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April 20, 2000
COMMENCEMENT/Honorary degrees go to stars of music and politics.
Six to receive honorary degrees
BY KATIE ALEX
A jazz composer and musician and the former mayor of Philadelphia are
among the six notables chosen to receive honorary degrees at Penns
244th Commencement May 22. In addition to poet and Nobel laureate Seamus
Heaney, this years Commencement speaker (Current,
April 6), the honorees are:
Wynton
Marsalis, the first jazz musician to win a Pulitzer Prize in music,
will receive a Doctor of Music. His achievements as a musician and composer
of both jazz and classical music include winning nine Grammy awards. In
1996, Time named him among Americas 25 most influential people.
Edward G.
Rendell (C65), former mayor of Philadelphia, will receive a
Doctor of Laws. During his tenure, he restored fiscal stability to a municipal
government that was near bankruptcy, increasing the City of Philadelphias
revenue collection by $70 million a year without an increase in taxes.
Ronald Dworkin,
LL.B., Quain Professor of Jurisprudence at University College, London,
and Sommer Professor of Law and Philosophy at New York University, will
receive a Doctor of Laws. His writings on the nature of law, constitutional
interpretation, human rights, the theory of democratic government, social
justice, and legal and social issues from affirmative action to assisted
suicide have transformed the interpretation of these matters.
John N.
Bahcall, Ph.D., Richard Black Professor of Natural Sciences at the
Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, will receive a Doctor of Science.
One of the worlds most distinguished astrophysicists, Bahcall studies
solar models, neutrino oscillations, nuclear fusion reactions and neutrinos
from the sun, and contributed to the planning and development of the Hubble
Space Telescope. He received the National Medal of Science in 1998 and
the NASA Distinguished Public Service Medal in 1993.
Mary Douglas,
D.Phil., retired professor of social anthropology at the University
of London, will receive a Doctor of Humane Letters. Douglas book
"Purity and Danger" (1966) was listed in The Times of
London as one of the 100 books that have influenced Western public discourse
since the Second World War. Her second book, "Natural Symbols"
(1970), won her international attention and remains one of the single
most important contributions to the theoretical analysis of culture.
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