THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOFOUNDED BY JOHN D. ROCKEFELLERTHE 512TH CONVOCATIONTHE SUMMER QUARTERAugust 24, 20123:00 P.M.ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELORDER OF EXERCISESROBERT J. ZIMMERPresident of the University, PresidingPRELUDES AND PROCESSIONALWylie Crawford, University CarillonneurMillar Brass EnsembleThomas Weisflog, University OrganistTHE CONVOCATION PROCESSIONThe Congregation stands and remains standing until after the Call to Order.The Flag BearersThe Marshal of the University and the Student MarshalsThe Candidates for DegreesThe Faculty of the UniversityThe Vice-MarshalThe DeansThe Trustees and Officers of the UniversityThe Faculty SpeakerThe Provost of the UniversityThe President of the UniversityBRASS FANFAREMillar Brass EnsembleCALL TO ORDERCATHERINE C. BAUMANNMarshal of the UniversityWELCOMEROBERT J. ZIMMERPresident of the UniversityTHE CONVOCATION ADDRESS«WHO OWNS YOU?"byMARSHA R. ROSNERCharles B. Huggins Professor and Chair,Ben May Department for Cancer Research; Professor, Committees on Cancer Biology, Cellular and MolecularPhysiology, Developmental Biology, Genetics, and Molecular Medicine;Director, Cornelius Crane Laboratory for Eczema Research;Co-Deputy Director, The University of Chicago Comprehensive Cancer Center;Fellow, Institute of Genomics and Systems BiologyProfessor Rosner is an expert in the field of signaltransduction and has had a longstanding interestin elucidating the mechanisms by which growthfactors mediate the growth, differentiation, or deathof cells. She is the author or co-author of over 140scientific publications and has been a member ofseveral editorial boards including the Journal ofBiological Chemistry and has served on the ScientificAdvisory Board of the Children's Memorial Institutefor Research at Northwestern University. Nationally,she has been a member of scientific review panelsfor the American Cancer Society, the VeteransAdministration, the Department of Defense, and theNational Institutes of Health, where she also servedas Chair of the Biochemistry Scientific ReviewPanel; she currently serves on the Tumor CellBiology Scientific Review Panel at NIH.Professor Rosner has been teaching Cancer Biologyto undergraduates at the University of Chicago forover 15 years and finds it highly rewarding. Shewas recognized for her teaching in 2001 when shereceived the Quantrell Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching. In 2011 she was awardedthe Gerald N. Wogan Lectureship at MIT inrecognition of her scientific achievements. She isactively involved in science education and is on theBoard of Trustees of the Illinois Math and ScienceAcademy.Professor Rosner received her bachelor's degree inbiochemistry from Harvard University and herPh.D. in biochemistry from the MassachusettsInstitute of Technology. She stayed at MIT to pursuepostdoctoral work as a fellow of the AmericanCancer Society and assumed her first facultyposition as Assistant Professor in the Department ofApplied Biological Sciences at MIT. After promotionto Associate Professor at MIT, Professor Rosnercame to the University of Chicago in 1987. She hasalso been a visiting professor at the University ofPalermo, Italy and at Stanford University.She and her husband Robert Rosner currently livein Hyde Park, where they raised their two children,Daniela and Nicole.MUSICAL INTERLUDECANTATA ACADEMlCAComposed by Benjamin BrittenThe University of Chicago Motet ChoirJames Kallembach, ConductorMillar Brass EnsembleTHE AWARD OF HONORSAwarded General Honors with the Bachelor's Degree:Tara Michelle BeenyVanessa Tamar BernickVenkat Ram BoddapatiAlexandra Katherine ClarkTimothy Michael CroninMaria Edet EkpoWenbo Fang Justin Gao-Mathson HansenAlyssa Marie JudayJennifer Li uMatthew Thomas MigalaDavid Gabriel NascaAdrianne Ugochi OkohJasmine Partida Joshua Alexander SealeWesley Alexandra SpachtTiffany Michele TaylorVirginia D. ThomasDamon WangTHE CONFERRING OF ACADEMIC DEGREESCandidates for Degrees will be presented in alphabetical order by degree in the following academic units:In the College by Dean John W. BoyerIn the William B. and Catherine V Graham School of Continuing Liberal and Professional Studiesby Dean Daniel W. ShannonIn the Division of the Biological Sciences and the Pritzker School of Medicineby Dean Kenneth S. Polonsky. Names will be read by Associate Dean Victoria E. Prince.In the Division of the Humanities by Dean Martha T. RothIn the Division of the Physical Sciences by Dean Robert A. FeffermanIn the Division of the Social Sciences by Dean Mario Luis SmallIn the University of Chicago Booth School of Business by Dean Sunil KumarNames will be read by Associate Dean Patty Keegan.In the Divinity School by Dean Margaret M. MitchellIn the Irving B. Harris Graduate School of Public Policy Studiesby Acting Dean of Students Kathi MarshallIn the School of Social Service Administration by Associate Dean of Students Laura Elk-WeistCandidates not presented are receiving degrees in absentia.The President will lead the audience in acknowledging the candidates after each school's degrees are distributed.DAVID GABRIEL NASCA(Visual Arts with Honors)ADRIANNE UGOCHI OKOH(English Language and Literature)JASMINE PARTIDA(Biological Sciences)YI TANG PIACENTINI(Linguistics).oE;DGAR �UrNTANA·(Seeiofogy)CHRISTOPHER VINCENT RIZZI(Chemistry)JOSHUA ALEXANDER SEALE(Germanic Studies with Honors)KEDAR SUNIL SHIROLE(Economics)MISCHA SINGER-FIERER(Political Science)WESLEY ALEXANDRA SPACHT(Philosophy)GIDEON HENRY TARCOV(Comparative Literature)VIRGINIA D. THOMAS(History)ABIGAIL INHABER WOODHAM(Economics)I. IN THE COLLEGEFor the Degree of Bachelor ofArts in the College:TARA MICHELLE BEENY(Political Science with Honors)(Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations with Honors)(East Asian Languages and Civilizations)VENKAT RAM BODDAPATI(Biological Sciences)ALEXANDRA KATHERINE CLARK(English Language and Literature with Honors)ALEXANDER DULCHINOS(Slavic Languages and Literatures) -:MARIA EDET EKPO(International Studies)CLARE MARGARET FERRELL(English Language and Literature)JUSTIN GAO-MATHSON HANSEN(East Asian Languages and Civilizations)ALYSSA MARIE JUDAY(Anthropology)ALEXANDER JULIAN KORNIENKO(History)ROBERTO JAVIER KUTCHER(Economics)HAOXU LI(Mathematics)JENNIFER LIU(Psychology with Honors)MATTHEW THOMAS MIGALA(Fundamentals: Issues and Texts)HOMAlRA SEDIGHAH NAIMI(English Language and Literature)KELVIN WENHENG SI(Mathematics)(Economics-A.B.)DAMON WANG(Computer Science)(Biological Chemistry)(Chemistry-A. B.)For the Degree of Bachelor of Science in the Collegeand the Division of the Physical Sciences:TIMOTHY MICHAEL CRONIN(Chemistry with Honors)(Biological Chemistry)WENBO FANG(Mathematics)II. THE STUDENT MARSHALSFor the Degree of Bachelor ofArts in the College:VANESSA TAMAR BERNICK(Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations with Honors) TIFFANY MICHELE TAYLOR(Political Science)(Comparative Race and Ethnic Studies with Honors)(Sociology)III. IN THE WILLIAM B. AND CATHERINE V. GRAHAM SCHOOL OFCONTINUING LIBERAL AND PROFESSIONAL STUDIESFor the Degree ofMaster of Liberal Arts:FADHIL H. ALSlKAFI5.B., University 0/ Baghdad, Iraq, I965TARAKAA BERTRANDA.B., Vanderbilt University, 2008KATHERYN MICHELLE EDWARDSA.B., Loyola University 0/ Chicago, I983DANIEL W. GEITERA.B., Saint Xavier University, Chicago, Illinois, 20IITHOMAS HERMANA.B., Columbia University, New York City, New York, I987LINDA CONGREVE LEVINB.Arch., Arizona State University, I980 TINGYU LUS.M, Illinois Institute of Technology; 20IIERIC RUSSELL MEYER5.B., Bellevue University, Nebraska, 20IIKATE CHRISTINA O'HARAA.B., Marquette University, 2004DAVID ODELL RINGERA.B., University of Chicaeo, I980STEPHANIE ANN WHITEA.B., Northern Illinois University, I985MICHAEL D. WILSONS.B., University 0/Massachusetts at Amherst, I992KATHIE YIN-HAN ANGA.B., University 0/ Chicago, 20IO(Biology)CAITLIN MARY BONHAM5.B., University 0/Michigan-Ann Arbor, 2008(Biology)EILEEN CHANTI For the Degree ofMaster ofArts in Teaching:SHELENA FRANCINA JOHNSONA.B., Loyola University o/Chicago, 20IOS.B., ibid., 20IO(Elementary Education)ROSALYN JOHNSON-McLEANA.B., Michigan State University, 2006(Elementary Education)A.B., St. Johnfs College, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 2007(Elementary Education)CARA LYNN CLIFFORDA.B., University 0/ Chicago, 2007(Elementary Education)DANIEL DONOHOE EDWARDSS.B., University 0/ Colorado at Boulder, 20IO(Mathematics)BRITA JEAN GALLA.B., Luther College, 2008(Elementary Education)HANNAH RUTH GORDONA.B., University 0/ Chicago, 20IO(Mathematics)ANNA ROSE GRIFFITHA.B., University 0/ Chicago, 20II(Biology)CINDY GUITRONA.B., University 0/ Chicago, 20IO(Elementary Education)JASMINE MARIE HENDRICKSA.B., University 0/ Chicago, 20II(Elementary Education)KATHRYN COOK HOTTINGERA.B., University of Chicag», 2005(Biology)GLORIA TERESA HUEZO5. B., University 0/ Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, I995(Mathematics)MARTA JOHNSONA.B., Swarthmore College, 2002A.M., Chicago Theological Seminary, 2007(Biology) FRANK W KADRIA.B., DePaul University, Chicago, Illinois, 2009(Elementary Education)HENINGHAM LYONS KENNEDYA.B., Yale University, 2007(Elementary Education)ALEXANDRA MARIE KRUEGERA.B., University of Chicago, 20II(Elementary Education)MARGUERITE ANNE LAFRENIEREA.B., Northwestern University, 20IO(Elementary Education)TANIA LEES.B., Boston College, 2006(Elementary Education)KARl LEHMANA.B., University 0/Michigan-Ann Arbor, I992(Elementary Education)MARK JEFFREY LIBERSONA.B., Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, I989(Elementary