UNCW to Graduate 1,176 Undergrads, 135 Grads in May 18 Ceremony
Thursday, May 02, 2002
WILMINGTON, NC -- In its 63rd commencement ceremony, The
University of North Carolina at Wilmington will award 1,176
baccalaureate degrees and 135 graduate degrees in two ceremonies on
Saturday, May 18, in Trask Coliseum.
The first ceremony at 9:30 a.m. will be for 474 undergraduates and
77 master's degree candidates of the Cameron School of Business,
Watson School of Education and the School of Nursing. The 1:30 p.m.
ceremony will be for 702 undergraduates in the College of Arts and
Sciences and 58 master's degree candidates.
During the afternoon ceremony, Wilmington native jazz legend Percy
Heath will be awarded the honorary Doctor of Fine Arts Degree. The
day before at 4 p.m., Friday, May 17, Mr. Heath will be recognized
by his hometown with a Walk of Fame star at Walk of Fame Plaza at
the Cotton Exchange. A public reception, hosted by the Williston
Alumni Association, will be held at 5 p.m. in the Williston
Auditorium at Cape Fear Museum.
Interestingly, Percy Heath's brother, saxophonist and educator
Jimmy Heath, will receive an honorary Doctor of Music Degree on May
24, 2002, from the Juilliard School in New York City.
Responding to student wishes to walk across the stage and
personally receive their diplomas from a top university official,
there will be no keynote graduation speaker this year.
Born in Wilmington, North Carolina, in 1923 and a graduate of
Williston High School, Percy Heath developed a taste for jazz
because of his mother's interest in the music. Philadelphia, where
Heath and his family later moved, offered exposure to jazz on a
multitude of radio stations and in countless performance venues.
Heath initially played violin, but switched to bass, studying the
instrument formally at the Granoff School of Music. He also trained
informally with jazz bass master Charlie Mingus. Acquiring a
reputation as a precise and passionate bassist, Heath flourished in
the 1940s and early 50s accompanying such jazz giants as Charlie
Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk, and Miles Davis.
Taking time out from music during World War II, he had the honor of
being selected as one of the distinguished group of
African-American fighter pilots, the Tuskegee Airmen.
Musical talent did not grace only Percy and his mother: Percy's
younger brothers Jimmy and Albert ("Tootie") Heath also became jazz
musicians, on saxophone and drums respectively. In 1951, Percy
Heath helped found the Modern Jazz Quartet. For the next 23 years,
the Quartet toured and recorded, playing standards as well as
original compositions, Heath's sinuous and enchanting bass lines
anchoring the group's sound. The Quartet disbanded temporarily in
the 1970s. At that time, Percy, Jimmy, Tootie, and an associate
(Stanley Cowell) formed the Heath Brothers band. In 1982, Percy
returned to the Modern Jazz Quartet. When pianist John Lewis,
musical director of the Quartet, died not too long ago, Heath
became the sole surviving member of what had always been a premier
jazz ensemble.
Heath was nominated for the honorary doctorate by Dr. Denis Carter,
associate vice chancellor for planning and academic outreach, and
Dr. Maurice Martinez, professor of specialty studies in the UNCW
Watson School of Education and host of North Carolina Blue Notes, a
WHQR public radio-produced series about jazz musicians with Tar
Heel roots. (Photo of Dr. Martinez and Mr. Heath suitable for
downloading is available on the UNCW "What's New" Web site,
www.uncwil.edu/news.)
The University of North Carolina at Wilmington, the Celebrate
Wilmington
organization, and all of Wilmington itself, are proud and delighted
to welcome back to Wilmington this titan of indigenous American
music.
The University of North Carolina at Wilmington is a comprehensive
university with 10,600 students and is known for providing an
outstanding undergraduate experience. It also offers master's
programs that impact the region's needs and issues. UNCW is
distinguished from other comprehensive universities through its
promise to create people who are educated for the 21st century who
have a sense of civic responsibility and leadership. That promise
is grounded in a unique academic focus that connects student
learning in and out of the classroom across four broad themes:
regional engagement, natural environment, information technology,
and internationalization. For more information, visit our Web site
www.uncwil.edu.
Celebrate Wilmington, created in 1994, is a collaboration among
the
Arts Council of the Lower Cape Fear River, the University of North
Carolina at Wilmington, and the Wilmington community generally, to
promote and expand multicultural arts in the region. Previous
artists awarded stars on the Walk of Fame include Roman Gabriel,
Minnie Evans, Hugh Morton, Henry Bacon, Frank Capra, Jr., Catarina
Jarboro, Robert C. Ruark, Jr., Althea Gibson, David Brinkley, and
Charlie Daniels.
For more information about the Walk of Fame award or reception,
call 910-762-4223.

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