe He's Not So Terrible After All
Flintstone, Georgia
MARGARET RACHEL SHULTZ
On Love and Beatrice's Identity in
The Divine Comedy
EVA LAURA SIEGEL
On Experience, and Why We Should Embrace
a Valueless Existence
ELIZABETH MIRIAM SILVERMAN
Pride and Morality in Gulliver's Travels
ASHLEY LAUREN SMITH
Fall to Faith: An Examination of Test,
Suffering and Punishment
LOGAN EMERSON SMITH
Trial of the Sensualist: A Synthesis of the Physical
and Spiritual through an Investigation of the
Sensualist Perspective in Fyodor Dostoevsky's
The Brothers Karamazov
CHELSEA LYNN STIEGMAN
The Birth of the Species Being: How the Dialectic
Transforms the Face of Humanity
Delmar, Maryland
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Baltimore, Maryland
New Orleans, Louisiana
Santa Rosa, California
Lusby, Maryland
�HILARY TERASE STIM
A Poet and His City: Thoughts on Baudelaire's
"Tableaux Parisiens "
HANNAH ELISHEBA STONE
Till Death Do Us Part: A Study of the Relationships
in Pride and Prejudice
DEBORAH CAROL STREUSAND
Striving in the Little World of Man
Austin, Texas
Allentown, Pennsylvania
North Potomac, Maryland
DONALD MICHAEL SULLIVAN, JR.
Love Through Commandments and Promise: The First
Epistle of John
Indianapolis, Indiana
KATHRYN ASHLEY SULLIVAN
Converging in the Tide
Baltimore, Maryland
SCOTT ALEXANDER TAYLOR
An Essay on Sensibility in Non-Euclidean Geometry
Woodside, New York
ADAM ROBERT THIMMIG
Blueprints & Burned Bridges: Analytic and Synthetic
Judgments, their Importance in Modern Philosophy,
and their Effect on a Skeptic
Tiburon, California
BLAIR ERIN THOMPSON
Movement and Mortality: An Inquiry Into Living a
Beautiful Life according to Michel de Montaigne
Crofton, Maryland
FREYA ELISE THOMPSON
Fragments of Faith: Faith in the Individual vs. Faith
in the Community
St. Paul, Minnesota
EMILY ROSE TORDO
Waiting for the Denouement: The Life and Death
of Anna Karenina
ERIC BENJAMIN TORGERSON
Liberty, the Last Luxury
Ardmore, Pennsylvania
Landover, Maryland
�HOLLY ELIZABETH MARIE TORGERSON
Babel's Ambition and Babel's Shame
LESLIE S. Ujj
On the Dangers of Living in a Literary World:
Real Life and the Underground Man
KYLE BENTON VARNER
Friendship and Happiness in Aristotle's
Nicomachean Ethics
SERENA BUSH WASHINGTON
Made in His Image: Love and Divinity in Songs of
Innocence and of Experience by William Blake
PAUL TERRY WILFORD
The Making of a Moral Being
ROBERT CALDER WILLIAMS
Technology and Chthonic Nature in Sustainable
Agriculture
MAGDALEN KATHRYN WOLFE
A Match Burning in a Crocus: Form, Meaning,
and the Unifying Power of Language in
Virginia Woolf's The Waves
JAMES LOCKWOOD WRIGLEY
Reconciling Marx's Ethical and Material Elements
Nevada City, California
Trenton, New Jersey
Spokane, Washington
Gainesville, Florida
Charleston, South Carolina
Rutherford, California
Seattle, Washington
Lexington, Massachusetts
NICHOLAS KENNETH YOUNES
The Sea and Moby-Dick
Potomac, Maryland
GEORGE J. ZAHRINGER IV
The Beautiful Socrates: An Attempt at Initiation
into the Mysteries of Eros
Wellington, Florida
* Upon completion of requirements
�MASTER OF ARTS IN LIBERAL ARTS DEGREE
GRADUATE INSTITUTE IN LIBERAL EDUCATION
DONELLA LOUISE ADAMS
PAIGE ABJUNA BARENT
Baltimore, Maryland
Berea, Ohio
KEELEY DAWN BARRY
Pine, Colorado
MARY KATE BRENNAN
Baltimore, Maryland
WILLIAM PAUL BROADWAY
WESLEY SCOTT BROWN
St. Louis, Missouri
Winterville, Georgia
JESSICA ELIZABETH BURGARD
Silver Spring, Maryland
DAVID HARPER BYERS
Silver Spring, Maryland
PAUL DAVID CALVIN
KELLEIGH ANN CUNNINGHAM
PRISCILLA BURNS CUNNINGHAM
JAMES RICHARD D ARCANGELO
LILLIAN LOGAN THAYER DERRICK
ZACHARY ANDREW DUNN
ANDREW CHARLES EMERSON
PETER PAUL GELZINIS IV
Annapolis, Maryland
Fryburg, Pennsylvania
Fairfax Station, Virginia
Dumfries, Virginia
Baltimore, Maryland
North Potomac, Maryland
Lincoln, Maine
South Boston, Massachusetts
JONATHAN LEE GREEN
Kansas City, Kansas
COREY GENE HAYDEN
Belleville, Illinois
CORNELIUS JOSEPH HIGGINS
KAREN CHARLOTTE IPPOLITO
ROBERT PRICE IRONS III
JILLIAN STEPHANIE JOHNSON
DAVID A. KANE
CHRISTOPHER WILLIAM KAUFFMAN
Alexandria, Virginia
Marblehead, Massachusetts
Charlotte sville, Virginia
Chagrin Falls, Ohio
Green Bay, Wisconsin
Reston, Virginia
�DAVID THOMAS KEARNS
Hershey, Pennsylvania
DAVID MICHAEL KRAUS
St. Louis, Missouri
LEAH ELIZABETH LAVIN
Signal Mountain, Tennessee
COURTNEY MICHELLE LAWRENCE
Baltimore, Maryland
ROBERT SAMUEL LEIB
Biglerville, Pennsylvania
EMILY BONDO MAWHINNEY
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
DANIEL PATRICK MCGARRON
IRA MILLER
Washington, District of Columbia
Bethesda, Maryland
KELLY JEAN NASH
Rockford, Illinois
JEFFREY MICHAEL PETERS
Millers, Maryland
RYAN THOMAS PHILLIPS
BRIAN THOMAS PIETRAVALLE
ELIJAH EVERETT REED
Dublin, Ohio
Washington, District of Columbia
Scottsboro, Alabama
ANTHONY SCOTT REINER
Orlando, Florida
MARK STEVEN RIPKA, JR.
Tacoma, Washington
LAUREN ELIZABETH ROBBINS
JOSHUA MARC SAKS
CRAIG EDWARD SWANSON
CHARLES JAY THRONSON
ARTHUR ANTHONY TORELLI
Lexington, Virginia
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Denver City, Texas
Gunnison, Colorado
Neavitt, Maryland
MATTHEW JOHN URBANSKI
Findlay, Ohio
DlAN OWEN VANDfiMARK
Annapolis, Maryland
JOEL EDGAR WILLIAMS
Williamsburg, Virginia
MARY ELIZABETH WINTERBOTTOM
Ellicott City, Maryland
�PRIZES AND AWARDS
COMMENCEMENT 2007
To the member of the Senior Glass who has written the best senior essay.
Offered in memory of Susan Irene Roberts, of the class of 1966
"At War 'Twixt Will and Will Not": The Psychology of Politics
and Human Justice in Measure for Measure
ERICA MARIE BEALL
A Match Burning in a Crocus: Form, Meaning, and the Unifying
Power of Language in Virginia Woolfs The Waves
MAGDALEN KATHRYN WOLFE
HONORABLE MENTION
Being, Seeming, and Consciousness: Scientific Thought
and Explanation in Hegel's "Force and
Understanding " and Quantum Mechanics
BRIAN PATRICK HUWE
To the member of the Junior Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered by Mrs. Leslie Clark Stevens in memory of her
daughter-in-law, Kathryn Mylorie Stevens
Mortality and Progress in Gulliver's Travels
STEVEN ROBERT FAIRCHILD
Inward Sailing
FABIO HULLEY LOMELINO
�To the member of the Sophomore Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered under the will of the late Judge Walter I. Dawkins,
of the Class of 1880
The Role of Gender, Nature and Politics in
Chaucer's Canterbury Tales
IAN KENNETH LINDQUIST
To the member of the Freshman Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered in memory of Jacob Klein, Tutor Emeritus, and his wife,
Else, by Dr. and Mrs. Stuart Walker
Retracing the Divine? Logos in the Sophist
CASSANDRA MICHELLE KREEK
To the member of the January Freshman Class who has written the best
annual essay in the 2005-2006 academic year.
Offered in memory of Elizabeth "Betsy" Marta Smith, of the
Class of 1993, by Robert Clinton Nease, of the Class of 1992
On Plato, Mathematics, and Knowledge
KELVIN WAYGID CHUNG
To the Graduate Institute student who has written a
distinguished preceptorial essay in the year 2006.
Offered by the Alumni Association
Art in The Divine Comedy
LISA MARIE McGovERN
To a member of the Senior Class, for excellence in speaking.
Offered in memory of Senator Millard E. Tydings of Maryland
NICHOLAS KENNETH YOUNES
�To the student who submits the best English version of a Greek text.
Offered in memory of John S. Kieffer, President Emeritus
Text: Opening Speech from Euripides ' Alcestis
ANDREW JOSEPH ROMITI
To the student who submits the best English version of a French poem.
Offered by the Board of Visitors and Governors
Text: Marie-Claire Bancquart, "Retour d'Ulysse, "
KAYLA JEAN GAMIN
To the student who submits a fine original English poem.
Offered by Dr. George Austin in memory of his brother, Henry
"Killing Time "
ANN KEATING
"He Slumbers, but the Woman Does Not Sleep "
ALEXANDRA GRACE WALLING
To the student who submits a fine original musical composition.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap
"Variations for Xylophone and Strings "
ARIEL AVRAM WINNICK
To the student who submits a fine essay on a piece of music.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap
No PRIZE AWARDED
�To the student who submits the most elegant solution of a geometrical problem.
Offered by the Class of 1986 in honor of Bryce Jacobsen, of the
Class of 1942, Tutor and Director of Athletics Emeritus
THEODORE JAMES SALWEN
CLARE MYERS SAUNDERS
HONORABLE MENTION
WILLIAM RYAN KELLY
MATTHEW CHARLES MCLEAN
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of an analytical problem.
Offered in memory of James R. McClintock of the Class of 1965
WILLIAM RYAN KELLY
To the student who carries out a fine laboratory project.
Exploring Experimental Design and Data Analysis Through a
Study of the Growth Patterns o/Humex crispus
ANNA LEE JOHNSON
HONORABLE MENTION
Romer 's Experiment
BRIAN PATRICK HUWE
�To the Senior man and woman who by their participation,
leadership, and sportsmanship have contributed most to the
College's athletic program, special blazers.
Offered by the Alumni Association of St. John's College
JAMES LOCKWOOD WRIGLEY
EMMA KATRINA PLAUT
)K
To the member of the Senior Class who has contributed outstanding
service to the Greater Annapolis Community.
Offered by the Caritas Society of St. John's College
No PRIZE AWARDED
Walter S. Baird Prize-for a Senior who has demonstrated excellence
in the arts, literature, or sciences
Collection of Shakespearian sonnets, illuminated & calligraphed
AMY JOY FALK
To the member of the Senior Class who has demonstrated the greatest care
for and service to youth residing in the City of Annapolis.
Offered by the friends and family of Marvin B. Cooper,
of the Class of 1969
No PRIZE AWARDED
�To the member of the Senior Class whose work in the St. John's College Community
Art Exhibition demonstrates mastery of technique and original thought.
Icon of St. Michael Written Under the Prospon School, painting
JOHN CONSTANTINE BENTLY DODGE
Lighter-than-Air Cathedral, ink and watercolor
LUKAS KARL GOODMUTH
HONORABLE MENTION
The Rise and Fall of Shu, scroll painting
DAVID LUKE FERRELL
�ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Leslie Milton Abrams, 1954
Dr. Granville Q. Adams, 1929
John D. Alexander, 1920
Philip L. Alger, 1912
Alter Graduate Institute Scholarship Fund
Alumni Scholarship
Annapolis Graduate Institute
Annapolis Self-Help
George M. Austin, 1908
Walter S. Baird, 1930
Betty Beck Bennett, 1960
Fred and Marion Billups Fund
Ford K. Brown, H70
Garitas Society of St. John's College
Casasco Family Fund
Chicago Regional
Mrs. Clyde Alvin Clapp
James T. Clark, 1928
Class of 1897
Class of 1898
Richard F. Cleveland, H54
Bernard Clorety, 1950
Dr. Charles C. Cook
Marvin Brent Cooper, 1969
The Joseph and Robert Cornell
Memorial Foundation
Eugene N. (1929) and Robert G. (1963) Cozzolino
Wiley and Helen Crawford
Cpl. George E. Cunniff III
Donna Marie Delattre
Clarence L. Dickinson, 1911
Richard A. Duhan, 1963
Martin Dyer Book Fund
Faculty Scholarship
Ronald Fielding Scholarships
James H. Frame, 1950
Friends of St. John's
Harry Golding, Graduate Institute
George A. and Eveline T. Greenleaf
Edna G. and Roscoe E. Grove, 1910
John T. and Gertrude L. Harrison, 1907
John T. Harrison, Jr.
Charles W. Hass, 1927
Richard H. Hodgson, 1906
The Hodson Trust
Alfred and Ruth Houston, 1906
Houston Regional
John Isaacs
J. Seward Johnson, Jr.
Jesse H. and Mary Gibbs Jones
Col. Robert E. and Margaret Larsh Jones, 1909
Robert E. Kanode, 1939
Dr. Simon and Fanny Kaplan, H84
Francis A. Katz, 1929
John Spangler Kieffer, H70, and
Roxana White Kieffer, H84
Jacob Klein, H76
Korshin Family Fund
Tom and Cathryn Krause
Arthur E. and Hilda Combs Landers, 1930
Joseph LaPides
Michael Littleton Memorial
John D. Mack, 1945
Massachusetts Regional
James Matthews, H99
Martin Conrad Miller (1981) Book Fund
Philip A. Myers II, 1938
NationsBank Foundation (Bank of America)
Rev. Theo O'Brien
O'Grady Memorial
Oklahoma Regional
Norman G. Owens
Dr. Thomas Parran and Thomas Parran, Jr.
Passin Family Fund
The Duane and Clementine Peterson
Charitable Fund
Pittsburgh Regional
Reader's Digest Foundation
J. Douglas Ramsey, 1937
Lenore B. Binder
Charles & Cleo Ritz
Susan I. Roberts, 1966
Clifton C.Roehle
Joan and Bela Ronay
Murray Joel and Julius Rosenberg, 1938
G. D. Searle/John E. Robson
Rob son Family
J. J. Salovaara
Flora Duvall Sayles
Hazel Norris and J. Graham Shannahan, 1908
DougE. Sherr (1972) Memorial
Thomas J., H94, and Marion K. Slakey
J. Winfree Smith, H80
James S. Spirer, 1970
C.V. Starr Foundation
Harry S. and Vivian B. Spectre Book Fund
Jean Roberts Staylor
Andrew and Lenore Steiner Book Fund
Clarence W.Stryker
Karl and Evelyn Van Tassel
Frederick J. Von Schwerdtner
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Vanous
Pattie Bourne Turner Walker, 1966
Richard D. Weigle, H49
John L.Williams, 1950
Thomas J. and Marvil F. Williams
Frank K. Wilson, 1935
St. John's College
St. John's College Alumni Association
�ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
AAI Corporation
Abell Foundation
Estate of Eugene Adkins
AT&T
Bank of America
Batza Family Foundation
Beaehley Foundation, Inc.
Bunting Family Foundation
CACI
Estate of Namaddis Caembeneay
Campbell Foundation, Inc.
Canusa Corporation
Caritas Society of St. John's College
Annie E. Casey Foundation
Mr. Donald W. Chamberlain
Corporate Office Properties Trust
CSC
Richard & Rosalie C. Davison Foundation
Arthur & Isadora Dellheim Foundation
Dixon Valve and Coupling Company
Eliasberg Family Foundation
Essex Corporation
GE Foundation
General Dynamics-Advanced Information Systems
Isadore and Bertha Gudelsky Foundation, Inc.
LaVerna Hahn Charitable Trust
Henderson-Webb, Inc.
David and Barbara Hirschhorn Foundation
Hoffberger Foundation
Harley Howell Charitable Foundation
Huether-McClelland Foundation, Inc.
James M. Johnston Trust
Larry Katz
KAWG&F
Ensign J. Markland Kelly Jr. Memorial Foundation
Lalley Charitable Fund
John J. Leidy Foundation
Estate of Barbara Leonard
Lockheed Martin Integrated Systems & Solutions
Lord Baltimore Capital Corporation
Macht Philanthropic Fund
Miles & Stockbridge Foundation
Northrop Grumman
Number Ten Foundation, Inc.
Mr. E. Magmder Passano, Jr.
Procter & Gamble Cosmetics Foundation, Inc.
Raytheon Systems
Estate of Ann D.H. Rich
Mr. William R. Snyder
St. Paul Travelers Foundation
T. Rowe Price Associates Foundation, Inc.
Venable, Baetjer and Howard Foundation, Inc.
Verizon Federal Network Systems
Victor Graphics, Inc.
Mr. Ronald J. Volpe
Thomas von Foerster
Delores E. Wolf
Gifts received after April 15, 2007 are gratefully acknowledged
and will be listed in the 2008 Commencement Program.
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
23 pages
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
St. John's College
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2007-05-13
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
CommencementExercises2007
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Description
An account of the resource
Program for the two hundred fifteenth commencement in the three hundred eleventh year of the college.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Commencement (St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Program, 2007
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/d4910a19d783cc6c785647d8fc84de3c.pdf
6aefbec12684e982d975d86b2134486f
PDF Text
Text
STJOHN'S
College
COMMENCEMENT
EXERCISES
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
SUNDAY, MAY FOURTEENTH
Two THOUSAND AND six
�PROGRAM
FOR THE TWO HUNDRED FOURTEENTH
COMMENCEMENT IN THE
THREE HUNDRED TENTH YEAR
OF THE COLLEGE
PRELUDE
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
ACADEMIC PROCESSION
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
THE NATIONAL ANTHEM
FRANCIS SCOTT KEY, ALUMNUS, GLASS OF 1796
WELCOME
CHRISTOPHER B. NELSON
PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
PRESIDENT NELSON
ANNOUNCEMENT OF PRIZES AND AWARDS
MICHAEL DINK
DEAN OF THE COLLEGE
ADDRESS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS
JUDITH SEEGER
ASSISTANT DEAN
CONFERRING OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
DEAN DINK
CONFERRING OF GRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
JOAN E. SILVER
DIRECTOR OF THE GRADUATE INSTITUTE
ACADEMIC RECESSION
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
�BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
(with title of essay)
ANNA AMBROSE AHERN
The Complexities of Decision-Making
in War and Peace
ARTHUR CHARLES ALLEN
Andrei Tarkovsky's Andrei Rublev:
An Argument for Art
PHILIP GLENDEN ARCHER
Light-Footed Ulysses: The Wandering
Consciousness in James Joyce 9s Ulysses
MARGOT FORSCHER BEHREND
Voyage into "Le Voyage "
BRIANNE AMELIA BELL
Theotokos: Mary's Conflict in Mantegna 's
Madonna with Sleeping Christ Child
MAUREEN ELIZABETH BOWERS
Le Monstre: An Exploration of Love in
Racine's Phedre
AARON GOLDING BRAGER
The Little Engine That Could: Communism
as a Lockean Government
ANNA DOROTHEY BREON
Education and the Rights of Woman in Middlemarch
MICHAEL BRIGHT
"Who is Odysseus?99: Tracing the Roots of Identity
SHILO SHADID BROOKS
The Cosmology ofXenophon 's Socrates: A Reading of
Chapters 1.4 andlV.s ofXenophon's Memorabilia
Lubbock, Texas
Mukilteo, Washington
Oakland, California
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Tacoma, Washington
Virginia Beach, Virginia
Baltimore, Maryland
Jersey Shore, Pennsylvania
Ann Arbor, Michigan
Lubbock, Texas
�AARON KEITH BRUMLEY
Anticipation and Interpretation in the New Organon
and Advancement of Learning, Book One
LORD THOMAS ALTON BURBRIDGE
Man in the City: Encountering Rousseau's
Discourse on the Origin and the Foundation of
Inequality Among Men
ERIN LEE CALLAHAN
Overseas: A Study of Travel and Traveler
Through the Eyes of Gulliver
DAVID SCOTT CANTINE
"For Your Maker is Your Husband": Reflections
on Marriage and the Character of God
SARAH ELIZABETH CHAVEZ
Physical Analogy: Science of the Likely Story
ELEANOR ANNE CLARK
A Pattern for Forgiveness: A Parable of Forgiveness
in Tolstoy'sWai and Peace
Topeka, Kansas
Austin, Texas
Falls Church, Virginia
Northumberland, Pennsylvania
Helotes, Texas
Berlin, Germany
ALEXANDER GREGORY CLAXTON
No End in Sight: An Exploration
of Teleology in Darwinism
Annapolis, Maryland
STEPHEN ROOKE GLOSS
On Montaigne: The Value of Writing
As a Means of Self-Creation
Los Altos, California
JONATHAN DAVID COPPADGE
Deception and Divinity: The Self and Amour-Propre
in Pascal and La Rochefoucauld
CLARE CATHERINE LEA ALOHA CORTRIGHT
From Love to Rage and Back Again
Liberty, Pennsylvania
Vallejo, California
�KATHRYN NICOLE COURTRIGHT
Everyday Enigmas: An Exploration of the Seemingly
Opposed Notions of Continuity and Infinitesimals
GEREMY LEE COY
"The Other Side of Silence": Significance in George
Eliot's Middlemarch
BENJAMIN JAMES CROMARTIE
Point of Rocks, Maryland
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Egg Harbor City, New Jersey
The Shield of Achilles: Divine Views of Human Life
in the Iliad
JOSEPH PAUL DANIELS
The Glory of the Living Christ
New Bern, North Carolina
MARY REBECCA DAVENPORT
Jesus or You: Choosing a Path in Flannery O 'Connor's
The Violent Bear it Away
Eagle River, Alaska
JOSHUA ALAN DAVIDSON
Faith and Resignation: A Study of the Religious
Individual in S0ren Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling
Snow Hill, Maryland
EMILY KYLE DfiBusK
Life, London, This Moment in June:
The Sense of Life in Mrs. Dalloway
AILEEN SAMANTHA EDANA DICKEY
Montaigne, Au Naturel:
It's Either That or He Eats People
MICHAEL MACDONALD DOBBYN
The Many Ways of Man in Homer's Odyssey
Elkton, Maryland
Tucson, Arizona
Alexandria, Virginia
THOMAS COVINGTON DYER
Leo Tolstoy and Inner Peace
Potomac, Maryland
JENNIFER ELIZABETH FAIT
Imitating Justice: A Discussion of Education and
Lying in Plato's Republic
Mequon, Wisconsin
�ELIJAH KIRK FERBRACHE
"That They May Be One as We Are": Oneness in Jesus'
Last Supper Discourse
ERICA SCHILLER FREEMAN
The Force of Physics: The Truth of Modern Science in
Hegel's Phenomenology
ALEXIS CLARE FRUECHTING
Guided by Leo Tolstoy: Investigating What is Art?
ERIKK MICHAEL GEANNIKIS
The Kingdoms of Power and Wisdom: Cartesian and
Leibnizian Physics, Metaphysics, and Investigation in
the Historical Development of Quantum Mechanics
RACHEL GABRIELLE GILLIS
The Dreams Stuff is Made Of: A Look at
the Mathematical Language of Nature in
Light of Quantum Mechanics in Heisenberg's
Physics and Philosophy
SHOSHANA RUTH GOLDSTEIN
Finding the Territory Ahead of the Rest
REBECCA EMILY GREEN
Fear of the Lord: The Significance of Absolute Fear in
Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit
THOMAS GROVER GREEN
Abstraction and Imperfection in
Galileo's Two New Sciences
KEVIN THOMAS GRIZZARD
Francis Bacon, Ancient Science, and the Attempt to
Understand Nature
CAMERON DONALD HEALY
Stylish Science: Faraday's 28th Series, Newton's
System of the World
Barnesville, Ohio
Roselle Park, New Jersey
Dallas, Texas
Baldwin, New York
Peakville, New York
Highland Park, New Jersey
Rockville, Maryland
Portland, Oregon
Midlothian, Virginia
St. Michaels, Maryland
�ALLISON HOPE HENNIGAN
Beaute: A Foray into the Question of Whether Beauty
is Good or Evil in Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du Mai
GENEVA KATHRYN HINKLE
A Princely Virtue: Seeking the Good
in MachiavellVs Prince
Decatur, Alabama
Greenfield Center, New York
DANIEL RUSSELL HOUCK
What's Up, Baudelaire?From the Highs
to the Lows of Elevation, Curiosity, and Ennui
Mesa, Arizona
SAMUEL PAUL HUCKINS
EssentialReflexivity: The Role of Perspective in
Describing Universal Development
Fairmont, West Virginia
JULIE ANNE JANICKI
Children of Pride and Fear: An Investigation into
How Man 9s Natural Condition Necessitates an
Artificial Solution
LUKE RAVI JAYAPALAN
Deeper Shadows: The Unsettling Inscrutability
q/*Benito Cereno
BRIAN TED JONES
War in Richard III
ALEXANDER COPLAND KAST
Misanthropic Motive Forces in Moliere's Misanthrope
CATHERINE GRACE KEENE
The Kindness of a Convict: A Look
at Compassion in Les Miserables
IAN JOSEPH KING
Contemplative Action: Xenophon 's Will to Power
Gainesville, Florida
Buffalo Grove, Illinois
Talihina, Oklahoma
Gharlottesville, Virginia
Tunkhannock, Pennsylvania
Mount Wolf, Pennsylvania
�BENJAMIN CHARLES KLOCH
What Makes a Man? Meaningful Associations
in the Nicomachean Ethics
Hurlock, Maryland
MAX ISAAC THOMAS KRONBERG
Abba, Father: Gethsemane and the
Dual Nature of Jesus
Leesburg, Virginia
WILLIAM RAYMOND LADD-CAWTHORNE
Discourse on Methods: Searching/or Truth in the
Unknown; or, The Passion of What Is
ERIC WAYNE LASILOO
An Essay on Descartes 'Interest in Pappus's Problem
JEFFREY DAVID LEE
RaskolnikoVy or On Pushing-Through
GARRETT HAMILTON LEWIS
Appearances and Isolation: The Experience of
Reading Heart of Darkness or I Drink Alone
JENNIFER GRACE LOWE
Sum Pius Aeneas: Piety, Rage, and the Making
of a New Kind of Hero
ANDREW CRAIG MACKINLAY
Maxwell's Mathematical Machine
MATTHEW DAVID MANGOLD
Prosperous Garments: Time and
Transformations in The Tempest
DEBORAH GRACE MANGUM
Meaningless! Meaningless!
