University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL)
- Class of 1967
Page 1 of 184
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 184 of the 1967 volume:
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ERBATUM On page 22 the fourth line should read: to be sure, somewhat distinctive; no other campus The Quadrangles m... WM the Idea Following pages: Dedication of Foster Hall C0mp1eted 18930 .141: .. :i c . wind... .I.. ..r .I... .x. vgiww .8? :Iajw. . .:..., . t . .3; 133.2513... 1 x . W W F . . . n a M 1 m . , .. : nxofmr... 332 4 $gmm$ . , . .3 .. 9.3.?52. w. I Egg Em.z. 3 ?w 32.. The Masque entitled gThe Gift:9 performed in honor of the dedication of Ida Noyes Hall on the Womefs Quadrangle. gAlz'lrIaL Materw is followed by Youth, the Lake, the Lake Chiidren Gepresenting waveletsL the Cleud, the seven little raindrops, and the Sun Chariot, among others, during the Quarter- Centennial Celebration, June 5, 1916. Summer Convocation Processional by Botany Pond, c. 1920 Dr. and Mrs. James Henry Breasted and 5011 Charles beside the foot of a colossus at the entrance of the Great Temple, Ahu Suhel, Egypt. Annual Maypole Dance, 0. 1915 Zoology Lab c. 1955 The old Law School looking south towards the Midway, shortly after the buildings erection in 1903 SHAGMEN SET TO TROUNCE BOILERMAKERSW 12 V'nlfl H'I'U MI W; m4, Partial assembly of the first nuclear reactor, West Stands, Stagg Field, University of Chicago, November 1942. Photograph taken during addition of the 19th layer of graphite. Alternate layers of graphite, containing uranium metal and or uranium oxide, were separated by layers of solid graphite blocks. Layer 18, almost covered, contained uranium oxide. Criticality was achieved on December 2, 1942. 13 HWOWEW The celebration of an anniversary generally implies a sort of amazement at the durability of the survivor. Anything can happen in this world, the feehng is, and to last for any length of time is an achievement in itself. This is not so for a university, however. Their life-spans are naturally measured in centuries. The Universities of Bologna, Paris, and Oxford are over eight hundred years old. In 1892. Harvard was already two hundred and fifty years old; schools in Bolivia and New Zealand were already matriculating the grandsons of alumni. A university was opened a thousand miles deep in Siberia two years before the cornerstone t0 Cobb Hall was laid. In short, we are an upstart. With one possible exception tKyoto University in J aparQ the Uni- versity of Chicago is the youngest of the great 30110015 0f the world. Even for an American institution, we have a short past to look back on. My grandmother remembers a family picnic in the prairie we now call Hyde Park. It has all hap- pened within living memory. How did it happen, though? Was 1892 an auspicious year to be born in? North Texas State and West Virginia Wesleyan were started in that year also; we have evidently done something that they have not. Did the growth of America make a great new school inevitable? But Chicago bettered thousands of competitors to become that school. Money-lots of it-certainly helped. But the University of Texas has over twice as large an endowment as we do, and Harvard four times as large; and we have achieved some parity even with the latter. The only history Chicago has is that of the big investment and the big risk. If we can glance 16 away grumbling. from the microstructure of aca- demic life, we see how often the University has tried something big and new. The Hutehius col- lege and the remaking of Hyde Park are obvious examples: highly questionable. Clearly unsatis- factory. delightfully controversial. We prefer to Haunt academic fashion rather than follow it. in the hope that we might set it. Chicago scholars have always tended to form subversive opposi- tions to intellectual conformity. In the past they have upset textbooks in physics and soci- ology; right now, in economics and humanistic criticism, as examples. Chicago has remained im- portant because it refuses to be ignored. There is, : ye, ief'e :o'MV: or has been. a Chicago School of everything. Our record, then, has a curious flavor. We are confidently cynical about our achievements; they were intended to be provoking, not to be praised. We have little past, and want none. We would rather look back on seventy-five years of an ever-developing future. 