Education)NICHOLAS MATHIAS LIMBECKA.B., University o/Wisconsin-Madison, 2007(Elementary Education)THOMAS LOWERYS.B., Loyola University of Chicago, 2009(Mathematics)SARA LUCILE MAHONEYA.B., University o/Chicago, 2009(Mathematics)JASMINE NICOLE MARSHALLA.B., Rutgers, The State University 0/ New Jersey-NewBrunswick, 2009(Elementary Education)MICHAEL MORRISSEYA.B., Carleton College, 2009(Biology)AIDAN O'DOWD-RYAN5.B., University of Miami, 20IO(Biology)SHAWN PRAKASH REDDYA.B., University of Chicago, I996M.F.A., School of the Art Institute of Chicago, 200I(Elementary Education)WILLIAM GORMAN REEDS.B., University of Chicago, 200B(Biology) PRIYANK SRIVASTAVAS.B., University of Illinois at Chicago, 2001(Biology)JESSICA KELLY STAFFA.B., American University, Washington, District of Columbia,20IO(Elementary Education)DONALD TAYLOR IIA.B., Columbia University, New York City, New York, 200BA.M., Eastern Illinois University, 20IO(Elementary Education)ANNEMARIE THILMONTA.B., University of Chicago, 20II(Elementary Education)IV. IN THE DIVISION OF THE BIOLOGICAL SCIENCESAND THE PRITZKER SCHOOL OF MEDICINEFor the Degree ofMaster of Science:LAURA ALIDA MERWIN5.B., Pepperdine University, 200B(Ecology and Evolution)SITANGCAROLINE BETH ALBERTINA.B., Mount Holyoke College, 2005(Organismal Biology and Anatomy)MICHAEL JOSEPH GLISTAA.B., Kalamazoo College, 2006(Pathology)CYNTHIA THERESE HARMONB. Eng. , Vanderbilt University, 2002(Pathology) Dipl., Peking University, Beijing, China, 2006S.M, University of Chicago, 20I2(Ecology and Evolution)For the Degree ofDoctor ofPhilosophy:DAVID EDWARD WEBSTER ARNOLDSA.B., Williams College, 2004(Genetics)DISSERTATION: Transcriptional Control of Cardiac ConductionSystem Development and FunctionFIYINFOLU OLADELE BALOGUN5.B., University of Maryland, Baltimore County, 2005(Pathology)DISSERTATION: DNA Resection and Chromatin Remodeling inGI Checkpoint Activation of Budding YeastJUNGUO BIANS.B., Tsinghua University, Beijing, China, I99BS.M., Purdue University, West Lafoyette, Indiana, 2004(Medical Physics)DISSERTATION: Optimization-Based Image Reconstructionfrom a Small Number of ProjectionsNICHOLAS LEWIS BLOCKS.B., Texas A&M University, College Station, 2006S.M, University of Chicago, 2009(Evolutionary Biology)DISSERTATION: Cryptic Diversity and Phylogeography in theBernieridae, an Endemic Malagasy Passerine RadiationJESSICA JUTTA BOCKHORNA.B., Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, NewBruswick, 2006(Biochemistry and Molecular Biology)DISSERTATION: The Role of MicroRNAs in Breast CancerInvasion and Drug Response BYRON CARLISLE BURNETTE5.B., University of Wisconsin- Whitewater, 2004(Pathology)DISSERTATION: Local Radiotherapy Modulates the TumorImmune Microenvironment: The Role of1Jpe I InterferonsCAROLYN ELIZABETH CAINA.B., Washington University in St. Louis, 2006(Human Genetics)DISSERTATION: Mechanisms Underlying Gene ExpressionDiffirences between Primates: Changes in ChromatinLandscapeLOUIS YOUN CHOIA.B. University of Chicago, 2002(Developmental Biology)DISSERTATION: MET Signaling is Required for MultipleAspects ofZebrafish Hindbrain MorphogenesisARPAD MICHAEL DANOSA.B., University of Chicago, 200IS.M, ibid., 2009(Molecular Metabolism and Nutrition)DISSERTATION: Targeting Glycogen Metabolism and m TOR inDiabetes and CancerSCOTT RICHARD DEBOERA.B., Indiana University Bloomington, 2002(Neurobiology)DISSERTATION: Analysis ofI-Amyloid Peptide Species Derivedfrom Axonally or Dendritically Targeted I-Amyloid PrecursorProteinJACOB FRANK DEGNERS.B., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2003S.M, University of Central Florida, 2007(Genetics)DISSERTATION: Computational Approaches to UnderstandingGene RegulationREBECCA BETH DIKOWS.B., Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, 2003S.M, University of Chicago, 2009(Evolutionary Biology)DISSERTATION: Genome-Level Homology and Phylogeny: CaseStudies Using Vibrionaceae and Shewanellaceae(Gammaproteobacteria)ROBERT FOREMANS.B., Indiana University Bloomington, 2007(Microbiology)DISSERTATION: Regulation of General Stress Response ina-ProteobacteriaJEFFERY ADAM GOLDSTEINA.B., Drake University, 2005S.B., ibid, 2005(Pathology)DISSERTATION: SMAD Signaling Drives Heart and MuscleDysfunction in Muscular DystrophyMATTHEW HOBSON GREENS.B., University ofArizona, 2005(Computational Neuroscience)DISSERTATION: Neuromechanics of the Larval Zebrafish PectoralFinWENNDY HERNANDEZA.B., George Washington University, I998S.M., Howard University, 2004(Cancer Biology)DISSERTATION: The Role ofMMPS, TIMPS, and RECKPolymorphisms in Prostate Cancer Susceptibility andProgression in African AmericansHEATHER MAE KINGS.B., Illinois Institute of Technology, 2007(Organismal Biology and Anatomy)DISSERTATION: The Evolution of Locomotion in Sarcopterygii:Insights from the Lungfish Protopterus annectensBEVERLY AMY LAUA.B., Reed College, 2006(Medical Physics)DISSERTATION: Modeling Digital Breast Tomosynthesis ImagingSystems for Optimization StudiesTERA LEE LAVOIES.B., York College of Pennsylvania, 200IS.M, Johns Hopkins University, 2005(Pathology)DISSERTATION: Disrupting Actin-Myosin-Actin Connectivity toPotentiate Breathing-Induced Reversal of BronchoconstrictionTHIEN LES.B., Illinois Institute of Technology, 2006(Pathology)DISSERTATION: ERjS Genomic Functions: Novel Interactionswith EBFI and CoREST MICHAEL LUSIGNANS.B., University of Wisconsin-Madison, I996(Computational Neuroscience)DISSERTATION: Growing Up Singing: Behavioral andPhysiological Perspectives on Song AcquisitionJOSEPH CHARLES MARANVILLES.B., Arizona State University, 2007(Human Genetics)DISSERTATION: The Genetic and Regulatory Architecture ofVariation in Glucocorticoid ResponseERIC DONALD MORTENSONS.B., Westmont College, 2000(Immunology)DISSERTATION: A New Mechanism ofAnti-HER2lneu AntibodyTherapy: The Role ofAdaptive ImmunityKATARINA JENNIFER RUSCICS.B., University of Chicago, 2006(Computational Neuroscience)DISSERTATION: Biophysical Studies of the Cardiac Iss ChannelComplex Voltage Sensing DomainLAUREN COLE SALLANS.B., Florida Atlantic University, 2003S.M, ibid., 2007(Organismal Biology and Anatomy)DISSERTATION: The Rise of Ray-Finned Fishes (Actinopterygii)after the Fall of the Devonian WorldELIZABETH SARAH COX SCORDATOS.B., Duke University, 2004(Evolutionary Biology)DISSERTATION: Geographical and Temporal Variation inSexually Selected Traits: Environmental Variation, MultipleSignals, and Consequences for Population DivergenceSCOTT ADRIAN SMEMOA.B., Washington University in St. Louis, 2002(Human Genetics)DISSERTATION: Regulation of Heart Development viaTranscriptional Enhancers and Epigenetic ModificationsALBERT ADAMS TAYLORS.B., Beloit College, 2002S.M., Northwestern University, 2003(Neurobiology)DISSERTATION: The Transcription Factor Gli3 is Required toMaintain Integrity of the Cerebral Cortical Germinal ZoneNORA FOULK WASSERMANA.B., Haverford College, 2004(Human Genetics)DISSERTATION: Cis-Regulatory Variants and Non-CodingDisease AssociationsDAVID J. WHEATCROFTA.B., University of Chicago, 2003A.M, ibid., 2005(Evolutionary Biology)DISSERTATION: The Evolution of Cooperation in AvianMobbingBRIGITTE KATHLEEN ZIERVOGELA.B., University of Minnesota- Twin Cities, 2006(Biochemistry and Molecular Biology)DISSERTATION: Antibiotic Permeation and Ion Screening byBacterial PorinsV. IN THE DIVISION OF THE HUMANITIESFor the Degree ofMaster ofArts:SEJIN MINB.Mus., Roosevelt University, I998(Master ofArts Program in the Humanities)STINA MARIA BAcKSTROMA.B., Uppsala Universitet, Sweden, 2004(Philosophy)SHANNON CHRISTINE BALDOA.B., Transylvania University, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Humanities)URSULA C. BERGSTROMA.B., Wesleyan University, I998(Classics: Classical Languages and Literatures)ANDREW MARK CHIACCHIERINIA.B., University of Richmond, 2000(Master ofArts Program in the Humanities)DAVID C. DEMARCOA.B., Hillsdale College, 2002A.M, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2005(New Testament and Early Christian Literature)JASON SINCLAIR FOWLER5.B., Centre College, 2003(Romance Languages and Literatures)BRECK FURNASB.RA., School of the Art Institute of Chicago, 2008(Master ofArts Program in the Humanities)LISA HEATHER HICKSA.B., Brown University, I999(Philosophy)SARAH JEAN HOLZHAUSENA.B., Grand Valley State University, 2009(Slavic Languages and Literatures)MAX KOSSB.Sc. (Hons), University of London, England, United Kingdom,2004A.M, ibid, 2006(Art History)JENNIFER LOREN MACKA.B., Smith College, 200I(Master ofArts Program in the Humanities)MARGARET McFEEA.B., Wesleyan University, 20IO(Romance Languages and Literatures) NIGEL JOHN MORTONB.A. (Hons), University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 20II(Classics: Classical Languages and Literatures)PEGGAH NAVABA.B., Sarah Lawrence College, 20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Humanities)CATALINA OSPINA JIMENEZ5.B., Universidad de los Andes, Bogota, Colombia, 2005(Master ofArts Program in the Humanities)NEAL ALAN PARKERA.B., Willamette University, 20IO(Latin American and Caribbean Studies)ERIC REX PIPERA.B., University of Illinois at Chicago, I999(Master ofArts Program in the Humanities)TRACI J. REEVESA.B., University of Southern California, 2005(Cinema and Media Studies)CLARK A. REMINGTONB.Mus., Indiana University Bloomington, I9785.B., ibid, I980M'.Mus., ibid., I980t.o, Columbia University, New York City, New York, I987(Philosophy)STEVEN FORRESTER RICEA.B., University ofMinnesota-Morris, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Humanities)QUENTIN ONSTOTT RINGA.B., Pitzer College, 200I(Master