FIVE RECEIVE SPECIAL COMMENCEMENT HONORS AT OHIO STATE COLUMBUS -- Five leaders in the fields of drama, history, science, law and business will be recognized with special honors during The Ohio State University's winter quarter commencement March 20 in St. John Arena. Honorary doctorates will be presented to mime Marcel Marceau, legal historian Stanley N. Katz and scientist Gerhard Levy. The Distinguished Service Award will be presented to J. Gilbert Reese and John T. Eby. Marcel Marceau, Doctor of Humane Letters Internationally acclaimed as the world's greatest mime, Marcel Marceau is celebrating the 50th anniversary of the creation of the character BIP, whose striped pullover and battered top hat are universally familiar. A native of Strasbourg, France, Marceau enrolled in Charles Dullin's School of Dramatic Art in Paris in 1946, where he studied under Etienne Decroux. The following year when he created BIP, his dramatic alter-ego, his reputation as a master of pantomime began to grow. In 1949, after winning the renowned Deburau Prize for his second mimodrama, Death Before Dawn, Marceau formed his Compagnie de Mime Marcel Marceau. Following several successful European tours, Marceau made his first North American tour in 1955-56. He played standing- room-only crowds nationwide. In 1956, Marceau won an Emmy for his appearance on an NBC spectacular. In 1978, the City of Paris awarded him a grant to open the Ecole de Mimodrame de Paris. The French government honored him with its highest award, naming him an Officier de la Legion d'Honneur. Marceau has continued to tour worldwide through the years. In 1995 he presented a three-day artist-in-residence program at Ohio State's departments of theatre and dance. He is currently on an official 50th anniversary tour of North America. Marceau will be on the Ohio State campus March 18 and 19 to conduct workshops with students and faculty. Stanley N. Katz, Doctor of Laws Stanley N. Katz, professor of public and international affairs at Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School and co- director of Princeton's Center for Arts and Cultural Policy Research, is known as one of America's foremost legal historians. A native of Chicago, Katz earned his bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees from Harvard University. He joined the University of Wisconsin's history faculty in 1965. In 1971, he joined the faculty of the University of Chicago as a professor of legal history, professor of history and associate dean of the law school. In 1978, Katz was named Class of 1921 Bicentennial Professor of the History of American Law and Liberty at Princeton University. He was co-appointed professor of public and international affairs in the Woodrow Wilson School in 1982 and held both appointments until 1986, when he was named senior fellow in the Wilson School. From 1979 to 1986, he also served as a visiting professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania. An outspoken advocate for the liberal arts and the ideals of intellectual exchange, Katz served as president of the American Council of Learned Societies from 1986 to 1997. He has written, co-authored or edited some 50 books and scholarly articles. He co-founded Reviews in American History, the leading journal devoted to new literature in American history, and has served as associate editor since 1973. Gerhard Levy, Doctor of Science A renowned leader in pharmaceutical education and research, Gerhard Levy is University Distinguished Professor of Pharmaceutics Emeritus at the State University of New York at Buffalo School of Pharmacy. He was instrumental in the founding of the scientific field of biopharmaceutics and has made major contributions to the understanding of how drugs act. Born in Germany, Levy earned his bachelor's and doctoral degrees from the University of California, San Francisco. He joined the faculty of the University of Buffalo in 1958 as an assistant professor of pharmacy, serving as acting department chair the following year. In 1964, Levy was named professor of biopharmaceutics, and served as chair of the Department of Pharmaceutics from 1966-70. He was director of the Clinical Pharmacokinetics Research Center from 1979 to 1988. He was given emeritus status in 1995. Levy is an elected member of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences and holds honorary degrees from five universities. Among his many honors are the 1990 Gold Medal of the Slovak Medical Society; the 1990 Scheele Award of the Swedish Academy of Pharmaceutical Sciences; the 1992 Dale E. Wurster Research Award in Pharmaceutics from the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists; and the first Lifetime Achievement in the Pharmaceutical Sciences Award of the International Pharmaceutical Federation in 1994. J. Gilbert Reese, Distinguished Service Award The senior partner of the law firm Reese, Pyle, Drake & Meyer, J. Gilbert Reese earned his bachelor's and Juris Doctor degrees from Ohio State. A strong supporter of education in central Ohio, Reese has retained close ties to Ohio State, especially in his service to the College of Law and the Newark campus. He served as chair of the College of Law National Council from 1972 to 1978, and continues to have an active role in faculty recruiting, fund raising and other law school-related activities. He received the College of Law's Distinguished Alumnus Award in 1979. In recent years he was actively involved in the successful effort to remodel and build an addition to the law school. Reese was instrumental in establishing the Newark campus of The Ohio State University, helping to select and raise funds for the land on which the school was established. In 1971, he provided leadership in creating the co-located technical college at the regional campus and is a trustee emeritus of the Central Ohio Technical College. He has served as chair of the Newark Campus Development Fund since its 1983 inception, helping to raise funds for the support and development of the campus. Reese has served as a trustee of the Columbus Museum of Art, trustee of the Columbus College of Art and Design, trustee and president of the Newark YMCA, president of the Licking County Bar Association, president of the Newark Area Chamber of Commerce and trustee of Dawes Arboretum. John T. Eby, Distinguished Service Award A graduate of Ohio State with a bachelor of science degree in business administration, John T. Eby is a retired executive director of corporate strategy for Ford Motor Co. in Dearborn, Mich. Eby held several positions at Ford, including president of the Ford Motor Co. of Japan from 1981 to 1984. As executive director of corporate strategy, he was a leader in implementing the quality improvement policies and practices that helped turn Ford around. Eby also was instrumental in establishing Ohio State's Total Quality Business and Education Partnership with Ford, which has served as a catalyst for continuous quality improvements throughout the university. Long active in alumni affairs, Eby served on the Alumni Advisory Council as a regional campus representative and a University College representative from 1979 to 1985. During that time, he assisted in setting up an agenda for encouraging student applications for international scholarships. He was elected to a five-year term on the Alumni Association's board of directors in 1988, serving as president from 1991 to 1993. In 1987, he was honored at Ohio State's 300th commencement as an outstanding alumnus. # Contact: Tracy Turner, University Communications, (614) 688-3682