17 EXP 1ABH yIVVN 1967 19 HAR- PERS 3A- ZAAR Here is a university. This is a rough diagram of - These are some of its build What more can we say? By themselves, the buildings to he sure, somewhat distinctiv- looks quite like Chicago. But then, the meanest tenement in Woodlawn that are peculiar to it alone. You are the content. G-B, LMH, R0, Ryeyou ii solid representatives of Mi You trickled through them argued with teachers and 1' You wrestled with your re. in another, ate your lunch You even looked at them, 0i That is all the camera can a Only you can see what we 1 lecture to se ooks in them. ation in one, d your checks 22 23 24 25 27 28 gamma: mamm... .kaszrau a Ff , 5... $$m.-. . - .. . .3! A .. Lavjs. . war 33 23a. . .. WV. W .51.... .u .. . v 30 INQTIUTE FOR COMPUTER RESEIRCH 31 32 Here we are at the university. What shall we study? God, there is so much that is available to us. The first course in the catalog is ANAT 110 301 01 Cross Anatomy; but ifs a graduate course, and requires PQ Cons Instr for non-Med students. BIOL 118 115 01 Population Biology 100 Call H LAW C 10-1130 TT PQ Biol 112? CHEM 320 261 01 Elem Phys Chem-l 100 McClure D Lect: K 103 9.30 MWF Disc. 1 hr Wkly arr PQ Chem 107, Phys 133, Math 153? Oh, there are many others: ECON 201 Elements Econ Anal-l GERMAN 230 Erzaehler des 19 Jhts HUM 275 Hist 0f Book-Boethius. No, that conHicts with NCD 151 Ambiguity 8: Meaning MATH 253 Linear TranstMatrices PHYSED 095 Trampoline POLSCI 263 France 1966-Pattems Behind Events POLISH 286 Wyspianski 8t Sym Drama. No1 itas scheduled too early. SOCIOL 207 Exp Social Psych All the way down to ZOOL 195 452 01 Zoological Problems. N0, thafs a graduate course . . . 34- Pram; CEMQHEL r: 3f 7:01; 121. k3 ' . M xt- .- ,uy,:.nj;n.gworn 7K. 5:356:30d MI . 'h .. .H .- V w A r w 6 l, , x: xx 1-. ,1 u , in 'r x . r 38 31L , . xi. $161 W! ,5. x Dri$g mah! O x ,Eulal: o -;.:;? W19. 0 M NH ll a g? 44 ' C I 0 WM m WW Aw ngq. MA 929 iqssssss'cl QEATHWM 2.4M O x 1524'! II 22+? M 3m Wa5 - ' W MW WW 033W rule, 01L ConPhbf: pr-pakmz' 33E OYVAH NOTE; PAPER DUE Nova 230 - O X$ j Do WMPKY WSJW WIT ' L35 I! m WW W$Wm2 WWW ,65' MW6; Wm rim, mm me: May 9gb mi .. E m 9M by. W: Seffagmqnco iMQwJF Q W ' Maud I ' . 6 mam Sfaho'n Of 5295 Ewan: MM'J . a - - MMWM dg7WM$W 010i 45 mama me I K 6' 4g E ? ? g i $42,424 . . . . if each mass dm is mul 1plied by the square of its distance from the axis and all the products r?dm summed over the whole body, the mo- ment of inertia is obtained. Thus, I -fr2c1m . . . . . . . . uh huh . . . . 0n the ever-beginning quest for the truiy liberal education: a class in the New Cellegiate Division. John Dewey was an educational philosopher. His experimental phi- losophies of education were first tried in a model school at the Uni- versity of Chicago before 1900. They were dismal failures. Chil- dren learned nothing. Undismayed . . . eNone Dare Call It Treason, by John A. Stormer -- r. - ---;701g.g;7m ' W w r 'ucl't s:- .5 4 . . .