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Awards

Commencement 2003

Indiana University honorary degree recipients

















IU awarded eight honorary degrees during the 2003 commencement season. The honorary degrees salute outstanding individuals who have made significant contributions to their professions, to their communities or to the world at large. And whether they stand tall in the world of education or research or philanthropy or journalism, all have close ties to Indiana University.

IU Bloomington


Samuel Hulbert
Biomedical Engineer and
President, Rose Hulman Institute of Technology;
Doctor of Science,
IU Bloomington
Samuel Hulbert, a biomedical engineer internationally recognized for his design and development of ceramic prosthetics, has led the Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology through a period of unprecedented growth and quality improvement. As president of the Terre Haute engineering school, Hulbert has, since 1976, steered the institute to national prominence; the last four years in a row, U.S. News and World Report has ranked Rose-Hulman as the top engineering college in the country among those that award undergraduate and master’s degrees. He also spearheaded the establishment of the joint IU Doctor of Medicine–Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Master of Science in Biomedical Engineering program. The program provides students who are principally interested in the practice of medicine the opportunity for in-depth study in the application of engineering principles. Graduates of the program will receive the degree of M.D. from the IU School of Medicine and the M.S. degree from Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology.

 
Max Marsh
Pharmaceutical Researcher, Chemist and Pioneer;
Doctor of Science,
IU Bloomington

Called a pioneer by his peers, Max Marsh began pushing at the frontier of theoretical chemistry and rational drug design as a young chemist at Eli Lilly and Company. With only a bachelor of science degree (his master’s degree was halted by WWII and family responsibilities), Marsh rose to the top levels in both research and administration at Lilly and in the process developed CADD (computer-aided drug design), a program which allowed researchers to purposely develop a specific drug for a specific problem. He also has been an enthusiastic proponent of a chemical informatics degree program at IU—and has been an ardent supporter of his alma mater. Throughout this extraordinary career, Marsh maintained close ties with the IU Department of Chemistry. In 1971, he was named an adjunct industrial professor of the department. After retiring from Lilly in 1986, he moved to Bloomington and accepted a long-term appointment as a visiting research scientist. In 1990, he was named an adjunct professor of chemistry.

 
Herbert White
Library and Information Science Scholar, Educator and Writer;
Doctor of Humane Letters,
IU Bloomington

If you were to do an author search on Herbert White using ERIC—a database he helped develop—you would find more than 150 articles and several books on library administration, supervision and automation. He also has been a regular columnist for such industry journals as American Libraries, Library Journal, and Information and Library Manager. But his contributions to the libraries of IU and the world go far beyond providing material for their shelves. In 1975, he joined the faculty of IU’s School of Library and Information Science (SLIS). Initially professor and director of the school’s research center, White served as dean of SLIS from 1980 to 1990, and was appointed Distinguished Professor in the final year of his deanship. During his leadership, SLIS became one of the top-ranked and largest schools of library and information science in the world.

IUPUI

J. Herman Blake
University Educator, Administrator and Mentor;
Doctor of Humane Letters,
IUPUI

Editor's note: Our apologies to Mr. Blake whose biographical profile was left out of our newsprint edition this week.

J. Herman Blake has transformed the lives of thousands of students and teachers in Indiana and throughout the United States. What is the secret of this charismatic administrator and educator? Colleagues say it’s his faith in his fellow human beings and his attention to the potential in each individual. Blake, who first came to IUPUI as a consultant on undergraduate education, served the campus as vice chancellor for undergraduate education from 1989 to 1997. Largely through his efforts, IUPUI became a national leader among public, urban institutions that promote undergraduate education for diverse student populations. Since leaving IUPUI, Blake has held a joint appointment as director of African American studies and professor of sociology, educational leadership, and policy studies at Iowa State University. A first-generation college student, Blake has received prestigious awards for his work with many grassroots community groups, as well as with Save the Children, Project Pericles, the Academic Advisory Council of the Lumina Foundation for Education, and many other organizations. He has also received fellowships from the Rockefeller, Ford, Woodrow Wilson, and John Hay Whitney Foundations, as well as numerous honorary degrees. Blake’s success in motivating students to aspire beyond the easily attainable has helped shaped dozens of careers that are, in turn, perpetuating his vision of greater diversity in higher education.