ofArts Program in the Humanities)KIRSTEN LOUISE WELLMANA.B., University of Georgia, 2000(Master ofArts Program in the Humanities)For the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy:EMMANUELLE HELENA ELIANEBONNAFOUXLic., Uniuersite de Tours (Unuersite Francois Rabalais), France,I999Maitrise, ibid., 2002(Romance Languages and Literatures)DISSERTATION: EAnimal miroir de l'homme dans la Fiction dulyon d'Eustache DeschampsAlKATERINI CHATZOPOULOUPtychia, Aristoteleio Panepistimio Thessalonikis, Thessalonika,Greece, 2002Metaptychiako, ibid., 2005(Linguistics)DISSERTATION: Negation and Nonveridicality in the History ofGreek SUN-AH CHOIA.B., Korea University, South Korea, 2000A.M., Seoul National University, South Korea, 2003A.M, University of Chicago, 2006{Art History}DISSERTATION: Quest for the True Vt'sage: Sacred Images inMedieval Chinese Buddhist Art and the Concept ofZhenTERESA MARIA DANZEA.B., University of Dallas, 200IA.M, University of Chicago, 2005(Classics: Classical Languages and Literatures)DISSERTATION: The Agenry and Affection of Pity in SophoclesARNAB DEYA.B., University of Delhi, New Delhi, India, 2000A.M, ibid., 2002M'Pbil., ibid., 2004A.M, University of Chicago, 2007(South Asian Languages and Civilizations and History)DISSERTATION: Of Planters, Ecology, and Labor: PlantationWorlds, Human History and Nonhuman Actors in EasternIndia (Assam), I840-I9IOROY SHELOMO FISCHELA.B., Hebrew University ofJerusalem, Israel, 2003A.M, ibid., 2007A.M., University of Chicago, 20I2(South Asian Languages and Civilizations and History)DISSERTATION: Society, Space, and the State in the DeccanSultanates, I565-I636JAMES MICHAEL FORTNEYA.B., University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2000MA. T, Boston University, 200IA.M, Middlebury College, 2004(Romance Languages and Literatures)DISSERTATION: Homosexual Productions: Gay Italian ProseFiction from the I970S to the Beginning of the Twenty-firstCenturySYLVIE GOUTASDipl., Uniuersite de Reims Champagne-Ardenne, France, I990Lic., ibid., I993Maitrise, Uniuersite de Rauen, Mont-Saint-Aignan, France, I999(Romance Languages and Literatures)DISSERTATION: Evolution et revolutions de la charite dans lasociete et le roman franrais du XIX siecle: Charite personnelleet collective dans La Comedic humaine d'Honore de BalzacTHOMAS ANGELO GRANOA.B., Stanford University, 2006(Linguistics)DISSERTATION: Control and Restructuring at the Syntax­Semantics InterfaceAIDAN GRAYA.B., University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada,2003(Philosophy)DISSERTATION: Names and Name-Bearing: An Essay on thePredicate View of NamesNATHAN ALAN HOLMESA.B., Brock University, St. Catherines, Ontario, Canada, 2003A.M., Ryerson Polytechnic Institute, Toronto, Ontario, Canada,2004(Cinema and Media Studies)DISSERTATION: Welcome to Fear City: Crime Film and theUrban Imagination, I970-I975KATHRYN LEE HUNDLEYA.B., Earlham College, I992A.M, University of Chicago, I994(Romance Languages and Literatures)DISSERTATION: Restless Reinvention: Solitude underConstruction in Ellaberinto de la soledad by Octavio PazMARIUSZ SEBASTIAN KOZAKB. Mus. , University of New Mexico, 2000M Mus. , University of Rochester, 2003MMus., University of New Mexico, 2006(Music)DISSERTATION: Moving in Time: The Role of Gesture inUnderstanding the Temporal Organization of MusicJAE-YON LEEA.B., Yonsei University, Seoul, South Korea, I998A.M, ibid., 200IA.M., Harvard University, 2003(East Asian Languages and Civilizations)DISSERTATION: Magazines and the Collective Rise of LiteraryWriters in Korea, I9I9-I927THOMAS LOCKHARTA.B., University of Oxford, England, United Kingdom, 2003(Philosophy)DISSERTATION: Frege, Singular Terms, and Logical Objects ALESSANDRO PAJEWSKILaurea, Uniuersita degli Studi dell 'Aquila, L'Aquila, Italy, I999A.M., University of Chicago, 200I(Conceptual and Historical Studies of Science)DISSERTATION: The Face of Nature: Hume and Darwin onAnalogy and EmotionCOLIN MICHAEL PATRICKA.B., Wesleyan University, I998A.M, University of Chicago, 2007(Philosophy)DISSERTATION: Internalism, Practical Relations, andPsychologismJOHN DAVID PERSONA.B., Gustavus Adolphus College, 2002A.M, University of Chicago, 20II(East Asian Languages and Civilizations)DISSERTATION: Philosophizing '[apan': The Genri NipponSociety and the Question ofJapanesenessIVAN DAVID ROSSA.B., Bard College, 2005(Cinema and Media Studies)DISSERTATION: Mediating the Historical Imagination: VisualMedia and the us. Civil war, I86I-20IIJOHANNA THERESA SEMLERA.M., Freie Uniuersitdt Berlin, Germany, 2002(Comparative Literature)DISSERTATION: Bare Life and Metamorphic Being: NaziPropaganda, Agamben, Coetzee and KafkaDUSTIN PAUL SIMPSONA.B., University ofArizona- Tucson, I996A.M, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, 200I(Comparative Literature)DISSERTATION: Modern Poetry and Poetic PleasureCHARLES WILLIAM SMALLA.B., University of Oxford, England, United Kingdom, 2003(Philosophy)DISSERTATION: Two Kinds of Practical KnowledgeCATHERINE STUERKand., Katholieke Uniuersiteit Leuuen, Belgium, I987Lic., ibid., I99IA.M., National Taiwan University, Taipei, I998(Art History)DISSERTATION: Dimensions of Place: Map, Itinerary, and Tracein Images of NanjingJAMES N. TALLONS.B., Winona State University, I997A.M, University of Chicago, 2000A.M, ibid., 2003(Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations)DISSERTATION: The Failure of Ottoman ism: The AlbanianRebellions of I909- I9I2KATHRYN MARIE TANAKAA.B., Ohio State University, Columbus, 200IA.M, washington University in St. Louis, 2004(East Asian Languages and Civilizations)DISSERTATION: Through the Hospital Gates: Hansen's Diseaseand Modern Japanese LiteratureVINCENT WANA.B., State University of New York at Buffalo, I992S.M, ibid., I995(Conceptual and Historical Studies of Science)DISSERTATION: Historical Causes and Map Visualizations inBiologyJOSHUA ROLOCKS.B., University 0/ Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, I980S.M., Northwestern University, I982Ph.D., ibid, I993(Computer Science)VIVEK SAM PATH KUMARS.B., Georgetown University, 20II(Statistics)YIWEI SHEA.B., Northwestern University, 20IO(Mathematics)MIJO SIMUNOVICS.B., University of Zagreb, Croatia, 2008M. Chem., ibid., 20IO(Chemistry)MICHAEL TIMOTHY SMITHS.B., California Institute of Technology. 20IO(Mathematics)ALEXANDER VOSTRIKOVDipl., Moscow Institute 0/ Physics and Technology, Russia, 2009(Physics)BING YIWANGS.B., National Taiwan University, Taipei, 2003(Computer Science)MIAOYAN WANGS.B., Fudan University, Shanghai, China.aoto(Statistics)RYAN YUAN WANGA.B., University o/Chicago, 20I2(Statistics)JOHN WILMESA.B., Reed College, 20IO(Mathematics)BOBBY LARUE EDWARD WILSONS.B., Morehouse College, 20IO(Mathematics)EVA WUYTSDipl., Universiteit Gent, Ghent, Belgium, 2007(Astronomy and Astrophysics)JIAYING XUS.B., Shanghai Jiaotong University, China, 2006s.M., University 0/ Michigan-Ann Arbor, 20IO(Computer Science)YICHEN YUS.B., Xiamen University, Fujian, China.uoio(Chemistry)YAN ZHANGS.B., California Institute of Technology; 2008(Mathematics)YIBIN ZHANGB.Eng., Xian Jiaotong University, China, 20II(Computer Science)VI. IN THE DIVISION OF THE PHYSICAL SCIENCESFor the Degree ofMaster of ScienceSTEPHANIE LOUISE AHOS.B., Michigan Technological University, 2008(Computer Science)STEPHANIE LOUISE AHOS.B., Michigan Technological University, 2008S.M., University 0/ Chicago, 20I2(Geophysical Sciences)MOHAMMED MATOOQALHUSEINS.B., King Fahd University of'Petroleum and Minerals, Dhahran,Saudi Arabia, 2005 '(Computer Science)IMMANUEL DAVID BUDERS.B., Stanford University, 2007(Physics)TIMOTHY MICHAEL CRONINS.B., University of Chicago, 20I2(Chemistry)ANDREW WIEBE DAHLS.B., University of Chicago, 20I2(Statistics)DONALD EDWARD FREDERICKA.B., Miami University, 2005A.M., University 0/ Chicago, 2008(Computer Science)QUOCPHUHOA.B., Princeton University, 20II(Mathematics)KEVIN RUSSELL LABEA.B., Swarthmore College, 20II(Physics)SARAN LEWPRASERTB. Eng. , Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand, 2008(Computer Science)ZIMU LIS.B., University 0/Michigan-Ann Arbor, 20II(Physics)ANKUN LIUS.B., Peking University, Beijing, China, 2007S.M., ibid., 20IO(Geophysical Sciences)JONATHAN NALOWA.B., University 0/ Colorado at Boulder, 2009(Statistics)BO PENGS.B., University of Chicago, 20IO(Statistics)CHRISTOPHER RICHARD POLICASTROS.B., Massachusetts Institute o/Technology, 20II(Mathematics)For the Degree of Doctor ofPhilosophy:WINFRIED REINHARD BARTADipl., Universitas Regensburg, Germany, 200IDipl., Fern Uniuersitdt in Hagen, Germany 2000(Statistics)DISSERTATION: Random -walk Metropolis Chains on theHypercubeIMMANUEL DAVID BUDERS.B., Stanford University, 2001S.M, University of Chicago, 20I2(Physics)DISSERTATION: Measurement of the CMB Polarization at 95GHzfrom QUIETCHANGGEE CHANGSB., Pohang University of Science and Technology, South Korea,2005(Statistics)DISSERTATION: Estimation of Covariance Matrix for High­Dimensional Data and High-Frequency DataXIAOHUI CHANGA.B., University of Chicago, 2000(Statistics)DISSERTATION: -wavelet Analysis in Spatial Interpolation ofHigh-Frequency Monitoring DataKUN GAOS.B., Peking University, Beijing, China, 2008SM., University of Chicago, 20IO(Mathematics)DISSERTATION: Implied Volatility AsymptoticsSTEPHEN ROLAND GREENB.Sc. (Hons), University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 2005SM, University of Chicago, 2000(Physics)DISSERTATION: Nonlinear Backreaction in CosmologyJOSEPH SEAN GUINNESSA.B., Washington University in St Louis, 2001(Statistics)DISSERTATION: Nonstationary Models for Spatial- TemporalProcessesCHRISTOPHER