96-12-03 Five to Receive Commencement Honors FIVE RECEIVE SPECIAL COMMENCEMENT HONORS AT OHIO STATE COLUMBUS -- A businessman, an administrator, a scientist, an attorney and a former philanthropist will be recognized with special honors during The Ohio State University's autumn quarter commencement ceremonies Dec. 13 in St. John Arena. Honorary doctorates will be presented to businessman John Ong, administrator Lawrence Barnett, and to agricultural scientist E. Travis York. The Distinguished Service Award will be presented to attorney Arthur I. Vorys and posthumously to philanthropist Sally Moore Nitschke. John Ong, Doctor Of Humanities John Ong, chair and chief executive officer of the BFGoodrich Co., is a 1954 Master of Arts graduate of Ohio State in history. He is credited for transforming BFGoodrich -- a manufacturer of tires, rubber products and plastics -- into a profitable provider of aircraft systems and services and a producer of specialty chemicals. After earning a law degree from Harvard Law School in 1957, Ong began his career with BFGoodrich in 1961 as assistant counsel for the corporation. In 1966, he became administrative assistant to the president of International BFGoodrich, vice president of that division in 1969 and president in 1970. He was named group vice president in 1972, and executive vice president and a member of the board of directors the following year. He served as vice chair from 1974-75 before being elected president in 1975. Ong has been chair and CEO since 1979. Ong is the director of several other major corporations including Ameritech, ASARCO, Cooper Industries, the Geon Co., The Kroger Co., and TRW. An advocate for business involvement in civic and cultural activities, Ong is a director of the Chemical Manufactures Association and serves as trustee of the University of Chicago, the Musical Arts Association, and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. In addition, Ong plays a leadership role in a number of organizations involved with education and the competitiveness of American business. He serves as an honorary member of Ohio State's Humanities Development Council and received the College of Humanities' first Alumni Award of Distinction in 1994. He is a member of the Business Roundtable, chair of the Ohio Business Roundtable, a senior member of the Conference Board, and a member of the Business Council. Ong resides in Hudson, Ohio. Lawrence Barnett, Doctor of Fine Arts Lawrence Barnett, entrepreneur, community leader and philanthropist, was one quarter away from graduation from Ohio State when illness forced him to withdraw. More than 50 years later following a successful career as a corporate executive, he returned to the university to earn his Bachelor of Science in Business Administration degree in 1988. A native of Orrville, Barnett worked in the talent department of the Columbia Broadcasting System and the Music Corporation of America. He became head of MCA's talent division, handling such bands as Tommy Dorsey and Benny Goodman. In 1936, Barnett became president and director of MCA, a position he held until 1963. In 1963 he was named chair and president of General Artist Corporation and director of Baldwin-Montrose Chemical Corporation, parent company of General Artists and Chris-Craft Industries. In 1967,, he assumed the executive vice presidency of Chris-Craft, retiring in 1988. He remains a director of Chris-Craft. Barnett is serving as co-chair of the university's current five-year national fund-raising campaign. He was instrumental in establishing a master's degree program in arts policy and administration through the College of Arts and the Fisher College of Business. E. Travis York, Doctor of Science E. Travis York, scholar, academician, and scientist has made notable contributions to the field of agriculture. A member of the University of Florida faculty since 1963, York is a Distinguished Service Professor emeritus and chancellor emeritus of the State University System of Florida. He earned his bachelor and master of science degrees from Auburn University, and received his doctorate in soil science from Cornell University. After serving in the U.S. Army during World War II, York joined the agronomy faculty at North Carolina State University in 1949, becoming department chair before he was 30. While at North Carolina, York fostered the development of a strong soil fertility and plant nutrition research program recognized nationally for its excellence. He was named eastern director of the American Potash Institute in Washington, D.C., in 1956 and became director of Auburn's Cooperative Extension Service in 1959. In 1961, he was the administrator of the USDA Federal Extension Service. He was recruited by the University of Florida as provost for agriculture, serving as vice president for agricultural affairs, executive vice president and interim president. In 1974 he was named chancellor of the State University System of Florida. York resides in Gainsveille, Fla., and is involved in GREAN, an initiative to solve the problems of hunger, environmental degradation, and poverty in the third world. Sally Moore Nitschke, Distinguished Service Award Sally Moore Nitschke was an Ohio State alumna and served on a number of philanthropic organizations until her death in 1995. Nitschke retained close ties to her national women's fraternity, Kappa Kappa Gamma, for more than 40 years, serving as a local, regional and national volunteer. She served as national president of the 115,000-member fraternity from 1980 to 1984, becoming well-known for her pioneering work in programs for collegiate women on such topics as ethics and values, leadership, personal safety, and self-esteem. Board of Directors in 1977. She served two terms on the Alumni Advisory Council, including a stint as the first woman chair of the council. She was a board member of the Student Loan Foundation, a member of the Distinguished Alumni Teaching Awards Committee, an adviser to the Student-Alumni Council, and was active in planning Ohio State's Women's Day. A founding member of the Volunteer Action Center in Columbus and the Worthington Resource Center, Nitschke also served as president of the Junior League and the Childhood League. Arthur I. Vorys, Distinguished Service Award Arthur I. Vorys is former senior partner and currently of counsel in Columbus's largest law firm, Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease. A native of Columbus, Vorys served as a lieutenant in the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve during World War II. In 1949, he earned his law degree from Ohio State and entered the private practice of law with Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease, a firm founded by his grandfather. With the exception of a two-year stint as superintendent of insurance for the state of Ohio in 1957-59, he has remained in private practice. Vorys played a leadership role in cementing the relationship between the Ohio State College of Medicine's Department of Pediatrics and Columbus's Children's Hospital, where he served as board president from 1978-82. He was named to the University Hospitals Board at its inception and worked tirelessly to recruit volunteers to support the Medical Center's continuing development. He is a past president of the Hospitals board, and a supporter of the College of Law, leading the efforts to raise funds for the college's new wing during its Centennial Campaign. # Contact: Tracy Turner, University Communications, (614)688-3682. [Submitted by: Von Vargas (vargas.12@osu.edu) Tue, 3 Dec 1996 09:35:20 -0500 (EST)] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.