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Louisiana State University |
Mr.
Charles H. Barré
Mr. Charles H.
Barré
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CHARLES H. BARRÉ was
born August 8, 1922, in Mooringsport, Louisiana. He received his
bachelor’s
degree in industrial chemistry from Louisiana State University
in 1943 and was a member of Lambda Chi Alpha. In 1946, he joined
Marathon Oil Company in Texas City, Texas, and gained positions
of increasing responsibility in Marathon’s operations in
Munich, Germany, and Findlay, Ohio. In 1965, he attended Harvard
University’s Advanced Management Program. At Marathon, he
became vice president of refining in 1971 and was named director
in 1977 until his retirement in 1984. He has served on the boards
of many corporations and foundations including Director of the
National Petroleum Refiners Association from 1972 to 1983 and Vice
President from 1975 to 1978. Charles is an active member and former
chair of the College of Basic Sciences Development Council. He
has served as a member of the LSU Foundation and was awarded the
LSU Foundation President’s Award for Lifetime Giving. He
was inducted into the LSU Alumni Association’s Hall of Distinction
in 1991, and was named the LSU Alumni Association Alumnus of the
Year in 2004. He and his wife Mary have generously donated to various
causes around the campus including the Lod Cook Alumni Center and
Cook Conference Center and Hotel, the Andonie Museum. They
have established the Charles and Mary Barré Alumni Professorship
in Music and the Charles Barré Professorship in Chemistry.
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Mr.
Frank W. Harrison, Jr.
Mr. Frank W.
Harrison, Jr. |
FRANK W. HARRISON,
JR., was born in Bastrop, Louisiana in 1928. He received his bachelor’s
degree from LSU in petroleum geology in 1950 and served in the
U.S. Army from 1951 to 1953. He is a self-employed consulting geologist
in oil and gas exploration. Frank has authored several publications
on the petroleum geology of Louisiana. His professional affiliations
include the American Association of Professional Geologists (AAPG),
the American Geological Institute (AGI), serving as president for
both organizations, the Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies,
Independent Petroleum Association of America, Society of Independent
Professional Earth Scientists, and the Lafayette Geological Society.
Frank is a long-serving member of the College of Basic Sciences
Development Council, is co-chairman of the LSU Geology Field Camp
Campaign, and established two professorships in geology in 1998.
His numerous civic affiliations and commitments include relationships
with Bank One, American Liberty Financial Corporation, the Lafayette
General Medical Center, and the Chamber of Commerce. He joined
the LSU Foundation in 1976 and has been on the board since 1987.
He received the LSU Foundation President’s Award for Lifetime
Support at the benefactor level.
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Dr.
George C. Kent, Jr.

Dr. George C.
Kent, Jr. |
GEORGE C. KENT, JR., was born
on July 25, 1914, in Kingston, New York. He earned his bachelor’s
degree from Maryville College in Tennessee in 1937, and his master’s
and doctoral degrees in biology with a minor in anatomy from Vanderbilt
University in 1942. He served as a research associate at Cornell’s
Department of Histology and Embryology in 1941 and as an instructor
of embryology at Vanderbilt during the summer of 1942 before accepting
a position as a professor at LSU in the fall of 1942. He was chairman
of the zoology department from 1959 to 1963 and was named an Alumni
Professor in 1964. He retired as professor emeritus in 1979. His
book, Comparative Anatomy of Vertebrates is now in its 9th edition.
During his time at LSU, Kent became the veritable guru to be consulted
for students wanting to attend medical school. He was chair of
the Pre-medical and Pre-dental Committee from 1946 to 1979. During
those 33 years, he provided large numbers of students with the
benefit of his experience and guidance on the best course of study,
which schools to apply to, and how to “put their best foot
forward.” His course in Comparative Anatomy is legendary
at LSU. Although he put a top priority on teaching, he never gave
up his own research program and he continued to publish long after
his retirement.
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Dr.
Joseph M. Reynolds

Dr. Joseph M.
Reynolds |
JOSEPH M. REYNOLDS
was born in Woodlawn, Tennessee in 1924. He earned a degree in
physics at Vanderbilt University in 1946, and received a doctorate
in physics from Yale University in 1950. Reynolds served at LSU
as a professor of physics until 1985. He served in this capacity
for three years, then worked progressively up the administrative
ladder to the position of Vice President for Academic Affairs.
He retired in 1985. His research interests included low temperature
physics, gravitational waves, and superconductors. His recognitions
and honors included a Guggenheim Fellowship as a physics professor
at the University of Leiden, the Netherlands, from 1958 to 1959;
membership in Phi Kappa Phi and Omicron Delta Kappa; a post as
a visiting scholar at Stanford University from 1969 to 1970; his
appointment as a Boyd Professor, LSU’s highest faculty honor
in 1965; and two consecutive presidential appointments to the National
Science Board from 1968 to 1976. Dr. Reynolds passed away in 1997.
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