- .qwmrmgm' I like to think of iire held in a man's hand. Fire, a dangerous force, tamed at his fingertips. I often wonder about the hours when a man sits alone, watching the smoke of a cigarette, thinking. I wonder what great things have come from such hours. When a man thinks, there is a spot of Iire alive in his mind. -Atlas Shrugged, by Ayn Rand .mm.,., Fine teaching is too subtle an art to be recognized in any but the plainest of ways. Nathan Sugar- man is a fine teacher. We hope he will be understood also as an ex- ample of many other men in this University who have taught peo- ple well. 49 Might. jg. I 9 m.l i , :a ,I' .: H? -, '..... .' - i; I LU i I. '- mm. llh-Ilvr INGLESIDE .. EAST FITTY-SEVENTH DREXEL 73: Hhhufu Farm! Shtt'm V EAST WINTH I-QthnE Jo 65mg: I951! Amara MIDWAY PLAISANCE J uwr shmz'n-I E 2 E ' i I ' $$$ng :9: MVM' J ! i g 152: , E 3:55; i. i l 1 l ! E . ,J 2 i .- THE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY I. HARPER Wain Librarw 5. JONES Khemisan IO. BUSINESS EAST musiness and Economics, 2. CLASSES 6. SWtFI i'rheology and Philosophy! H. BREASTEO Orienlul Institute1 3. GOODS?EED Utrli 7. CULVER fBiolcgy and Medicinal i2. lid 4. BIllINGS fModicinel 8. ROSENWALD Kieniogy, Geography, Maps! 13. 1090 Education! 9. ECKHART Physics and Mmhemulic$ There is something awe- some about sitting in a large room surrounded by a vast store of knowledge. The books are higher up the Walls than you can reach; there are books three floors above you and three Hoors below; a mil- lion to the east of you, a mil- lion to the west of you, in a dozen different buildings. Two million, three million, or moreeall of us are told at one time, and we all forget, because there are so many of them. A tiny selection you have become miserably familiar with. Some of them will wait fifty years to give a final subtle flourish to someoneas thesis. And many, you know, could never conceivably serve any human endeavor. But there they are anyway. all around you. 53 54 55 xxxng 3 a Wk KEN Of course, ifs never Open. But itjs the thought that counts. Ashes to ashes, dUst to dust. How perishable and imperfect are the monuments of man! How antiquated, how uncertain, is the source of all our learned papers and treatises the bookstore. HULWVLUK .LN iNUUD'l'Hil-ib DUDLD :tions of Industrial Society 1 Historical Case: Manchester Lrshall, The Emergence of the Firs elected Readings, 8.89 122 13R1 er and Waber 1 :uer 1ed.1 Marx andengels k The Communist Manifesto pp. 1-41 Socialism: Utopian and Scientif1 Anti-Duh : Capital The Gernw Letter t abgr, The arer, Bur .1 -' .5, .u no In :ntemporaryFormulations innheim, Rational and Irrational I Society in SR .menne Th1: ThQ+1+11+1hh61 WWr-xmamvnf 60 ll; ITf-II'ATT .M H b Before surrendering to Student Health, remember that health may not be worth it. Tr;r an aspirin first and see what that does for you. Students often view the admin- istration rather as though it were a poor television show. They could care less about the characters they see as posturing two-dimensionally on the screen. It would be sur- prising if administrators did not feel the same way about the student body sometimes also. These two as- pects of the university play such different roles in its existence that stereotyping is unavoidable. To an administrator, students are a work How whose telos is to flow smoothly. Students generally be- come individuals to him by coming to him with problems, or by creat- ing problemsethe dividing line can be fuzzy. They confuse their registration programs and delay their payments; they miss appoint- ments; they complain; they pass out leaHets and petitions; they sit in, atittle. The studentls administrators, on the Other hand, are foreign particles in the eye of Education. They take money from him; they erect regu- lations around him; they wave red tape at him; they create all the conditions he does not like. Like our own bodies, the admin- istration is noticeable only when it is unsatisfactory. We curse our constitution for its bad digestion, but do not praise it for being free from headaches. Both relationships are familiar and enduring, but too close to permit much sympathy. While we are waiting for the second coming of Socrates, then, 'we will probably see the following scenes many times repeated. 