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Louisiana State University |
Dr.
Mary Lowe Good
Dr. Mary Lowe
Good
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MARY LOWE GOOD, born in
Grapevine, Texas, but raised in Kirby, Arkansas, received her Ph.D.
in 1955 from University of Arkansas. She has served her profession
and the American people for a half century; including presidential
appointments to the National Science Board (twice), the Council of
Advisors on Science and Technology, and Undersecretary for Technology
in the Department of Commerce. She began her career at LSU in the
Chemistry Department, rising to the rank of Boyd Professor during
25 years on the faculty. She is currently University Professor and
Dean of Information Science and Systems at University of Arkansas,
Little Rock. Mary earned numerous national and international
awards including: the Vannevar Bush Award from the National Science
Foundation, The Abelson Prize from the American Association for the
Advancement of Science, and the Priestly Award from the American
Chemical Society. She is also an elected member of the National Academy
of Engineering, past president of the American Chemical Society,
and past president of the American Association for the Advancement
of Science. Mary’s citation for the prestigious Heinz Award
sums up much about her professional service: “Dr. Good’s
gentile leadership and wide-ranging knowledge of the interplay between
technology and economics has resulted in a legacy that will impact
this nation for decades to come.”
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Mr.
Adolphe G. Gueymard
Mr. Adolphe G.
Gueymard |
ADOLPHE G. GUEYMARD,
of Carville, Louisiana, earned a Bachelors of Science degree in
1935 from Louisiana State University in the field of petroleum
geology. His distinguished career in the petroleum industry culminated
in his work as senior vice-president of First City National Bank
and his current position as president of Bankers Oil Corporation
of Houston. Dolph was an ROTC captain at LSU, and later was one
of the first gliders to land in Normandy on D-Day. War correspondent
Walter Cronkite interviewed his crew and wrote “a make-shift
crew handling a glider borne anti-tank gun knocked out a tank today
saving possibly hundreds of British and American soldiers.” During
WWII, he received two bronze stars, two presidential citations,
and finished with the rank of major. A life-long member of the
American Petroleum Institute and the American Association of Petroleum
Geologists, Dolph has been a member of the LSU Foundation since
1965, serving as president in 1969. He was also a founding member
of the LSU Campanile Charities, an organization supporting faculty
and students in the fields of petroleum geology, engineering, and
business. He has served the college in many capacities, created
the Adolphe G. Gueymard Professorship in Geology & Geophysics,
is a member of the LSU Geology Field Camp Campaign and a generous
patron of this facility—Dolph credits his experiences at
Geology Field Camp with much of his success in the petroleum industry.
In 2000, Dolph was honored with induction to the LSU Alumni Association
Hall of Distinction.
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Dr.
Joe A. Moreland

Dr. Joe A.
Moreland |
JOSEPH A. MORELAND, born and raised
in Baton Rouge, was always solidly 'LSU'. He received the Bachelor
of Science degree in 1950 and his M.D. in 1954. Dr. Moreland began
his career as an intern at the Brooke Army Hospital and later became
a Flight Surgeon at Luke Air Force Base. He received the Soldiers
Medal from the U.S. Air Force in 1957. After military service,
he was a surgery resident at Charity Hospital in New Orleans for
four years. For over thirty years Joe maintained a private professional
practice in Baton Rouge, as well as teaching appointments and a
Clinical Associate Professorship at Earl K. Long Hospital. He has
also served as Chief of Staff and member of the Board of Trustees
for Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center. Joe has been
very active in a variety of professional organizations, including
the Surgical Association of Louisiana (president in 1978), the
Baton Rouge Parish Medical Society (president in 1979), the Louisiana
Chapter of the American College of Surgeons (president in 1982).
He is a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons. Dr. Moreland
was a long-time member of the College of Basic Sciences Development
Council, and was instrumental in helping to establish the four
George C. Kent, Jr. Professorships as well as the Moreland Family
Professorship in Biological Sciences. (Dr. Moreland passed away in
2007 and is fondly remembered by his family and friends at LSU
for his cheerful dedication and endearing smile).
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Dr.
Shirley C. Tucker

Dr. Shirley C.
Tucker |
SHIRLEY C. TUCKER
is an emeritus Boyd Professor of botany, LSU’s
highest professorial rank. She received the Ph.D. in Botany from
University of California, Davis. Though retired from LSU in 1995,
she has continued a very active research program at the University
of California, Santa Barbara. Her career at LSU began with a heavy
load of teaching, but her hard work and perseverance gradually
led her to a research niche that was nationally recognized with
research funding and graduate students to mentor. When she retired,
two NSF grants and one NASA grant were active, and she has continued
to receive research funding during her “retirement”.
She is still an active member of the NSF-funded MORPH Research
Coordinating Network, which promotes a modern synthesis of plant
evolutionary development and interaction among organismic and molecular
plant biologists. She was LSU’s original evolution/development
scholar (EVO-DEVO). At LSU she served as president of the local
chapter of Sigma Xi and was the first woman elected to the LSU
Science Club. Shirley has served as president of the two largest
national organizations for botany: in 1995 for the American Society
of Plant Taxonomists, and in 1997 for the Botanical Society of
America. She is fondly remembered for her unselfish and dedicated
mentoring of young faculty and graduate students during her career
at LSU.
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