MICHAEL KELSOSB., Colorado School ofMines, 2000S.B., ibid., 2000S.M, University of Chicago, 2008(Physics)DISSERTATION: Recent Results in Dark Matter Direct DetectionExperimentsMYOUNGJI LEES.B., Seoul National University, South Korea, 2004SM, ibid., 2000(Statistics)DISSERTATION: Local Properties of Irregularly ObservedGaussian FieldsSAMUEL NICHOLAS LEITNERA.B., Wesleyan University, 2005SM., University of Chicago, 2001(Astronomy and Astrophysics)DISSERTATION: On the Last IO Billion Years of Stellar MassGrowth in Star-Forming GalaxiesWEISHAN LIUSB., Peking University, Beijing, China, 2000S.M, University of Chicago, 2001(Chemistry)DISSERTATION: Microfluidics for Discretized Analysis ofChemical and Biological Systems EMILY MARIE NORTONA.B., Portland State University, 2002A.M., University of Chicago, 2000SM, ibid., 20IO(Mathematics)DISSERTATION: Andre Algebras: Quasi Symplectic ReflectionAlgebras in Characteristic pGUNN TAE PARKS.B., Seoul National University, South Korea, I994SM., University of Chicago, 2009(Physics)DISSERTATION: Performance-Limiting Factors for X-ray FreeElectron Laser Oscillator as a Highly Coherent, High SpectralPurity X-ray SourceSRAVANA REDDYS.B., Brandeis University, 2000S.M, University of Chicago, 2009(Computer Science)DISSERTATION: Learning Pronunciations from UnlabeledEvidenceMICHAEL ANDREW SCHMIDTS.B., Johns Hopkins University, 2005S.M, University of Chicago, 2001(Physics)DISSERTATION: Coherent Spin Oscillations and Non-LinearDynamics in Two Quantum MagnetsMORGAN SONDEREGGERSB., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2004S.B., ibid., 2005S.M, University of Chicago, 2009(Computer Science and Linguistics)DISSERTATION: Phonetic and Phonological Dynamics on RealityTelevisionYUNUSEMRETURKMENDipl., Orta Dogu Teknik Uniuersitesi, Ankara, Turkey, 2005S.M., ibid., 2000S.M., University of Chicago, 2007(Chemistry)DISSERTATION: Cycloaddition Reactions of I,2-Diazines withSiloxy Alkynes and Exploration of New Hydrogen BondingCatalyst ScaffoldsJONATHON ANDREW VAN SCHELTS.B., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2005SM, University of Chicago, 2000(Physics)DISSERTATION: Precision Mass Measurements of Neutron-RichNuclei, and Limitations on the t-Process EnvironmentDAN WANGSB., Fudan University, Shanghai, China, 2005(Statistics)DISSERTATION: The Estimation of Leverage Effect with HighFrequency DataEVA WUYTSDip!', Universiteit Gent, Ghent, Belgium, 2001S.M, University of Chicago, 20I2(Astronomy and Astrophysics)DISSERTATION: A Magnified View of High Redshift StarFormationJUNJUN ZHANGS.B., Nanjing University, China, 2004(Geophysical Sciences)DISSERTATION: Titanium Isotope CosmochemistryTING ZHANGS.B., Fudan University, Shanghai, China, 2007(Statistics)DISSERTATION: Nonparametric Inference on Nonstationary TimeSeriesFor the Degree of Doctor ofPhilosophy in the Division of the Physical Sciences and theDivision of the Biological Sciences:TOBIAS TIMOTHY FALZONE5.B., University of California, Los Angeles, 2007S.M, University of Chicago, 20IO(Biophysical Sciences)DISSERTATION: Actin Assembly Kinetics Plays a Critical Role inDetermining Crosslinked F-actin Network StructureVII. IN THE DIVISION OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCESx, For the Degree ofMaster ofArts:GHAZALASIFB.Sc. (Hons), Lahore University of Management Sciences,Pakistan, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)JAMIE ATKINSONA.B., Hofitra University, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)AMY MICHELLE AUGUSTA.B., University of Illinois at Chicago, 2002MA. T., Dominican University, 2000(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)BRANDON JOEL BALESA.B., Brigham Young University, 2009(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)KYE ANDERSON BARKERA.B., University of Kansas, 20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)KERBY BENNETTA.B., University of California, Los Angeles, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)JAMES BLISSA.B., University of California, Irvine, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)KYLA ROBERTA BOURNEA.B., University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada, 20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)CHRISTY ,MONET BRANDLYA.B., St. Mary's College of Maryland, 2009(International Relations)ANNETTE MIXON BURKEENA.B., University of Southern California, I997jD., Howard University, I997(Political Science)ERIN JENNA CABLES.B., University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, 20IO(Psychology)FILIBERTO CHAVEZ, JR.A.B., University of California, Berkeley, 20IO(History)ZHUOREN CHENA.B., Pennsylvania State University, University Park, 20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)ANA ESPERANZA CHOCARRO GARCIAA.B., Mars Hill College, 20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)JOON CHUNGS.B., Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 20075.B., ibid., 2007(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)LAURA KATHLEEN CONLEYA.B., Wesleyan University, 2007(International Relations) AMY ELLEN COOPER5.B., Georgetown University, I998A.M., University of Chicago, 2002(Comparative Human Development)IVANA CVARKOVICA.B., University of Chicago, 2008(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)ELIZABETH CAITLIN ANNE DANIELS ONS.B., Indiana University Bloomington, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)ANYA SARA DEGENSHEINA.B., Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, 2007(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)JASMINE MARIE DEJESUSA.B., Harvard University, 2007(Psychology)ERIC LLAMAS DEMAFELIZA.B., Brown University, 2009(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)DRAGANA DJUKICA.B., Western Michigan University, 2004MBA., Northeastern Illinois University, 2008(International Relations)SCOTT McVOY DODDSA.B., Tufts University, 20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)NICOLE CAITLYN DUNNAVANTA.B., Colorado College, 2009(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)PEISHAN FANS.B., University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 2008(Psychology)ZHICAO FANGLL.B., Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou, China,20II(International Relations)SHANNON ROSE FINLEYS.B., University ofArizona, 2008(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)MOLLY ELIZABETH FLAHERTYA.B., Columbia University, New York City, New York, 2004A.M., University of Edinburg, Scotland, United Kingdom, 2007(Psychology)LAURA ELIZABETH GARVINA.B., Harvard University, 20IO(Psychology)VICTORIA CLAIRE GERSTMANA.B., Columbia University, New York City, New York, 2008(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)LIZZY KATE GRAYA.B., University of California, Santa Cruz, 2007(Sociology)BRADLEY GREEN5.B., University of Kansas, 2005(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)STEVI RENEE GRIMMA.B., University of California, Berkeley, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)KATELAND NICOLE HAASA.B., University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)MATTHEW HARRISON HARTMANA.B., University of Chicago, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)STEPHEN CHARLES HEDGERA.B., University of Chicago, 2009(Psychology)ANDREW CHRISTOPHER HERMANA.B., University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)CHING FANG HSULL.B., National Taiwan University, Taipei, 2009(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)PETER TA-KANG HUS.B., Carnegie Mellon University, 2002A.M, University of Chicago, 2007(Psychology)LIUAN CHEN HUSKAA.B., Wheaton College, Illinois, 2009(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)DANIEL ZIV JACOBSA.B., McGill University, Montreal Quebec, Canada, 2008{International Relations}ANDREW RALEIGH JONESA.B., Wheaton College, Illinois, 20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)PEDJA JURISICPh.B., University of Pittsburgh, Main Campus, 2006(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)RICHARD ROBERT KAMINSKIA.B., University of Chicago, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)JULIA N. KANEA.B., Kalamazoo College, 2009(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)MAKSIM RUMENOV KARABASHEVA.B., Ramapo College of New jersey, 2009(International Relations)TIMOTHY DANNA KAUTZA.B., Stanford University, 2008(Economics)CHRISTINE VERLENA KEIFERA.B., University of Virginia, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)ZACHARY ARTHUR KNITTERA.B., University Of Virginia, 20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)WILLIAM ALEXANDER STEPHENS LANGEA.M., University of Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)JOHN M. LEEKERA.B., Newman University, Wichita, Kansas, 20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)JEFFREY MARTIN LEESA.B., University of Maine at Farmington, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences) NICHOLAS CAMERON LEVYA.B., Princeton University, 2007(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)NATASHA MARIE LEYKA.B., Macalester College, 2009{International Relations}YINYIN LIA.B., University of Rochester, 20II{International Relations}MICHAEL EUGENE LOMBARDA.B., Seton Hall University, 20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)DILI LULL.B., Peking University, Beijing, China, 20IIS.B., ibid., 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)IAN MARK LYONSS.B., Brown University, 2004(Psychology)ANDREW MATTARELLA-MICKES.B., Michigan State University, 2005(Psychology)AMANDA F. MAUSNERA.B., University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2009(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)MARIE