PSU grad returns to campus today to be sworn in as an ambassador
http://blog.oregonlive.com/breakingnews/2008/07/psu_grad_returns_to_school_for.html
Swearing-in ceremonies for U.S. Ambassadors are usually held with much pomp and circumstance in Washington, D.C., often at the State Department, or at their foreign outposts.
But this afternoon Portland State University alumnus Joseph LeBaron will be sworn in as the ambassador to Qatar on the patio at the Simon Benson House in the South Park Blocks at 4 p.m.
"It is very unusual -- the first time I've ever heard of it happening outside D.C.,'' said David A. Staples, a spokesman for the U.S. Department of State's bureau of Near Eastern affairs. "Most ambassadors want that pomp and ceremony, but he already had that when he was sworn in as the ambassador to Mauritania."
LeBaron, 60, said he arranged the unprecedented outside-Washington swearing-in ceremony to bring the Foreign Service beyond the Beltway.
LeBaron graduated from PSU in 1969 with a bachelor of science degree and earned his Ph.D in Near Eastern studies from Princeton University. He joined the Foreign service in 1980, and his diplomatic career included being a vice-consul in Doha, Qatar.
President George Bush nominated LeBaron for the ambassadorship in February, and he was confirmed by the Senate in early June.
He began his diplomatic career in 1980 when he joined the U.S. Foreign Service, and later with assignments to the Near East as vice-consul at the U.S. Embassy in Doha, Qatar. He speaks Turkish, Persian and Arabic.
PSU officials said university's interim president, Michael Reardon, will speak, and the oath will be administered by Paul De Muniz, chief justice of the Oregon Supreme Court, himself a PSU alum.
http://blog.oregonlive.com/breakingnews/2008/07/psu_grad_returns_to_school_for.html
Swearing-in ceremonies for U.S. Ambassadors are usually held with much pomp and circumstance in Washington, D.C., often at the State Department, or at their foreign outposts.
But this afternoon Portland State University alumnus Joseph LeBaron will be sworn in as the ambassador to Qatar on the patio at the Simon Benson House in the South Park Blocks at 4 p.m.
"It is very unusual -- the first time I've ever heard of it happening outside D.C.,'' said David A. Staples, a spokesman for the U.S. Department of State's bureau of Near Eastern affairs. "Most ambassadors want that pomp and ceremony, but he already had that when he was sworn in as the ambassador to Mauritania."
LeBaron, 60, said he arranged the unprecedented outside-Washington swearing-in ceremony to bring the Foreign Service beyond the Beltway.
LeBaron graduated from PSU in 1969 with a bachelor of science degree and earned his Ph.D in Near Eastern studies from Princeton University. He joined the Foreign service in 1980, and his diplomatic career included being a vice-consul in Doha, Qatar.
President George Bush nominated LeBaron for the ambassadorship in February, and he was confirmed by the Senate in early June.
He began his diplomatic career in 1980 when he joined the U.S. Foreign Service, and later with assignments to the Near East as vice-consul at the U.S. Embassy in Doha, Qatar. He speaks Turkish, Persian and Arabic.
PSU officials said university's interim president, Michael Reardon, will speak, and the oath will be administered by Paul De Muniz, chief justice of the Oregon Supreme Court, himself a PSU alum.