The Suspension of Causality
CHESTER PAUL MARTIN
Achilles: The Hero and His Relation to the Community
Pittsboro, North Carolina
Ramah, New Mexico
Atascadero, California
Anacortes, Washington
St. Louis, Missouri
Malvern, Pennsylvania
Winfield, Kansas
Pflugerville, Texas
Hinesburg, Vermont
�JOHN STEWART MASAR
Closing the Gap: An Examination of the Separation
Between Religion and Science Through the Work of
Hegel and Kierkegaard
Silver Spring, Maryland
KERRY MERTENS MORSE
Augustine's Song of Change
Bozeman, Montana
SAMANTHA ANNE MOYERMAN
The Role of Angels in Maimonides'
Guide of the Perplexed
St. Louis, Missouri
MICHAEL NICHOLAS MUNTERS
The Machine That Makes Itself
SARAH LYNNE NAVARRE
The Community and the Anomaly:
Finding Balance in Job
ALEXIS KENNEDY NEMER
What Shall We Do?
EMILY ANNE NISCH
God in Creation: Words and the Word
in the Gospel of John
KATHERYN LOUISE NORRIS
The Tripartite Soul in Plato's Republic: The Result of
Composition or Corruption
Alexandria, Virginia
Urbana, Ohio
Mill Valley, California
Bloomfield Hills, Michigan
Lakewood, Ohio
MOIRA KRISTIN O'SHEA
Giving An Onion: How Salvation Can Be Born
Of Despair in The Brothers Karamazov
New Paltz, New York
TODD BENJAMIN PARKER
Free Will in C.S. Lewis: A Treatise on The Human Will
in the Writings of C.S. Lewis (in Two Parts)
Salisbury, Maryland
PAUL NATHAN PATRONE
Contemplation Through Action: Athens and the Sea
Rocky Mount, North Carolina
�LAURA JEANNE PINSON
The Phenomenology of SanchoPanza; or,
How to Tell a Story
CATHERINE MARY PISHA
Words and Fire: Intimacy with God
in Pascal's Memorial
Wilmington, Delaware
Nanuet, New York
BRIAN GROUSE QUINN
Are the Blinders On? Misunderstanding
Jesus in the Gospel of John
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
MICHAEL DMITRY RASHKIN
The Anti- "Key to All Mythologies ": Feeling Versus the
Intellect in George Eliot's Middlemarch
San Francisco, California
DANIEL Louis RERA
An Inquiry into the Connexion and Interaction
Between Political Structures and Commerce
YONATAN SCHREIBER
Buffalo, New York
Arlington, Massachusetts
Socrates in a Life Better Than Ruling
GREGORY MOERLEIN SCHROEDER
The Greater Number: Popular Government
andPublius' Leviathan
DANIEL SCHWARTZ
On Communicating to Cavemen: Plato, Francis
Bacon, and the Problems of Didactic Persuasion
ELIZABETH DUHRING SCOTT
On Happiness, Freedom and Morality: Toward an
Apology for Kant's Position in "On a Supposed Right
to Liefor Philanthropic Reasons "
ANNE NELLIE SHELLITO
Recollecting in Plato's Meno
Cincinnati, Ohio
Coral Springs, Florida
Richmond, Virginia
New Orleans, Louisiana
�JENNIFER ELIZABETH SILGALS
Expectancy and Faith: The Fatherhood of Abraham
NICHOLAS JAMES STEINER
A City in Mid-Voyage: The Course of Athens
During the Peloponnesian War
DONALD JOSEPH STONE
Odysseus and His Name
CHRISTOPHER JAMES STUART
Revolution and Reconstitution: How the Declaration
of Independence Informs the U.S. Constitution
Summerviile, South Carolina
Vandalia, Missouri
Southington, Connecticut
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
PATRICK COLUM SULLIVAN
Understanding Feeling in The Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn
Midland, Michigan
JENNIFER KAY SWEENEY
On the Role of Experience in Living a Beautiful Life
Using Michel de Montaigne's "Of 'Experience "
Juneau, Wisconsin
CHRISTOPHER BENJAMIN UTTER
Imitation, Salvation, and the Return
to Poetry in Republic X
MICHAEL GREGORY VECCHIOLLA
Eros, The Greatest Beguikr of Men: The Contest
Between Wisdom and Pleasure Through the
Speeches ofAgathon, Socrates, and Alcibiades in
Plato's Symposium
MATTHEW CAILEN WARD
The Living Text and the Texture of the Living: Love,
Writing, and the City in Plato's Phaedrus
MICHAEL-DOUGLAS RODGERS WARD
From Experience to Measurement: An Investigation
ofBrunelleschVs Order
Cleveland Heights, Ohio
St. Charles, Illinois
Sacramento, California
Tacoma, Washington
�SAMANTHA SIGNA WEAVER
Friendship vs. Citizenship in The Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn
Kensington, California
JAMES TUCKER WHITE
The Portrait Baudelaire Paints of Beauty: Hot Damn
Carlisle, Pennsylvania
SARAH PATRICIA WHITFIELD
Making Man Worthy of Happiness: The Role of Moral
Law and Nature in The Perfection of Man
Byram, Mississippi
SARAH STEELE WILSON
Unifying the Soul: The Place of Poetry
in Plato's Republic
Yardley, Pennsylvania
WEBSTER YE
The Notion of Judgment in The Merchant of Venice
McLean, Virginia
AMY ELISE YOUNGKIN
".. Condemning shadows quite." The Bounds of
Emulation and Imagination in Shakespeare's
Antony and Cleopatra
Austin, Texas
NECHAMA ZAKHEIM
The Life and Moral Education of the
Hippocratic Physician
New York, New York
'
�MASTER OF ARTS IN LIBERAL ARTS DEGREE
GRADUATE INSTITUTE IN LIBERAL EDUCATION
NORMAN ROBERT ALLEN
SHANNON HOUSTON ANDRUS
Washington, District of Columbia
Lafayette, Louisiana
GEOFFREY SCOTT BAGWELL
Portland, Oregon
WILLIAM PAUL BINDER, JR.
Chicago, Illinois
JOANNA JANE BUTCHER
PAUL BRYAN COOPER
Colorado Springs, Colorado
University Park, Maryland
THOMAS CLINE DABNEY
Alexandria, Virginia
SHEILA ANN DICKERSON
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
PATRICK JOHN FARRELL, JR.
Coeymans, New York
WILLIAM MARTIN FERRELL
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
CHANDRA SOPHIA HANSON
Burlington, Vermont
DONALD Louis HITT
Ann Arbor, Michigan
RACHEL HOFMANN
DENISE CANCIENNE KAHM
BRETT LEWIS KELLER
MICHAEL WILLIAM KELLY
JACQUELINE KENNEDY
LAUREN ANN KOPAJTIC
Scotts Valley, California
Belle Rose, Louisiana
Gurnee, Illinois
Baltimore, Maryland
Lompoc, California
Jarrettsville, Maryland
�COREY WAYNE LONEY
Hartselle, Alabama
KELVIN VICTOR LUCAS
Downingtown, Pennsylvania
ERIC LINN MATTHEWS
Orange Park, Florida
DAVID COLE METCALF
Richmond, Virginia
JONATHAN EDWARD MILLBURN
ALLISON BROOKE OWENS
Cambridge, Maryland
Highland Village, Texas
VASHTI ELIZABETH PEARSON
Birmingham, Alabama
MATTHEW ALEXANDER RAREY
Franklin Park, Illinois
LYNN ELEANOR ROMANO
Annapolis, Maryland
S. FORD ROWAN
Annapolis, Maryland
CHAD SCHROCK
Annapolis, Maryland
ANDREW WARHOL SERIO
DAVID BRENTON SPEER
CHRISTOPHER ROBERT STRAUSS
SUSAN MERRIE SWIER
GREGORY GRANT WILLIAMS
Davidsonville, Maryland
Dalhart, Texas
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Annapolis, Maryland
Bay Area, California
�PRIZES AND AWARDS
COMMENCEMENT 2,006
To the member of the Senior Class who has written the best senior essay.
Offered in memory of Susan Irene Roberts, of the class of 1966
From Love to Rage and Back Again
CLARE CATHERINE LEA ALOHA CORTRIGHT
Words and Fire: Intimacy with God in Pascal's Memorial
CATHERINE MARY PISHA
HONORABLE MENTION
On Happiness, Freedom and Morality: Toward an
Apology for Kant's Position in "On a Supposed Right
to Liefor Philanthropic Reasons "
ELIZABETH DUHRING SCOTT
To the member of the Junior Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered by Mrs. Leslie Clark Stevens in memory of her
daughter-in-law, Kathryn Mylorie Stevens
Imagination 's Indispensable Synthesis: An Interpretation of the
Groundwork for Kant's 'Deduction'
ERICA MARIE BEALL
The Greater Self- An Investigation of Hume's Vision of Sympathy
ANN ELIZABETH KEATING
�To the member of the Sophomore Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered under the will of the late Judge Walter I. Dawkins,
of the Class of 1880
Body, Mind and Heart: The Pilgrimage to God
In Augustine's Confessions
FABIO HULLEY LOMELINO
To the member of the Freshman Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered in memory of Jacob Klein, Tutor Emeritus, and his wife,
Else, by Dr. and Mrs. Stuart Walker
Identifying What One Has Never Seen: Recognition and
Knowledge in Plato's Theaetetus
NATHAN SHOLES GATES
HONORABLE MENTION
Language and Form
LAURA LOGAN JOHNS
To the member of the January Freshman Class who has written the best
annual essay in the 2004-2005 academic year.
Offered in memory of Elizabeth "Betsy" Marta Smith, of the
Class of 1993, by Robert Clinton Nease, of the Class of 1993
Homophrosynen: The Like-Minded ness of Penelope and Odysseus
LAUREN MICHELLE GOODMAN
To the Graduate Institute student who has written a
distinguished preceptorial essay in the year 2005.
Offered by the Alumni Association
Poetic Language, Immortality, and the Beloved
ROBERT PRICE IRONS, III
.
�To a member of the Senior Class, for excellence in speaking.
Offered in memory of Senator Millard E. Tydings of Maryland
LUKE RAVI JAYAPALAN
To the student who submits the best English version of a Greek text.
Offered in memory of John S. Kieffer, President Emeritus
Text: Opening Speech from Euripides ' Cyclops
MATTHEW DAVID MANGOLD
To the student who submits the best English version of a French poem.
Offered by the Board of Visitors and Governors
Text: Gidllaume Apollinaire, "A Madeleine"
KAYLA JEAN GAMIN
)K
To the student who submits a fine original English poem.
Offered by Dr. George Austin in memory of his brother, Henry
The Resurrection Sonnets: A Cycle in Three Parts
DAVID LUKE FERRELL
To the student who submits a fine original musical composition.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap
"Romances"
LUKE ANTHONY RUSSELL
�To the student who submits a fine essay on a piece of music.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap
The Freedom of Man in Mozart's Don Giovanni
APRIL NICHELLE SHARP
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of a geometrical problem.
Offered by the Class of 1986 in honor of Bryce Jacobsen, of the
Class of 1942, Tutor and Director of Athletics Emeritus
WILLIAM RYAN KELLY
HONORABLE MENTION:
KATHRYN NICOLE COURTRIGHT
CLARE MYERS SAUNDERS
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of an analytical problem.
Offered in memory of James R. McClintock of the Class of 1965
No PRIZE
HONORABLE MENTION
WILLIAM RYAN KELLY
To the student who carries out a fine laboratory project.
Electrolytic Fluid Flow Induced by Currents and Magnets.
NICHOLAS KENNETH YOUNES
�To the Senior man and woman who by their participation,
leadership, and sportsmanship have contributed most to the
College's athletic program, special blazers.
Offered by the Alumni Association of St. John's College
THOMAS COVINGTON DYER
ANNA AMBROSE AHERN
To the member of the Senior Class who has contributed outstanding
service to the Greater Annapolis Community.
Offered by the Caritas Society of St. John's College
DONALD JOSEPH STONE
To the member of the Senior Class who has demonstrated the greatest care
for and service to youth residing in the City of Annapolis.
Offered by the friends and family of Marvin B. Cooper,
of the Class of 1969
MICHAEL MACDONALD DOBBYN
JULIE ANNE JANICKI
To the member of the Senior Glass who submits the best work of visual art to the
Community Art Exhibition, the Charles Vernon Moran Prize
"Lemma II" From Isaac Newton's Principia, ceramic
MICHAEL-DOUGLAS RODGERS WARD
Walter S. Baird Prize-for a Senior who has demonstrated excellence
in the arts, literature, or sciences
"Lemma II" From Isaac Newton's Principia, ceramic
MICHAEL-DOUGLAS RODGERS WARD
�ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Leslie Milton Abrams, 1954
Dr. Granville Q. Adams, 1929
Mildred Alexander
Philip L. Alger, 1912
Alter Graduate Institute Scholarship Fund
Alumni Scholarship
Annapolis Graduate Institute
Annapolis Self-Help
George M. Austin, 1908
Walter S. Baird, 1930
Betty Beck Bennett, 1960
Fred and Marion Billups Fund
Ford K-Brown, H70
Caritas Society of St. John's College
Gasasco Family Fund
Chicago Regional
Mrs. Clyde Alvin Qapp
James T.Clark, 1928
Class of 1897
Class of 1898
Richard F. Cleveland, H$4
Bernard Clorety, 1950
Dr. Charles C. Cook
Marvin Brent Cooper, 1969
The Joseph and Robert Cornell
Memorial Foundation
Eugene N. (1929) and Robert G. (1963) Cozzolino
Wiley and Helen Crawford
Cpl. George E. Cunniff III
Donna Marie Delattre
Clarence L. Dickinson, 1911
Richard A. Duhan, 1963
Martin Dyer Book Fund
Faculty Scholarship
Ronald Fielding Scholarships
James H. Frame, 1950
Friends of St. John's
Harry Golding, Graduate Institute
George A. and Eveline T. Greenleaf
Edna G. and Roscoe E. Grove, 1910
John T. and Gertrude L. Harrison, 1907
John T. Harrison, Jr.
Charles W. Hass, 1927
Richard H. Hodgson, 1906
The Hodson Trust
Alfred and Ruth Houston, 1906
Houston Regional
John Isaacs
J. Seward Johnson, Jr.
Jesse H. and Mary Gibbs Jones
Col. Robert E. and Margaret Larsh Jones, 1909
Robert E. Kanode, 1939
Dr. Simon and Fanny Kaplan, H&4
Francis A. Katz, 1929
John Spangler Kieffer, H7O, and
Roxana White Kieffer, H84
Jacob Klein, H76
Korshin Family Fund
Arthur E. and Hilda Combs Landers, 1930
Joseph LaPides
Michael Littleton Memorial
Massachusetts Regional
James Matthews, Hgg
Martin Conrad Miller (1981) Book Fund
Philip A. Myers II, 1938
NationsBank Foundation (Bank of America)
Rev. Theo O'Brien
O'Grady Memorial
Oklahoma Regional
Norman G. Owens
Dr. Thomas Parran and Thomas Parran, Jr.
Passin Family Fund
The Duane and Clementine Peterson
Charitable Fund
Pittsburgh Regional
Reader's Digest Foundation
J. Douglas Ramsey, 1937
Lenore B. Hinder
Cleo Ritz
Susan I. Roberts, 1966
Clifton C. Roehle
Joan and Bela Ronay
Murray Joel and Julius Rosenberg, 1938
G. D. Searle/John E. Robson
Robson Family
J.J.Salovaara
Flora Duvall Sayles
Hazel Norris and J. Graham Shannahan, 1908
Doug E. Sherr (1972) Memorial
Thomas J., Hg4, and Marion K. Slakey
J. Winfree Smith, H8o
James S. Spirer, 1970
C.V. Starr Foundation
Harry S. and Vivian B. Spectre Book Fund
Jean Roberts Staylor
Andrew and Lenore Steiner Book Fund
Clarence W.Stryfcer
Karl and Evelyn Van Tassel
Frederick J. Von Schwerdtner
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Vanous
Pattie Bourne Turner Walker, 1966
Richard D. Weigle, H49
John L. Williams, 1950
Thomas J. and Marvil F. Williams
Frank K. Wilson, 1935
St. John's College
St. John's College Alumni Association
�ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Alex Brown & Sons Charitable Foundation, Inc.
Allegis Group
Batza Family Foundation
Mrs. Martha Bier
CACI
Caritas Society of St. John's College
Annie E. Casey Foundation
Chevy Chase Bank
C,SC
Erickson Retirement Communities
General Dynamics-Advanced Information
Isadore and Bertha Gudelsky Foundation, Inc.
Harris Corporation
Mr. Thomas P. Healy
David and Barbara Hirschhorn Foundation
The Hodson Scholarship Foundation
Hoffberger Foundation
I-Fund
Larry Katz
Mr. Peter E. Keith
The Ensign C. Markland Kelly, Jr. Memorial Foundation
Arthur E. and Hilda Combs Landers Charitable Trust
The John J. Leidy Foundation
Barbara Leonard (Hss)
Lockheed Martin Corporation
Lord Baltimore Capital Corporation
Dr. Kevin Manning
Dr. Lois M. Meszaros
Harvey M. and Lynn P. Meyerhoff Fund
Joseph Meyerhoff Fund
Miles & Stockbridge Foundation
Monumental Life Insurance & AEGON USA
Myerberg Foundation, Inc.
Nationwide Foundation
Nationwide Insurance
Mr. Harry O'Mealia
Provident Bank
Raytheon Systems
Mrs. Ann D. H. Rich
Cleo Ritz
Mr. Mitchell Schmale
Mr. John F. Simanski
Ms. Rachel B. Smith
T. Rowe Price Associates Foundation, Inc.
Ms. Cindy Thompson
United Parcel Services
WBFF/WNUV
Ms. Sharon Christopher Wylie
HaidiZech
Gifts received after April 15, aoo6 are gratefully acknowledged
and will be listed in the 2007 Commencement Program.
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
22 pages
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
St. John's College
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2006-05-14
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
CommencementExercises2006
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Description
An account of the resource
Program for the two hundred fourteenth commencement in the three hundred tenth year of the college.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Commencement (St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Program, 2006
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/ea9b43ac26268c1f2895ea6781e6a18e.pdf
92dc1e165f679abc91bd83ecd87ce35e
PDF Text
Text
SIJOHN'S
College
A N N A P O L I S • SANTA FE
COMMENCEMENT
EXERCISES
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
SUNDAY, MAY FIFTEENTH
Two THOUSAND AND FIVE
�PROGRAM
FOR THE TWO HUNDRED THIRTEENTH
COMMENCEMENT IN THE
THREE HUNDRED NINTH YEAR
OF THE COLLEGE
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
PRELUDE
ACADEMIC PROCESSION
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
THE NATIONAL ANTHEM
FRANCIS SCOTT KEY, ALUMNUS, GLASS OF 1796
CHRISTOPHER B. NELSON
PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
WELCOME
PRESIDENT NELSON
ANNOUNCEMENT OF PRIZES AND AWARDS
HARVEY FLAUMENHAFT
DEAN OF THE COLLEGE
JOSEPH MACFARLAND
TUTOR, ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE
ADDRESS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS
CONFERRING OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
DEAN FLAUMENHAFT
CONFERRING OF GRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
JOAN E. SILVER
DIRECTOR OF THE GRADUATE INSTITUTE
ACADEMIC RECESSION
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
�BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
(with title of essay)
PRANKIE-SlOBHAN MlLLAY AlTC HI SON-CLARK
Leucadia, California
Anticipating the Whole in The Brothers Karamazov
MARGARET LILLIAN ALEXANDER
On Negativity in the Phenomenology
SARAH EMILY ALTMAN
An Investigation Concerning Methods of Knowing
(By Way of Aristotle's Physics,)
CHARLES ARNOTT
Salvation Among the Damned: Dante's Realization
of the Nature of Sin in the Inferno
LINDSEY ELIZABETH BARNES
An Inquiry of the History and of Its Possible Use
IAN MATTHEW BLAUSTEIN
Seeing Other People: On the Necessity of Moral Action
in Kant's Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals
SAMANTHA KIMBERLY BUKER
Death and the Maiden: The Courtship of
AleksandrPushkin's Tatiana and Onegin
SIR ROBERT GAYLORD BURBRIDGE
Lost in Translation—A Critical Analysis of
Critical Analysis: The Continuity of Matter,
Space-Time, and Reason
TOBIAS DAVID BURRESS
1
Eatontown, New Jersey
Palm Beach, Florida
Easton, Maryland
Kentfield, California
Chagrin Falls, Ohio
Baltimore, Maryland
Austin, Texas
Middletown, Rhode Island
�* ELIZABETH BOWLING COOK CAVANAUGH-O'KEEFE
Joy in Wretchedness:
Pascal's Roadmap to Everlasting Joy
MATTHEW BRYAN CLIFFORD
Theatrical Morals:
Paradoxes of Self-Awareness in King Lear
ANN MARIE COCCONI
An Exploration of the Use and
Existence of the Infinite in Mathematics
NICHOLAS JEREMY COLTEN
The Missing Middle
MICHAEL ROBERT CONBOY
Going Beyond Non-Contradiction:
Views of the True in Hegel and Kierkegaard
ALEXANDER HAMILTON CONSTANTINE
Prime Mover and Being: A Comparison of
Aristotle and Parmenides
Laytonsville, Maryland
Hamilton, New Jersey
Wheaton, Illinois
St. Paul, Minnesota
Golden Valley, Minnesota
Rochester, New York
STEPHEN WESLEY COONCE
The Fall and Rise of Man in the Book o/^Genesis
Hawthorne, Florida
SANDEEP SHEKHAR DAS
The Only Thing Harder Than Killing Your God is
Killing Yourself: An Examination of Shortcuts to
Happiness in Dostoevsky's Demons
Katonah, New York
JANAE LEANNA DECKER
In Black and White: Demystifying Moby Dick
MARSHALL KINCAID DERKS
The Ladder and the Path:
Education in Plato's Republic
JOSEPH VINCENT DOBBYN
The Pedagogy of Parables
Portland, Oregon
Columbia, South Carolina
Alexandria, Virginia
�ELIZABETH ALISON DURHAM
Fools, Liars, and Madmen: A Search for Wisdom
in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night
LAWRENCE RYEN DWYER
Is Leibniz an Idealist?
COOPER NATHANIEL GALLIMORE
One Noble Aim: The Search for Meaning and the
Great-SouledMan in Hobbes's Leviathan
Portland, Oregon
Kalamazoo, Michigan
Charlotte, North Carolina
THOMAS AUGUSTUS GALLO
Washington, District of Columbia
The Wealth of Exchange and Men: An Inquiry into the
Fate of Free Pursuit
JORDAN BERNARD GANNON
O Memory, What Shall I Make of Thee?