KYLE McDONALDA.B., james Madison University, 20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)ELIAS JAMES MILONASA.B., �yne State University, Detroit, Michigan, 20II(International Relations)AMIR MOHAMEDA.B., Monmouth University, West Long Branch, New jersey, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)SEAMUS MONTGOMERYA.B., University of�shington, Seattle, 20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)CIRUCE ALEXANDERMOVAHEDI-LANKARANIS.B., Pennsylvania State University, University Park, 2005(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)KATHARINE NAPORAA.B., University of Virginia, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)JOSIAH BRANDON NUNZIATOA.B., Houghton College, 20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)JULIA PATRICE O'DONNELLA.B., Fordham University, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)MARK OHRTMANA.B., University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2005S.M., University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 2007(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)MAKENZIE O'NEILA.B., Gonzaga University, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)JASON MARTIN OSEQUEDAA.B., University of California, Berkeley, 2009(History)GEORGE PAPAYAA.B., Tbilisi State University, Georgia, 2003A.B., ibid., 2003A.M, ibid., 2009(Economics)SETH DAVID PECKHAMA.B., western Kentucky University, 20IO(International Relations)CLARA PICKERMag., Universitiit Wien, Vienna, Austria, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)RACHEL MINNA PIERSONA.B., Johns Hopkins University, 2009(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)MAYA MARIAM PILLAIA.B., Mount Holyoke College, 2007(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)CECILIA ESTHER RABESSS.B., University of Pennsylvania, 2006(Middle Eastern Studies)MUTHANNA RAHMANA.B., University of Florida, 2007(Middle Eastern Studies)KELLY RYANNE REBECKA.B., University of Southern California, 2008(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)DANIELLE N. RENDINAA.B., University of California, Santa Barbara, 2009(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)JESSICA SAGE RICHA.B., Amherst College, 2000(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)EMILY JILL ROSENA.B., University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, 20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)MAOR ROYTMANS.B., Michigan State University, 2009(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)LAUREL ELLYN SALLACK MACUPAA.B., University of California, Davis, 20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)VINCENT NICHOLAS SANCHEZA.B., University of California, Berkeley, 20IO(History)RICHARD S. SCHIFFRINA.B., Syracuse University, I974(Political Science)CHRISTOPHER PAUL SCHMUTTENMAERA.B., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 20IO(International Relations)TATYANA SHPIGELA.B., George Washington University, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)EMILY JANE SOPERB.A. (Hons), Victoria University of wellington, New Zealand,20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)KAILASH SRINIVASANA.B., University of California, Davis, 20IO(International Relations)KARA LEIKO TAKASAKIA.B., Tufts University, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)MATTHEW ROYCE TAYLORS.B., University of Oregon, 20II(International Relations)VANESSA ROSE TERESIA.B., DePaul University, Chicago, Illinois, 2009(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences) JACOB RICHARD THOMASA.B., University of California, Berkeley, 2002(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)ANDREW ERIC TITLEA.B., Tufts University, 2007(International Relations)BRIAN MICHAEL TRUMPA.B., University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)ROBIN NICOLE UHLEA.B., Dartmouth College, 2009(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)MARY ELIZABETH VANDEN PLASA.B., Knox College, 20IO(International Relations)PATRICK FRANCIS VAN KESSELA.B., University of Texas at Austin, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)SJEF VAN STIPHOUTBach., Universiteit van Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 2008Doctorandus, ibid., 20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)KATHRYNE CHRISTINE TREHUBETSVANTYNEA.B., Smith College, 20IO(Psychology)MICHAEL ANTHONY VEIT, JR.A.B., Marquette University, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)JOSHUA RAMON VERAA.B., University of California, Berkeley, 20IO(History)VIJAY VIKRAMA.M., University of St Andrews, Scotland, United Kingdom, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)SARA ANNICE WALSHA.B., Tulane University, 2007(International Relations)JONATHAN EDWARD WARCZAKA.B., University of Chicago, 20I2(International Relations)TYLER WAYWELLA.B., Brown University, 20IO(International Relations)BRIAN WERTERS.B., California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo,20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)KIMBERLY MICHELLE WILLIAMS5.B., University of Illinois at Chicago, 2008(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)ALLISON ELIZABETH WOODA.B., Princeton University, 20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)JOAN XUA.B., Harvard University, 20II(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)EMILY CAROLINE YOUATTA.B., Reed College, 20IO(Master ofArts Program in the Social Sciences)BANG QUAN ZHENGA.B., San Francisco State University, 2005A.M, University ofMichigan-Ann Arbor, 2008(International Relations)For the Degree of Doctor ofPhilosophy:SEAN FITZGERALD DUNWOODYA.B., University of Scranton, I998A.M, Rheinische Friedrich- Wilhelms Uniuersitat Bonn,Germany, 2003A.M, University of Chicago, 2004(History)DISSERTATION: Conflict, Confession, and Peaceful Coexistencein Augsburg, I547-I600STEPHANIE CHRISTINE ECHOLSB.Sc., Mount Allison University, Sackuille, New Brunswick,Canada, 2004A.M., University of Chicago, 2007A.M, ibid., 2009(Psychology)DISSERTATION: Racially Biased Attention to Pain PredictsGroup Differences in Empathic Concern and HelpingBehaviorMATTHEW MILLS BARTONA.B., University of Florida, 2005A.M., ibid: 2006A.M., University of Chicago, 2007(History)DISSERTATION: State, Society, and the Struggle for PoliticalAuthority in Nineteenth-Century Minas Gerais, BrazilELISE CHERTO FF BERMANA.B., Dartmouth College, 2003A.M, University of Chicago, 2008(Comparative Human Development)DISSERTATION: Children Have Nothing to Hide: Deception,Age, and Avoiding Giving in the Marshall IslandsTIFFANY CORINNA BLOOMFIELDA.B., Harvard University, 2002A.M, University of Chicago, 2008(Psychology)DISSERTATION: Recursive Vocal Pattern Learning andGeneralization in StarlingsKATARfNA BOROVICKOvAA.M., Univerzita Komenskeho v Bratislaue, Bratislava, Slovakia,2005A.M., University of Chicago, 2008(Economics)DISSERTATION: Learning and Labor Market FlowsJULIA ANNE BURDICK-WILLA.B., University of Chicago, 2004A.M, ibid., 2008(Sociology)DISSERTATION: Violent Crime and Achievement in Chicago:Neighborhoods, Peers, and SchoolsAHSAN ISHAQ BUTTA.B., Ohio Wesleyan University, 2006A.M, University of Chicago, 2008(Political Science)DISSERTATION: Goodbye or See You Later: Why States FightSome Secessionists but Not OthersANANYA CHAKRAVARTIA.B., Princeton University, 2005A.M., University of Chicago, 2007(History)DISSERTATION: The Empire ofApostles: Jesuits in Brazil andIndia, ioth-irth CSHAWN THOMAS COCHRANS.B., United States Air Force Academy, I995M.P.P., Harvard University, I997A.M, Air University-School ofAdvanced Airpower Studies, 2009(Political Science)DISSERTATION: Civil-Military Balance of Resolve: TheDomestic Politics of Withdrawal from Protracted Small warAMY ELLEN COOPERS.B., Georgetown University, I998A.M., University of Chicago, 2002AM, ibid; 20I2(Comparative Human Development)DISSERTATION: Vital Politics: Medicine and Citizenship inVenezuelaTHEODOR WILLIAM DUNKELGRUNA.M, Universiteit Leiden, The Netherlands, 200IA.M., University of Chicago, 2002(Social Thought)DISSERTATION: The Multiplicity of Scripture: The Confluenceof Textual Traditions in the Making of the Antwerp PolyglotBible (I568-I573) ELIZABETH FEINA.B., Swarthmore College, I999A.M., University of Chicago, 20IO(Comparative Human Development)DISSERTATION: The Machine Within: An Ethnography ofAsperger's Syndrome, Biomedicine, and the Paradoxes ofIdentity and Technology in the Late Modern United StatesJULIA ESTHER FEINA.B., Middlebury College, 2003A.M., University of Chicago, 2004(History)DISSERTATION: Cultural Curators and Provincial Publics:Local Museums and Social Change in Siberia, I887-I94ICATHERINE GAINTYA.B., Wellesley College, I997M.P.H., Boston University, 2002A.M., University of Chicago, 2005(History)DISSERTATION: The Pursuit of "Happiness Minutes": MedicalEfficiency in the United States, I9IO-I940MIN HEE GOA.B., Ewha Woman's University, Seoul, South Korea, 2004A.M, University of Chicago, 2006(Political Science)DISSERTATION: Rethinking the Structural Basis of UrbanDevelopment: The Power and Peril of Communities in Post­Katrina New OrleansKATHRYN ELISSA GOLDFARBA.B., William Marsh Rice University, 2004A.M., University of Chicago, 2008(Anthropology)DISSERTATION: Fragile Kinships: Family Ideologies and ChildWelfare in Japanjoxo FELIPE FERREIRA GON�ALVESA.B., Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte,Brazil I997Mestre, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil I999A.M., Johns Hopkins University, 2002(Anthropology)DISSERTATION: The Hero s Many Bodies: Monuments,Nationalism, and Power in Havana and MiamiJOHNHENRY R. GONZALEZA.B., Harvard