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Page 29 text:
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1)1. (.KI(.OK l SU S, I ' ldllSSdl (ll l ' llil(iv(i|)liy siiuo li) !. ' ). is priiiKiiilv iiiuusltil ill deck phi- losophy and philosopln ol icligioii. I ' ornicr eflilor of ihc I ' liilosoltliicol Review niul ihc aulhor of llie hook. Clirisliaii Failli ami Deiiionarw lie is a past CJiairiniin of ihc Society for the Siiuleiit of Aniiciit l ' hiliis(iph . I ' rofcssor ' hislos has held fellowships tioiii Ihe {.iii;geidieini Foiiiidalioii. the Xalional Coiiiuil of Religion in Higher IdiKalion. and the Social Researdi Coniuil. Popular teadiei and scholar. Assistant Professor of Oiiental Studies Jamis KF [TZt:cK received his li, . iiiaoiiii eiiin laiiile ill two iindergiadiiate years at .Mimicsota. A specialist in Islamic intellectual hisloiv and (In isliaii-Islatiiic (onlaits. he has trav- eled eMensixelv doing lesearih in Africa and Asia. most recenth spending se eial months in F-g pt preparing a loillKoming hook. The Classes of 1957 and 19. K haie voted l)i. kiii eik laxorite pre- ceptor. Piofcssoi Gk)R(.i r. riio. i. s was called to Princeton in 1910 to inaiigiirale a program of instruc- tion ill leligions thought. Dr. Thomas, presently the Pyne Pro- fessor, has expanded this program into a department which offers both graduate and nndergiaduate programs of simh. . moiig the for- mer Rhodes Scholar ' s works arc Cluisliiui l-.lhics and Moral I ' lii- losojyliy and The ' italil of the Clnisliaii Tratlilton. Dr. Di ' RANr V. Robirison. Jr., Associate Professor of I ' .iiglish, whose interests lie in .Medieval culture, teaches an undergraduate (ouise on Chaucer. Ihrongh (hancer. Pro- fessor Rohertson inlrodiites the stu- dent to Middle . ge living and thinking. His interprelalions are challenging those of Haivaid Pio- fcssor Kitlieilge, long the standard tor Chaucerian scholars. EDW. RI) DlIDI.FY Hl ' MI. JOIIN.SON. Associate Professor of F.nglish. gratl- tiated fioin Priiuelon in I9!il. vasa memher of Phi Beta Kappa, and later hetanie a Rhodes Scholar. As the Philip I ' reneau Preceptor from 1950 to 1952. Dr. (ohusoii received leave, enabling him to concentrate on background reading in Mexican psycliolog) ' and anthropology. He is now engaged in a study of the relationships between literature and ideas in Xiitorian Kngland.
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Page 28 text:
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A lifelong sliulcril and aiiahsl ol Near Eastern Alfairs and the first Horatio Garrett Professor of Foreign Affairs, T. Cuvler Young was called to Princeton in 1947 as the Uni ersity expanded its program in Near F.astern Studies. Dr. Yonng, having dexoted his life to tlic sliidy of Persia, has come to know its pc()]jlc and customs as a mis- sionary and government official. Cnr- rently an . d ' i.sory Editor to the Middle East Jotinial and the president of the .American Friends of the Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem, Professor Yomig is one of the few Western scholars ever to be named a Knight of the Holy .Se|)nlchre. Having received his A.B. and graduate degrees from Princeton, Donald Dri.w Ectii-RX joined the faculty in 1929 and was made Professor of Art and . rchaeolog in 1916. He is especially noted for his study of the influence of socialism and communism on art and American life, and he co-authored Socialisiii in A inn icon Life, a two- volume study prejjared under a Rockefeller Grant. He has also written for the Art Bulletin, Speniliini, and other prominent publications. . n associate piofcssor whose special fields are contemporary Spanish roman- ticism and literature, Llr. Edmund L. KiNt; joined the faculty in 1916. A former director of the Mississippi State College Glee Club, Dr. King has had professional training in solo and en- semble singing, and was also a member of the Princeton Society of Musical Amateurs. He is the author of Guslavo Ailiiljilio Bequer: from Pninter to Poet, and the translator of Castro ' s The SliiKline of Spanish History. Associate Professor of Classics P.vui. C1olem. n- NoRTON combines research and teaching with his duties as Latin Scribe of the Ehiiversity. He teaches courses which range from the famous orations of Cicero to the informal reading of the New Testament in Greek. . graduate of Prince- ton and a Rhodes Scholar. Dr. Cloleman-Xortoii is well known as the author ol Tivelre Tiibles, a treatise on Roman Law. 24
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Page 30 text:
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1)1. ' llllAM |, liMMOi, (il llie Department of Economics and Sociology is a rcnonncd voiing Amciican economist. Dining World War II he lid analytical work lor tlic I ' . S. Depaitmcnt of .Vgricnltine and now inslriuts courses in both the undernradnatc and graduate schools. . member of the President ' s . d isory Committee and chairman of the Graduate Comiriittee of his de]jarlment. I)i. Bamnol lias also ser cd on the Graduate .Schools Faculty Connnillee. Socio Sciences Wii.i.iAM W. I.otKWOOD, born in Shanghai, China, has been described as one of the best- informed . mericans in the field of Far Fastcrn Affairs. . fter serying with the State Dc])art- ment and Office of Strategic Seryices dining World ' ar 11, he worked as . ssistant Chief of the Diyision of Japanese and Korean Economic .MTairs. Lockwood became .Assistant Director of the Woodrow Wilson School in 1911) and a full piofessor in 1955. Dr. Melvin M. Tumin, .Associate Professor of , ntlnopology aird Sociology, has been with the University since 1917. His primary interest is in morale and demorali ation in industrial society and in the conditions yvhich make men qualitatiye, not just (|uaiuitatiye, members of their society. Since 1955 he has been engaged in a study of social stratification and social mobility in Puerto Rico, and in 1951 he directed a conference concerned with that island under the auspices of the Woodrow Wilson School. Professor of History, E. H rris Harisiso.n, ' 28, has long been a tayorite lecturer of students in his Renaissance and Reformation course. His first published work. Rival Aiiihai.siiilim at Ike Court o Ojiicn Marx, won the .Adams Prize of the . meritan Historical .Association. , s an active Princeton undergiaduate, he was I ' riangle Club President and a member of Phi Beta kappa. In 1949 Dr. Harbison served as chairman of the President ' s Committee on Student-Faculty Rela- tions. 26
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