Gridley, California
ADAM BENJAMIN GARBER
A Look at the Spiritual Relationship
Between Community and Individual; or,
Jonah Gets a Timeout to Grow
Atlanta, Georgia
MATTHEW BOGAN GATES
Transcending Historical Aporia
EILEEN SUZANNE GATEWOOD
First Principles in Aristotle's Physics
and Newton's Principia
JOHN FUREY GERARD
And he said, "Here lam ": The Dialectical Struggle of
Faith in Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Grants, New Mexico
Princeton, New Jersey
ERIC WILLIAM GLEYSTEEN
Moving Meter and The Wearied Mind
Highland, Maryland
LEE THOMAS GOLDSMITH
Why Is It Called Phedre? or,
The Inward Hero for Racine's Inward Tragedy
Media, Pennsylvania
�LAURA ANN GREENWOLD
Overcoming Luther's Leviathan:
The Relationship Between Faith and Man
in Luther's The Freedom of a Christian
Columbia, South Carolina
GWENDOLYN GREER GURLEY
Degeneration, Dignity, and Deception: Battling
Human Nature in Swift's Gulliver's Travels
Frederick, Maryland
RACHEL SARAH HALL
Happiness Through Opposition:
The Natural Man in Rousseau's Second Discourse
Fargo, North Dakota
JAMES Me KAY HARRISON
Beauty and the Aesthetic in Action in Friedrich
Schiller's Letters on the Aesthetic Education of Man
Park City, Utah
JOAN BRIANT HENRIKSEN
Divine Absurdity: Man's Relationship with God
Springfield, Illinois
TOBIN JAMES HERRINGSHAW
Tragedy and Transformation:
Aristotle's Poetics
Bay City, Michigan
at Work in
ANDREA SUSANA HINES
What Connubial Felicity Really Was
ELIZABETH WRAY HOHN
Fear and Courage in the Nicomachean Ethics
JOHANNES JAMES BROWNLOW HUESSY
Sovereignty in Confederation: The Independence of
States in Political Union in The Spirit of the Laws,
The Federalist and The Draft EU Constitution
ERIN FARRIS HUGHEY-COMMERS
Seeing the Sky:
Joy and Oblivion in Tolstoy's War and Peace
Annapolis, Maryland
Oberlin, Ohio
Norwich, Vermont
Lovingston, Virginia
�Ross RICHARDSON HUNT
Cyrus the Elder and the Beautiful
in Xenophon 's Kurou Paideia
THOMAS BULEN JACOBS
Son ofPeleus
NORA ELISA KELLEHER
A Hidden Miracle: Alyosha 's Discovery
in The Brothers Karamazov
KATHERINE LEIGH KELLY
Justice in the Balance: On the Oresteia
DWIGHT THOMAS KNOLL
The Kingdom of Heaven in The Sermon on the Mount
VERA SERGEEVNA KOSHKINA
The Necessity of Self-Education in Rousseau's Emile
KYRA ALEXIS KOZEMCHAK
Misinterpretation
CARA FRANCES LAMMEY
Our Spoonful of Sugar: An Examination
of Rousseau Js Cosmopolitan Soul
JUSTIN DALE LANIER
On the Erotic Geometer: How Nothing Can
Guide Our Actions Here Below; or,
A Groundwork for the Mathematics of Morals
NATHAN COE MARSH
Unnatural Obsession: Imagination,
Mathematical Reason, and the Cult of Objectivity
FRANCIS TINGLER MC€ANN
On the Nature of Freedom in the Best
of All Possible Worlds
Santa Fe, New Mexico
Fairfax Station, Virginia
New York, New York
Bel Air, Maryland
Stephenville, Texas
Chicago, Illinois
Falls Church, Virginia
West Grove, Pennsylvania
Lake Charles, Louisiana
Tampa, Florida
Leavenworth, Kansas
�IAN CHRISTOPHER McMuRTRY
The Cultural Assimilation of Lawrence of Arabia
Newfield, New York
MATTHEW DORRINGTON MIHLON
Approaches to Truth and Life in Beyond Good and Evil
Tujunga, California
SIMEON ANDREW MORBEY
Taming Apollo: Justice's Connection
to Morality in the Oresteia
BRENT EDWARD MORRIS
Pure Reason and Its End
CHRISTOPHER THAIN MUSCARELLA
The Shapes You Take Are Endless:
Women, Lies, and Storytelling in the Odyssey
ERICA BETH AANA NAONE
The Word and the Image: Investigating Straightness
AIDAN FRANCIS O'FLYNN
Darwin and the Evolution of Scientific Consciousness
MICHAEL MIKHAILOVITCH OSSORGIN VIII
The Death of Pride: Bearing Fruit in the World
SHAKTI CHRISTINE PEARCE
The Voice of Meaning: Song, Word, and
World in Wallace Stevens's Poem
"The Idea of Order at Key West"
JAMES MICHAEL PEARSON
The Patient Agent: Musings on Odyssean
Activity and Passivity
JOHN MATTHEW PETERSON
Impious Youths and Divine Puppets:
Politics in Plato's Laws
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Oakland, New Jersey
Framingham, Massachusetts
DeLand, Florida
Hamilton, New York
Santa Fe, New Mexico
Faber, Virginia
Russell, Pennsylvania
Owego, New York
�SPENCER BRYANT POTTER
The Obscuring Power of Theatrics in Benito Cereno
AUDRA LOUISE PRICE
On Principle and Passion: Moral Education
and Unlikely Heroism in Mansfield Park
Alexandria, Virginia
Grand Junction, Colorado
MATTHEW LAWRENCE REINER
The Discord of Friendship and Justice
in Book One of Plato's Republic
Annapolis, Maryland
NATALIE SUSAN RINN
The Union of Fanny Price and Mansfield Park
St. Cloud, Minnesota
DARLENE BETH ROGERS
On the Fictionalization of Historically Great Men
Egremont, Massachusetts
ERVIN FAURICIO ROMERO
Sin, Law, and Faith —An Exploration of Conflict in
the Individual: Paul's Epistle to the Romans
North Hills, California
JEROD JAMES RULEAUX
Alone in the Dark: The Deadly Fruits of Isolation in
The Brothers Karamazov
Bozeman, Montana
DANIEL TYLER RUSSELL
On Justice in Book I of Plato's Republic
JULIE ANN SAROWSKI
Perfection of Man in Society
Annapolis, Maryland
Shawnee Mission, Kansas
LAUREN WESLEY SHERMAN
"... but now my eyes have seen You ": An Exploration of
Job's Emerging Insight Throughout the Book of Job
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
JILLIAN MARY Sico
On Sympathy and Divine Union:
An Exploration of Music and the St. Matthew Passion
Mount Holly, New Jersey
�BETH ANN SIEKIERA
The Life of Dorothea Brooke in George Eliot's
Middlemarch: A Study of Greatness in Provincial Life
MELISSA ANN SKOOG
From Here to There—Knowing in Part with
the Hope of Knowing Fully Some Day:
An Examination ofSocratic and Christian Ideas
Presented in Plato's Phaedo, Kierkegaard's
Philosophical Fragments, and the New Testament
ERIC FuRIN SLOAT
East Windsor, Connecticut
Troy, Ohio
Ann Arbor, Michigan
The Sorrow of Change: Some Thoughts About
Baudelaire's Poem "Le Cygne "
JOSHUA PAUL SuiCH
Lakeland, Florida
"You Can Kill the Messenger'1: From Prophecy to
Messiah and Apostles to Martyrs—A Synthetic Inquiry
of Their Foundations in the Old and New Testaments
MATTHEW ARTHUR TALAMINI
On the Analogy of the City and the Soul
in the Republic and Other Similar Analogies
AMY ELIZABETH TAYLOR
A Meditation on Johannes Climacus
JACOB JESSE THOMAS
Timonium, Maryland
Littleton, Colorado
Cameron, West Virginia
Condemnation and Redemption: Polyphony and Later
Sacred Music in Light of St. Augustine's Confessions
OLETA LOUISE THOMAS
Falls Church, Virginia
Plato's Forms and Language
LAURA ELANOR TRAINA
O Heavy Vice, Thinking Wicked What is Nice:
Suppression and Elevation of the Soul As Indicative
of Good and Evil in Shakespeare's Othello
Cherry Hill, New Jersey
�SEAN ALEJANDRO VALLES
Castles Made of Sand: Atomism and Building
Knowledge from Assumption in the Works of
Antoine Lavoisier and Michael Faraday
CHRISTOPHER WILLIAM WALKER
What is Knowledge? or,
The Triumph of Faith in an Uncertain World
VINCENT WANG
Rousseau and The Myth of the Fall:
An Investigation of Man \s Fall from the State of Nature
ISAAC JOSEPH WEINER
The Knot and the Lock
JOSHUA MARK WEINSTEIN
Nietzsche's Ebb and Flow
WILLIAM LAMAR WELLS
What, Then, is Money? An Examination of Value
and Money in the Works of Karl Marx, Adam Smith,
John Locke, and Aristotle ofMacedon
NICHOLAS DAVID WHITTIER
The Rise and Fall of the Beautiful Soul
Newton, Massachusetts
Woodbridge, Virginia
San Marino, California
High Falls, New York
Lititz, Pennsylvania
Jamesville, New York
Dover, Pennsylvania
JARED COLLIN WILK
What Does it Mean for Jesus to Fulfill the Law
and the Prophets?
Corvallis, Oregon
JESSE TWAIN WORDEN
Socrates, What's Your Point?
Mt. Desert, Maine
NICOLE ASHER YOUNG
Between Nature and Freedom: Natural and Artistic
Beauty in Kant's Critique of Judgment
Acworth, Georgia
ROY LAVI ZAIDENBERG
The Cedar Tree Door: How Gilgamesh Approached
Immortality and Retained his Humanity
Tel Aviv, Israel
�MASTER OF ARTS IN LIBERAL ARTS DEGREE
GRADUATE INSTITUTE IN LIBERAL EDUCATION
GREGORY WAYNE BAIR II
CYNTHIA MARY BARRY
MELVIN BENDER
MADI BOBB
DIMITRA CHRISTINA BOLGER
CHARLA ANN GROVER BURT
DANIEL TYREE CALLIS, JR.
DANIEL MORGAN CLARK
AMY LUCILE CLITHERO
STEPHANIE NICHOLE DENNY
JOSHUA MATTHEW GROSSMAN
PETER BURNELL HANSEN
MELISSA SUE HELEN HILL
JOHN ANDREW Izzo
RYAN CARL JENSEN
JENNIFER LYNN JOHNSON
Hanover, Pennsylvania
Annapolis, Maryland
Arnold, Maryland
The Gambia, West Africa
Glenview, Illinois
Sandpoint, Idaho
Washington, District of Columbia
Boyds, Maryland
Lewisville, North Carolina
Pleasant View, Tennessee
Youngstown, Ohio
Austin, Texas
Latrobe, Pennsylvania
Mt. Ephraim, New Jersey
Washington, District of Columbia
Minot, North Dakota
NICHOLAS JOHAN KAHM
Stamford, Connecticut
JENNY CAMPBELL KAWA
Athens, Georgia
JOSEPH WILLIAM KEARNS
Hershey, Pennsylvania
JOHN McLfioo LANKFORD
Frederick, Maryland
JEFFREY ALAN LEWIS
Annapolis, Maryland
RAYMOND HEATH LINAM
THOMAS CHARLES LIZARDO
Ponder, Texas
Fairfax, Virginia
LINDA MARY LOUGHREY
Severna Park, Maryland
MICHAEL JOHN MARTENS
High Wycombe, England
TIMOTHY M. MASON
Ashtabula, Ohio
KEYLLA MORILLO-SMITH
Annapolis, Maryland
KATHRYN MARIE PATTON
Baltimore, Maryland
KERI BETH PETERSON
Annapolis, Maryland
GREGORY ROBERTSON
Bridgeport, Connecticut
�JERRY D. SALYER
CYNTHIA DU PONT TOBIAS
JOHN TERRIELL WOODS, JR.
Salyersville, Kentucky
Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania
Pasadena, Maryland
�PRIZES AND AWARDS
COMMENCEMENT 2,005
To the member of the Senior Class who has written the best senior essay.
Offered in memory of Susan Irene Roberts, of the class of 1966
The Word and the Image: Investigating Straightness
ERICA BETH AANA NAONE
HONORABLE MENTION
The Voice of Meaning: Song, Word, and World in Wallace
Stevens's Poem "The Idea of Order at Key West"
SHAKTI CHRISTINE PEARCE
On Sympathy and Divine Union: An Exploration of Music
and the St. Matthew Passion
JILLIAN MARY Sico
Seeing Other People: On the Necessity of Moral Action in Kant's
Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals
IAN MATTHEW BLAUSTEIN
To the member of the Junior Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered by Mrs. Leslie Clark Stevens in memory of her
daughter-in-law, Kathryn Mylorie Stevens
Failure in George Eliot's Middlemarch
GEREMY LEE COY
HONORABLE MENTION
uAnyHope
of Subduing Him is False ": Motion and Passion in
Hobbes 's Leviathan
SARAH LYNNE NAVARRE
�To the member of the Sophomore Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered under the will of the late Judge Walter I. Dawkins,
of the Class of 1880
Questioning Moses: An Essay on Book XI of
St. Augustine's Confessions
CHELSEA RACHEL BATTEN
HONORABLE MENTION
Breaking Boundaries and the Limits of Nature:
An Interpretation of the Ode to Man
PAUL TERRY WILFORD
To the member of the Freshman Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered in memory of Jacob Klein, Tutor Emeritus, and his wife,
Else, by Dr. and Mrs. Stuart Walker
Socrates in the Symposium: A Love Letter
KATRINA THERESE GERSIE
HONORABLE MENTION
Luck Be a Lady
SUSAN AUDREY HOLCOMB
To the member of the January Freshman Class who has written the best
annual essay in the 2003-2004 academic year.
Offered in memory of Elizabeth "Betsy" Marta Smith, of the
Class of 1993, by Robert Clinton Nease, of the Class of 1992
"The Coin for Which All Things Are Exchanged":
Socrates' Defense of Argument in the Phaedo
SARAH ELIZABETH HOGAN
�To the Graduate Institute student who has written a
distinguished preceptorial essay in the year 2004.
Offered by the Alumni Association
What Does "I" Mean? Examining Kant's Thoughts on the
Synthetic Unity of Apperception
NEIL ANTHONY BATT
To a member of the Senior Class, for excellence in speaking.
Offered in memory of Senator Millard E. Tydings of Maryland
LEE THOMAS GOLDSMITH
HONORABLE MENTION
ERICA BETH AANA NAONE
To the student who submits the best English version of a Greek text.
Offered in memory of John S. Kieffer, President Emeritus
Text: Chorusfrom Euripides ' Hercales
ANDREW JOSEPH ROMITI
To the student who submits the best English version of a French poem.
Offered by the Board of Visitors and Governors
Text: Jean de La Fontaine, " Volupte "
NORA ELISA KELLEHER
DANIEL SCHWARTZ
�To the student who submits a fine original English poem.
Offered by Dr. George Austin in memory of his brother, Henry
"A Current Past"
KATRINA THERESE GERSIE
To the student who submits a fine original musical composition.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap
"Chopinesque "
THOMAS BULEN JACOBS
Musical Composition for Piano
TOBIAS JOSEPH RUSSELL
To the student who submits a fine essay on a piece of music.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap
On Sympathy and Divine Union:
An Exploration of Music and the St. Matthew Passion
JILLIAN MARY Sico
On the Finale to Don Giovanni
ARTHUR CHARLES ALLEN
HONORABLE MENTION
Bach's Incarnation of the Word in Sound
SAMANTHA KIMBERLY BUKER
�To the student who submits the most elegant solution of a geometrical problem.
Offered by the Class of 1986 in honor of Bryce Jacobsen, of the
Glass of 1942, Tutor and Director of Athletics Emeritus
No PRIZE
HONORABLE MENTION
ANDREW CRAIG MACKINLAY
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of an analytical problem.
Offered in memory of James R. McClintock of the Class of 1965
No PRIZE
To the student who carries out a fine laboratory project.
No PRIZE
To the Senior man and woman who by their participation,
leadership, and sportsmanship have contributed most to the
College's athletic program, special blazers.
Offered by the Alumni Association of St. John's College
NICHOLAS DAVID WHITTIER
JOAN BRIANT HENRIKSEN
NATALIE SUSAN RINN
To the member of the Senior Class who has demonstrated the greatest care
for and service to youth residing in the City of Annapolis.
Offered by the friends and family of Marvin B. Cooper,
of the Class of 1969
JACOB JESSE THOMAS
�To the member of the Senior Class who submits the best work of visual art to the
Community Art Exhibition, the Charles Vernon Moran Prize
No PRIZE
Walter S. Baird Prize-for a Senior who has demonstrated excellence
in the arts, literature, or sciences
Story of Adam and Eve, 2-Dimensional Work of Visual Art
SAMANTHA KIMBERLY BUKER
Maryland State Archives Internship
BETH ANN SIEKIERA
�ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Leslie Milton Abrams, 1954
Dr. Granville Q. Adams, 1929
John D. Alexander, Sr., 1920
Philip L.Alger, 1912
Alter Graduate Institute Scholarship Fund
Annapolis Graduate Institute
Annapolis Self-Help
George M. Austin, 1908
Walter S. Baird, 1930
Bank of America
Betty Beck Bennett, 1960
Ford K. Brown, H'70
Chicago Regional
Mrs. Clyde Alvin Clapp
James T.Clark, 1928
Class of 1897
Class of 1898
Richard F. Cleveland, H'54
Bernard Clorety, 1950
Dr. Charles C. Cook
Marvin Brent Cooper, 1969
The Joseph and Robert Cornell
Memorial Foundation
Eugene N.( 1929)and
RobertG. (1963) Cozzolino
Wiley and Helen Crawford
Cpl. George E. Cunniff III
Donna Marie Delattre
Clarence L. Dickinson, 1911
Richard A. Duhan, 1963
Martin Dyer Book Fund
Faculty Scholarship
James H. Frame, 1950
Friends of St. John's
Harry Golding, Graduate Institute
George A. and Eveline T. Greenleaf
Edna G. and Roscoe E. Grove, 1910
John T. and Gertrude L. Harrison, 1907
John T. Harrison, Jr.
Charles W. Hass, 1927
Richard H. Hodgson, 1906
The Hodson Trust
Alfred and Ruth Houston, 1906
Houston Regional
John Isaacs
J. Seward Johnson, Jr.
Jesse H. and Mary Gibbs Jones
Col. Robert E. and Margaret Larsh Jones, 1909
Robert E. Kanode, 1939
Dr. Simon and Fanny Kaplan, H'84
Francis A. Katz, 1929
John Spangler Kieffer, H'70 and Roxana White
Kieffer, H'84
Jacob Klein, H'76
Korshin Family Fund
Arthur E. and Hilda Combs Landers, 1930
Joseph LaPides
Michael Littleton Memorial Fund
Massachusetts Regional
James Matthews, H'99
Martin Conrad Miller (1981) Book Fund
Philip A. Myers II, 1938
NationsBank Foundation (Bank of America)
Rev. Theo O'Brien
Oklahoma Regional
Norman G. Owens
Dr. Thomas Parran and Thomas Parran, Jr.
The Duane and Clementine Peterson
Charitable Fund
Pittsburgh Regional
Reader's Digest Foundation
J. Douglas Ramsey, 1937
Lenore B. Hinder
Susan I. Roberts, 1966
Clifton C. Roehle
Joan and Bela Ronay
Murray Joel and Julius Rosenberg, 1938
G. D. Searle/John E. Robson
Robson Family
J. J. Salovaara
Flora Duvall Sayles
Hazel Norris and J. Graham Shannahan, 1908
DougE. Sherr (1972) Memorial
J.Winfree Smith, H'80
James S. Spirer, 1970
C.V. Starr Foundation
Harry S. and Vivian B. Spectre Book Fund
Jean Roberts Staylor
Andrew and Lenore Steiner Book Fund
Clarence W.Stryker
Karl and Evelyn Van Tassel
Frederick J. Von Schwerdtner
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Vanous
Pattie Bourne Turner Walker, 1966
Richard D. Weigle, H'49
John L. Williams, 1950
Thomas J. and Marvil F. Williams
Frank K. Wilson, 1935
St. John's College
St. John's College Alumni Association
�ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
AES Warrior Run
Alcoa Eastalco Works
Annapolis Banking and Trust
ARINC, Inc.
The Baltimore Sun
BB&T Charitable Foundation
Butler Capital Corporation
Carrollton Bank
Chevy Chase Bank
Clark-Winchole Foundation
Computer Sciences Corporation
Constellation Energy Group
Erickson Retirement Communities
Estate of Mildred E. Alexander
Estate of Albert Pagano, Jr.
Estate of Thomas B. Turner
Farmers Insurance Group, Inc.
Gallagher, Evelius, & Jones LLP
Glenn L. Martin Foundation
Goldsmith Family Foundation
The Isadore and Bertha Gudelsky Foundation, Inc.
LaVerna Hahn Charitable Trust
The Hodson Scholarship Foundation
Hub Labels, Inc.
Independent College Fund of Maryland
Larry Katz
The Ensign C. Markland Kelly, Jr. Memorial Foundation
The John J. Leidy Foundation
Barbara Leonard
Legg Mason, Inc.
Mercantile Fund
Miles & Stockbridge
Nationwide Foundation
Nationwide Insurance
RCM&D
Royal Folly Bed & Breakfast
The St. Paul Companies, Inc. Foundation
SunTrust Bank
Susquehanna Bank
T. Rowe Price Associates Foundation, Inc.
Verizon-Maryland
Whiteford, Taylor & Preston
Haidi Zech
Gifts received after April 15, 2005 are gratefully acknowledged
and will be listed in the 2006 Commencement Program.
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
22 pages
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
St. John's College
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2005-05-15
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
CommencementExercises2005
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Description
An account of the resource
Program for the two hundred thirteenth commencement in the three hundred ninth year of the college.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Commencement (St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Program, 2005
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/73397a9f79ac2f40f2bb0e1ec19c105a.pdf
4b79ba6dba0b7d3d1fe45c63576b3678
PDF Text
Text
SIJOHN'S
College
A N N A P O L I S • S A N T A FE
COMMENCEMENT
EXERCISES
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
SUNDAY, MAY SIXTEENTH
Two THOUSAND AND FOUR
�PROGRAM
FOR THE TWO HUNDRED TWELFTH
COMMENCEMENT IN THE
THREE HUNDRED EIGHTH YEAR
OF THE COLLEGE
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
PRELUDE
ACADEMIC PROCESSION
THE NATIONAL ANTHEM
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
FRANCIS SCOTT KEY, ALUMNUS, CLASS OF 1796
WELCOME
CHRISTOPHER B. NELSON
PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
ANNOUNCEMENT OF PRIZES AND AWARDS
PRESIDENT NELSON
HARVEY FLAUMENHAFT
DEAN OF THE COLLEGE
ADDRESS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS
CHESTER W. BURKE
TUTOR, ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE
CONFERRING OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
DEAN FLAUMENHAFT
CONFERRING OF GRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
WILLIAM PASTILLE
DIRECTOR OF THE GRADUATE INSTITUTE
ACADEMIC RECESSION
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
�BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
(with title of essay)
ROBERT CHARLES ABBOTT, JR.
Herodotus VIII. 55
Alexandria. Virginia
CHARLES OLIVER ANDERSON
''Sewer Rats May Taste Like Pumpkin Pie... v:
The Ethics of Eating
Baltimore, Maryland
MARTIN JANIS ANDERSON
In Search of Dignity: An Analysis of Sin and Social
Corruption in Genesis
Rockville, Maryland
JEFFREY LYLE ARMEL
History, Husserl, and the. Crisis
LINDSEY STUART BANNAN
For the City or For the Man: The Motivations of the
Athenian Democracy in Policy-Ma king During the
Peloponnesian War
ANTON BARBA-KAY
The Noble Science of Retreating Well: A Structural
Account of Plato \s Laches
ROBERT EDWARD BENNING
An Examination of Philosophical Transitions in
Tolstoy "s War and Peace
Seal Beach. California
Anchorage. Alaska
Olympia, Washington
Nashville. Tennessee
JUSTIN VIKRAM BERRIER
The Almond Rod and the Boiling Pot: A. Struggle
Between Faith and Doubt in Jeremiah, Gods Most
Tormented Prophet
Wynnewood, Pennsylvania
JENNIFER ALEXANDRA BISHOP
The Problem of Hierarchy in Paradise Lost
Cleveland, South Carolina
�ANDREW CRAIG VINCENT BRISTOR
The End of justice in the Aristotelian State
Lutherville. Maryland
HAYDEN McCLURE BROCKETT
Nobility and Friendship in Plato \s Gorgias
New Britain, Connecticut
KIMBERLY ANNE BRYAN
Oh, That "s a Likely Story: An Exploration of True
Opinion and Faith in Plato's Timaeus
MATTHEW JOSEPH BUBAN
A Student's Understanding of Lemma Three from the
First Section of the First Book Within Newton's
Principia
KASIMIR CHRISTIAN BUJAK
The Action of Mercy: Love and Suffering in
The Brothers Karamazov
Chatsworth, California
Terrace Park, Ohio
Palmyra, New Jersey
AURORA JEAN CASSELLS
The Mirage of Right Action
Shepherdstown, West Virginia
PROSE LYSANDRA CASSELLS
Philosophical Playfulness: An Exploration of
Playfulness in Plato's Phaedrus
Shepherdstown, West Virginia
MARY ELIZABETH COCKEY
The Loneliness in Freedom: An Examination of
Huckleberry Fin ?i as a Ghost in the World of the Living
REBEKAH ELEANOR COLEMAN
A Science of the Self
SHANNA KATHLEEN COLEMAN
"BeautifulLives": The Feminine Tragedy of
Absalom, Absalom!
PAMELA LINDA CONNOR
How Grand We Are This Morning: The Ordinary
Becomes Extraordinary in James Joyce's Ulysses
Salisbury, Maryland
Tulsa, Oklahoma
Derry, New Hampshire
Favetteville, New York
�ENJOLI OLEETA COOKE
77/6* Third Person of God: Epitomes of God's Love,
Gift, and Holy Spirit
Annapolis, Maryland
ANDREA CHRISTEN Cox
Freedom of Life: Pierre's Passage Through War and
Peace
Alton, Wyoming
ROBERT ANTHONY CULBERT
Self Discovery Through Justice in the Iliad of Homer
JILL BAKER DELSTON
What is Transcendental Phenomenology?
Santa Fe, New Mexico
Washington, District of Columbia
RHIANNON LEE BOWLING
Pigs, Paradise, and the Vision of a Child in
Flannery O'Connor's The River
Eldershurg, Maryland
MARY FITZGERALD DUFFY
Saying the Ineffable: Translating Poetry
Oxford. Pennsylvania
ELIZABETH COLE EDWARDS
Ecstasy
Sterling. Virginia
KENNETH BERESFORD ERKENBRACK
The Power of Bach *s B Minor Mass
Denver, Colorado
PATRICK NATHANIEL EVANS
Know Thyself: an Exploration of Human Nature and
Sociability in Rousseau Iy Second Discourse
Nokesville, Virginia
KATRIN FINCK
Ideal Imperfection: Governing Man with and for His
Natural Inclinations
Neubrandenburg, Germany
BRYSON WEST FlNKLEA
The Proper Place of a Scientist: A Reconciliation
Between an Academic Scientist and a Thoughtful
Layman
Mocksville. North Carolina
�MARGARET B RICH AM FLEMING
The End of an Odyssey
RHONDA COLLEEN FRANKLIN
The Education to Virtue in Mansfield Park
NICHOLAS ALEXANDER GARKLAVS
7ragedy in Twilight: A Reading of William Faulkner's
The Sound and the Fury
MARTIN ROBERT GAUDINSKI
A Therapy of Logos: An Account of Psychoanalysis
and a Reflection on the Power of its Dialectic
BLAKE ELIZABETH GREGORY
The Magnitude-Number Split: Examining the
Evolution of the Number Line
JOSEPH MARTIN GULHAUGEN
Freedom is Coming: The Growth of the Individual
and the Search for Freedom in Mark Twain's
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
LISA MARIE HABEGGER
On Sin and the Self in Purgatorio
THEODORE HADZI-ANTICH, JR.
Justice and Paradox: Exploring Book One of
Plato 's Republic
TATIANA MONIQUE HAMBOYAN
Locked in Marx: An Exploration of How Differences
in Property and Labor Result in Different
Communities in Locke and Marx
JOSEPH HAIM HAY
Hieros Gamos: God, Nature, and the Reality of the
Soul in the Works ofC. G. Jung
Gaithersburg, Maryland
Albany, Oregon
East Meadow, New York
Marlborough, Connecticut
Dallas, Texas
Neenah, Wisconsin
Lebanon, Pennsylvania
Williainsville, New York
Newburyport, Massachusetts
Indianapolis, Indiana
�CHRISTOPHER VEATCHEL HENDERSON, JR.