University, 2006A.M, University of Chicago, 2007(History)DISSERTAT.ION: The war on Sugar: Forced Labor, CommodityProduction and the Origins of the Haitian Peasantry, I79I­I843DANNY RYAN GRAYA.B., Columbia University, New York City, New York, I996A.M., University of Chicago, 2009(Anthropology)DISSERTATION: Effacing the 7magined Slum': Space,Subjectivity, and Sociality in the Margins of New OrleansJONATHAN DAINES HALLA.B., Brigham Young University, 2006A.M., University of Chicago, 2007(Economics)DISSERTATION: Pareto Improvements from Lexus Lanes: TheCase for Value Pricing on Heavily Congested HighwaysSHANNON LEE MARIE HEALDA.B., University of Chicago, 2002A.M., ibid., 2005(Psychology)DISSERTATION: Tuning the Targets of Speech Production: EffectsofArticulatory and Perceptual Experience on SpeechProductionDARRYL M. HELLERA.B., College of Charleston, I982A.M., Columbia University, New York City, New York, 2003(History)DISSERTATION: The Poor Man's Carriage: Street Railways andTheir Publics in Brooklyn and New York, I850-I896DANIEL ROBERT HUEBNERA.B., Montana State University, 2006S.B., ibid., 2006A.M., University of Chicago, 2008(Sociology)DISSERTATION: The Making of George Herbert Mead: A Studyin the Production of Knowledge in Modern AcademiaLAURA-ZOE HUMPHREYSA.B., McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, 2000A.M., University of Chicago, 2004(Anthropology and Cinema and Media Studies)DISSERTATION: Revolutions Within: Criticism and Ambivalencein Post-Soviet Cuban CinemaJEREMY LINN JONESA.B., Lewis and Clark College, I996A.M., University of Chicago, 2004(Anthropology)DISSERTATION: Dealing with Disintegration: Urban Youth,Historical Narrative, and 'Making Do' in HyperinflationaryZimbabweJENNIFER TRACI-LYNN KARLINA.B., Wesleyan University, I999A.M., University of Chicago, 2009(Conceptual and Historical Studies of Science)DISSERTATION: Respatializing the Clinic: Health andCommunity on Chicago's South SideCHELSEY LOUISE KIVLANDA.B., Colorado College, 200IA.M., Columbia University, New York City, New York, 2003A.M., University of Chicago, 2006(Anthropology)DISSERTATION: "We Make the State": Performance, Politick,and Respect in Urban HaitiMICHELLE ANNE LELIEVREA.B., McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, I998M. Phil. , University of Cambridge, England, United Kingdom,2000(Anthropology)DISSERTATION: Ajiwisin (You Move from One Place toAnother): Mobility, Emplacement and Politics in (Post-)Colonial Nova Scotia IAN MARK LYONSS.B., Brown University, 2004A.M., University of Chicago, 20I2(Psychology)DISSERTATION: A Sense of Order: Ordinality and the Meaningof Symbolic NumbersANDREW MATTARELLA-MICKE5.B., Michigan State University, 2005A.M., University of Chicago, 20I2(Psychology)DISSERTATION: The Role ofApproximate Number in AdultArithmeticJESSICA HELEN NEPTUNEA.B., Bard College, 2002A.M., University of Chicago, 2007(History)DISSERTATION: The Making of the Carceral State: StreetCrime, the war on Drugs, and Punitive Politics in New York,I95I-I973MIHIR ANIL PANDYAA.B., University of Chicago, I994A.M., ibid., 2002(Anthropology)DISSERTATION: Manufacturing Stealth: Security, Commerceand Culture in Cold war Southern CaliforniaJON CHRISTOPHER ROGOWSKIA.B., University of North Carolina at Greensboro, 2003A.M., University of Chicago, 2007(Political Science)DISSERTATION: Representation and the Electoral ConnectionRAFAEL SANTANAA.B., Occidental College, 2002A.M., University of Chicago, 2006(Sociology)DISSERTATION: The Life and Death of Hometown AssociationsCAROLINE SCHUSTERA.B., Stanford University, 2005A.M., University of Chicago, 2007(Anthropology)DISSERTATION: Social Collateral: Microcredit Development andthe Politics of Interdependency in ParaguayJESSICA JEK-YIN SIMA.B., University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada, 2005A.M., University of Chicago, 2008(Psychology)DISSERTATION: Good Groups, Good Members, Good Selves:Exploring How Individuals Harness the Utility of GroupsPETER RUSSELL SIMONSA.B., Calvin College, 2000M.P.P., University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, 2002A.M., University of Maine at Orono, 2004(History)DISSERTATION: Cultivating a New World: AgrarianInternationalism in the Upper Midwest, I9I9-I950LAURIE ROSE SKELLYS.B., Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut, 2004A.M., University of Chicago, 2009(Psychology)DISSERTATION: The Brain Basis of Emotion Perception andEmpathy in Criminal PsychopathyJAMES SLOTTAA.B., University of Chicago, 2000A.M., ibid., 2003(Anthropology and Linguistics)DISSERTATION: On the Receiving End: Cultural Frames forCommunicative Acts in Post-colonial Papua New GuineaBECKETT STERNERS.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2006A.M, University of Chicago, 2009S.M, ibid., 20II(Conceptual and Historical Studies of Science)DISSERTATION: The Practice of Theorizing in ComputationalBiology: Function, Information, and MechanismIAN NATHANIEL STOREYA.B., Dartmouth College, 2004A.M, University of Chicago, 2006(Political Science)DISSERTATION: The Taste of Politics: Kant's Theory ofJudgment and Belonging in the Modern WorldLUCAS DAVID THREINENB. Ch.E., University of Minnesota- Twin Cities, I997A.M, University of Chicago, 2009(Economics)DISSERTATION: The Dynamic Response to Trade Policy:Evidence from the US. Textile and Clothing Industries SAUNjUHI VERMAA.B., Indiana University Bloomington, 2005A.M, University of Chicago, 2009(Sociology)DISSERTATION: Black Gold, Brown Labor: The Legalization ofIndentured Work through the Transnational MigrationIndustryRICHARD THOMAS WEYHINGA.B., University ofMichigan-Ann Arbor, 2003A.M., University of Chicago, 2005(History)DISSERTATION: The Straits of Empire: French Colonial Detroitand the Origins of the Fox "l%rsLAUREN ANNE WYNNEA.B., Columbia University, New York City, New York, 2002A.M, University of Chicago, 2005(Anthropology)DISSERTATION: Practices of Care: Food and the Pursuit ofBalance in Rural YucatdnVIII. IN THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOTH SCHOOL OF BUSINESSFor the Degree ofMaster of Business Administration:ANDREAS T. AGUNGA.B., Michigan State University, 200IM.Acc., University of Notre Dame, 2002RANDALL WILLIAM ANDERSONS.B., Northern Illinois University, I995MONICA EUN-KYOUNG BALLS.B., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, I998LOREN LEO BATTISTS.B., Northern Illinois University, I998S.M, DePaul University, Chicago, Illinois, 2002DAVID K. BEACHA.B., New York University, 2005SAMIT S. BHANDARIS.B., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2004MINDY ANNE BUDGORS.B., University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2004MARION ELIZABETH BURLAKS.B., Louisiana State University and Agricultural andMechanical College, 2005JAY HILARIO CAISIPS.B., University of the Phillippines, Quezon City, 2007SEAN MICHAEL CENTILLIA.B., Michigan State University, 2007YU CHENB.Arch., Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China, 2002M.Arch., Kent State University, 2005·WITH HONORSTATYANA CHUPINAA.B., Ural State Academy ofArchitecture and Arts,Yekaterinburg, Russia, I999A.M, ibid, 200IJEREMY BRANDON CLARKS.B., Brigham Young University, 2002KRISTIN LYNN COMMERSB.B.A., University of Notre Dame, 2009KRISTINE MILA H. CRUZA.B., University of Chicago, 2002SCOT DAVISA.B., Carleton College, 2003·WITH HONORS MARY FUGO DE REYNAA.B., Ohio State University, Columbus, 2004TIMOTHY EUGENE DOREA.B., Harvard University, 2003SCOTT JAMES DUBAB.B.A., University of Notre Dame, 2003ERIN LYNN ENNESB.B.A., University of Notre Dame, 2005ANDREW RALPH EVANSS.B., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2004ROGER FARISHS.B., Tulane University, I999S.M, ibid., 2000·WITH HONORSJUAN CARLOS FONNEGRAIng., Universidad de los Andes, Bogota, Colombia, 2002Mag., ibid., 2003Dipl., Ecole Speciale des Travaux Publica, Paris, France, 2006JOEL BRIAN FORTNEYB.B.A., University of Iowa, 200IBRANDON ROBERT GATHS.B., Indiana University Bloomington, 2002DANIEL SCOTT GERMANOTTAS.B., Carroll College, "l%ukesha, Wisconsin, 2005MATTHEW JUSTIN GIERKES.B., Valparaiso University, 2006·WITH HONORSjASPINDER GREWALB. Tech., Punjab Technical University, Jalandhar, India, 2004FRANCIS XAVIER GREYWITT IIIB.B.A., St. Bonaventure University, 2000ANUj GUPTAB.Eng. (Hons), Punjab Engineering College, Chandigarh, India,200IJOYCE L. Y. HSUA.B., Wellesley College, 2005CHARLES HWANGA.B., Northwestern University, 2005SRlKANTH KANTIPUDIB. Tech., Indian Institute o/Technology Madras, India, I998S.M, Ohio State University, Columbus, 2000SIRAVICH JACK KRASAEATHA.B., Emory University, I999MPP, University o/Chicago, 2002M. Tax., DePaul University, Chicago, Illinois, 2004MATTHEW D. LAUGHTONS.B., Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, 200IPAUL J. LEES.B., University 0/ Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, I997S.M, Johns Hopkins University, 200IjD., George Washington University, 2003MENG LIB.Econ., Tsinghua University, Beijing, China, 2005A.M, Ohio State University, Columbus, 2006QUANBAO LIUS.B., China University of Geosciences, Wuhan, I994MEng., ibid., I997SOAMESH MANGALGIRIB. Eng. , University 0/ Pune, India, 200IS.M., University o/Wisconsin-Madison, 2003·WITH HONORSCHRISTOPHER H. MOHRA.B., Northwestern University, 200ICIARAN PATRICK MORGANA.B., Trinity College DublinlColdiste na Trion6ide, Baile AthaCliath, Ireland, 2000SEYED KASRA MOSHKANIA.B., Harvard University, 2006·WITH HONORSCHRISTOPHERJ. MYERSS.B., Pennsylvania State University, University Park, 2006ANTHONY MICHAEL NOVARAA.B., Michigan State University, 2004SCOTT OHMS.B., Nyack College, 2009KYUNG PARKS.B., University 