65 66 67 3 g E g .. ii; E- .4-J-..'Jia 1' I'F! t ,r,--1- .- 3; +4! HI; , :QTEMrNJ '7 When any scholar is able to understand Tully or such like classical Latin author externpore, and to make and speak irue Latin in verse and prose, sun at aiunt Marie: and to decline perfectly the par- adigms of nouns and verbs in the Greek tongue: hat him then and not therefore be capable of admission into the college. Ru!es for admission into Harvard, I642 Due to a printing error in the Winter Time Schedules, Philosophy 321 UPositivism and Nihilism from Kant to Kahnw was accidentally listed as Philosophy 311. To receive a grade for this course, any student currently registered for Philosophy 311 must fill out a tan change of program form tavailable from his depart- mentj, dropping Philosophy 311 and adding Philosophy 321. After receiving his advisorhs consent and departmental approval, the form should then be submitted to the Registrafs ofhce. In addition, each student should file a petition requesting exemption from the five dollar late registration fee, available in Gates- Blake 122. Students not in the department of Philosophy must have this form signed both by the chairman of the philosophy department and the chairman of their own department, except for students in the MAT program. No program changes can he accepted after Thursday, Janu- ary 19.efanu,ary 203?; issue of the Chicago Maroon, newspaper of the University of Chicago. So much for the categorical imperative. m-The New Yorker, February 4, 1967 Warner A. Wick Dean of Students James E. Newman Assistant Dean of Students Wayne C. Booth Dean of the College '45:.vggq..a'xxkatvxww.wl 2;. 3.46.- 71 Virginia Ferrari '5 .17er in. Residence, 1967 Turn on MW Mmm :Mm. ... . .. .. Tune in C all exit Computation Center ;.r.-3I .o-...- ach1oJ-a.a-.1t e .T. u. .r.. 1.: al 5 H I 1 a .2... H e .1 m Robert S. Mulliken 1966 Nobel Prize in Chemistry You may say: What effect does the presence of a Nobel Prize win- ner have on the student body at large? What can their accomplish- ments mean to an undergraduate? Yet these men justify for us a sort of proud conceit that we exercise in casualness. Of course we have two Nobel Prize winners, here at the U of C. And where else would they be? Dr. Charles B. Huggins 1966 N 0565 Prize in Medicine 9 80 IN MEMORIAM Paul B. Moses Robert W. Spike 81 PHAN- T AS MA- GORIA I b 1.1:. '0 I h ., NW; . I W fr 83 -' km- . i gy Dorms are not designed for people. They are built to meet the increase in Enrollment, to solve the Housing Shortage. Yet these well-intended receptacles for the Enrollment wind up containing hundreds of independent, unruly people. The walls that were clean and smooth when the architect thought them up develop un- planned chips and defiant decorations. The soundproofing is challenged, and de- feated. The standardized furnishings are rearranged to fit obstinately personal tastes. As the Enrollment settles into comprehensible sets of friends and ene- mies, the strange little dorm societies are born. Looking determinedly for a breach to honor each regulation in, the individual students create the real dorm. The strug- gle is not easy for either side; but the dorms emerge folded, stapled, and muti- Iated into a surprisingly human environ- ment. W? a --v. :w: wry ,ma 1- 7-4, '3x m; .x ,w . a g txwgmu. 2 m 87 88 1 HM. I italm it I l i is H anqcaEam. SEE m.:ma.c$mmm E .33 mm Cuttmum 3 mung E 330:1 .Eimzmmm 52w rmguszEmE :35...:-$:$ :95th ..$w .Eimbm mum EEQOH :vxzztwsmww Ezwzom ruwzmarm 89 What is happening today? The boys and girls dorft even touch each Other any more. When they dance. 