The Fate of the. Ideal in the Aristotelian State
AMANDA DAWN HINTON
Merry Learning: An Inquiry into the Themes of
Integration and Interpretation in Rabelais' Gargantua
KlRSTEN AlSTNE-LlSE HlPSKY
Evansville, Indiana
Morristown, Tennessee
Racine, Wisconsin
Hack Finn and Qualities of the Superstitious
ANDREW CAMERON HORNBECK
Exterminating the Bug
MACKENZIE HOLAWAY HUDSON
An Investigation of Judas and Betrayal in Bach V
St. Matthew Passion
ROBIN BROOKE HUGENS
The Ardent Way ofDlscipleship: Jesus and His
Followers in the Sermon on the Mount
BENJAMIN BEARDSLEY JASNOW
Mud to Gold: Baudelaire's Poetic Devotion
HELEN EDITH KONGSGAARD
A Space in Verse: Passing Through Baudelaire's
Correspondences
PATRICIA KOSCINSKI
The White Elephant: Examining the Role of Greatness
in the Fall of Athens
MEREDITH JEAN LICARI
Unfolding the Folds of the Dual Universe in Liebniz
DANIEL EVAN MALKIEL
Hyperbolic Misgivings
Scarsdale, New York
Atlantic Beach, Florida
Suwanee, Georgia
Bethesda. Maryland
St. Helena, California
Walnutport, Pennsylvania
Timonium. Maryland
Columbia. Maryland
�MICHAEL WHELPLEY MALONE
Infinitesimals: A Little Look at Little Things
Jenkintown, Pennsylvania
LAURA ANNE MANGUM
The Dialectic of Faith in Fear and Trembling
Pflugerville, Texas
LAURA MARIE MANION
Understanding Faction in The Federalist, Paper Ten
RYAN JAMES MAWHAR
A Philosophical Triangulation of the Relationship
Between Mathematics and Physics
COURTNEY WAINWRIGHT MAY
A Faction Reaction: The Electoral College
IAN CRISTIAN MC€RACKEN
The Relation of Taste to Morality in Kant *s
Third Critique
Olney, Maryland
Kwajalein, Marshall Islands
McLean, Virginia
Herndon, Virginia
SEAN ALEXANDER McLAiN
Effectual Truth and Virtue in Machiavelli's The Prince
Irving, Texas
KRISTI DEANNA MEADOR
Rightly Spoken Misunderstanding: Speech and Silence
in the Book of Job
Lexington, Kentucky
JOSEPH CAIN METHOD
Washington, District of Columbia
The Truth About Parables: An Engagement with the
Kafka Parable The Truth About Sancho Panza
REBECCA KATE MITCHESON
Doubting God's Justice on One Leg: Ahab in
Moby Dick
Winchester, Massachusetts
TEASEL ELIZABETH MUIR-HARMONY
The Beautiful Death of a Courageous Man
Bernardston, Massachusetts
�JACKSON SWAGGERT O'BRIEN
On Beautiful Music
KELLEY CLARK O'DONNELL
Ahead of the Rest: The Final Departure of
Huckleberry Finn
Nashville, Tennessee
Ascot Berks, United Kingdom
JOHN LAZEAR OKRENT
Sunlight on Water; or, What a Poet Makes: An Essay
on Paul Valery's Le Cimetiere Marin
New York, New York
ERIN MICHELLE PAGE
A Reasonable God: The Role of Reason in the Study of
God in Aquinas
Alexandria, Virginia
GABRIELLE PASTENKOS
Go Down, Moses, And Set My People Free
Ramsey, New Jersey
ZACHARY ROBERT PERRON
The Importance of Being Sensuous: Appearance and
Self-Deception as Described by Baudelaire
ROBERT MARSHALL POLLACK
Being in Flesh: Jesus and Religious Criticism in the
Gospel of John
DANIEL RAYMOND RESSLER
The Value and Function of Asceticism
Mooers Forks, New York
Concord, California
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
KATHERINE ANNE ROACH
GodeVs Incompleteness Theorem: The Limitations of
Formal Logic
Newark. Delaware
SARAH ELIZABETH ROBERTS
Rendering the Universe Less Hideous and the
Moments Less Difficult: An Examination of Beauty,
Morality, and Ennui in Charles Baudelaire's
Les Fleurs du Mai
Poolesville, Maryland
�ALEXANDRA LEE ROBINS
Pericles and the Duality of Word and Deed
TODD ROBINSON
The Civil Philosophy of Thomas Hobbes: Essay on the
Empowerment of Man Through Self-Knowledge as a
Means of Achieving Peaceful Community
Great Neck, New York
Hamburg, Pennsylvania
MARY IRENE RUFFIN
''Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?" An Analysis
of the Mechanics of Freud's Mind
Bowie, Maryland
RYAN DOUGLAS BARNES RYLEE
Odyssey and Union
Prescott, Arizona
EMILY MERIAM SCHRICK
Marx and the Drowning Man: The Individual in a
Communist Society
Loomis, California
BRIANNE LEIGH SEYMOUR
Julius Caesar: The Virtue of Brutus
JAIME CELESTE SMITH
Why Opposites Don V Necessarily Attract: A Look at
the Marriage ofDesdemona and Othello in
Shakespeare's Othello
SAMUEL LEE SPALDING
On the Necessity and Utility of the Graphic
Imagination for Geometry
NATHAN PAUL STALNAKER
An Insensible Man: An Inquiry into the Nature of Pure
Intuitions in Light of the Non-Euclidean Revolution
TRISTAN MICHAEL STANI
The Question of Temporal Self-Consciousness
Snow Hill, Maryland
Freeport, Maine
Huntsville, Alabama
Ann Arbor, Michigan
�SARAH ELIZABETH STICKNEY
Sweetest Nut Hath Sourest Rind, Such a Nut is
Rosalind
JEREMY MlCHAEL STRYER
Santa Fe, New Mexic
Framingham, Massachusetts
7, Oedipus: A Story of Fatherhood and Fading Away
in Oedipus Tyrannus
RANDALL GARY SULLIVAN
Self-Mastery and Hope - the Price of Free Will
Placerville, California
KATHERINE COLLINS SYKORA
An Exploration of Faith in Fear and Trembling
Chagrin Falls, Ohio
ANDERSON RUSSELL TALLENT
Defending Socrates'Legacy: Appearance, Speech, and
Philosophy in Plato *s Theaetetus
Lake Marv, Florida
CHARLENE LOUISE TAYLOR-BURNS
Seeing God in the Dark: Ivan's Answers to the Eternal
Questions in The Brothers Karamazov
Agua Dulce, California
MELISSA ANN THOMAS
Reconciling Faith with Action
Decatur, Nebraska
MATTHEW CHRISTIAN THOMPSON
The Comedy of Antony and Cleopatra
Youngstown, Ohio
JOHANNA LYNN THRALL
Naked & Afraid: The Fear of God in Genesis
JOSEPH GERARD TOENJES
Adam Smith "s Invisible Hand: How the Nation
Benefits at the Expense of the Individual
MARY MORRISON TOWNSEND
The Question of Soul in Plato's Phaedrus
JUSTIN EDWARD MONTGOMERY TRIEVEL
The Passionate Faith of Abraham
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Topeka, Kansas
Lake Charles, Louisiana
Utica, New York
�DOUGLAS CLIFTON TURNER
A Thing by Nature Prodigal: On Fear and Hope in
Thucydides
DAWN ELLEN WADE
The Merchant of Venice: A Portrayal of Disorder
in the Human Soul and Social Interaction Caused
by the Love of Money, Differences in Race and Creed,
and Love
DAVID JOSEPH WHITE
All in the Family: An Investigation of the Spirit
of Sparta
Groton, New York
New Albany, Indiana
Keyser, West Virginia
ROSEANNA MARIE WHITE
Learning Through Lear What Language Must Obey,
"Speak What We Feel Not What We Ought to Say. "
Wiley Ford, West Virginia
WILLIAM BOYD WHITTAKER, JR.
"Stronger, More Evil and More Profound?":
The Boundaries of Cultural Perspectives and the
Self-Overcoming of the Type "Man" in Beyond Good
and Evil.
Union, Missouri
NAMIR SINCOFF YEDID
The Sound of Silence: A Meditation on God, Abraham,
and the Binding of Isaac
Del Mar, California
�MASTER OF ARTS IN LIBERAL ARTS DEGREE
GRADUATE INSTITUTE IN LIBERAL EDUCATION
MATTHEW CURTIS BALTENSPERGER
JAMUNA MERIUM BASTIANPILLAI
ANN SLANE BAUM
JOHN RANDOL BERGQUIST
LAWRENCE PAYNE BLACK
ELI COHEN
JUSTIN LEE CORDER
RACHEL ALEXANDRA YELLIN DARROW
JOHN CHRISTOPHER DUPUY
HANNAH ELIZABETH EAGLESON
STEVANNE ANTOINETTE ELLIS
WILLIAM JERED FAIRES
JEANNE HELEN FAUCHEUX
BRAD RICHARD CLAZA
NINA LEE CUISE-GERRITY
SIRI ELIZABETH HARDING
WILLIAM JOHN HAWKINS IV
MEREDITH JUNE HAWORTH
JAY RICHARD HENNICKE
BREANNE YVETTE HERRERA
STEPHEN MATTHEW JOYCE
AARON JAMES KIPFER
SARA REBECCA LEMMOND
MICHAEL JOHN LOOFT
SEAN MICHAEL MADDEN
Denton, Texas
Toronto, Canada
Baltimore, Maryland
Birmingham, Alabama
Alexandria, Virginia
Shelburne Falls, Massachusetts
Harrisonbnrg, Virginia
Riva, Maryland
St. Louis, Missouri
Hershey, Pennsylvania
Greenville, Texas
Charlotte, North Carolina
Reston, Virginia
Bay City, Michigan
Baltimore, Maryland
Livermore, California
Portland, Oregon
San Jose, California
Montville, New Jersey
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Pepper Pike, Ohio
Peoria, Illinois
Silver Spring, Maryland
Annapolis, Maryland
Mayfield, East Sussex,
United Kingdom
MARY LIN MARTIN
MEGAN KATHERINE McBRiDE
REGINA CONNOR MIANTE
ELIZABETH HOWELL NEAL
Berne, Indiana
Langhorne, Pennsylvania
Annapolis, Maryland
Nashville, Tennessee
�DAVID PAUL RAMSEY
BRIAN NATHANIEL RlCE
RYAN ALAN RISING
Conyers, Georgia
Kennesaw, Georgia
Winfield, Kansas
THEODORE COURTNEY ROGERS
New York, New York
ALANA LEAH ROTH
Baltimore, Maryland
DEREK ALAN SHARP
Knoxville, Tennessee
EDMUND HAL STERN
Edgewater, Maryland
BENJAMIN ROBIN STRICKLAND
AMANDA JEAN SUTTLES
NATHANIEL LEE WHITMAN
SLAVKA KOSTADINOVA ZLATKOVA
Santa Fe, Tennessee
Houston, Texas
Adams, Massachusetts
Pernik, Bulgaria
�PRIZES AND AWARDS
COMMENCEMENT 2,004
To the member of the Senior Class who has written the best senior essay.
Offered in memory of Susan Irene Roberts, of the class of 1966
Herodotus VIII. 55
ROBERT CHARLES ABBOTT, JR.
The Third Person of God: Epitomes of God's Love, Gift,
and Holy Spirit
ENJOLI OLEETA COOKE
HONORABLE MENTION
The Noble Science of Retreating Well: A Structural Account of
Plato ly Laches
ANTON BARBA-KAY
Sunlight on Water; or, Wliat a Poet Makes: An Essay On
Paul Valery's Le Cimetiere Marin
JOHN LAZEAR OKRENT
Defending Socrates*Legacy: Appearance, Speech, and
Philosophy in Plato's Theaetetus
ANDERSON RUSSELL TALLENT
To the member of the Junior Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered by Mrs. Leslie Clark Stevens in memory of her
daughter-in-law, Kathryn Mylorie Stevens
Two Political Machines: How the Social Compact Goes
Beyond the Leviathan
Ross RICHARDSON HUNT
�* Happier Far?' The Duality of the Fall in Milton's Paradise Lost
TIMOTHY EDWARDS KILE
HONORABLE MENTION
Faith From Physics: The Continuum of Physics and
Metaphysics for Leibniz
LEE THOMAS GOLDSMITH
The Two Lights of Nature and Grace
JILLIAN MARY Sico
To the member of the Sophomore Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered under the will of the late Judge Walter I. Dawkins,
of the Class of 1880
Calamity, Proclamation, Solace, and Salvation:
The Lot of the Prophet
ERIKK MICHAEL GEANNIKIS
HONORABLE MENTION
On the Substance of Love's Equilibrium in The Knight's Tale
MICHAEL NICHOLAS MUNTERS
)K
To the member of the Freshman Class who has written the best annual essay.
Offered in memory of Jacob Klein, Tutor Emeritus, and his wife,
Else, by Dr. and Mrs. Stuart Walker
On the Composition of the Phaedrus
JANE LOUISE BLAKE
The Way of Truth
NICHOLAS KENNETH YOUNES
�To the member of the January Freshman Glass who has written the best
annual essay in the 2002-2003 academic year.
Offered in memory of Elizabeth "Betsy" Marta Smith, of the
Class of 1993, by Robert Clinton Nease, of the Class of 1992
On Justice in Plato 's Republic: A Comparison of Virtue in the
Individual and the Collective
ERICA SCHILLER FREEMAN
To the Graduate Institute student who has written a
distinguished preceptorial essay in the year 2003.
Offered by the Alumni Association
The Menis of Achilles
SARAH ELIZABETH HERBERT
To a member of the Senior Class, for excellence in speaking.
Offered in memory of Senator Millard E. Tydings of Maryland
KELLEY CLARK O'DONNELL
To the student who submits the best English version of a Greek text.
Offered in memory of John S. Kieffer, President Emeritus
Text: Demosthenes., Against Meidias
ANTON BARBA-KAY
To the student who submits the best English version of a French poem.
Offered by the Board of Visitors and Governors
Text: Hugo, 'Apres une Lecture de Dante "
IAN CRISTIAN McCRACKEN
�To the student who submits a fine original English poem.
Offered by Dr. George Austin in memory of his brother, Henry
"Astyanax "
JOHN LAZEAR OKRENT
HONORABLE MENTION
"Plaaskind"
ELEANOR ANNE CLARK
"To the American Girl in Rome, 1951'
MARY FITZGERALD DUFFY
"Cherry Spring "
SARAH ELIZABETH STICKNEY
To the student who submits a fine original musical composition.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap
"Bottle of Tears"
JENNIFER GRACE LOWE
To the student who submits a fine essay on a piece of music.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap
On the Inevitably Human
ISAAC JOSEPH WEINER
HONORABLE MENTION
Ave Verum
PAUL NATHAN PATRONE
�To the student who submits the most elegant solution of a geometrical problem.
Offered by the Class of 1986 in honor of Bryce Jacobsen, of the
Class of 1942, Tutor and Director of Athletics Emeritus
SIR ROBERT GAYLORD BURBRIDGE
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of an analytical problem.
Offered in memory of James R. McClintock of the Class of 1965
BRYSON WEST FINKLEA
HONORABLE MENTION
ANTON BARBA-KAY
SIR ROBERT GAYLORD BURBRIDGE
JUSTIN DALE LANIER
To the student who carries out a fine laboratory project.
Construction of an Electron Microscope
MICHAEL WHELPLEY MALONE
To the Senior man and woman who by their participation,
leadership, and sportsmanship have contributed most to the
College's athletic program, special blazers.
Offered by the Alumni Association of St. John's College
MICHAEL WHELPLEY MALONE
BLAKE ELIZABETH GREGORY
�To the member of the Senior Class who has demonstrated the greatest care
for and service to youth residing in the City of Annapolis.
Offered by the friends and family of Marvin B. Cooper,
of the Class of 1969
BRYSON WEST FINKLEA
To the member of the Senior Class who submits the best work of visual art to the
Community Art Exhibition, the Charles Vernon Moran Prize
Un titled, Alabaster Sculpture
TEASEL ELIZABETH MUIR-HARMONY
Walter S. Baird Prize-for a Senior who has demonstrated excellence
in the arts, literature, or sciences
Seven Poems
MARY FITZGERALD DUFFY
A Collection of 11 Poems
JOHN LAZEAR OKRENT
Urban Teaching Scholarship
JACOB JESSE THOMAS
MATTHEW DAVID MANGOLD
Mercantile Bank Scholarship
JENNIFER KAY SWEENEY
�ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Leslie Milton Abrams, 1954
Dr. Granville Q. Adams, 1929
Philip L. Alger, 1912
Alter Graduate Institute Scholarship Fund
Annapolis Graduate Institute
Annapolis Self-Help
George M. Austin, 1908
Waiter S. Baird, 1930
Bank of America
Betty Beck Bennett, 1960
Ford K. Brown, H'70
Chicago Regional
Mrs. Clyde Alvin Clapp
James T. Clark, 1928
Class of 1897
Class of 1898
Richard F. Cleveland, H'54
Bernard Clorety, 1950
Dr. Charles C. Cook
Marvin Brent Cooper, 1969
The Joseph and Robert Cornell Memorial
Foundation
Eugene N. (1929) and Robert G. (1963)
Cozzolino
Wiley and Helen Crawford
Cpl. George E. Cunniff III
Donna Marie Delattre
Clarence L. Dickinson, 1911
Richard A. Duhan, 1963
Martin Dyer Book Fund
Faculty Scholarship
James H. Frame, 1950
Harry Golding, Graduate Institute
Edna G. and Roscoe E. Grove, 1910
John T. and Gertrude L. Harrison, 1907
John T. Harrison, Jr.
Charles W. Hass, 1927
Richard H. Hodgson, 1906
The Hodson Trust
Alfred and Ruth Houston, 1906
Houston Regional
J. Seward Johnson, Jr.
Jesse H. and Mary Gibbs Jones
Robert E. and Margaret Larsh Jones, 1909
Robert E.Kanode, 1939
Dr. Simon and Fanny Kaplan, H'84
Francis A. Katz, 1929
John Spangler Kieffer, H'70 and Roxana
White Kieffer, H'84
Jacob Klein, H'76
Korshin Family Fund
Arthur E. and Hilda Combs Landers, 1930
Joseph LaPides
Michael Littleton Memorial Fund
Massachusetts Regional
James Matthews, H'99
Martin Conrad Miller (1981) Book Fund
Philip A. Myers II, 1938
Rev. Theo O'Brien
Oklahoma Regional
Norman G. Owens
Dr. Thomas Parran and Thomas Par ran. Jr.
The Duane and Clementine Peterson
Charitable Fund
Pittsburgh Regional
Reader's Digest Foundation
J. Douglas Ramsey, 1937
Leanore B. Rinder
Susan I. Roberts, 1966
Clifton C. Roehle
Joan and Be la Ron ay
Murray Joel and Julius Rosenberg, 1938
G. D. Searle/John E. Robson
Robson Family
J. J. Salovaara
Flora Duvall Sayles
Hazel Morris and J. Graham Shannahan,
1908
Doug E. Sherr (1972) Memorial
J. Winfree Smith, H'8()
James S. Spirer, 1970
C.V. Starr Foundation
Harry S. and Vivian B. Spectre Book Fund
Jean Roberts Staylor
Andrew and Leonore Steiner Book Fund
Clarence W. Stryker
Karl and Evelyn Van Tassel
Frederick J. Von Schwerdtner
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Various
Pattie Bourne Turner Walker, 1966
Richard D. Weigle, H'49
John L. Williams, 1950
Thomas J. and Marvil F. Williams
Frank K. Wilson, 1935
St. John's College
St. John's College Alumni Association
�ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Aegon TransAmerica Foundation
Annapolis Banking & Trust Company
Anonymous
ARINC
B B & T Corporation
Baltimore Life Insurance Company
The John Bickford Foundation
Bunting Family Foundation
Campbell Foundation, Inc.
Arthur & Isadora Dellheim Foundation
Deutsche Bank Alex Brown Charitable Foundation
Dry Family Charitable Foundation
Estate of Joseph L. Bean
Gallagher Evelius & Jones
Glenn L. Martin
Harley W. Howell Charitable Foundation
JJ. Raines Foundation, Inc.
The Estate of Elizabeth J. Hodges
Kiplinger Foundation
The Hodson Scholarship Foundation
Independent College Fund of Maryland
Larry W.Katz
Ensign C. Markland Kelly, Jr. Memorial Foundation
Morton & Sophia Macht Philanthropic Fund
Legg Mason, Inc.
The John J. Leidy Foundation
McCormick & Company
Procter & Gamble Cosmetics Foundation
Rosemore, Inc.
Saul Ewing LLP
T. Rowe Price Associates Foundation, Inc.
United Parcel Service
Verizon - Maryland
: Wachovia Corporation
Whiting Turner Contracting Company
Gifts received after April 15, 2004 are gratefully acknowledged
and will be listed in the 2005 Commencement Program.
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
23 pages
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2004-05-16
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
CommencementExercises2004
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
St. John's College
Description
An account of the resource
Program for the two hundred twelfth commencement in the three hundred eighth year of the college.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Commencement (St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Program, 2004
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/23aac1369544476b36b7c254b622047b.pdf
5b0f52076da9471034a1d67dcf7bc1c6
PDF Text
Text
SIJOHN'S
College
A N N A P O L I S • SANTA FE
COMMENCEMENT
EXERCISES
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
SUNDAY, MAY ELEVENTH
Two THOUSAND AND THREE
�PROGRAM
FOR THE TWO HUNDRED ELEVENTH
COMMENCEMENT IN THE
THREE HUNDRED SEVENTH YEAR
OF THE COLLEGE
FANFARE
SYMPHONY No. 5 BY WILLIAM BOYCE
ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
PRELUDE
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
ACADEMIC PROCESSION
THE NATIONAL ANTHEM
FRANCIS SCOTT KEY, ALUMNUS, CLASS OF 1796
WELCOME
ANNOUNCEMENT OF PRIZES AND AWARDS
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
CHRISTOPHER B. NELSON
PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
PRESIDENT NELSON
HARVEY FLAUMENHAFT
DEAN OF THE COLLEGE
ADDRESS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS
LEWIS H. LAPHAM
ESSAYIST, AUTHOR, AND EDITOR OF
HARPER 's MAGAZINE
CONFERRING OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
DEAN FLAUMENHAFT
CONFERRING OF GRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
WILLIAM PASTILLE
DIRECTOR OF THE GRADUATE INSTITUTE
ACADEMIC RECESSION
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
�BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
(with title of essay)
ADITYA ADHIKARI
In the City of Dereliction: Alienation, Art and
Ideal in Baudelaire's Tableaux Parisians
Kathmandu, Nepal
MAYA JESSICA ALAPIN
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
The City and the Soul as Circles:
An Image of the Best Life from Plato's Republic
JESSICA LEIGH ALEXANDER
"No Human Heart Changes Half So Fast as the
Shape of a City": Charles Baudelaire's Duality of
Man and Art
VIRGINIA ESTHER CECELIA ALLEN
"Through the Mists I See the Sky":
Finding a Way Out in Racine's Phedre
EastAmherst, New York
Berryville, Virginia
EMILY LYDEN BALDWIN
Washington, District of Columbia
A Kaleidoscope Gifted with Consciousness:
The Role of the Artist as Seen in the Works of
Charles Baudelaire
CHRISTOPHER SILAS BAREFORD
Blameless and Upright
Concord, Massachusetts
MEREDITH ENA BARTON
Aristotle's Investigation: A Look into the Method
of Inquiry in Parts of Animals
Baltimore, Maryland
AMANDA KAY BELL
The Dream of Dmitri Karamazov
Irmo, South Carolina
ELIZABETH ADA BOYCE
"Natura non Facit Saltum": Discovering the
Persuasiveness and Self-Consistency of Darwin's
Argument in the Origin of Species
Aspen, Colorado
�MICHAEL JAMES BRIDGE
God's Thumb: The Political Discourse
of The Federalist
Fairfax, Virginia
GINA MARIE BRILLANTE
Desire, the One True Teacher: The Investigation of
Love Within Plato's Symposium
College Park, Maryland
ALEXANDRA RICABLANCA BROSEUS
The Devil's in the Details: An Examination of Time
and Faith in Hieronymus Bosch's Prado Epiphany
Bethesda, Maryland
RENZO BRUN DEL RE
Smitten with Smith
LADY ELIZABETH PINKLYN BURBRIDGE
Newton's Calculus: The Conduit Between
Man's Mind and the World
KATHRYN DAWN BUSH
"As You See, It Is Really All Very Simple":
A Discussion of the Quantum Mechanics of
P.A.M. Dirac
STEVEN DOUGLAS BUSH
The Return to Society: An Investigation into
Rousseau's Idealization of the Savage State in the
Second Discourse
TRACY LAUREN CAIN
Time, Laughter, and the Absurd, or Faith:
A Reflection Upon Fear and Trembling by Soren
Kierkegaard writing as Johannes de Silentio
MARION FIFE COOK
Stories of Faith and the Finite in Kierkegaard's
Fear and Trembling
KAGAN ERIC COUGHLIN
A Modest Approach to Science Through Analogy
Catonsville, Maryland
Austin, Texas
Green Creek, North Carolina
Laguna Hills, California
Canton, Ohio
Houston, Texas
Springfield, Vermont
�MATTHEW ALLYN CROSIER
Death and the Possibility of Life-A Russian Moral
Bath: An Examination of Pierre Bezukhov in
Tolstoy's War and Peace
ELIZABETH CAULFIELD CUMMING
The U.S. Marshal and the Smell of Gunsmoke:
The Mythology of Justice from Athens to Shinbone
ADAM CHRISTOPHER DAWSON
A Confession of the Confessions
THOMAS RYAN DEVINE
All is One: The Quest to Resolve the Many
into the One in Physics
JESSICA LYON DIAMOND
Telling the Truth About Eros: The Speech of
Socrates in Plato's Symposium
Lubbock, Texas
Towson, Maryland
Leavenworth, Kansas
Fairmont, West Virginia
Columbia, Maryland
JOHN WESLEY DIXON
Locke and Aristotle on Property and Nature
Dewey, Oklahoma
MARY Jo LEONHARDI DOKTER
"And God Said": The Power and Community
Displayed by Speech in Genesis
Dearborn, Michigan
AUDREY ANNE DOLGINOFF
Pilgrimage: Dante's Love for Beatrice by Way of
His Imagination
WlLSON MCCLELLAND DUNLAVEY
Las Vegas, Nevada
Sarasota, Florida
An Experience with Language: Coming to
Terms with Sense-Certainty in Hegel's
Phenomenology of Spirit
NATHANAEL ALAN EAGLE
The Eternal Silence of These Infinite Spaces:
An Exegesis of Baudelaire's Le Gouffre^ Au Lecteur,
and Correspondences
Graham, Washington
�NICHOLAS ANTHONY EMBIRICOS
Livy's Historical Method: His Use of Exemplars,
How They Work, and Why He Uses Them
London, England
ANNA GAIL FAGERGREN
The Art of Beauty: A Discussion of Duality in
To the Lighthouse
Olympia, Washington
TESSA ANNE FALLON
Morality, Faith, and Meaning: Raskolnikov's
Struggle in Crime and Punishment
Miller Place, New York
AARON JAMES FOSTER
The Perfect Proteus: Inspiration and a
Crisis of Self in Plato's Ion
LYDIA ELEANOR FREWEN
The Ait of The Waves
ANN-THERESE HATFIELD GARDNER
Socrates and Theaetetus
NOAM ARIEH GEDALOF
Plato's Historical Art: The Socratic Writings
ADAM MICHAEL GIES
The World as a Will and an Interpretation:
On the Will to Power and Epistemological Politics
REBEKAH NEELY GOTTLOB
Proust's Doctrine of Recollection
STEPHANIE WYNNE GRIMMETT
Proof of Progress: Hegel's Self-Examination
Through Human History
ZOE AUGUSTINA HAMSTEAD
Wanted: Guilty For All
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Auburn, Maine
Brookfield, Wisconsin
Jerusalem, Israel
Spokane, Washington
St. George, Virginia
Sundance, Wyoming
Kearneysville, West Virginia
�TAMARA KARA HARDISON
Who is God?: Interpreting God Through
His Paradoxical Actions as Presented in
the Book of Isaiah
DANIEL GREGORY HARMON
Following Our Heart: A Quest for Certainty
in The Brothers Karamazov
EMILY HANNA HAWORTH
The Divine Tragedy: An Unmasking of
Dante's Ulysses
MARGARET ELIZABETH HEJTMANCIK
A Difficult Shade of White: Alcibiades' Impasse in
the Presence of an Erotic Philosopher in Plato's
Symposium
BRIANA LEIGH HENDERSON
Black Magic Woman: An Exploration of
Euripides' Medea
Augusta, Maine
San Francisco, California
Cumberland, Maryland
Derwood, Maryland
San Antonio, Texas
SETH LORENZ HEFNER
The Meeting of Two Non-Cutting Lines of
Thought: Accommodating Lobachevski's
Geometry in Kant's Transcendental Philosophy
Berlin, Germany
JASON NOEL HINOJOSA
No Apologies from the Rough: The Rejection of
Philosophy and the Movement Toward Love and
Nature in Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass
Dallas, Texas
JOHN MACLIN HORTON
Canst Thou Tame the Leviathan?: On the Debate
Concerning Darwin's Origin of Species
NICHOLAS STEUART HUDSON
Moral Teleology and Practical Proofs
Fairhope, Alabama
Ghent, New York
�WILLIAM ALLEN HUDSON
Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina
Zosima's Joy and Ivan's Suffering: Answering Some
Important Questions in The Brothers Karamazov
ANDREW GRAHAM HUNT
Responsible Ecology: An Ethical Approach to the
Natural World
JOSEPH LUCAS HYDE
The Fool in His Own House: Hamlet's Reason
in Madness
JUSTIN MATTHEW JONES
Dante's Education: His Moral and Poetic Perfection
THOMAS ALEXANDER JUSKEVICH
Mind and Structure in Metaphysical Speculation:
A Thematic Discussion on the Nature of the
Universe and Its Relation to Human Experience
KATHLEEN CAMPBELL KELLEY
"Hast Thou Found Me, O Mine Enemy?": Stephen
Dedalus Fights off Time, Memory, and the World
in James Joyce's Ulysses
JOSEPH MICHAEL KING
Two Apparent Trifurcations of Need and the
Secret to Life
JOHN THOMAS KOVACIK
The Fall of Rome and One Man's Chance to Save It
Bethesda, Maryland
Raleigh, North Carolina
Rochester, New York
Virginia Beach, Virginia
Columbia, Maryland
Tampa, Florida
Denver, Colorado
MICHAEL WILLIAM KRELL
Zeal and Despair: On the Persuasive Power of
Hegelian Dialectic
Hagerstown, Maryland
BEKIR HARUN KugiJK
The Harmony of La Rochefoucauld's Diverse
Maxims: An Inquiry into the Problem of
Self-Knowledge in the Maximes
Istanbul, Turkey
�RACHEL LA PRADE
Friday Harbor, Washington
Children are the Best Teachers: An Examination of
the Relationship Between God and Man
DAVID FOSTER LEVY
On Nietzsche's Genealogy
Towson, Maryland
AARON BOYD MACLEAN
Motion as a Kind of Life: On Aristotle's Discussion
of the Void
Burke, Virginia
FRANCIS CHESTER MANHEIM
Quid Pro Quo-Self-interest and Its Restraint:
An Essay on the Affinity Between Economics and
the Moral Sentiments in Adam Smith's The Wealth
of Nations and The Theory of Moral Sentiments
London, England
KYLE JOSEPH MARQUIS
Williamsburg, Massachusetts
Montaigne's Path to Wisdom; or, How Not to Miss
the Point Entirely
RICHARD ROBIN MARTELL
Benevolent Neutrality: John Locke, the Supreme
Court, and the Freedom of Religion
DARREN PAUL MAYBERRY
The Rhetoric of Shame: An Examination of Shame
in Plato's Gorgias
Germantown, Maryland
Falmouth, Maine
KELLY LYNN McCoLLUM
Above All, Aristotle: An Exposition of the
Importance of What is Commonly Said to
Aristotle's Method of Investigation into Nature
OldLyme, Connecticut
KELLIE MARIE McCoY
Looking into Nothing: A Journey into Conrad's
Heart of Darkness
Tarpon Springs, Florida
�JOHN JAMES McNuLTY
Crime and the State; or, How Two Wrongs Make a
Philosophy of Right
MATTHEW DAVID MOKEY
Beholding "The Bear": An Exploration of the
Imagery and Life in William Faulkner's Story
"The Bear"
McLean, Virginia
CASEY CHERI MOORE
The Trees Are Not Willing to Teach Me Anything:
Philosophic Conversation in the Phaedrus
TRAVIS JOHN MULROY
The Crime of Philosophy: An Essay on
Plato's Theages
KATHERINE ELIZABETH NEHRING
What Took Place Between the Readers and the
Authors of Don Quixote, Together with Other
Veracious Events Highly Relevant to this History;
or, This is An Essay
Laguna Niguel, California
Berlin, Connecticut
Washington, District of Columbia
ROBERT VINCENT O'BRIEN III
Understanding Material Order: A Discussion of the
Foundations of Modern Chemistry
COLIN Ross O'NEILL
The First Three Speeches of Plato's Phaedrus
Fairhope, Alabama
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
DANIEL ROBERT NEAL
"Is It Worth It, Is It Worth It?": The Problem of
Suffering in The Brothers Karamazov
BRENDAN ROWAN NORWOOD
A Little Rebellion Now and Then: Melville's
One-Man Revolution
Rapid City, South Dakota
Vashon, Washington
Winchester, Massachusetts
�MICHELLE KAY PAINE
The Amorous Unknown: Love and the Leap of
Philosophy in Kierkegaard's Philosophical
Fragments
AMY MICHELLE PHILLIPS
An Inquiry into the Foundation of
Newton's Principia
STEPHANIE LYNN PORCARO
The Waves, Friendship, and Self-Identity
Delaplane, Virginia
Gloucester Point, Virginia
The Dalles, Oregon
BENNET BRISTOL PORTER
What, Me Worry?: The Journey of Self-Deception
in Cervantes's Don Quixote
Falmouth, Massachusetts
RUSSELL ROBERT RAMSEY
Paul's Gospel: The Worlds of Adam and Christ in
Romans
Columbus, Georgia
KATHERINE MARIE REDDING
On Thoughtfulness and Healthy Philosophy in
Plato's Charmides
JOHN FRANKLIN THOMSON REED
Close Friends, Worlds Apart: An Analysis of
Andrew and Pierre in Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace
CHRISTY LYNN RHOTON
Just a Little Taste: An Exploration of the Fall of
Man in Genesis
TRENT STEVEN RINEY
Evolution and Economics: Searching for a Pattern
of Thought in Darwin and Smith
ALEXANDER SCHAAN RINN
Frege's Philosophy of Mathematics
Westminster, Maryland
Alexandria, Virginia
Columbus, Ohio
Lebanon, Kentucky
St. Cloud, Minnesota
�ISADORA ROSE SAGENG
The Tragedy of Terrible Justice in the Agamemnon
Annapolis, Maryland
CHRISTOPHER ROBERTSON SCHOR
Beyond Discord-The Evolution of Dissonance: An
Analysis of Octatonicism within Stravinsky's Music
Cherry Hilly New Jersey
CHRISTINA LYNN SERVETNICK
The Calm Temples of Truth: On Serenity and
the Nature of Things
JUSTIN SAYRE SHEPHERD
The Generation of Peace Through War
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Washington, District of Columbia
KATHERINE ANNE SHERMAN
The Being of a Poet: An Examination of Charles
Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du Mai
LEWIS MARK SLAWSKY
Contradiction in the City: An Examination of
Book I of Plato's Republic
Niskayuna, New York
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
IAN MICHAEL SMITH
With Respect of Size: Euclid, Dedekind, and the
Theory of Number
Spokane, Washington
ISAAC STEPHEN SMITH
"My Atoms Are Determined, But My Will's
Another Case": An Essay on the Differentiation of
Theoretical and Practical Reasoning
Myersvitte, Maryland
STEPHEN GUSTAV STEIM
Facing the Dragon: Spiritual Violence in Flannery
O'Connor's The Violent Bear It Away
Oak Park, Illinois
ARTHUR WENDEL STOUT IV
The Powers of Government
New Orleans, Louisiana
�EMILY IRENE STRICKLAND
Out, Out Brief Quentin!: Inheriting the Southern
Ideal Through Story and Paradox
JULIA MARIE STRICKLER
Experiencing Incommensurability
ANNA REYNIS STRYKER
Trial of Faith in Pursuit of an Idle Dream:
An Examination of "The Story of the Man
Who Couldn't Keep from Prying" in
Cervantes' Don Quixote
Jefferson
City, Missouri
Garland, Texas
Alameda, New Mexico
BRIAN OWEN SUMNER
The Fullness of Life: The Transformation of
Achilles in The Iliad
Rising Sun, Maryland
THOMAS GLENN SZERECZ
Language in Beyond Good and Evil:
An Instrument for Change in the Hands of the
Philosopher
Annapolis, Maryland
MICHAEL ZEPHYR TEREBEY
Being Numbers: Some Consequences of Formal
Undecidability
AMANDA BETH TREADWELL
The Restoration of Morality: Hume's Defense
of a Secular, Disinterested Moral Sentiment
TIFFANY ELLEN TYRRELL
Some Are Born Great, Some Achieve Greatness:
A Study of Heroic Excellence
NATASHA VERMAAK
In Pursuit of Clytemnestra
ABIGAIL SHIRKLEY VINES
Faith in Soren Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling:
On Being at Home in the World
Bozman, Maryland
South Windsor, Connecticut
Lewisberry, Pennsylvania
Ashland, Wisconsin
Hampton, Virginia
�ELIZABETH ANNE WAGNER
Visible Manifestations of the Invisible in
Parker's Back
Charlotte, North Carolina
ALEXANDER EMERSON WALL
The Human World: An Interpretation of
Plato's Gorgias
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
SAMANTHA MAY WARBURTON
Transcendental Philosophy: The Solution to
Metaphysics in Kant's Critique of Pure Reason
WHITNEY ELIZABETH WELSH
History's Realization of Freedom: A Look at the
Rise of the West
IAN PATRICK WHITNEY
The True, the Good, and the Shoes to Match:
Observations on Flannery O'Connor's
"The Lame Shall Enter First"
DEBRA KIM WILKINSON
Reason and Revelation in Augustine's Confessions
Sewanee, Tennessee
Uniontown, Ohio
Fresno, California
Tiverton, Rhode Island
LEAH COLLEEN WILLCOX
Speak What We Feel: A Call to Ethics Through
Catharsis in William Shakespeare's King Lear
Roseboom, New York
SCOTT FERNON WILLIAMSON
Persuasion: Making the Weaker Argument the
Stronger; or, Partners with Reason
Alexandria, Virginia
SARA WHITE WILSON
Pay Attention to the Girl Bearing Fruits:
The Emergence of Images in Our Mind and the
World in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit
Hopewell, New Jersey
KATHERINE JENNY WINDSTRUP
Laughing at Love; or, The School for Cynics:
An Examination of Don Alfonso in Cosifan tutte
Belmont, California
�SONIA PARONIAN WISNIEWSKI
To Live Life as a Dangerous Experiment:
Nietzsche's The Gay Science
WILLIAM SAMUEL YOUNG
Whose Spirit is This?: On Reconciling Genius and
Freedom in Kant's First and Third Critiques
SCOTT ANTHONY ZOLLNER
The Cultivation of the Spirit in Nietzsche's
Beyond Good and Evil
Bolingbrook, Illinois
Boston, Massachusetts
Cumberland, Maryland
�MASTER OF ARTS IN LIBERAL ARTS DEGREE
GRADUATE INSTITUTE IN LIBERAL EDUCATION
DEREK MICHAEL AGGLETON
Ossining, New York
SUSAN McDoNOUGH BISHOP
Arnold, Maryland
JOYCE LEONARD BRAVO
Bethesda, Maryland
JAN SYLVIA CARPENTER
Melrose, Montana
NINA MARIE CARRIERI
Berkeley, California
MICHAEL JOSEPH COLOMBO
Baltimore, Maryland
NICHOLAS Louis DiNuNzio
Reading, Pennsylvania
JAMES PATRICK EGAN
SARAH ELIZABETH HERBERT
RYAN ERIC JOHNSON
AARON NOAH KREMPA
EDMUND FRANCIS KURYLA II
Walnut Creek, California
Arlington, Virginia
Annapolis, Maryland
Bath, Pennsylvania
Fort Worth, Texas
AUSTIN DANIEL LAGRONE
Shreveport, Louisiana
FRANCES JENNIFER LIMON
Mexico City, Mexico
�MARK HOWARD MACLEAN
Lawrenceville, New Jersey
BRIAN EDWARD MANNING
Baltimore, Maryland
SCOTT MILLER MC€URLEY
Annapolis, Maryland
MARK DAVIS MOORMAN
San Francisco, California
SERGEY MICHAEL NEDELSKY
Sioux Falls, South Dakota
MICHAEL JAMES O'DONNELL
Brooklyn, New York
DEBORAH JANE ROBERGE
SHANNON MARIE SAIA
DANIEL ERIC SHATTUCK
MEREDITH ELIZABETH SMITH
JENNY REBECCA ST. MARTIN
MATTHEW SCOTT VEST
JEFFREY GRANT ZWILLENBERG
Doylestown, Pennsylvania
Indian Head, Maryland
Annapolis, Maryland
Middlesboro, Kentucky
Fairfax, Virginia
Birmingham, Alabama
Kansas City, Kansas
�PRIZES AND AWARDS
COMMENCEMENT 2,003
To the member of the Senior Class who has written
the best senior essay.
Offered in memory of Susan Irene Roberts,
of the class of 1966
Zeal and Despair: On the Persuasive
Power of Hegelian Dialectic
Motion as a Kind of Life: On Aristotle's
Discussion of the Void
HONORABLE MENTION
"Hast Thou Found Me, O Mine Enemy?":
Stephen Dedalus Fights off Time, Memory,
and the World in James Joyce's Ulysses
Being Numbers: Some Consequences
of Formal Undecidability
To the member of the Junior Class who has written
the best annual essay.
Offered by Mrs. Leslie Clark Stevens in memory
of her daughter-in-law,
Kathryn Mylorie Stevens
The Philosophical Principles in the
Newtonian Universe
To the member of the Sophomore Class who has
written the best annual essay.
Offered under the will of the late
Judge Walter I. Dawkins, of the Class of 1880
Launcelot is Dead: The Consolation of
Chaucer's Prodigal Knight
The Necessity of the Generation
Toward Evil in Plotinus
MICHAEL WILLIAM KRELL
AARON BOYD MACLEAN
KATHLEEN CAMPBELL KELLEY
MICHAEL ZEPHYR TEREBEY
MEREDITH JEAN LICARI
MICHAEL ROBERT CONBOY
JILLIAN MARY Sico
�To the member of the Freshman Class who has written
the best annual essay.
Offered in memory of Jacob Klein,
Tutor Emeritus, and his wife, Else,
by Dr. and Mrs. Stuart Walker
What Antigone Would Be
CLARE CATHERINE CORTRIGHT
Elements of Happiness: An Examination
of the Complete Virtuous Life in Aristotle's
Nichomachean Ethics
To the member of the January Freshman Class who
has written the best annual essay in the 2001-2002
academic year.
Offered in memory of Elizabeth "Betsy" Marta
Smith, of the Class of 1993, by Robert Clinton
Nease, of the Class of 1992
To the Graduate Institute student who has written a
distinguished preceptorial essay in the year 2002.
Offered by the Alumni Association
What I Can Say - What You Can See What There Can Be: More or Less about the
Nature of Scientific Explanation and its
Epistemological and Ontological Implications
Thrinakia: The Rift Between Odysseus and
his Companions
To a member of the Senior Class, for excellence
in speaking.
Offered in memory of
Senator Millard E. Tydings of Maryland
To the student who submits the best English version
of a Greek text.
Offered in memory of John S. Kieffer, President
Emeritus
Text: Epigrams ofAsklepiades
JENNIFER ELIZABETH FAIT
No PRIZE
WILLIAM THOMAS GROUSE
ROGER MARCUS JACKSON
ALEXANDER EMERSON WALL
ANTON BARBA-KAY
�To the student who submits the best English version
of a French poem.
Offered by the Board of Visitors and
Governors
Text: "Dante "
To the student who submits a fine original
English poem.
Offered by Dr. George Austin
in memory of his brother, Henry
"Night Flight Along the East Coast"
ALEXANDRA LEE ROBINS
KATHERINE ELIZABETH NEHRING
HONORABLE MENTION
"Poems "
"Vers toi (de vous) "
"Although Tilted"
To the student who submits a fine original musical
composition.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap
"The Hamlet Suite "
To the student who submits a fine essay on a piece
of music.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap
Acts of Listening: Representation Through Music
in Mozart's Don Giovanni
To the student who submits the most elegant solution
of a geometrical problem.
Offered by the Class of 1986 in honor of
Bryee Jacobsen, of the Class of 1942, Tutor
and Director of Athletics Emeritus
To the student who submits the most elegant solution
of an analytical problem.
Offered in memory of James R. McClintock
of the Class of 1965
HONORABLE MENTION
JOSEPH LUCAS HYDE
JOHN ANGUS MAC€AULL
CASEY CHERI MOORE
THOMAS BULEN JACOBS
HELEN EDITH KONGSGAARD
ANTON BARBA-KAY
BRYSON WEST FINKLEA
JUSTIN DALE LANIER
ANTON BARBA-KAY
�To the student who carries out a fine laboratory project
Investigating the Seed Germination Pattern of
Rumex crispus under Standard Laboratory
Conditions
MEREDITH ENA BARTON
HONORABLE MENTION
False Starts: An Attempt at a Prologue to
Faraday's Chemical History of a Candle
To the Senior man and woman who by their
participation, leadership, and sportsmanship have
contributed most to the College's athletic program,
special blazers.
Offered by the Alumni Association
of St. John's College
MICHAEL WHELPLEY MALONE
ADAM CHRISTOPHER DAWSON
MARY Jo LEONHARDI DOKTER
To the member of the Senior Class who has
demonstrated the greatest care for and service
to youth residing in the City of Annapolis.
Offered by the friends and family of
Marvin B. Cooper, of the Class of 1969
RUSSELL ROBERT RAMSEY
To the member of the Senior Class who submits the
best work of visual art to the Community Art
Exhibition, the Charles Vernon Moran Prize
Handcrafted violin bow
LYDIA ELEANOR FREWEN
Bloody Bay, Tobago, black and white photograph
Walter S. Baird Prize-for a Senior who has
demonstrated excellence in the arts, literature,
or sciences
"How to Carry It, "short story
Groundworks, series of photographs
SARA WHITE WILSON
KATHLEEN CAMPBELL KELLEY
KATHERINE ANNE SHERMAN
Marshall Scholarship
AARON BOYD MACLEAN
National Science Foundation Research Experience
for Undergraduates (in mathematical sciences)
BRYSON WEST FINKLEA
National Security Scholarship and Internship
DANIEL EVAN MALKIEL
�ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Leslie Milton Abrams, 1954
Dr. Granville Q. Adams, 1929
Philip L. Alger, 1912
Annapolis Graduate Institute
Annapolis Self-Help
George M. Austin, 1908
Walter S. Baird, 1930
Bank of America
Betty Beck Bennett, 1960
Ford K. Brown, H'70
Chicago Regional
Mrs. Clyde Alvin Clapp
James T.Clark, 1928
Class of 1897
Class of 1898
Richard F. Cleveland, H'54
Bernard Clorety, 1950
Dr. Charles C. Cook
Marvin Brent Cooper, 1969
The Joseph and Robert Cornell
Memorial Foundation
Eugene N.( 1929) and
Robert G. (1963) Cozzolino
Wiley and Helen Crawford
Cpl. George E. Cunniff III
Donna Marie Delattre
Clarence L. Dickinson, 1911
Richard A. Duhan, 1963
Martin Dyer Book Fund
Faculty Scholarship
James H. Frame, 1950
Harry Golding, Graduate Institute
Edna G. and Roscoe E. Grove, 1910
John T. and Gertrude L. Harrison, 1907
John T. Harrison, Jr.
Charles W. Hass, 1927
Richard H. Hodgson, 1906
The Hodson Trust
Alfred and Ruth Houston, 1906
Houston Regional
J. Seward Johnson, Jr.
Jesse H. and Mary Gibbs Jones
Robert E. and Margaret Larsh Jones, 1909
Robert E. Kanode, 1939
Dr. Simon and Fanny Kaplan, H'84
Francis A. Katz, 1929
John Spangler Kieffer, H'70 and
Roxana White Kieffer, H'84
Jacob Klein, H'76
Korshin Family Fund
Arthur E. and Hilda Combs Landers, 1930
Joseph LaPides
Michael Littleton Memorial Fund
Massachusetts Regional
James Matthews, H '99
Philip A. Myers II, 1938
Rev. Theo O'Brien
Oklahoma Regional
Norman G. Owens
Dr. Thomas Par ran and Thomas Parran, Jr.
The Duane and Clementine Peterson
Charitable Fund
Pittsburgh Regional
Reader's Digest Foundation
J. Douglas Ramsey, 1937
Lenore B. Hinder
Susan I. Roberts, 1966
Clifton C.Roehle
Joan and Bela Ronay
Murray Joel and Julius Rosenberg, 1938
G.D. Searle/John E. Robson
Robson Family
J. J. Salovaara
Flora Duvall Sayles
Hazel Norris and
J. Graham Shannahan, 1908
Doug E. Sherr (1972) Memorial
J. Winfree Smith, H'80
James S. Spirer, 1970
C. V. Starr Foundation
Harry S. and Vivian B. Spectre Book Fund
Jean Roberts Staylor
Andrew and Leonore Steiner Book Fund
Clarence W.Stryker
Karl and Evelyn Van Tassel
Frederick J. Von Schwerdtner
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Vanous
Pattie Bourne Turner Walker, 1966
Richard D. Weigle, H'49
John L. Williams, 1950
Thomas J. and Marvil F. Williams
Frank K. Wilson, 1935
St. John's College
St. John's College Alumni Association
�ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
AAI Corporation
Aegon TransAmerica Foundation
AES Warrior Run
Alex Brown & Sons Charitable Foundation
Allfirst Financial Inc.
Annapolis Banking & Trust Company
Baltimore Life Insurance Company
The John Bickford Foundation
Boeing Company
Booz, Allen & Hamilton
Bozzuto Group
Bunting Family Foundation
Butler Capital
Class of 1992
CSC's Defense Group
Richard & Rosalee C. Davison Foundation
DelaPlaine Foundation
Dixon Valve & Coupling Company
Dunbar Armored Express
Eliasberg Family Foundation, Inc.
Farmers National Bank of Maryland/First
Virginia Banks
Ferris Baker Watts Inc.
Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland
Miss Charlotte Fletcher
Gallagher Evelius & Jones
The Gazette
General Dynamics/Government Systems
Corporation
Gordon Feinblatt Rothman Hoffberg
JJ. Haines Foundation, Inc.
Hecht-Levi Foundation, Inc.
Hedwin Corporation
Henderson-Webb, Inc.
The Estate of Elizabeth Hodges
The Hodson Scholarship Foundation
Hoffberger Foundation, Inc.
Honeywell Technology Solutions
Harley W. Howell Charitable Foundation
J.M. Huber
Independent Can Company
Independent College Fund of Maryland
The James M. Johnston Trust for
Charitable and Educational Purposes
Larry W.Katz
Katz, Abosch, Windesheim, Gershman &
Freedman, PA
KCI Technologies, Inc.
Ensign C. Markland Kelly, Jr. Memorial
Foundation
Kiplinger Foundation
L-3 Communications System
Lalley Charitable Fund
Legg Mason, Inc.
The John J. Leidy Foundation
Lockheed Martin Corporation
Lucent Technologies
Macht Philanthropic Fund
Glenn L. Martin Foundation
McCormick & Company
Joseph Meyerhoff Fund, Inc
Miles & Stockbridge Foundation
Northrup Grumman
Number Ten Foundation, Inc.
Potomac Electric Power Company
Procter & Gamble Cosmetics Foundation
Provident Bank of Maryland
Raytheon Systems Company
The Estate of Mary Reever
Riggs, Counselman, Michaels and Downes
SAIC
Saul Ewing LLP
Semmes, Bowen & Semmes Foundation
Shockley Honda
William Smith Scholarship Fund
State Farm Insurance Companies
Stieff Foundation, Inc.
St. Paul Companies
Sun Trust
T. Rowe Price Associates
Foundation, Inc.
United Parcel Service
Verizon - Maryland
Victor Graphics, Inc.
Wachovia Corporation
Whiting Turner Contracting Company
Gifts received after April 15, 2003are gratefullyacknowledged
and will be listed in the 2004 Commencement Program.
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
24 pages
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2003-05-11
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
CommencementExercises2003
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
St. John's College
Description
An account of the resource
Program for the two hundred eleventh commencement in the three hundred seventh year of the college.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Commencement (St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Program, 2003
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/81c805f7f792d6c21e2a876e13baead1.pdf
abd578be01c4d1f56fca9e1213df1dc4
PDF Text
Text
STJOHN'S
College
ANNAPOLIS « S A N T A FE
COMMENCEMENT
EXERCISES
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
SUNDAY, MAY TWELFTH
Two THOUSAND AND Two
�PROGRAM
FOR THE TWO HUNDRED TENTH
COMMENCEMENT IN THE
THREE HUNDRED SIXTH YEAR
OF THE COLLEGE
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
PRELUDE
ACADEMIC PROCESSION
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
THE NATIONAL ANTHEM
CHRISTOPHER B. NELSON
PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
WELCOME
PRESIDENT NELSON
ANNOUNCEMENT OF PRIZES AND AWARDS
HARVEY FLAUMENHAFT
DEAN OF THE COLLEGE
VICTOR DAVIS HANSON
ADDRESS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS
AUTHOR, MILITARY HISTORIAN AND CLASSICIST
CONFERRING OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
DEAN FLAUMENHAFT
CONFERRING OF GRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
WILLIAM PASTILLE
DIRECTOR OF THE GRADUATE INSTITUTE
ACADEMIC RECESSION
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
�BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
(with title of essay)
AMELIA ANN ADAMS
Considering Phlebas: Life and Death in T.S. Eliot's
The Wasteland
Normal, Illinois
STEPHANIE ELISE ADAMS
For Love of Sophie: The Socialization of Natural
Man
Yorktown, Virginia
MATTHEW ALBANESE
All in the Family: The Julio-Claudian Transition
Toms River, New Jersey
NICHOLAS SYLVAN ALEXANDRA
Hobbes' Noble Lie: An Examination of How
Hobbes' Formulation of Human Nature Shapes
His Description of the Commonwealth
Spring Valley, New York
MONICA PEREZ ANATALIO
How Does the "Faint Voice of Conscience"
Affect Free Choice and Self-Awareness in St.
Augustine's Confessions and Kant's Grounding
for the Metaphysics of "Morals?
Manassas, Virginia
STEPHEN CONRAD BAPPERT
A Portrait of the Artist's City: Images of Societal
Disease in James Joyce's Dubliners
PETER LANGFORD BEARDEN
The Ark of the Covenant
KATHRYN TAYLOR BENSON
The Journey to Self-Realization:
An "Hegelian" Account of Self-Consciousness
in Milton's Paradise Lost
JOSHUA DAVID BLISTEIN
The Strength and Innocence of Humanity in
Camus' The Plague
Coldwater, Michigan
Chatham, New Jersey
Warminster, Pennsylvania
Annapolis, Maryland
�RAQUEL BROMBERG
The Road to Delphi
Sharon, Massachusetts
SARAH FAY BURNHAM
King Saul
Stillwater, Oklahoma
AARON STARR BUTLER
Things Better Left Unsaid: Socrates' Defense and
Conviction in The Apologia
San Diego, California
ALAN BRIAN CARLSON
Eros or Empire? An Inquiry Concerning the Life
of Marcus Antonius, Rome's Great Statesman,
General, and Lover, from Plutarch's Life of Antony
ESTHER JUNG EUN CHAI
Fyodor Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov
ALEKSAJNDER HAYDN CHANCE
Spirits in the Temple of Nature:
Baudelaire's Search for Paradise
ERIK JOHN CHILD
The Nature of God in the Book of Exodus
London, New Hampshire
Ogden, Kansas
Bellingham, Washington
Tokyo, Japan
ISABEL HANSBROUGH CLARK
The Consciousness of a Christian: A Study of the
Role of Food in the Bible
Severna Park, Maryland
JONATHAN GREGORY COOPER
Conscience and the Constant Conflict
Needham, Massachusetts
JOHN KELSEY COTTRELL
The Cult of the Untrue: Reverence and Art in
Nietzsche's Thought
Alexandria, Virginia
CATHERINE MARY Cox
Aristotle's Mirror: The Relationship between
Men and Law
Ellicott City, Maryland
�GEORGE THOMAS DEANS II
Dogma's Downfall: Looking at Socrates' Defeat in
Plato's Parmenides
Topsham, Maine
ARIANNE THERESE DOROTHEA DEMPSEY
Hastings-on-Hudson, New York
The Restless Heart: An Examination of the WiU
through Rest and Motion in St. Augustine's
Confessions
PAUL EDWARD DETCHEMENDY
Becoming and Denying Christ: Stavrogin's Demon
Forgiveness
JOHN RICHARD DOBBYN, JR.