A’Leilia Bundles
NBC and ABC Television News Producer, Author and Lecturer;
Doctor of Human Letters,
IUPUI

The great-great-granddaughter of Indianapolis entrepreneur, social activist and influential philanthropist Madame C.J. Walker, A’Lelia Bundles is an Emmy-winning news producer, author and lecturer. She wrote the best-selling book, On Her Own Ground: The Life and Times of Madame C. J. Walker, and a prize-winning biography for young adults, Madam C. J. Walker: Entrepreneur. She worked for NBC News and then for ABC’s World News Tonight with Peter Jenings was promoted to Washington, D.C., deputy bureau chief and then to her current post as director of talent development in Washington and New York. She also is a strong voice for the future of education, having served as president of the Radcliffe College Alumnae Association, director of the Harvard Club of Washington, D.C., and as advisory board member of Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism and the Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America. She also has been a board member of the IU Center on Philanthropy in Indianapolis and of the Madam Walker Theatre Center

 
Ting-Kai Li
Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism Researcher
and Federal Agency Director;
Doctor of Science,
IUPUI

During his 31 years at the IU School of Medicine, Ting-Kai Li helped to place the institution at the forefront of alcohol research by identifying the genetic component of alcoholism. He conducted his world-renowned research while serving the School of Medicine in prominent administrative capacities. From 1985 to 2000, he was associate dean for research, and from 1987 until his retirement in 2002, Li served as director of the IU Alcohol Research Center, which was established with a grant from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) of the National Institutes of Health. In 2002, the NIAAA—the federal agency that funds 90 percent of the research into the causes, treatment and prevention of alcoholism—appointed Li as its new director, putting him at the helm of federal alcohol research efforts.

IU Kokomo

Photo copyright 2002, Wilbur Tague Photography
Virgil Hunt
University Administrator, Mentor and Philanthropist;
Doctor of Humane Letters,
IU Kokomo
When Virgil Hunt first arrived at the site of the new IU Extension Center in Kokomo in 1945, he found the doors locked. Never one to let an obstacle stop him, he climbed through an open window and spent the night on a sofa. Then he spent the next 31 years ensuring that the doors of IU Kokomo—and then IU Indianapolis (which later became IUPUI—remained open for everyone. Under Hunt’s tutelage, the IU Extension Center in Kokomo grew from 188 students in 1945 to well over 700 students when he went to IU Indianapolis in 1956. Throughout his career at IU Kokomo, Hunt worked hard to raise funds and acquire new buildings for the campus. Even though the now-91-year-old Hunt officially retired from IU 27 years ago, his legacy lives on and his contributions to the university continue. In February of 2002, the new science building at IU Kokomo was named Virgil and Elizabeth Hunt Hall in honor of him and his late wife.

IU South Bend

Those who know Barbara Warner marvel at the resounding impact this gentle, unassuming individual has had on the cultural life of the South Bend community. She started a career in journalism, working first as a reporter for the South Bend Tribune and then for the Irving News Agency.
Barbara Warner
Philanthropist, Volunteer and Advocate for the Arts;
Doctor of Humane Letters,
IU South Bend
Simultaneously, Warner demonstrated her love for her hometown through her involvement in many local philanthropic causes. Warner was founding president of the Arts Center and Foundation, now part of the South Bend Regional Museum of Art, and was a founder of the museum’s art league. Warner’s impact on the South Bend community also extends to social concerns. She recently was recognized by the Family and Children’s Center, with the Chairman’s Award for 50 years of volunteer service, including time as the president of the organization’s board of directors. She served as co-chair of the capital campaign at the Logan Center, a facility for individuals with learning disabilities. In addition, Warner was given the Helping Hand Award by the Center for Hospice and Palliative Care.



 
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Publication date: May 30, 2003
Comments: homepgs@indiana.edu
Copyright 2000, The Trustees of Indiana University