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4 honorary degrees to be awarded
by Barbara
Pitoniak, Chronicle staff
our
individuals will receive honorary degrees at Commencement ceremonies
May 25-26. Jacquelyn C. Campbell, Anna D. Wolf Endowed Professor,
and associate dean for the Ph.D. program and research, School of
Nursing, Johns Hopkins University, will be designated a doctor of
science; George W. Faison, award-winning dancer and choreographer,
will be designated a doctor of fine arts; Michael J. Kittredge,
entrepreneur and founder of Yankee Candle Company, will be designated
a doctor of public service; and Blenda J. Wilson, president and
CEO, Nellie Mae Education Foundation, also will be designated a
doctor of public service.
Campbell and Faison
will receive their honorary degrees during the Graduate School Commencement,
Saturday, May 25, at 10:30 a.m. in the William D. Mullins Memorial
Center. Honorary degrees will be conferred on Kittredge and Wilson
during undergraduate ceremonies Sunday, May 26, at 10 a.m. in Warren
P. McGuirk Alumni Stadium.
Biographical profiles of honorary degree recipients
Jacquelyn C. Campbell
was appointed Anna D. Wolf Endowed Professor at the School of Nursing,
Johns Hopkins University, in 1993. She was named associate dean
for the Ph.D. program and research in 1998. An expert in the field
of violence against women, she has conducted extensive research
on domestic violence and wife-battering, and is widely published
in her field. Campbell has worked with women's shelters and policy-related
committees on domestic violence for more than 20 years. She currently
serves on the board of directors for the House of Ruth Shelter in
Baltimore, Md., and the Family Violence Prevention Fund of San Francisco,
Calif., and from 1997-2001 she was a member of the National Advisory
Committee on Violence Against Women.
George W. Faison has
been a noted American dancer, choreographer, theater director, and
educator for the past 30 years. He was the first African-American
choreographer to win a Tony Award for his work on "The Wiz,"
which also won him a Drama Desk Award. He was nominated for another
Tony for "Porgy and Bess," at Radio City Music Hall. A
former member of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, in 1971,
Faison started his own dance company, the George Faison Dance Experience,
which successfully toured the country for four years. Faison recently
founded the not-for-profit American Performing Arts Collaborative
(APAC) to develop and present theatrical, educational, and entertainment
events. Through APAC, UMass graduate students work as interns, receiving
training in technical, administrative, and educational aspects of
the performing arts. In turn, Faison and other collaborative staff
visit UMass for artistic residencies, during which they conduct
workshops and master classes for performing arts students.
Michael J. Kittredge
made his first candle in 1969 on his parents' stove in South Hadley,
and within 30 years built the Yankee Candle Company into a retail
giant. While still in his early twenties, he worked alone to grow
his fledgling business, moving his newly named Yankee Candle Company
into a former mill building in Hoyoke in 1973. Ten years later,
Kittredge opened his retail store in Deerfield, and moved candle
production from Holyoke. The remainder of the decade saw a series
of expansions of both the retail operation and factory, including
the opening of satellite stores, and the Bavarian Christmas Village
in 1993. In 1996, Kittredge was named "National Entrepreneur
of the Year" by USA Today. In 1998, 80 percent of Yankee Candle's
equity was purchased by Forstmann Little & Company, and in 1999,
the company went public. Kittredge currently remains chairman of
the company's board of directors.
Blenda J. Wilson
began her service as the first president and chief executive officer
of the Nellie Mae Education Foundation (NMEF) in 1999. Established
a year earlier to promote accessibility, quality, and effectiveness
in education from preschool through postsecondary levels, especially
for under-served populations, NMEF has net assets of approximately
$400 million, making it one of the largest foundations in New England,
and the largest focused exclusively on education. Wilson was formerly
president of California State University, Northridge, from 1992-99,
and prior to that, she was chancellor of the University of Michigan
Dearborn, from 1988-92. From 1984-88, she was executive director
of the Colorado Commission on Higher Education, where she served
as an officer in the governor's cabinet. A nationally known speaker
on higher education policy issues, Wilson is past chair of the American
Association of Higher Education, and currently serves on numerous
boards.
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