The Birth of a Nation
Virginia Beach, Virginia
Alexandria, Virginia
RACHEL PAGE DUDIK
The Longing for Mortal Wisdom: An Inquiry
into the Right Sort of Curiosity Necessary for
Seeking Wisdom in an Analysis of The Confessions
of St. Augustine
Centre Hall, Pennsylvania
TERENCE JAMES DUVALL
Shakespeare's Othello: A Look at One That Lov'd
Not Wisely, But Too Well
OldBrookville, New York
ROSHINI EBENEZER
An Analysis of Burke's Primary Concern in
Reflections on the Revolution in France
MICHAEL JOHN ESTERHELD
All of These Look to You: An Inquiry into Seeing
in the Book of Job
JOSEPH JAMES FERRARA
"In Our Image, After Our Likeness": An
Exploration of Separation in Genesis
Dehra-Dun,
Uttaranchal, India
Bowie, Maryland
New Fairfield, Connecticut
�NICOLE MARIE FISHER
On Pineapple Compote and Other Such Evils:
The Seeds of Atheism and Immorality in
The Brothers Karamazov
LUCAS TIMOTHY FORD
Man Made Man
JOHN THOMAS FRENCH
The Job of the Job: Finding Purpose in Job's
Suffering
DAVID WILLARD GEDDES
That Last Stride
JAMES FRASER GILMORE
The Mythology of Life and Self
CARA LYNN GORMALLY
"Good Intentions": The Irony of Appearance and
Reality in Kafka's Metamorphosis
LIAM BRENDAN GRADY
(Essay previously completed)
Sparks, Maryland
Yardley, Pennsylvania
New Fairfield, Connecticut
Derwood, Maryland
Mt. Desert, Maine
Litchfield, Connecticut
Washington,
District of Columbia
MEGAN MARIE GRAFF
History's Heirs: The Burden of Time Past and
Time Future in the Four Quartets
Baltimore, Maryland
EMILY ALLISON GRAZE
The Golden Day: An Analysis of Ralph Ellison's
Invisible Man
Norwood, Maryland
PETER MURPHY HEYNEMAN
The Comic Spirit
ANDREW YEUNG-BUN Hui
"Putting Polycletus and Nature to Shame":
Transformation, Transcendence, and the End of
Art in Dante's Purgatorio, X-XII
Silver Spring, Maryland
Garland, Texas
�GABRIELA JANINE QUERCIA HURWITZ
What Does It Mean to be a Creation of God?
TIFFANY MONIQUE JOLY
Emile's Cake
DENIS ALEXANDROVICH KALIAGUIN
Aristotle on the Dual Origins of the City
WARD SHIRO KASHIWA*
SARAH ELIZABETH KELLY
Love and Betrayal in the Garden of Eden
McLean, Virginia
Barnstable, Massachusetts
Moscow, Russia
Honolulu, Hawaii
Pasadena, Maryland
WILLIAM RAIGHNE KIRK
Doylestown, Pennsylvania
The Whole Picture: An Essay on the Role of
Christianity and Platon Karataev in War and Peace
MICHAEL CHRISTOPHER KLIM *
KRISTINA MARIE KORONA
Discovery of Poetic Wisdom by Giambattista Vico
Rendering the Proper Understanding of the Mind
Louis EDWARD KOVACS
Time and Curiosity in Baudelaire's Le Voyage
ERIN KATHLEEN KRASNIEWICZ
Night and Day in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
LOGAN MONROE LAUBACH
Traveling Without Moving: An Ascent of the Soul
According to Plotinus
LAURA LEIGH LYON
The Curse of Compassion
MICHAEL EARL MAGUIRE II
A Village Paralyzed by Fear
Arnold, Maryland
Wayne, Michigan
White Plains, Maryland
Riverside, Connecticut
Hughesville, Pennsylvania
Omaha, Nebraska
South Newfane, Vermont
�DAVID SHEFFIELD MARTIN, JR.
Wilderness and Humanity in Joseph Conrad's
Heart of Darkness
Atlanta, Georgia
MEGAN HEATHER MAXWELL-SMITH
The Discovery of Death: Prince Andrew's Motion
Towards Knowing in War and Peace
Studio City, California
BARON GENE MEDENWALD
The Long Road to Happiness: A Study of the
Acquisition of Virtue in Aristotle's Nicomachean
Ethics
Fort Collins, Colorado
SARAH CAMP MUGFORD
An Examination of the Arguments of the Crito and
How the Laws' Speech Benefits Socrates and Crito
White Hall, Maryland
JUSTIN MATTHEW NAYLOR
Toward the Hope of an Excellent Republic (On
Tocqueville and the Possibilities for Democracy)
Wilmington, Delaware
GEORGE JOSEPH NELSON
How Does Reason Overcome the Animal in Man?
An Analysis of Aristotle's Ethics and Politics
LORETTA O'CONNOR
The Clothes Make the Man: Exploring the
Dialectic of Social Materialism
KATHERINE AMY OEHLBERG
A Nature Within and Without: An Inquiry into the
Evolution of the Moral Sense
Kalispell, Montana
Charlottesville, Virginia
Naperville, Illinois
Calvert County, Maryland
JOHN THOMAS OSBORNE
An Argument for an Aesthetic Education:
Schiller's Letters on the Aesthetic Education of Man
and Wallenstein Trilogy
�QUINBY MITCHELL OWEN
The Prophet's Purpose: An Examination of
Flannery O'Connor's The Violent Bear It Away
RANDALL WITMAN PENNELL
Huckleberry Finn: Wild and Uncultivated
SARAH VIRGINIA PETERS
Mirror or Mirage ? Temporal Motion and Meaning
in One Hundred Years of Solitude
Woodstock, Virginia
Nottingham, Pennsylvania
Lodi, California
LARS ANDREW PETERSON
Monsters of the Cloth in Les Fleurs Du Mai
Owego, New York
BLAKELY LAUREN PHILLIPS
"Of Insight and Not of Tradition":
The Foundations of the Creative Capacity in
Emerson's Nature
Woodstock, Georgia
CAROLINE JOHNSTON PICARD
The Song of the Ostrich
JONATHAN THOMAS POLK
Going the Wrong Way on the Wrong Courses:
The Obstacles of Homecoming
RACHEL AVIVA POLLACK
In Search of a "Great Man": An Inquiry into
Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace
ALICIA MEREDITH POTEE
Fearing God Wisely: Freedom, Love, and Science
in Spinozan Democracy
HIRAM KISTLER POWERS
Freedom and Necessity: An Historical
Examination of Tolstoy's War and Peace
JEFFREY RAMSEY
The Revelation of Eros in Plato's Symposium
Lake Tahoe, California
Athens, Georgia
Silver Spring, Maryland
Lutherville, Maryland
Washington,
District of Columbia
West Chester, Pennsylvania
�DAVID TOWNSEND REINER
The Teaching of Lies: Socrates and Hippias
West Friendship, Maryland
LEE THOMAS ROACH
A Responsibility to Self and to Country:
The Authors of The Federalist
RACHEL MARIE ROCCIA
Bread as a Biblical Symbol for the Human
Condition
Easton, Connecticut
Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania
NIKKI JANE ROSENBERG
"Visions and Revisions": A Comparison of
J. Alfred Prufrock and Hamlet, Prince of Denmark
ARIEL JULIE Ross
Confused Speeches: Poetic Experience in
Les Fleurs du Mai
SEAN ALAN Ross
Jesus' Message of the New Life in the Gospel of
Matthew
PETER FREDERICK SCHADLER
Faith Unseen: A Study of Faith and How We Come
to It in the Gospel of Matthew
RACHEL ELLEN SEAY
"To Weep and Be Thrilled":
Music in War and Peace
AUSTIN MORRISON SETH
Augustine's Restlessness: What Can Be Known
Through Reason and Grace?
LAUREN MICHELLE SHOFER
Concealment in Darkness: A Process of Gaining a
Deeper Understanding of Invisibility
Houston, Texas
Carbondale, Colorado
Stoneville, North Carolina
Washington,
District of Columbia
Denver, Colorado
Richmond, Virginia
Crownsville, Maryland
�PETER COON SKADOW
"I Am Too Hot and Burned by My Own Thoughts;
Often It Nearly Takes My Breath Away"
Tryon, North Carolina
PETER NOLAN SPEER
A Teleological Suspension of the Ethical
Garden City, New York
GRETCHEN VALERIE STILTNER
The Significance of the Moment in Kierkegaard's
Philosophical Fragments
Baltimore, Maryland
LAURA JEAN STRACHE
Toward a Second Sailing in Search of Truth: A
Platonic Reading of Heisenberg's Indeterminacy
Principle
Sherman, Texas
Jo ELLA STRALEY
Transmuting the Bread of Daily Experience
ANNA ELIZABETH STUBNA
An Interpretation of Religion Throughout
Thomas More's Utopia
MICHAEL BYRON SULLIVAN
The Intellect in St. Thomas Aquinas
ERIK KENDALL THOMPSON
"The Lord Liveth": David, a Psalm, and the
Love of Life
MATTHEW JOHN TINQ
Transcending Christian Faith: The Christian's
Fascination and Difficulty with Absolute Knowing
in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit
St. Paul, Minnesota
Oakdale, Pennsylvania
Placerville, California
Binghamton, New York
ElPaso, Texas
MARGARETTA AMELIA TOBIAS
Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania
Love and Laugh at Thy Neighbor: An Examination
of Laughter in Pride and Prejudice
�STEPHEN JAMES TRAVIS
The Foundation and Movement of the
Acts of the Apostles
BENJAMIN LAUGHLIN TRUESDALE
A Sacrifice to Eros
MEGAN KYOMI UMEMOTO
Beauty and the Beast: The Union of Jane Austen
and Martin Heidegger
Redlands, California
Hopkinton, New Hampshire
Parker, Colorado
CHRISTOPHER JOHN WARNAGIRIS
East Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania
Reason at All Cost: The Defining Human Quality
in Epictetus' Discourses
CAROL ANN WETHERELL
Has Job Sinned in His Heart? Whether Job's
Relationship to His Children Emulates His
Relationship to God
DAVID WARD WILSON
Marlow the Philosopher
Trenton, Missouri
Owings Mills, Maryland
ANNA LORRAINE WORKS
"Of the Truth of Which We Can Assert Nothing,
Whatever We May Say or Think of Its Probability":
An Exploration of Faraday's Method
Townshend, Vermont
MARIAM GULREZ YAZDANI
Conflict of the Common Good and the Individual
as Seen through Alexis de Tocqueville's Democracy
in America
Islamabad, Pakistan
CHRISTIAN PATRICK YODER
Moving Towards a State of Motion: Galileo's
Contribution to the Development of the Concept
of Inertia
* upon completion of requirements
Belleville, Pennsylvania
�MASTER OF ARTS IN LIBERAL ARTS DEGREE
GRADUATE INSTITUTE IN LIBERAL EDUCATION
ZAHERALLY KASSAMALLY AHAMED
Nairobi, Kenya
BENJAMIN WILLIAM ANDERSON
Holden, Maine
CAROLINE ELIZABETH BRANCH
Atlanta, Georgia
DESIREE EVE BYKER
SALLY McCiAiN CHOATE
WILLIAM THOMAS GROUSE
THEA HADJICONSTANDI DELBALZO
Atlanta, Georgia
Annapolis, Maryland
Riva, Maryland
PENELOPE GWYNN DONNELLY
Berkley, Michigan
WILLIAM RAYMOND GEISLER*
Meade, Kansas
CHARLES SAMUEL A. GREEN
Westlake Village, California
PETER JAMES OLEN HANNAH
Monterey, California
CHRISTOPHER RYAN HART
San Diego, California
AUSTIN EDWARD JOSEPH HATCH
Falls Church, Virginia
ARELI ALLENE HERRING
REBECCA THOMAS HUDSON
ROGER MARCUS JACKSON
ESTHER VICTORIA KAY
KATHERINE MARION LEWIS
Bristol, Tennessee
Ellicott City, Maryland
Cleveland, Tennessee
Amherst, Virginia
St. Paul, Minnesota
�STEVE CHU-CHEN LIN
Ross HALE MACKENZIE
High Bridge, New Jersey
Annapolis, Maryland
MICHAEL LEE MCDONALD
Columbia, Maryland
HUGH BARNES MC!NTOSH
Washington, District of Columbia
GERALD PETER MIANTE
ANNE WHITMAN MILLER
Stevensville, Maryland
Derwood, Maryland
ALLYSON WILLIAMS MOWER
Richfield, Utah
EILEEN FRANCES MURPHY
Baltimore, Maryland
JASON WILLIAM OCKER
Knoxville, Maryland
RONALD ELLIOTT OSBORN
Silver Spring, Maryland
Brookings, South Dakota
ROBIN LEAH RIETZ
LORI LYNN RUBBLING
Emmitsburg, Maryland
STEPHEN MICHAEL SELF
Sacramento, California
MARY RUESEN STRAUSS
Davidsonville, Maryland
Arlington, Virginia
JAMES PATRICK TERP
Irving, Texas
DAVID MICHAEL WILLIAMS
MELODIE LOUISE WILSON-VELASCO
FRANZ RHEINHARDT WISE
+degree requirements
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Baltimore, Maryland
met in Annapolis, graduating in Santa Fe
�PRIZES AND AWARDS
COMMENCEMENT 2002
To the member of the Senior Glass who has written
the best senior essay.
Offered in memory of Susan Irene Roberts, of
the class of 1966
A Nature Within and Without: An Inquiry into
the Evolution of the Moral Sense
HONORABLE MENTION
"Putting Polycletus and Nature to Shame":
Transformation, Transcendence, and the End
of Art in Dante's Purgatorio, X-XII
KATHERINE AMY OEHLBERG
ANDREW YEUNG-BUN Hui
To the member of the Junior Glass who has written
the best annual essay.
Offered by Mrs. Leslie Clark Stevens in memory
of her daughter-in-law,
Kathryn Mylorie Stevens
The Machine: Pascal's Path to Salvation
MICHELLE KAY PAINE
HONORABLE MENTION
Looking Forward by Looking Backward:
Mapping Out the Development of the Human
Soul in Rousseau's Discourse on the Origin and
Foundations of Inequality Among Men
MAYA JESSICA ALAPIN
To the member of the Sophomore Class who has
written the best annual essay.
Offered under the will of the late
Judge Walter I. Dawkins, of the Class of 1880
Richard's Tragedy
Telling Time by the Moon
MATTHEW BRYAN CLIFFORD
MATTHEW CHRISTIAN THOMPSON
�To the member of the Freshman Class who has written
the best annual essay.
Offered in memory of Jacob Klein, Tutor
Emeritus, and his wife, Else, by the Dean
Wining, Dining, and Opining '
To the member of the January Freshman Glass who
has written the best annual essay in the 2000-2001
academic year.
Offered in memory of Elizabeth "Betsy" Marta
Smith, of the Class of 1993, by Robert Clinton
Nease, of the Class of 1992
To the Graduate Institute student who has written a
distinguished preceptorial essay in the year 2001.
Offered by the Alumni Association
Mastered by Images: Understanding Socrates'
Criticism of the Poets in Plato's Republic
To a member of the Senior Glass, for excellence
in speaking.
Offered in memory of
Senator Millard E. Tydings of Maryland
To the student who submits the best English version
of a Greek text.
Offered in memory of John S. Kieffer, President
Emeritus
Text: Plato, Laws 887C-888B
JOSHUA MARK WEINSTEIN
No PRIZE
CHRISTOPHER RYAN HART
JONATHAN THOMAS POLK
JEFFREY RAMSEY
To the student who submits the best English version
of a French poem.
Offered by the Board of Visitors and
Governors
Text: Leconte deLisle, "Midi"
KATHERINE ELIZABETH NEHRING
�To the student who submits a fine original
English poem.
Offered by Dr. George Austin
in memory of his brother, Henry
"OfPapercuts and Pollen "
To the student who submits a fine original musical
composition.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap
"Jubilate Deo: A Motet for Three Voices "
ALICIA MEREDITH POTEE
ERIN MICHELLE PAGE
To the student who submits a fine essay on a piece
of music.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap
The Contrapuntal Soul ofLassus' "Beatus Vir"
ANTON BARBA-KAY
To the student who submits the most elegant solution
of a geometrical problem.
Offered by the Glass of 1986 in honor of
Bryce Jacobsen, of the Class of 1942, Tutor
and Director of Athletics Emeritus
BENNET BRISTOL PORTER
HONORABLE MENTION
ANTON BARBA-KAY
To the student who submits the most elegant solution
of an analytical problem.
Offered in memory of James R. McGlintock
MARY Jo LEONHARDI DOKTER
of the Glass of 1965
To the student who carries out a fine laboratory
project.
An Investigation of the Phenomenon of
Imposed Dormancy in the Seeds of
Rumex crispus
GARA LYNN GORMALLY
HONORABLE MENTION
On the Reduction of Water through
Electrolysis
MICHAEL WHELPLEY MALONE
�To the Senior man and woman who by their
participation, leadership, and sportsmanship have
contributed most to the College's athletic program,
special blazers.
Offered by the Alumni Association
of St. John's College
Louis EDWARD KOVACS
MEGAN HEATHER MAXWELL-SMITH
To the member of the Senior Class who has
demonstrated the greatest care for and service
to youth residing in the City of Annapolis.
Offered by the friends and family of
Marvin B. Cooper,
of the Class of 1969
ERIN KATHLEEN KRASNIEWICZ
To the member of the Senior Class who submits the
best work of visual art to the Community Art
Exhibition, the Charles Vernon Moran Prize
16 Young People with Short Hair, painting
CAROLINE JOHNSTON PICARD
Walter S. Baird Prize - for a Senior who
has demonstrated excellence in the arts,
literature, or sciences
16 Young People with Short Hair, painting
CAROLINE JOHNSTON PICARD
Jack Kent Cooke Foundation Graduate Scholarship 2002
Fulbright Teaching Assistantship to Germany
David L. Boren/NSEP (National Security Education
Program), undergraduate scholarship for study
abroad in China
Witherspoon Fellowship for Leadership Development
ANDREW YEUNG-BUN Hui
HIRAM KISTLER POWERS
RYAN DOUGLAS BARNES RYLEE
ROSHINI EBENEZER
�ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Leslie Milton Abrams, 1954
Dr. Granville Q. Adams, 1929
Philip L.Alger, 1912
Annapolis Graduate Institute
Annapolis Self-Help
George M. Austin, 1908
Walter S. Baird, 1930
Bank of America
Betty Beck Bennett, 1960
Ford K. Brown, H'70
Chicago Regional
Mrs. Clyde Alvin Clapp
James T. Clark, 1928
Class of 1897
Class of 1898
Richard F. Cleveland, H'54
Bernard Clorety, 1950
Dr. Charles C. Cook
Marvin Brent Cooper, 1969
The Joseph and Robert Cornell
Memorial Foundation
Eugene N.( 1929) and
Robert G. (1963) Cozzolino
Wiley and Helen Crawford
Cpl. George E. Cunniff III
Donna Marie Delattre
Clarence L. Dickinson, 1911
Richard A. Duhan, 1963
Faculty Scholarship
James H. Frame, 1950
Harry Golding, Graduate Institute
Edna G. and Roscoe E. Grove, 1910
John T. and Gertrude L. Harrison, 1907
John T. Harrison, Jr.
Charles W.Hass, 1927
Richard H. Hodgson, 1906
The Hodson Trust
Alfred and Ruth Houston, 1906
Houston Regional
J. Seward Johnson, Jr.
Jesse H. and Mary Gibbs Jones
Robert E. and Margaret Larsh Jones, 1909
Robert E. Kanode, 1939
Dr. Simon and Fanny Kaplan, H'84
Francis A. Katz, 1929
John Spangler Kieffer, H'70 and
Roxana White Kieffer, H'84
Jacob Klein, H'76
Korshin Family Fund
Arthur E. and Hilda Combs Landers, 1930
Joseph LaPides
Michael Littleton Memorial Fund
Massachusetts Regional
James Matthews, H '99
Philip A. Myers II, 1938
Rev. Theo O'Brien
Oklahoma Regional
Norman G. Owens
Dr. Thomas Parran and Thomas Parran, Jr.
The Duane and Clementine Peterson
Charitable Fund
Pittsburgh Regional
Reader's Digest Foundation
J. Douglas Ramsey, 1937
Lenore B. Hinder
Susan I. Roberts, 1966
Clifton C. Roehle
Joan and Bela Ronay
Murray Joel and Julius Rosenberg, 1938
G.D. Searle/John E. Robson
Robson Family
J. J. Salovaara
Flora Duvall Sayles
Hazel Norris and
J. Graham Shannahan, 1908
DougE. Sherr (1972) Memorial
J. Winfree Smith, H'80
James S. Spirer, 1970
C. V. Starr Foundation
Jean Roberts Staylor
Clarence W. Stryker
Karl and Evelyn Van Tassel
Frederick J. Von Schwerdtner
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Vanous
Pattie Bourne Turner Walker, 1966
Richard D. Weigle, H'49
John L. Williams, 1950
Thomas J. and Marvil F. Williams
Frank K. Wilson, 1935
St. John's College
St. John's College Alumni Association
�ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Annapolis Banking & Trust Company
Applied Signal Technology, Inc.
William G. Baker, Jr. Memorial Fund
Vernal and Florence Bates Foundation
CitiFinancial
Clark-Winchcole Foundation
Class of 1992
Farmers National Bank of Maryland
Miss Charlotte Fletcher
General Dynamics/ Government Systems Corporation
Paul & Annetta Himmelfarb Foundation, Inc.
The Hodson Scholarship Foundation
IBM Corporation
Independent College Fund of Maryland
The James M. Johnston Trust for Charitable and Educational Purposes
Ensign C. Markland Kelly, Jr. Memorial Foundation
The John J. Leidy Foundation
Lucent Technologies
Merchantile Safe Deposit & Trust Company
OMEN, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Associates Foundation, Inc.
Raytheon Systems Company
TRW Intelligence Systems & Information Technology Group
Michael Tuch Foundation, Inc.
United Parcel Service
Gifts received after April 15,2002 are gratefully acknowledged
and will be listed in the 2003 Commencement Program.