0/ Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2003SACHIN SHANKAR PATKARS.B., All Institute 0/ Engineering and Management, Mumbai,India, I993KONSTANTIN PETROVDipl., Voronezh State University, Russia, 2004A.M., New Economic School, Moscow, Russia, 2006Kand., Voronezh State Technical University, Russia, 2008 ATUL PHILIPB.Eng., University 0/ Madras, India, I998Dipl., S. P Jain Center 0/ Management and Research, Mumbai,India, 2002ANGELO PILEGGIA.B., Loyola University 0/ Chicago, 2000JOSEPH ALOYSIUS POLANECZKYA.B., University 0/ Chicago, 2004CECILIA ESTHER RABESSS.B., University 0/ Pennsylvania, 2006A.M, University 0/ Chicago, 20I2NATHAN PATRICK RAULINB.B.A., University o/Wisconsin-Madison, 2005·WITH HONORSTIMOTHY CHAPIN SAINTA.B., Haverford College, 2002MEGHAN KELLY SAVAGES.B., Vanderbilt University, 2007SHAAN KUMAR SETHIA.B., University of Calijornia, Los Angeles, 200IPARTHASARATHY SRINIVASANB.Eng., University 0/Madras, India, I997Mast., Illinois Institute o/Technology, 2005FRANK MATTHEW STREHLS.B., Taylor University, 2006NlRAJ SWAMIS.B., Marquette University, 2006·WITH HONORSNGOCANHVUB.Econ., National Economics University, Hanoi, Vietnam, 2005MICHAEL B. WETTAS.B., Marquette University, 2004DON LENERE WOODSS.B., University 0/ Michigan-Ann Arbor, 2000XIAOJUNWUB.Eng., Shanghai Jiaotong University, China, 2006FENGXUES.B., Nanjing University, China, I997S.M, University 0/ Nebraska-Lincoln, 2002Ph.D., University 0/ Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2005LEON XIAOLIANG ZHAOA.B., Northwestern University, 2003S.M, ibid., 2005·WITH HONORSJOSEPH ANDREW ZUERCHERB.B.A., Southern Methodist University, 2000For the Degree ofDoctor ofPhilosophy:TIMOTHY EUGENE DOREA.B., Harvard University, 2003MB.A., University 0/ Chicago, 20I2DISSERTATION: Essays on Venture CapitalMENG LIB.Econ., Tsinghua University, Beijing, China, 2005A.M, Ohio State University, Columbus, 2006M.B.A., University of Chicago, 20I2DISSERTATION: Moral Hazard and Internal Discipline: Theory andEvidenceLEI LIANB. Eng. , Qingdao University, China, I999MEng., Dong Hua University, Shanghai, China, 2002S.M., Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, 2004S.M., University 0/ Chicago, 2006DISSERTATION: An Essay on Option Prices SEUNG MIN YAES.B., Seoul National University, South Korea, 2000MB.A., ibid., 2005S.M, University 0/ Chicago, 2006MB.A., ibid., 20I2DISSERTATION: Essays in Asset Pricing and Information QualityJHE YUNA.B., Northwestern University, 2007MB.A., University o/Chicago, 20IIDISSERTATION: Evaluating Predictors within a Present- ValueFrameworkIX. IN THE DIVINITY SCHOOLFor the Degree ofMaster of Divinity:MADISON REID McCLENDONA.B., Furman University, 2009For the Degree ofMaster ofArts:FRANZCHA SYBIL BALZERA.B., University of California, Santa Barbara, 2007DAVID PRICE CURLINA.B., Wheaton College, Illinois, I990A.M, Columbia Bible College and Seminary, South Carolina,I999MDiv., ibid., I999BLAKE CODY EDWARDSA.B., Wheaton College, Illinois, 20IO ADAM DANIEL PARADISA.B., University of California, Santa Barbara, 2009CARLOS RAUL SCHIAPPA-PIETRAS.B., Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Lima, Peru, I993SUSAN CHRISTOPHER SHIELDSA.B., Lewis and Clark College, 20IOFor the Degree ofDoctor of Philosophy:KARL ERIC HEFTYA.B., University of Virginia, I999MPhil., University of Cambridge, England, United Kingdom,2004DISSERTATION: The God ofAppearanceGABRIEL AMBER ROBINSONA.B., Bard College, I996A.M., University of Chicago, 2000DISSERTATION: Bullfighting and Bull Taming: Formations ofReligion and Masculinity MICHAEL SOHNA.B., McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada,200IA.M, University of Chicago, 2005DISSERTATION: The Good ofRecognition: Phenomenology,Ethics, and Religion in the Thought of Leuinas and RicaurX. IN THE IRVING B. HARRIS GRADUATE SCHOOLOF PUBLIC POLICY STUDIESFor the Degree ofMaster of Public Policy:KAREN DEBORAH SILVERMANA.B., University of Pennsylvania, 2004For the Degree ofDoctor ofPhilosophy:JANNA ELIZABETH JOHNSONA.B., Dartmouth College, 2006DISSERTATION: Essays on Economic Demography in the UnitedStates ARIANNA LUCIA ZANOLINILaurea, Unioersita Commerciale 'Luigi Bocconi', Milan, Italy,2003MSc. University of London, England, United Kingdom, 2005DISSERTATION: Essays on Maternal Investment and ChildHuman Capital AccumulationXI. IN THE SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SERVICE ADMINISTRATIONKEZIA LEE FISHERA.B., University of Texas at Austin, 2004JOCELYN JANINE JONESA.B., University of Iowa, 2006 For the Degree ofMaster ofArts:ANNA MOORE KAPLANA.B., Columbia University, New York City, New York, I99IMF.A., School of the Art Institute of Chicago, I996PAOLA PINEDAA.B., New York University, I994For the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy:CHRISTINA MARIE ANDREWSA.B., Ithaca College, 2000M.S. W, Boston University, 2006DISSERTATION: State Medicaid Coverage and the AvailabilityofMedicaid-Covered Outpatient Substance Abuse TreatmentServices: Current Trends and Implications for Expansionunder Health ReformKELLI CANADAA.B., DePauw University, Greencastle, Indiana, 200IS.M., Columbia University, New York City, New York, 2003DISSERTATION: Serious Mental Illnesses and Treatment:Perspectives from Mental Health Court ParticipantsJAYATTA D. JONESA.B., University of Iowa, I993A.M, George Washington University, I997S.M., Columbia University, New York City, New York, 2000DISSERTATION: Women Readingfor Education, Affinity, &Development (WREAD): An Evaluation of a SemistructuredReading Discussion Group for African American FemaleAdult-Literacy Students with Histories of Trauma JUHI RYO KABOSKIA.B., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, I995MS. W, ibid., I999DISSERTATION: An Empirically-Derived TJpology of Risks forMothers with Substance Use ProblemsYOU SEUNG KIMA.B., Seoul National University, South Korea, 2002M.S. W, Washington University in St. Louis, 2005DISSERTATION: The Influence of Parental Religiosity andParental Ethnic Church Involvement on Development amongKorean American AdolescentsDESMOND UPTON PATTONA.B., University of North Carolina at Greensboro, 2004M5. W, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, 2006DISSERTATION: Connected, Known and Protected: AfricanAmerican Adolescent Males Navigating Community ViolenceTHE ALMA MATER(Please Stand)The University of Chicago Motet ChoirJames Kallembach, ConductorMillar Brass EnsembleAlma MaterUniversity of ChicagoText: Edwin H. Lewis, Ph.D., 1894��! J IJ. Jl ; ) I; J J j I r·To - day we glad - ly sing the praise of her Music: Eustasio Rosales and Mack Evansr jwhose daugh- ters and whose sons Now�� r.-.r Jl J J I J. j J J IJ. � J ] 1£ � j Jloy al voi - ces proud - ly raise to bless her with our be - ni - sons. Of�� J. J\ J J Iw. -0 J J IJ. J\ J J Iw. -0 J Jall fair mo - thers fair est she, most wise of all that wis - est be, most�� FJ IfTI IF] rt-.J. JS J 't IF r j J J\ IJ. II)true of all the true say we, is our dear AI- rna Ma ter.ADDRESS BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITYROBERT J. ZIMMERMUSICAL FINALEPUISQUE TOUT PASSEComposed by Paul HindemirhThe University of Chicago Motet ChoirJames Kallembach, ConductorCLOSING WORDSCATHERINE C. BAUMANNMarshal of the UniversityTRUMPET FLOURISHMillar Brass EnsembleTHE RECESSIONAL(Please Stand)TOCCATA from Symphony Number 5Composed by Charles-Marie WidorThomas Weisflog, University OrganistTHE CONVOCATION RECESSIONALThe Flag BearersThe Marshal of the UniversityThe President of the UniversityThe Provost of the UniversityThe Faculty SpeakerThe Trustees and Officers of the UniversityThe DeansThe Vice-MarshalThe Faculty of the UniversityThe GraduatesThe Student MarshalsSWINGING PEALWylie Crawford, University CarillonneurSOPRANOHannah McGintyMelissa BellahHelen EllsworthHelen HailesAllegra KuneyHannah MarkKristen ReidKaylee Steck TENORJulius Stein-SupanichSam DooleyMason HellerAlexander HuangMichael McGovernTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MOTET CHOIRJames Kallembach, DirectorKristen Reid, PresidentAdam Boche, Vice PresidentSam Dooley, Publicity ChairHannah McGinty, Social ChairBen Horn, Technical DirectorMichael McGovern, Vice President for TouringPhilip McGrath, Tour CoordinatorBASSSteven LauterwasserALTOJessica GreenAlexandra Deis- LaubyCai din FallahayJi Su KangHannah KochAriana NedelmanDami ObaroJessica Zhang Adam BocheEamon BoylanClayton DahmBen HornKiehlor MackPhilip McGrathMUSICIANSWylie Crawford, University CarillonneurThomas Weisflog, University OrganistMILLAR BRASS ENSEMBLEMatt Lee, DirectorROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELORGAN AND CARILLONTHE ORGANBuilt with the Chapel itself in 1928, RockefellerMemorial Chapel's regal organ is one offourUniversity organs of the American organ-builderE. M. Skinner (the others being at Yale, Princeton,and Michigan). These organs are considered amongthe finest examples of twentieth-century romanticorgans built in America. On November 1, 1928,Rockefeller's organ, Opus 634, was unveiled at arecital by Lynnwood Farnam, reportedly to a crowdof over 2,500 admirers.In the Rockefeller organ, Skinner fully invested hisgenius for realizing a full orchestral sound, with acomplete collection of voices and many soft etherealeffects. Many of the large pipe scales, which arenecessary to achieve a full sound in a building thesize of the Chapel, are no longer built and thuscannot be found in contemporary organs. Theoriginal Chapel organ included four manuals andhad 6,610 organ pipes in 108 ranks; since its 2008restoration, it now has 8,565 pipes in 132 ranks.The organ's bay of pipes, located in