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
21 pages
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2002-05-12
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
CommencementExercises2002
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
St. John's College
Description
An account of the resource
Program for the two hundred tenth commencement in the three hundred sixth year of the college.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Commencement (St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Program, 2002
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/42a10ac1fd46a8a7f8469648430451a5.pdf
c1fdd7a0de7db1284e0d1db1ff7b9d7c
PDF Text
Text
STJOHN'S
College
COMMENCEMENT
EXERCISES
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
SUNDAY, MAY THIRTEENTH
Two THOUSAND AND ONE
�PROGRAM
FOR THE TWO HUNDRED NINTH
COMMENCEMENT IN THE
THREE HUNDRED FIFTH YEAR
OF THE COLLEGE
PRELUDE
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
ACADEMIC PROCESSION
WELCOME
CHRISTOPHER B. NELSON
PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
ANNOUNCEMENT OF PRIZES AND AWARDS
PRESIDENT NELSON
HARVEY FLAUMENHAFT
DEAN OF THE COLLEGE
ADDRESS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS
ELLIOTT ZUCKERMAN
TUTOR EMERITUS, ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE
CONFERRING OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
DEAN FLAUMENHAFT
CONFERRING OF GRADUATE DEGREES
PRESIDENT NELSON
MICHAEL DINK
DIRECTOR OF THE GRADUATE INSTITUTE
ACADEMIC RECESSION
CARROLLTON BRASS QUINTET
�BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
(with title of essay)
JUSTIN DONALD ANDREWS
Mount Laurel, New Jersey
The Child in the Abyss: Innocence, Ennui, and
the Fracturing of the Poetic Soul in Baudelaire's
Le Voyage
ELIZABETH ANNE AUSTIN
The Fall of a Sparrow: Hamlet's Quest
for Completion
MOLLYNDA VANNA BAGAGLIO
Being Yourself, Staying at Play: An Exploration of
the Nature of Man and His Relationship with Art in
Friedrich Schiller's Letters on the Aesthetic
Education of Man
HEATHER ABIGAIL BEHREND
Prospero's Daughter
JULIA ELIZABETH BELL
Dialectic, Rhetoric and Politics: An Analysis
of the Gorgias
South Portland, Maine
Worcester, Massachusetts
Provo, Utah
Ramsey, New Jersey
DANIEL THOMAS BRAITHWAITE
Towards the Consciousness of No Subject
Oak Park, Illinois
LANCE RYAN BRISBOIS
On the Essentially Socratic Nature of the
Philosophical Fragments
Danvers, Massachusetts
JESSICA ALICE BROTMAN
On Plato's Phaedrus
Newton, Massachusetts
JAMIE LYNN BROUGH
The Musical Portrayal of Man's Primordial Roots in
Stravinsky's Rite of Spring
High Falls, New York
�BRENDAN SCHANTZ BULLOCK
Knowing That Which Cannot Be Known:
Cause and Necessity in the Metaphysics of Aristotle
and Leibniz
Windham, Vermont
Winston-Salem, North Carolina
LAUREL SHANN CALDWELL
"In loving thou dost well," (VIII.588): Sexual
Relationships as a Metaphor for Relationships to
God in Milton's Paradise Lost
MARIA CHRISTINA CASSIMATIS
Where We Stand - On Heidegger's Ground
BRYAN HOWARD CLEVELAND
Egypt and the Cult of Heracles: Mythology and the
Marvelous in Herodotus' Histories
Kensington, Maryland
Xenia, Ohio
Bainbridge Island, Washington
JONATHAN FREDERICK GULP
The Problem of Human Freedom in the Philosophy
of Rousseau
JOHN PATRICK CURRAN
Issues of Individual Liberty and a Free
Market of Exchange
TIMOTHY VAUGHN DANIELS
Power and Particles: The Role of Explanation
in Michael Faraday's Experimental Researches
in Electricity
WYATT JAMES DOWLING
Prospero and His Project
SUSAN DONAHUE ELLIS
Behind Convention: An Essay on the
Franklin's Tales
JASON MATTHIAS EMERY
Behold, Here I Am: An Examination of Faith,
Resignation, and Abraham's Greatness in
Fear and Trembling
Woodbridge, Virginia
New Bern, North Carolina
Whitman, Massachusetts
Chicago, Illinois
Bedford, New Hampshire
�KEVIN MICHAEL FARRELLY
Don Quijote and Sancho Panza
Montclair, New Jersey
ANDREW JAMES FERGUSON
Story Cycles
Gary, North Carolina
BEVERLY ANN FLEMER
Angel Bread: Purification by Purgatory,
Rise to Paradise
Middlebury, Vermont
EMILY FRANCES FRAMPTON
The Dialogue of Song in Vergil's Eclogues
Charleston, South Carolina
NICOLE SUZANNE FRANK
Liar Liar: An Examination of the Motives and
Meanings Behind Marlow's Lie to the Intended in
Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness
Mount Desert, Maine
TIMOTHY JAMES FREEMAN
A Step Towards Saving the Spirit of Kant's
Metaphysics
Hollywood, Maryland
ROBERT BRUCE ANDERSON GAMBILL
The Balance of Security and Command:
Considerations for the Founding of States
Richmond, Virginia
ANGELA CHRISTINE GIL
Estrangement and Revolution: The Alienated
Individual in Marx's German Ideology and
Emerson's Essays and Lectures
MontgomeryVillage, Maryland
SARAH LOUISE GUYETTE
From the Whale to the Cross: A Prophecy of World
Salvation
MICHELLE DAWN HALL
Love and Ambition in Stendhal's The Red
and the Black
Lakeside, California
St. Johnsbury, Vermont
�KEVIN MICHAEL FARRELLY
Don Quijote and Sancho Panza
Montclair, New Jersey
ANDREW JAMES FERGUSON
Story Cycles
Gary, North Carolina
BEVERLY ANN FLEMER
Angel Bread: Purification by Purgatory,
Rise to Paradise
Middlebury, Vermont
EMILY FRANCES FRAMPTON
The Dialogue of Song in Vergil's Eclogues
Charleston, South Carolina
NICOLE SUZANNE FRANK
Liar Liar: An Examination of the Motives and
Meanings Behind Marlow's Lie to the Intended in
Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness
Mount Desert, Maine
TIMOTHY JAMES FREEMAN
A Step Towards Saving the Spirit of Kant's
Metaphysics
Hollywood, Maryland
ROBERT BRUCE ANDERSON GAMBILL
The Balance of Security and Command:
Considerations for the Founding of States
Richmond, Virginia
ANGELA CHRISTINE GIL
Estrangement and Revolution: The Alienated
Individual in Marx's German Ideology and
Emerson's Essays and Lectures
MontgomeryVillage, Maryland
SARAH LOUISE GUYETTE
From the Whale to the Cross: A Prophecy of World
Salvation
MICHELLE DAWN HALL
Love and Ambition in Stendhal's The Red
and the Black
Lakeside, California
St. Johnsbury, Vermont
�JENNIFER BETH HARRIS
On the Necessity of the Passionate SelfConsciousness in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit
Miami, Florida
MARSHALL ABBOTT HEVRON
A Degree of Depravity: The Regulation of Vice in
The Federalist Papers
New Orleans, Louisiana
MELISSA LYNN HUTCHINS
A Look at the Power of Natural and Conventional
Languages in Rousseau's Emile
Rockville, Maryland
JAMES HERBERT INZEO
Shakespeare, Sonnets: On Lovers
Greenbelt, Maryland
HANNAH IRELAND
WAKING: Lajeune Parque of Paul Valery
Santa Fe, New Mexico
DAVID LEE JENNINGS
The Failure of Creon
Oakhurst, California
SARAH ELIZABETH JOYCE
The God Who Wants
Lookout Mountain, Georgia
LIZABETH JANET JUMP
Compassion and the Disruption of Complacency:
Huck Finn as a Moral Hero
IAN PETER JUNGBACKER
Making Sense of Penelope
BASIA KAPOLKA
Intimacy with Filth: An Examination of
Baudelaire's Une Charogne
JAIME LYNN KEELING
The Author's Meditation: Preoccupied with
Socrates and an Unaccountable Word
Westminster, Maryland
Oshkosh, Wisconsin
Salinas, California
Hot Springs, Arkansas
�ANTHE ALIFERIS KELLEY
Looking into Logic
DANIEL MORLEY KEYS
Hegel in Search of Himself in the State
Boston, Massachusetts
Princeton Junction, New Jersey
A-JlN KlM
The Musical "Don Giovanni": Kierkegaard's Lover
in Mozart's Opera
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
JOSHUA ALVA KIRKMAN
The Devils of the Land: The Human Experience in
Heart of Darkness
Greenville, South Carolina
ANDREW LYLE KOLB
You Speak Like a Book: Reading Notes
from Underground
SEAN ROBERT LALLY
The Dignity of Humanity: An Exploration of the
Content of Kant's Ethics
DAVID LAMAR LEE
The Structure of Human Blessedness in
Augustine's Confessions and De Trinitate
SERGEY LEVCHIN
Eros and History in the Art of C. P. Gavafy
LAURA ANNA LEWIS
The Body Tells the Truth: God Incarnate in
The Violent Bear It Away
SHAWN PATRICK LOHT
Morality within the Limits of Reason in Kant's
Critique of Practical Reason and Groundingfor the
Metaphysics of Morals
JOHN ROBERT LYON
Einstein's New Notion of Space
Flushing, New York
Brentwood, Tennessee
Skokie, Illinois
West Chicago, Illinois
Lewistown, Pennsylvania
Shiloh, Ohio
�New Stanton, Pennsylvania
KRISTIN PAULINE MASSER
"Does one's integrity ever lie in what one is
unable to do?": Backwards to Bethlehem with
Hazel Motes
DANIEL MORGAN MAZAL
Past the Lucid Paradox: The Search for True Sight
in Shakespeare's Sonnets
Deland, Florida
WILLIAM IAN McCov
Resurrection from The House of the Dead
PATRICK EDWARD McDowELL
Nothing Else Matters, and Nothing is So Neglected:
An Argument for Why One Ought to Live Seeking
God, Based upon Pascal's Pensees
ADRIENNE ROXANNE MOORE
Consciousness and Body, Will and Determinism:
Comments on Some Writings by Descartes
East Bangor, Pennsylvania
Alexandria, Virginia
CHARLES WILLIAM MORRISON
A Theological Account of Palestrina's
"Pope Marcellus Mass"
ALI JASON MOUSSALLI
Philosophy and Science in Maxwell and Poincare
DANIEL THOMAS SULLIVAN O'KEEFE
Believing in The Winter's Tale
Indiana, Pennsylvania
Texas
MICHAEL WAYNE MEADOWS
Drawn Down the Magic Cap: Marx and the
Morality of Private Property
ANNE MARGARET NEEDHAM
The Motive for Metaphor: Wallace Stevens'
Desire for Truth
San Antonio, Texas
Pensacola, Florida
Washington, District of Columbia
Wappingers Falls, New York
�ALEXANDER LEE OWEN
The Fall of the Roman Republic
STEPHEN THOMAS PALOPOLI
Paralysis, Gnomon, and Simony: An Analysis
of Deficiency in Joyce's Dubliners
COSMINA lOANA PoPA
Farmington, Michigan
Gwynedd Valley, Pennsylvania
Arad, Romania
"God Knows How These People Get Made!"
PAIGE ELIZABETH POSTLEWAIT
King Billy and the Paralyzed City
JEREMY ALEXANDER PRATT
A Study of Cyclical History
MARC ANTHONY PRIEST
A Justification of the Value of Scientific Pursuits
Based Upon Francis Bacon's New Organon
KATIE FRANKLIN PRINCE
Rainy Day Women - The Broken Wisdom
of the Artist
SYLVAINE NATHALIE RAMECKERS
Anagogy and Architecture: An Analysis of the
Geometrical Dynamics of Ghartres
JASON BRYAN REES
Process as the Unifying Principle of
Physical Reality
JESSICA KRISTIN REITZ
The Galilean Foundation for Relativity and the
Absolute Significance of Motion in Nature
CATHY OPPER ROSENBERG
A Creator's Unity in a Created World:
Contradiction, Separation, and Ambiguity
in the First Three Chapters of Genesis
Katy, Texas
King of Prussia, Pennsylvania
Memphis, Tennessee
Southern Pines, North Carolina
New York, New York
Grass Lake, Michigan
Worcester, Massachusetts
Orlando, Florida
�Marietta, Georgia
ERIC DANIEL ROSENBERG
Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit and the
Unhappy Consciousness
Annandale, Virginia
ELIZABETH BARAN ROYAL
On the Sickness of Man
ANDREW THOMAS SARAZIN
Not Histories, But Lives: An Exploration of
Plutarch's Method
Charlottesville, Virginia
Hanover, Maryland
COLBY LEE SCHMIDT
Odysseus: Terrorist or Guerrilla Warrior?
Baltimore, Maryland
SARAH LOUISE SCOTT
Georg Cantor's Transfinite Numbers: A Quest for
Objective Knowledge
Swansboro, North Carolina
TALLEY ROLLINGS SCROGGS
Chercher? pas seulement: creer
AARON BROOKS SECHLER
On Heidegger's Aristotle
Silver Spring, Maryland
COLIN HENDERSON SMITH
"Shall I Believe I Am Nothing? Shall I Believe I Am
God?" An Argument Against Edward O. Wilson's
Consilience Theory
Exeter, New Hampshire
MARGARET ELIZABETH SPAETH
Freedom Through Beauty
ERIK PETER STADNIK
In Search of the Balanced Life: Mary, Morality,
and Mansfield Park
KIMBERLY J. STATELER
Through the Ivory Gate: History, Heroes, and
Hopes as Glimmering Illusion
St. Joseph, Minnesota
Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania
Chicago, Illinois
�JONATHAN PAUL STEVENS
How Can a Loving God Allow Death?: An
Examination of the Fall of Man as Described
in Genesis
Boyertown, Pennsylvania
LEO GENE VLADIMIRSKY
On Mirrors, Images, and Ahab in Moby Dick
Weston, Connecticut
MELISSA WACHS
And Lead Us into Temptation: Stephen Dedalus,
Quentin Compson, and the Redemptive Power
of Sin
KRISTOPHER WAYNE WACKERMAN
Swift and Gulliver's Travels: Overcoming the
Problem of Educating Through Satire
MEIR RAPHAEL WALTERS
To Prevail over God and Men: The Formation of
Cities and Nations in the Book of Genesis
CECELIA ALEXANDRA WATSON
The Serial Experimentalist: Michael Faraday's
Method and His "Being Induced"
DANIEL ALBERT WEILAND
Why Quantum Mechanics is Incomplete
FLOYE HEATHER WELLS
The Spectacle of Nature - Man's Image of Himself:
An Exploration of Physical Nature in Rousseau's
Emile
Staten Island, New York
Kansas City, Missouri
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Memphis, Tennessee
Valencia, Pennsylvania
Vail, Colorado
JENNIFER ELIZABETH WESTIE
Williamstown, Massachusetts
Paradise for the Swarm: Discovering the Ennobling
Power of Love in The Brothers Karamazov
SARAH ELIZABETH WHITESEL
The Unstated Self: Madness, Nothing, and
Language in King Lear
Darnestown, Maryland
�NEVIN LAWRENCE YOUNG
Vague Remarks upon Galileo and Dedekind:
Continuity and the Infinite in Magnitude and
Multitude
IVA ZlZA
On Marx
Manchester, Maine
Novi Sad, Yugoslavia
�MASTER OF ARTS IN LIBERAL ARTS DEGREE
GRADUATE INSTITUTE IN LIBERAL EDUCATION
SHERWOOD RAY BELANGIA
Summerfield, North Carolina
JEREMY BRENINGSTALL
St. Louis Park, Minnesota
ERIC DAMIEN CADENA
La Crescenta, California
NATHAN ANDREW CRADDOCK
Cincinnati, Ohio
JILL ERIN CRAWFORD
Brooklyn, New York
ERIC CARL ELLINGSEN
Lexington, Kentucky
SCOTT WILLIAM GREENBERGER
Green Bay, Wisconsin
APRIL DAWN KONCHAR-HARBERT
Pasadena, Maryland
CHRISTOPHER ANDREW LARSON
La Plata, Maryland
YONGHWA LEE
MATTHEW KENNETH LOUGHRAN
JOHN MASON NEW
STEPHANIE NORQUIST
MARTHA ROSEAILEEN ROGERS
SHANNON LYNN ROQUEMORE
THEODORE MARTIN RYAN
DANIEL EVAN SILVERMINTZ
CHARLES WILBUR STOTLER III
Pusan, South Korea
Kensington, Maryland
Richmond, Virginia
Washington, District of Columbia
Annapolis, Maryland
Warner Robins, Georgia
St. Louis, Missouri
Boynton Beach, Florida
Johnstown, Pennsylvania
ANNE LOUISE SULLIVAN
San Diego, California
ERIC H. TWITE
San Diego, California
MILTON LAMONT WELCH
NATHAN D. WILSON
KEVIN B. YOST
WALTER JAMES YUREK
ZEJIAN ZHANG
Newport News, Virginia
Moscow, Idaho
Lincoln, Vermont
Rumbley, Maryland
Chong Qing, People s Republic of China
�HONORS AND PRIZES
COMMENCEMENT 2001
To the member of the Senior Class who has written
the best senior essay.
Offered in memory of Susan Irene Roberts, of
the class of 1966
A Step Towards Saving the Spirit of
Kant's Metaphysics
TIMOTHY JAMES FREEMAN
HANNAH IRELAND
WAKING: La Jeune Parque of Paul Valery
HONORABLE MENTION
Egypt and the Cult of Heracles: Mythology and the
BRYAN HOWARD CLEVELAND
Marvelous in Herodotus' Histories
To the member of the Junior Class who has written the
best annual essay.
Offered by Mrs. Leslie Clark Stevens in memory
of her daughter-in-law,
Kathryn Mylorie Stevens
The Present is Pregnant with the Future:
An Essay on Leibniz
RACHEL ELLEN SEAY
HONORABLE MENTION
Cuckoo and Nightingale: Modes of Inspiration
in Paradise Lost
PETER MURPHY HEYNEMAN
The Significance of Thinking a Concept
as a Problem
BLAKELY LAUREN PHILLIPS
To the member of the Sophomore Class who has
written the best annual essay.
Offered under the will of the late
Judge Walter I. Dawkins, of the Class of 1880
On Faith and Perfection...
KATHLEEN CAMPBELL KELLEY
HONORABLE MENTION
The Philosopher-Saint Defends his Career: A Study of
Faith and Reason in Aquinas
MICHELLE KAY PAINE
�To the member of the Freshman Glass who has written
the best annual essay.
Offered in memory of Jacob Klein, Tutor
Emeritus, and his wife, Else, by the Dean
ANDERSON RUSSELL TALLENT
The Incontinent Philosopher
HONORABLE MENTION
The Eumenides: Tension
To the member of the January Freshman Class who
has written the best annual essay in the 1999-2000
academic year.
Offered in memory of Elizabeth "Betsy" Marta
Smith, of the Class of 1993, by Robert Clinton
Nease, of the Class of 1992
To the Graduate Institute student who has written a
distinguished preceptorial essay in the year 2000.
Offered by the Alumni Association
"The Good Before Him ":
The Role of Eve in Paradise Lost
To a member of the Senior Class, for excellence
in speaking.
Offered in memory of
Senator Millard E. Tydings of Maryland
To the student who submits the best English version
of a Greek text.
Offered in memory of John S. Kieffer, President
Emeritus
ROBERT CHARLES ABBOTT, JR.
No PRIZE
CORINNE SAVAGE OLIVERIO
SARAH ELIZABETH WHITESEL
No PRIZE
To the student who submits the best English version
of a French poem.
Offered by the Board of Visitors and Governors
Text: Hugo, "A Theophile Gautier"
HONORABLE MENTION
JAMIE LYNN BROUGH
AMY MICHELLE PHILLIPS
�To the student who submits a fine original
English poem.
Offered by Dr. George Austin
in memory of his brother, Henry
FOR
: A Slap-pot Master
PETER HEYNEMAN
To the student who submits a fine original musical
composition.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap
No PRIZE
To the student who submits a fine essay on a piece
of music.
Offered in memory of Mary Joy Belknap
The Musical Portrayal of Man s Primordial Roots in
Stravinsky's Rite of Spring
JAMIE LYNN BROUGH
To the student who submits the most elegant solution
of a geometrical problem.
Offered by the Class of 1986 in honor of
Bryce Jacobsen, of the Class of 1942, Tutor
and Director of Athletics Emeritus
JUSTIN WILLIAM HURWITZ
To the student who submits the most elegant solution
of an analytical problem.
Offered in memory of James R. McClintock
of the Class of 1965
JUSTIN WILLIAM HURWITZ
To the student who carries out a fine laboratory
project.
A Faraday Cage
To the Senior man and woman who by their
participation, leadership, and sportsmanship have
contributed most to the College's athletic program,
special blazers.
Offered by the Alumni Association
of St. John's College
DAVID SHEFFIELD MARTIN, JR.
ANDREW JAMES FERGUSON
JESSICA KRISTIN REITZ
�To the member of the Senior Class who has
demonstrated the greatest care for and service to
youth residing in the City of Annapolis.
Offered by the friends and family of
Marvin B. Cooper,
of the Class of 1969
WILLIAM IAN McCoY
To the member of the Senior Class who submits the
best work of visual art to the Community Art
Exhibition, the Charles Vernon Moran Prize
Palm After Rainfall, color photograph
SYLVAINE NATHALIE RAMECKERS
Walter S. Baird Prize-for a Senior who has
demonstrated excellence in the arts,
literature, or sciences
Preservation, poetry collection
National Security Education Program(NSEP)
Scholarship for Summer Language Study, Egypt
National Security Agency Scholarship
and Internship
MARIA CHRISTINA CASSIMATIS
AARON BOYD MACLEAN
RYAN DOUGLAS BARNES RYLEE
�ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Leslie Milton Abrams, 1954
Dr. Granville Q. Adams, 1929
Philip L.Alger, 1912
Annapolis Graduate Institute
Annapolis-Self-Help
George M. Austin, 1908
Walter S. Baird, 1930
Betty Beck Bennett, 1960
Ford K. Brown, H'70
Chicago Regional
Mrs. Clyde Alvin Clapp
James T. Clark
Class of 1897
Class of 1898
Richard F. Cleveland, H'54
Bernard Clorety
Dr. Charles C. Cook
Marvin Brent Cooper, 1969
The Joseph and Robert Cornell
Memorial Foundation
Eugene N.( 1929(and
Robert G. (1963) Cozzolino
Wiley and Helen Crawford
Cpl. George E. Cunniff III
Clarence L. Dickinson, 1911
Richard A. Duhan, 1963
Faculty Scholarship
James H. Frame, 1950
Harry Golding, Graduate Institute
Edna G. and Roscoe E. Grove, 1910
John T. and Gertrude L. Harrison, 1907
John T. Harrison, Jr.
Charles W. Hass, 1927
Richard H. Hodgson, 1906
The Hodson Trust
Alfred and Ruth Houston, 1906
Houston Regional
J. Seward Johnson, Jr.
Jesse H. and Mary Gibbs Jones
Robert E. and Margaret Larsh Jones, 1909
Robert E. Kanode, 1939
Dr. Simon and Fanny Kaplan, H'84
Francis A. Katz, 1929
John Spangler Kieffer, H'70 and
RoxanaKieffer,H'84
Jacob Klein, H'76
Korshin Family Fund
Arthur E. and Hilda Combs Landers, 1930
Joseph LaPides
Michael Littleton Memorial Fund
Massachusetts Regional
James Matthews
Philip A. Myers II, 1938
NationsBank Foundation
Rev. Theo O'Brien
Oklahoma Regional
Norman G. Owens
Dr. Thomas Parran and Thomas Parran, Jr.
The Duane and Clementine Peterson
Charitable Fund
Pittsburgh Regional
Reader's Digest Foundation
J. Douglas Ramsey, 1937
Lenore B. Hinder
Susan I. Roberts, 1966
Clifton C. Roehle
Joan and Bela Ronay
Murray Joel and Julius Rosenberg, 1938
G.D. Searle/John E. Robson
Robson Family
J. J. Salovaara
Flora Duvall Sayles
Hazel Norris and
J. Graham Shannahan, 1908
Doug E. Sherr Memorial
J. Winfree Smith, H'80
James S. Spirer, 1970
C. V. Starr Foundation
Jean Roberts Staylor
Clarence W. Stryker
Karl and Evelyn Van Tassel
Frederick J. Von Schwerdtner
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Vanous
Richard D. Weigle, H'49
John L. Williams
Thomas J. and Marvil F. Williams
Frank K.Wilson, 1935
St. John's College
St. John's College Alumni Association
�ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIPS
St. John's College, Annapolis
Allied Signal Technical Services Corporation
AllFirst Financial, Inc.
Annapolis Banking and Trust
Applied Signal Technology
Baltimore Sun
Bank of America
Vernal and Florence Bates Foundation
Becton-Dickinson Microbiology Systems
Bell Atlantic-Maryland
Booz, Allen and Hamilton
Chevy Chase Bank
Clark-Winchcole Foundation
Class of 1992
Computer Science Corporation
Deutschebank Alex. Brown
First National Bank of Maryland
Miss Charlotte Fletcher
The Hodson Scholarship Foundation
Independent College Fund of Maryland
The James M. Johnston Trust
Ensign C. Markland Kelly, Jr. Memorial Foundation
L-3 Communications System-East
Legg Mason
The John J. Leidy Foundation
TimothyJ. Lyng
Litton/PRC, Inc.
Mercantile-Safe Deposit & Trust Company
OMEN, Inc.
Procter & Gamble
T. Rowe Price Foundation
Pulse Engineering, Inc.
Raytheon/HRB
Rollins/Leutkemeyer
Rosemore, Inc.
The Rouse Company
SRA International
St. Paul Companies
Richard Squires
TRW Systems & Information Technology Group
Michael Tuch Foundation, Inc.
UPS
K. C. Victor
Gifts received after April 15, 2001 are gratefully acknowledged and will be listed in
the 2002 Commencement Program.
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
21 pages
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2001-05-13
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
CommencementExercises2001
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
St. John's College
Description
An account of the resource
Program for the two hundred ninth commencement in the three hundred fifth year of the college.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Commencement (St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Program, 2001
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/325a929f5445932b78bbbd01680da4c6.pdf
fd7668e273f92087e45f831c2814d624
PDF Text
Text
'
��1893
cfca wwc.
Friday, June i6th
8 P.M.
Farewell Hop to '93.
Saturday, June ijth
Boat Regatta.
Sunday, June i8th
ii A. M.
Address before Y. M C A , Rev. J. W. Duffey, Baltimore, Md.,
8 P. M.
Baccalaureate Sermon, Rev. W. F. Corkran, D.D.
Monday, June ipth
10 A. M.
Military Drill and Competition for Flag,
8 P.M.
Philokalian Society Celebration.
Tuesday, June 2oth
10 A. M.
Class Day Bxercises,
8 P. M.
Philomathean Society Celebration.
Wednesday, June 2ist
10.30 A. M.
Graduation Exercises and Address before Alumni,
4 P.M.
Business Meeting of Alumni Association,
8.30 P. M.
Alumni Banquet.
�(Bio do20
10 a. m.
Call to Order,
Roll Call,
Reading Minutes,
President's Address,
Reports of Officers,
General Business,
Class History,
Class Prophecy,
Class Poem,
Distribution of Presents,
Address to Undergraduates,
Raising Mock Class Shield,
Smoking Class Pipes and Reception.
Office
i-ce^o.
Samuel Mitchell Wagaman, President.
Robert Penington, Vice-President.
William Henry Wilhelm, Recording Secretary.
James Philip Biays, Jr., Corresponding Secretary.
Howard Casper Norris, Treasurer.
Winfield Scott Schley, Jr., Historian.
Jonathan Handy Waller, Prophet.
Charles Early Dryden, Poet.
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
5 pages
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
St. John's College
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1893-06
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
CommencementExercises1983
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Description
An account of the resource
Program for the Class of '93 commencement exercises, June 16th to 21st 1893.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Commencement (St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Program, 1893
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/4f69f80f5c131f68981ecf8e6cf8a871.pdf
377f0e4296be05f66691d7b92d9261cb
PDF Text
Text
I
��&?
7
/ *:s€6t^
'K^^/^
/?•/?
W
faewy^
y^
�nf
ag, Smti?
front Enratnpnmtf at
B.00 0. m. Pr^araianj £rl?0al <£0mmimr*ttmtt Ator*aa bg
$. 13. Olljamforii. £lkri00j», «., (rlaaa 1005).
,
11.00 a. m. E^iyilitlt0n Srill.
0.00 p. m. Hr^ja Jfaraftr.
8.00 p. m. Sanre att& g»u^^ frtj Plyt 0i0ma Kappa
, 3utt^
B.00 p. m.
arg
11.00 a. m. larrala«r?at^ ^^rmott, hg 5Rt. 3R?tt. 31. 3. iKinsmatt
Stai?np cf Srlamar^, in &t A«tt^'a diyurriy.
B.00 jt. m. ^?rm0« Ii?f0r? ilj? Galtta* f. HL <tt. A..
.
P. 3f0nw, itatnrt ^ujimttt^nliettt iUtlmtngton OI0itf?r?tt«
HL IE.
1 1.00 a. m. #*ttiar ®raf0rtral
fi.00 p. m. 39r^s0 paran^.
B.00 p. m. Junior $rat0rintl Olontot, f0U0m^ 0g
0n Jffr0ni ffiamn.
10.30 a. m. (£ia0B Sag
3.00 w. m. laa^baU ^am^ frrtmtni ^ttstetta ani Alwmni.
fi.00 p. m. lr^B0 parade.
B.00 p. m. 3ram0*ll lall, (Elaaa 1012 10 ailaaa 0f 1011.
. Jlltt^ 21 at
10.30 a. m. C^ratiuatiott Sxwiaw. Aidr^aa fag if 0n. Hair &» 0f
1.30 p. m.
�OUasa ©titea
3L
Uttlfam
MtUtam
Hatt
4H000,
ID. Uirfttttson
Carl Irak?
Hiiiltam %01an0 Han &ant
�loll
1C. Aimms
C. (Elattfo
itrkttt00tt
. Olarl Srakr
^rrman S. ^
3C.
Jttlhur 21. K0n«t2
J.
jfarratt, Jr.
IE. Hitllman
HtUtam
JitUtam H01anli Ban 0a«t
Kmn^tly Edgar Utlaon
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
7 pages
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
St. John's College
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1911-06
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
CommencementExercises1911
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Description
An account of the resource
Program for the one hundred nineteenth annual commencement exercises, June fifteenth to twenty first.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Commencement (St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Program, 1911
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/1360939d637e0034df07d2f8288ee166.pdf
330a777a864f01307b05de6ff13162d2
PDF Text
Text
�JUNE J')t5
1
2
7 8
9
:
6
3
4
l0 ~
5
J:2
Ji3Ji4Yi'fil~ 11 1s 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES
�.I
( / / (/ ~/ y / / //
./f/r1/1:1U Uotl:f "'
1~11/j;,_~f oN t7 /;_ f
;'&,/1>.11 /,;I/ /
.JZ !? ;//' . /;;:///;;.n/ ,£:w!t1 /;;7J/t
,/
/
.r
I
/ '/ /
/J 111 11 l'f ( J ( / I I I I JI // 11 ~-~II 1 6
J
f"J
ll r;, I ., ,,.I , 1 · 1,Jei
.tl'/11~ 1; t1 (l"l l 1 i la ,;1.·1·lr 1 11li
1 1
.r i ,,71;/,,_J,.
0
~
fZ;f /,m,/
�Qlnmmenrrtnrnt 1.Exrrriar.a, 1!115
Jrngratn
lJtriba~. 1Ju11e
11 tq
6.00 p M .-l)RESS p \RADE
8.00 P M .-juNtoR ORATORICAL CoN rEsT
§aturhay. lJune 12tl1
i i.oo A M .-s~,10R
ORATORICAL CoNTEsT
~unhag,
1Jun.e 13tq
11.00 \ ~1 -B \ CC.Al \UREA TE SERMON
BY Rr:v \V . H. \VooLvERTON
of Stockton. N J.. in Presbyterian
ittottbay. 11un.e
6 00 p M
-
14t~
-DRESS PARADE
8.00 P. M
Church
.\N'!C'AL DEBATE BETWEEN RE.PRhS EN1J\TIVES OF
THE PI llLOMATHEAN AND PHILOKAL IAN LITERARY
SOCIET IES
m .sbay, 3J un.e 15 tlf
u.e
10.30 A
3 00 P
8.00 P
1'.1-RAISINC OF CLASS SIIIELD. AND PRESENTATION
OF MEMORIAL TABLET. BY THE SENIOR CLASS
t-...1 -BASEBALL GA\lf.E BETWELN STUDENTS AND ALUMNl
1v1-FAREWELLBALL,CLASS 1916TO 1915•
mebn.e.abay, Jfune l litll
Olonttnenr.eut.ent mag
10 30 A M-GRADUATION EXERCISES
l 00 p . M -LUNCHEON IN RANDALL I-lALL
�Qllaas ®ffiters
President
FRANCIS ARNOLD HAUSE
•
I-IERBERT EUGENE ]UMP
Vice-President
Secretary
OLIVER PARRY WINSLOW
Treasurer
DANIEL EUGENE WALSH
Historian
WALTON RIDER NELSON
joHN Eow1N SELBY
Sergeant-at-Arms
Qllas.a Qlnmmittee
FRANCIS AR~OLD HAUSE.
Chairman
HERBERT EUGENE JUMP
WALTON RIDER NELSON
�mo 11
(1lla1111
HENRY DE\ RIC~ CASS\RD
joHN
LA\\ RCi'c c DE 1 \RCO
FR\ '\;CtS \RNOLD HAUSE
CH \RLES
Ti IADDEUS
HERBERT
HAuvriR
Eucc
F
j uMP
H OWARD B10WI:.LL MATTHEWS
\V JLBLRT LACY MERRII<E
OR\'ILLF l\.1o'iROr \ 1ooRL
CHARLES BRov. "J
Mow BRAY
\\ALTON RIDER NELSON
R oscR1
Rr...10 R
j oHN
1Tc111E
Eow1N
Sc.:LHY
DANICL EucFNf· \VAL~H
CHAUNC CY V1croR \V1L~ON
OLIVER PARRY \V1NSLO\V
��nf
ARRANGEMENTS HAVE BEEN MADE FOR
EN.TERTAINING ALUMNI AT THE COLLEGE OR
ELSEWHERE, DURING THIS PERIOD
AN~
.Anmtpnlia. :!illlh.
IT IS
REQUESTED THAT THOSE WHO MAY DESIRE
TO AVAIL THEMSELVES OF THIS INVITATION
WILL SEND THEIR NAMES TO PROF .
GROVE,
A
SHORT
TIME
IN
R. E .
ADVANCE
uaprrtfully inuttr ynu tn hr prurnt
OF
THEIR ARRIVAL.
ut tqe
nnr lfunhrrh unh twrnty-tlfirh
1\uuual Q!nmmrur.rmrut
�C!!nmmrurrmrut 1£xrrrisrs
lll.3U J\ . .tllll. 1Rttillittg nf Q!lttss ~}Jitlh, tttth
Jnnrnttttintt nf .tllllrmnrittl iiluhlets, by tqr
~ruinr Q!lu1111.
3.nn J . .tllll. !!lasrhull <!5umr hettur.eu §;tuhruts
tttth J\lumui.
1915
Jrogrammr
JJfrihny. 3f uttr 1 ltq.
.ll.DIJ
~nturhuy,
31uninr ®rutnrirnl Q!nntrst.
~rninr
®ratnrirnl Q!nntr11t.
B.DIJ J . .tllll. l!lnnrr giuru hi! JIJi .tllllu iilqrftt
JJ1 rutrruity.
~ uttbtty,
3f Uttl' 13 tq.
11.IJIJ A . .lRll.
illarrulnur.eutr
~rrmnn
hy 1Rru.
31. ii;. Dllnoluertnn, nf §;tnrlttnu. N. 31 .. iu Jr.enhytrrittn (!J:qurriJ. J\unnpnlia, Sh.
!llllnnl'luy, :1Juur l 4tq.
li.IJIJ J. S .
fl!ll. JJ1artturll ilull, Q!ltt11s 1916 tn
lltrhttr.ahuy, 3fuue llitb, &nmmrttrrmrttt ilay.
1U.3IJ J\ . .tllll.
3futtr 12tq.
11.IJIJ A • .tllll.
J.
1915.
li.IJIJ J . .tllll. l!lr.e11s Jarah.e.
8.IJIJ J . .tllll.
Wur.ahuy, 3futtr 15tq.
illrrs11 tllttrnh.e.
B.rrn J . S. J\uuunl lll.ehat.e hl'fttt.e.en iR.epr.es.entatiu.es of tl1.e ltfl1ilnmatq.euu null Jl1ilnkalian
1!J ittrary §S>nril'1i.e11.
l.IJIJ J. ...
<!5rahtttttinu 1Exrrrilll'll.
i!Junr!Jrnu tu muuhttll i!ittll.
2.3IJ J • .tllll. J\uuual .tllllrrti11g nf t}J.e Alumni in
.tllllrl!lnturll i!iall.
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
6, 2 pages
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper, leather bound
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
St. John's College
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1915-06
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
CommencementExercises1915
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Description
An account of the resource
Program for the one hundred twenty-eighth annual commencement exercises, June eleventh to sixteenth.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Commencement (St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Program, 1915
Commencement
-
https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/sjcdigitalarchives/original/47ada61ea068efef424c1a40a4b03df6.pdf
0d8ff1813526cf2bf74545442d3c21cd
PDF Text
Text
ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
1696-1989
COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES
SUNDAY, MAY TWENTY-FIRST
NINETEEN HUNDRED EIGHTY-NINE
�PROGRAM
FOR THE
ONE HUNDRED NINETY-SEVENTH COMMENCEMENT
IN THE
TWO HUNDRED NINETY-THIRD YEAR
OF THE COLLEGE
ACADEMIC PROCESSION
WELCOME
ANNOUNCEMENT OF PRIZES AND AWARDS
ADDRESS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS
CONFERRING OF DEGREES
ACADEMIC RECESSION
Brass Quintet
William M. Dyal, Jr.
President of the College
President Dyal
Thomas K. Simpson
Tutor, St. John's College
President Dyal
Brass Quintet
�BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
(with title of essay)
HAROLD ATWOOD ANDERSON JR
An Inquiry into the Nature of the Musical Object
LINDA SUSANNA ATTAR
Emile, An Experiment in Nature
DANIEL CHRIS AUKERMAN
Labor as a Basis for Value
Labor Theory in Karl Marx's Capital
BRIGHAM BLASE BECHTEL
A Christian in the Profession of Arms
TIMOTHY JOHN BENJAMIN
The Art of Virtue
A Study of The Brothers Karamazov
JOSEPH GEORGE BOUCHER
The Inheritance and Repudiation
of a Legacy: The Heroism of
Belief in Faulkner's The Bear
JULIET HARWOOD BURCH
Alienation and Social Recourse
A Look at lonesco's Rhinoceros
GROVER LAFAYETTE BYNUM, III
Born to Sue
SARA ELLEN CATANIA
Working on the Soul in Tolstoy's
Anna Karenina
WILL NATHANIEL CLURMAN
Something on Learning
SEAN ELENA COSTELLO
Is He a Second Danton?
A Study of Hypocrisy in Stendhal's
Le Rouge et Le Noir
CHERIE LYNN CRAIG
Emile: A Modern Myth
Cleveland, Ohio
Houston, Texas
Union Bridge, Maryland
Millersville, Maryland
Clinton, New Jersey
Canandaigua, New York
Annapolis, Maryland
Austin, Texas
Chicago, Illinois
Newark, New Jersey
Kansas City, Missouri
Havre de Grace, Maryland
�RODRICK PATTEN CRAVEN
Searching for a Hero: An Examination
of Nietzsche's On the Uses and
Disadvantages of History for Life
DAEDRE PAGE CULLEN
The Tempest
Wilmington, Delaware
Virginia Beach, Virginia
AMANDA DALTON-FERNANDEZ
Knowledge of the Heart
Annapolis, Maryland
RHONDA LAVERNE CATCHER
Adam Smith's Invisible Hand
Baltimore, Maryland
ELIZABETH ANNE DEMARE
On Reading Melville's Billy Budd
New York, New York
DAVID EVERETT DILLARD
The Salvation Sandwich Redefined:
A New Statement About How Man Comes
into a Relationship with God
in Kierkegaard's Either/Or
New Castle, Delaware
APRIL LYNN DOBBS
A Look Back at the Elements of
Euclid: An Examination of Logic
in Geometry
JEANNE CLAIRE DUVOISIN
Geometry: What's a Little
Vagueness and Uncertainty?
Hixson, Tennessee
New Brunswick, New Jersey
DAVID JEOFFREY EARNEST
Reconciling Vengeance and Reason
in the Oresteia
San Rafael,
JOHN RANDOLPH EGGLESTON
Peace Comes Dropping Slow
Harrisonburg, Virginia
HENRY WILLIAM BRADBURY FISCHER
Newton's Philosophic Method:
"Hypotheses Non Fingo"
Hamden, Connecticut
*JOSEPH PIERRE PICOT DE BOISFEUILLET FLOYD, JR.
TRISTAN MILES FORGUS
The Dream of a Common Language
California
Tampa, Florida
Lake Forest, Illinois
�ERIKA GAFFNEY
The Implications of the Conflict
Between Individual Principles and
Societal Prejudices in Intruder
in the Dust
Silver Spring, Maryland
MARTIN DAVID GELFAND
Up From the Cave: Poetry,
Prophecy, and Perception
Cleveland Heights, Ohio
RAYMOND LESLIE GIFFORD
Political Mythology
Thrasymachus' Victory and Defeat
VIOLET MARET GILDEN
The Liberal Arts from a
Visual Perspective
Arvada, Colorado
Owings Mills, Maryland
GARFIELD BERNARD GOODRUM, JR
An Essay on The Charterhouse
of Parma
Orange, Connecticut
LINDA LORRAINE HAMM
Strong and Free Within Limits
Set by Providence
Flushing, New York
KAREN MARIE HARPER
Requiem Aeternum et Lux Perpetua:
A Reciprocal Reading of Hegel's
God and Joyce's Dead
Phoenix, Arizona
BRUCE BRETT HEAVNER
Questionable Ethics in Moliere's
Le Misanthrope
Liberty, Missouri
BRENDAN HUGH HEFFERNAN
Moral Necessity in Thus Spake
Zarathustra
Detroit, Michigan
NANCY ELIZABETH HEINBERG
"Is This a Life?"
The Threepenny Opera as a
Primer for Revolution
Wilmington, North Carolina
�NATHANIEL JACOB HERZ
Sight and Knowledge: An Examination
Vermeer's Woman Holding a Balance
TEODOR JAYMES HOLMBERG
Shakespeare's Historical Tetralogy:
The Playwright as Political Theorist
JOHN FREITAG ISHAM
Looking for Certainty, Knowledge,
and Tranquility in Montaigne
JENNIFER CAROL JOHNSTON
"She Was the World and the Heavens
Boiled Down to a Drop":
Janie's Passage Through and Beyond
Lordship and Bondage
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Warwick, Rhode Island
Akron, Ohio
Maitland, Florida
JAMES MICHAEL KENNELLY III
Discovering Faith as Love
Short Hills, New Jersey
KIMBERLY ANN KERN
Men Shall Endure Their Going Hence
A Study of Shakespeare's King Lear
College Park, Maryland
DIANA HUNTER KLATTE
Resolving the Contradictions
in Emile
Seattle, Washington
JUDITH ANN KLOSS
Peer Gynt: A Test of Love
Pitman, New Jersey
JEFFREY STANLEY KOJAC
Darkness, Horror, and Marlow
MARGARET ANN LAMB
The Importance of Seeing God
Moses and Aaron and the Golden Calf
SEAN OPENSHAW LAROCCA
This Domain is an Island
Kant's Speculative Philosophy
in the Wake of Non-Euclidean
Geometry, Quantum Physics, and
the Artistic Experience
Los Angeles, California
Arlington, Virginia
New Orleans, Louisiana
�ELISABETH ANNE LEONARD
Sing O Goddess: An Exploration
Into the Relationship Between
Poetry and Religion
NINDA CHARLOTTE LETAW
If Identity Then Morality . . . But Where
is a Man to Get Either One?
*ROGER WINSTON LOWE
*CHRISTOPHER SEAN MARKS
DAVID NEIL McNEiLL
An Other Reading of Hegel's
Phenomenology of Spirit
Lynchburg, Virginia
Upper Marlboro, Maryland
Natchitoches, Louisiana
Collingwood, New Jersey
Wyckoff,
New Jersey
LEE JEFFREY MENDELSON
Philosophy and the Founding Fathers:
Why Does the Constitution Endure?
Cedarhurst, New York
THEODORE POWELL MERZ
Shouting Fire in the Theatre:
How The Federalist Regarded the
Supreme Court
Madison, New Jersey
JOHN GLEASON MILES III
"All that We Know of the Life of
a Man is Merely a Certain Relation of
Free Will to Inevitability, That is, of
Consciousness to Reason"
DERICK DAVID MILLER
Being of More Than One Mind
Chevy Chase, Maryland
Tucson, Arizona
JOSEPH SCOTT MILLER
Seeing is "Seeing As . . .":
A Critical Look at Scientific Inquiry
Belle Mead, New Jersey
MONIQUE MARIE MOONEY
Monsters and Myth: The Legacy of
Phedre
Chevy Chase, Maryland
GEORGE CHRISTOPHER MOULTON
A Priori Desire: Non-Universal
Necessity in Geometry and Morality
Crestwood, Kentucky
�ANTHONY JUSTIN NYBERG
Marbury V. Madison: The Basis
for the Authority of Today's
Supreme Court
East Lansing, Michigan
JANET PALEY ORLIN
Conrad's Heart of Darkness:
The Binding of the Landlubber
New 'York, New York
JULIE THERESA OSTDIEK
Lobachevskian and Euclidean Geometries
A Study of the Works and Their
Contributions to Mathematics
Abingdon, Virginia
ALISON LYNN PACKWOOD
The Dedication of Tom Jones:
An Appeal to Lyttleton
and a Context for the Novel
Austin, Texas
ANNE PANTALONE
A Look at Self-Deception and
the Inferno of Dante
Wadsworth, Ohio
VALERIE ANNE PAWLEWICZ
Wherefore Art Thou, Juliet?
DAVID THOMAS PISARRA
Excellence as a Way of Life
and Business
WALTER LAWRENCE PLOURDE
What the . . .? Postulates
of Pure Reason?
ELIZABETH MCSHERRY POWERS
Who's Leading? The Role of
Forgiveness in Marriage
The North Country, New York
Orinda, California
Boscawen, New Hampshire
Richardson, Texas
CHARLES DONALD RANDLES JR
Anouilh's Antigone
Nashville, Tennessee
JONATHAN MUIR RANEY
Marriage and Justice
in Pride and Prejudice
Bellingham, Washington
�MARK RAYMOND RESSLER
Social Labor and the
Illusion of Surplus Value
JILL CAMILLE ROGERS
Rousseau: Natural Man vs. Civil Man
IAN DOUGLAS RUSHLAU
Is Man no More Than This?'
King Lear; Act III Sc IV
KURT RUZSITS-REDFIELD
Meditations by an American on
the Great Man Under the Constitution
of the United States
MELISSA DAVIS SAWICKI
The Making of a Moral Man:
Rousseau's Emile
JOHN DAVID SILVER
"On a Huge Hill, Cragged, and Steep,
Truth Stands, and Hee That Will Reach
Her, About Must, and About Must Goe."
(John Donne, Satyres in)
ARISTEDES SOMIS
Moral Responsibility in T. S. Eliot's
Murder in the Cathedral
PAUL THEODORE SPECK
Human Nature and the Alienation
of Man According to Karl Marx
SCOTT CHARLES STENGER
"Reflections on the Death of God,
the Coming of the Overman, and
Kantian Morality." or
"It's the End of Morality as We Know
It, and I feel Fine."
STEPHANIE DIANE STEPHENS
Recognizing a Child's
Excellence Through Education
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
San Francisco, California
Bethayres, Pennsylvania
Carlisle, Massachusetts
East Aurora, New York
Allendale, New Jersey
Lewisburg, Pennsylvania
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Morgantown, West Virginia
Reston, Virginia
�BRADLEY VINCENT STUART
Imagination and Geometry
Billings, Montana
COURTNEY ELISABETH SULLIVAN
Powerful Darkness
McLean, Virginia
NELL BARBARA SWEENEY
Whom Does It Please to Afflict
the Redeemer?
STEFANIE LINNEA TAKACS
Woman, A Flower of Evil
CHRISTOPHER MICHAEL TEGELER
And He Sets His Mind to Work Upon
Unknown Arts (And Changes the Laws
of Nature)
*]ULIA JEANINE THOMAS
NINA MARIA TOSTI
Do I Dare Disturb the Universe?
GEORGE ALFRED HENRY TURNER
The Invisible Foundation of the
Leibniz-Clarke Dispute: Continuity,
Diversity and Identity
ANNA MARGUERETTE WEBB
"I Should Hope We Can Find a Way
That's a Little More Complicated
Than That, Huck Finn"
SARAH ELIZABETH WETHERSON
Why Can't I Say What I Mean?
TY HARDIN YANCEY
The Failure of John Dewey's
Pedagogic Creed
MALCOLM SCOTT YOUNG
A Discusion of Marx's Analysis
of Capitalism, and its Supposed
Successor, Communism
* Upon completion of requirements
Bloomfield, Connecticut
Gaylordsville, Connecticut
Baltimore, Maryland
Northfrid, Illinois
Falls Church, Virginia
Edwardsville, Illinois
Marietta, Georgia
Baltimore, Maryland
Sacramento, California
Arlington, Virginia
�Jeffrey Stanley Kojac will be commissioned Second Lieutenant in the United States
Marine Corps by First Lieutenant Henry Williamson, Class of 1986. Captain James
Murtha will supervise the ceremony and the signing of the commissioning papers.
Mr. Kojac's father, Mr. Stanley Kojac, will pin the bars.
MASTER OF ARTS DEGREE
Graduate Institute in Liberal Education
RODNEY LEE BRIMHALL
Annapolis, Maryland
EDWARD PORTER EAGAN
Chevy Chase, Maryland
XIAYI HUANG
RICHARD CALDWEL LEAHY
JANET L. MEEKS
DANIEL PAUL MOORE
Guangzhou, China
Washington, DC
Falls Church, Virginia
Hood River, Oregon
ROBERT JUSTIN PELRINE
Arnold, Maryland
FAYE COUNCELL POLILLO
Stevensville, Maryland
JENNIFER HOPE ROGERS
Annapolis, Maryland
LEE VIRGINIA TODD
LISA R. WEST-JOHNSRUD
Severna Park, Maryland
Eugene, Oregon
�HONORS AND PRIZES
To the Senior who has the highest standing, a silver
medal. Offered by the Board of Visitors and
Governors
To a member of the Senior Class, for excellence in
speaking. Offered in memory of Senator Millard
E. Tydings, of Maryland
To the member of the Senior Class who has written
the best senior essay. Offered in memory of
Simon Kaplan, Tutor Emeritus, by his widow,
Mrs. Kaplan
HONORABLE MENTION
HONORABLE MENTION
To the member of the Junior Class who has written
the best annual essay. Offered by Mrs. Leslie
Clark Stevens in memory of her daughter-in-law,
Kathryn Mylorie Stevens
HONORABLE MENTION
To the member of the Sophomore Class who has
written the best annual essay. Offered under the
will of the late Judge Walter I. Dawkins, of the
Class of 1880
HONORABLE MENTION
JOSEPH SCOTT MILLER
DIANA HUNTER KLATTE
ELIZABETH ANNE DEMARE
WALTER LAWRENCE PLOURDE
ANNA MARGUERETTE WEBB
JOSEPH GEORGE BOUCHER
CRAIG STEPHEN THOMAS
MARK LYNN KREIDER
COLIN ALEXANDER ANDERSON
MICHAEL BRIAN COLE
To the member of the Freshman Class who has written the best annual essay. Offered in memory of
Jacob Klein, Tutor Emeritus, by Mrs. Klein
JEFFREY SARBEY SEIDMAN
To the student who submits the best English version
of a Greek text. Offered in memory of John S.
Kieffer, President Emeritus, by his widow, Mrs.
Kieffer
SIMON GEORGE BONE
To the student who submits the best English version
of a French poem
JEANNE CLAIRE DUVOISIN
To the student who submits the best original English
poem. Offered by Dr. George Austin in memory
of his brother, Henry
CAROLYN Lois BARNDT
�To the student who submits the best original musical
composition
SEAN OPENSHAW LAROCCA
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of a geometrical problem. Offered by the
Class of 1986 in honor of Bryce Jacobsen, of the
Class of 1942, Tutor and Director of Athletics
Emeritus
SIMON GEORGE BONE
To the student who submits the most elegant solution of a problem in analytic mathematics. Offered in memory of James R. McClintock of the
Class of 1965
To the Graduate Institute student who submitted a
distinguished preceptorial essay in 1988-89. Offered by the Graduate Institute Alumni
HONORABLE MENTION
To the Senior man and woman who by their participation, leadership, and sportsmanship have
contributed most to the College's athletic program, special maroon blazers. Offered by the
Alumni Association of St. John's College
THOMAS NELSON GINTER
BRADLEY VINCENT STUART
RICHARD WILSON SANDERS
SUNDANCE METELSKY
JEANNE CLAIRE DUVOISIN
LINDA LORRAINE HAMM
NATHANIEL JACOB HERZ
JOHN DAVID SILVER
To a member of the Senior Class who has contributed outstanding service to the Greater Annapolis Community. Offered by the Caritas
Society of St. John's College
AMANDA DALTON-FERNANDEZ
The Robertson Prize — for undergraduate or graduate
students who demonstrate unusual dedication,
progress and achievement in studio work in the
visual arts at St. John's College
DOUALA DENNIS
Chicago Business Fellowship
Truman Scholarship — four-year scholarship for a rising junior who is interested in a career in public
service
ALTERNATE
COLLINS DUODU-BONSU
ZOE ANN BEATTY
�ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS
At St. John's College—Annapolis
Dr. Granville Q. Adams, 1929
Philip L. Alger, 1912
Annapolis Graduate Institute
Annapolis Self-Help
George M. Austin, 1908
Walter S. Baird, 1930
Betty Beck Bennett, 1960
Ford K. Brown, H70
Chicago Regional
Mrs. Clyde Alvin Clapp
Class of 1897
Class of 1898
Richard F. Cleveland, H'54
Dr. Charles C. Cook
Corp. George E. Cunniff III
Clarence L. Dickinson, 1911
Richard A. Duhan, 1963
Faculty Scholarship
Harry Golding Graduate Institute
Edna G. & Roscoe E. Grove, 1910
John T. & Gertrude L. Harrison, 1907
John T. Harrison, Jr.
Charles W. Hass, 1927
Richard H. Hodgson, 1906
Hodson Trust
Alfred & Ruth Houston, 1906
Houston Regional
Jesse H. & Mary Gibbs Jones
Col. Robert E. & Margaret Larsh
Jones, 1909
Robert E. Kanode, 1939
Dr. Simon & Fanny Kaplan
Francis A. Katz, 1929
John Spangler Kieffer, H'70
Jacob Klein, H'76
Arthur E., Jr., & Hilda Combs
Landers, 1930
Joseph Lapides
Maryland National Foundation
Massachusetts Regional
Philip A. Myers II, 1938
Rev. Theo O'Brien
Oklahoma Regional
Dr. Thomas Parran, 1911
Pittsburgh Regional
Reader's Digest Foundation
Leanore B. Rinder
Clifton C. Roehle
Joan & Bela Ronay
Murray Joel & Julius Rosenberg, 1938
Flora Duvall Sayles
G. D. Searle/John E. Robson
Hazel Norris & J. Graham Shannahan,
1908
Clarence W. Stryker
Frederick J. von Schwerdtner
Richard D. Weigle, H'49
St. John's College
At St. John's College—Annapolis and Santa Fe
Donna Marie Delattre Memorial
C.V. Starr Memorial
�ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIPS
At St. John's College—Annapolis
Abell Foundation
Alumni Association
Atlantic Richfield Foundation
Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone
Company of Maryland—Annapolis
CHOICE
CIGNA
Crown Central Petroleum Corporation
Stella and Charles Guttman Foundation
James M. Johnston Trust for
Charitable and Educational Purposes
Ensign C. Markland Kelly, Jr.
Memorial Foundation
John J. Leidy Foundation
The Duane & Clementine Peterson
Charitable Fund
Rohm & Haas Company
Rotary Club of Annapolis
William Smith Scholarship Fund
The UPS Foundation
Karl R. Van Tassel
��
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Programs and Addresses
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
St. John's College Greenfield Library
Description
An account of the resource
Addresses given at commencement and programs of events related to, and including, the annual commencement ceremonies at St. John's College. Includes both the undergraduate and Graduate Institute commencements. <br /><br />The College Archives holds programs and/or addresses for the following years:<br />
<ul>
<li>1796</li>
<li>1835-1836</li>
<li>1842</li>
<li>1852</li>
<li>1856-1857</li>
<li>1870</li>
<li>1878</li>
<li>1880</li>
<li>1890</li>
<li>1893</li>
<li>1895</li>
<li>1897</li>
<li>1907</li>
<li>1910-1918</li>
<li>1920-1924</li>
<li>1928-1929</li>
<li>1932</li>
<li>1936-1937</li>
<li>1939-1945</li>
<li>1947-present </li>
</ul>
Click on <strong><a title="Commencement Programs and Addresses" href="http://digitalarchives.sjc.edu/items/browse?collection=18&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate&sort_dir=d">Items in the Commencement Programs and Addresses Collection</a></strong> to view and sort all items in the collection.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
commencementprograms
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Page numeration
Number of pages in the original item.
16 pages
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
St. John's College
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1989-05-21
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
CommencementExercises1989
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Annapolis, MD
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
St. John's College
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
text
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
St. John's College owns the rights to this publication.
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Description
An account of the resource
Program for the one hundred ninety-seventh commencement in the two hundred ninety-third year of the college.
Subject
The topic of the resource
Commencement (St. John's College, Annapolis, MD)
Title
A name given to the resource
Commencement Program, 1989
Commencement
Deprecated: Directive 'allow_url_include' is deprecated in Unknown on line 0