the Chapelchancel, is a work of art in itself and is an integralelement of the interior architecture of Rockefeller.In addition to the chancel organ located at the frontof the Chapel, Skinner installed a gallery organ inthe upper balcony of the Chapel, to accompanythe gallery choir. The organs can be playedindependently or as one, using either console. THE CARILLONThe Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial Carillonwas installed during the summer of 1932, a yearafter its sister instrument at Riverside Church inNew York City, and was dedicated at Thanksgivingthat year. Both carillons are the masterworks ofthe Gillett & Johnston bell foundry of Croydon,England. Carillons of this size had never beforebeen built and have not been constructed since.The Chicago instrument, comprised of 72 bellsand 100 tons of bronze, is the single largest musicalinstrument ever assembled. Its bells were cast overa three-year period and include a massive 18.5-tonbourdon sounding a low Ct.Since carefully tuned carillon bells of this sizehad never been created, the design consultant,Frederick Mayer (organist and choirmaster at WestPoint), took the ground-breaking step of placingthe fourteen largest bells below the playing cabinso that the sound of these bells would not deafenthe performer to the smaller bells. Similarly, he laidout these 58 smaller bells so that the tiniest of themwould be directly above the cabin, with the largerones higher in the tower. He also placed trapdoorsin the roof of the cabin, thus providing thecarillonneur with a balanced sound. In the 1960s,several changes were made to the installation and amajor restoration of this instrument was undertakenfrom 2006-08. Today, the layout of bells favors theaudience rather that the carillonneur.wear a black gown, which has long pointed sleeves.The gown of master's degree holders is also black,with sleeves that are squared at the end. Doctor'sgowns are fuller with velvet facings down the front/ and three bars on the generous bell-shaped sleeves.While the usual color is black, within the past halfcentury some American universities have adoptedgowns of a color appropriate for each school; at theUniversity of Chicago our doctoral gown is maroon.The cape of the earliest academic costumes hasbecome a hood, worn, by individuals with doctoraldegrees, over the shoulders and hanging behind.The lining of the hood is folded out and its colorsindicate the school from which the wearer obtainedhis or her degree. The velvet border designatesthe degree area of study (white for arts, yellow forscience, blue for philosophy, green for medicine,purple for law, and red for divinity). University ofChicago honorary degree recipients receive a hoodwith a white facing (doctor of humane letters),purple (doctor of laws), or yellow (doctor ofscience).ACADEMIC DRESSThe robes worn by participants in academicceremonies originated when European universitieswere being formed in the twelfth and thirteenthcenturies. Since many of the instructors came fromreligious orders and taught in unheated and draftybuildings, they adapted their religious robes for useas the university attire.The long robe with an attached cape or ho�dbecame the standard and variation in the costumeindicated the rank of the person wearing it. Theywere worn every day and served to distinguishscholars and their students from other citizens. Theapparel worn by university faculty that is seen inold engravings is remarkably similar to that which isworn today. The gown is a symbol of the democracyof scholarship since it covers any clothing indicatingother rank or status. While everyday fashions havechanged, universities retained the earlier style forformal attire to be worn by students, graduates,faculty, and university officials on ceremonialoccasions,European universities each developed their ownstyles and colors of academic dress, and some of thedifferences seen in the academic procession todayillustrate that variety. In the United States, however,an intercollegiate congress in 1895 agreed on a singlestandard for academic dress in this country thathas been adopted by most American colleges anduniversities. Individuals with bachelor's degrees The cap has its own traditions. The first right of afreed Roman slave was the privilege of wearing acap, so the academic cap is the sign of the freedomof scholarship. Although the flat square cap ormortarboard is most usual, Chicago's doctoral cap isan octagonal tam of velvet.THE MARSHAL AND THE STUDENT MARSHALSMARSHALCatherine C. BaumannThe office of Marshal of the University wasestablished in I895 to assist with the conduct ofofficial ceremonies. Until I903 the Marshal was anundergraduate upperclassman, assisted by otherundergraduate upperclassmen and by membersof the faculty. Since I903 the Marshal has been amember of the faculty, assisted by other membersof the faculty and by undergraduate upperclassmen.The Marshal, Vice-Marshal, and Assistant Marshalsof the University of Chicago wear maroon doctor's robes with alternating black velvet and gold metallicbars on the sleeves. Prior to receiving their bachelor'sdegrees, Student Marshals wear maroon bachelor'srobes with maroon mortarboards. When receivingtheir degrees, they wear black mortarboards.Student Marshals are appointed by the Presidentof the University in recognition of their excellentscholarship and leadership. Appointment as a StudentMarshal is the highest honor conferred by theUniversity upon undergraduate students.VI CE- MARS HALDavid LaRue CrabbASSISTANT MARSHALSTed CohenAndrew DavisHelma DikMartin E. Feder Rachel FultonRichard H. HelmholzJohn R. SchuermanMichael Silverstein Ronald A. ThistedChristina von NolckenLinda J. WaitePeter WhiteSTUDENT MARSHALSKaushal AddankiSophia ArabadjisJoshua BosshardtSeverine CaoThomas ChapmanSara CordermanIsaac DalkeBenjamin DauberChristopher DaveyMatthew DirksHayley DonerSadaf FerdowsiConnor GilroyNaomi GorfinkleHelen HailesAshley HardemanEmily Heaton Theodore KentTae Yeon KimFaith LakenSamantha LeeVictoria LeeTyler LeedsStephen LurieTrisha MacraeSaalika MelaAlec MitrovichRoxane PicardNicholas PoppKatherine QuinteroMargaret ReifJessica SampsonMichaeljit SandhuRebecca Schmidt20I2-20I3Harmon SiegelGregor- Fausto SiegmundJulia SizekJulius Stein-SupanichBailey SteinworthVasanth SubramanianWestin TomAlba Tomasula y GarciaDaniel TraficonteNicole TutunikGnome UwhubaGabriel ValleyFrank WenXiaoxing XiaHuitingXuHelena YuTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOThe University of Chicago was founded in I890 byJohn D. Rockefeller, biblical scholar William RaineyHarper, and Chicago-area Baptists. The University'sArticles of Incorporation commit the institutionto excellence in both undergraduate and graduateeducation, an explicit policy of co-education, and anatmosphere of non-sectarianism.Harper agreed to become the first president of theUniversity on the condition that he be allowedto establish a university that would be unlike anyother. He conceived of a university that wouldemphasize the creation of new knowledge and"make the work of investigation primary." To thisend, the University has always been dedicated toexcellence in research and has sought the mostdistinguished scholars for its faculty.Over the years, the University and its faculty havehad a major impact on American higher education.Faculty scholarship has shaped several essentialdisciplines and established important and distinctive"Chicago schools" in such disparate fields aseconomics, evolutionary biology, sociology, literarycriticism, anthropology, and law and economics.More than eighty Nobel laureates have beenmembers of the faculty, researchers, or students at theUniversity. Programmatic innovations originating atthe University include the invention of the four­quarter system, the establishment of a coherentprogram of general education for undergraduates,the initiation of a full-time medical school teachingfaculty, and the development of extension courses andprograms in the liberal arts for adults. The University includes an undergraduate College,the William B. and Catherine V. Graham Schoolof Continuing Liberal and Professional Studies,four graduate divisions (Biological Sciences,Humanities, Physical Sciences, and Social Sciences),six graduate professional schools (Divinity School,Law School, Pritzker School of Medicine, Irving B.Harris Graduate School of Public Policy Studies,School of Social Service Administration, and theUniversity of Chicago Booth School of Business),and a diverse collection of academic support unitsand resources, including libraries, research institutes,clinics, museums, theaters, and a university press.The University has more than 2,200 faculty andother academic personnel, and an enrollmentof over I5,000 students. The 2II acre campus islocated along the Midway Plaisance in Hyde Park, aresidential community on Lake Michigan south ofChicago's Loop.The University's English Collegiate Gothic buildings,built of gray Indiana limestone, were designed toframe shady, green quadrangles. Contemporarycampus buildings have been designed in keepingwith the original Gothic theme while drawingfrom the tradition of great modern architecture forwhich the city of Chicago is famous. Eero Saarinenand Ludwig Mies van der Rohe designed strikingbuildings for the Law School and the School ofSocial Service Administration. The National Trustfor Historic Preservation praised the University forits insistence on architectural continuity over "acentury of social and academic change."On July I, 2006, Robert J. Zimmer became theUniversity's thirteenth president.