91 I liked the taste of beer, its live, white lather, its brass- bright depths, the suddenworldthrough the wet-hrown walls of the glass, the tilted rush to the lips and the slow swallowing down to the belly, the salt on the tongue, the foam on the corners. eDylan Thomas 93 G .H:.:.....:....:$ m? .3: n. tl'V'I um. uh... .. wrcr N Apartments at UC: Experiment in gracious living. 98 Hyde Park is an unlikely place. There is an awareness gap between it and the rest of the world. Looking at the two objectively, there should be little doubt which is real and which the dream. But this one square mile of crowded city constitutes a little physical world many of us hardly leave for months on end. Walk from 6151; Street to Hyde Park Boulevard, or from Cottage Grove 10 the Point, some time. You find yourself wondering if you just might not fall over the edge of the world if you walked any farther. Along with other scholarly facilities, the University is conveniently located near 3 Fountain of Time. 2 0 1 104 Christmas, 1966 011 the 12th day of Christmas my true love gave to me: 12,000 Jews, 11 Blackstone Rangers, 10 guidance counselors, 9 draft exemptions, 8 tuition vouchers, 7,000 Marxists, 6 drunken orgies, 5 Warner Wicks, 4 pneumatic drills, 3 gargoyles, 2 campus cops, Robert Hutchins in a pear tree! -Carolers singing outside of University House Snow News is Good Newsl The more it snows lTiddely 130ml The more it goes lTiddely 130110 The more 1'1. goes The University Bus Service has announced that there is now one bus available. It will run west from 59 Street and Stony from 7 am until noon and in the opposite direction from 110011 until evening. The bus service will make a fur- . ther announcement later 111 the week when the 011 snowng. regular schedule will take effect. ernnie-the-Pooh, -afChicag0 Maroon, Blizzard Edition, by A. A. Milne . 3km. ,1 Ge $5 a ' $653: 9 $ 05v 66 oo.- K11: Cr .3 .5636: $ Yve e G o $ 0. 108 00 g; k :11 65011610 . Of a e 99 v0 b6 63 901?? ,06910 r; 13 kg 9 lo M515 - 00 0 6 if kx I9 5 63V 103$? 66 :9 09 otu mm Maw , 5 5W ' 3V x c! 43 A0 011' free .db .6 - .m m It is true that some people merely take coHee-hreaks in Swift and eat lunch in the C-Shop. Many others, however, find in them a gentle alternative to doing anything else. Walter J eschke of Ida Noyes Hall 112 Shapiro Collection '3 Jerry Lipsch, Tom Heagy, Jerry Hyman, Dave Rosenberg Student Government .05 .m 4..., e h N k n. a R e h t t S .m 3 g 3 S tudent S I saw the best minds of my generation starving hysterical naked . . . who passed through the universities hallucinating Arkansas and Blake-hght tragedy among the scholars of war, who were expelled from the academies for crazy 8: publishing obscene 0663 on the windows of the skull, h-ChHowlas, by Allen Ginsberg 0N, CITY OFHKCHICAGO Jerri; Timoth y Leary Robert F. Kennedy Stokely Carmichael Former Bishop. James Pike x Robert M. Hutchins Evgenii Yevteshenko Gala Performance in Honor of April First May 12 1967 122 123 Plunge, plunge 011 thru the line, And fight for old Chicag0 s fame. Smash into every play, Chicago grit will win this game. As we roll up the score, The cheers resound from high and low, Tear thru the line again and go, Chicago, Go! Go! Go! The March of the Maroon? l2? What part of campus life brings out as much pride in us as our sports program does? Our feverish lack of school spirit is never so strong as in our united disdain for athletics. State schools, we know, assign top priority to sports; rival schools such as Harvard give them some prestige; we deliantly place them last. The archliend Football, corrupter of academic virginity, we do not even grant varsity status. It is all totally irrational, of course? and quite irrelevant to our actual concern with sports. Many a senior who enthusiastically demonstrated against creeping Big Tenism four years ago treasures a battered football in his closet. The percentage of participating athletes on this campus is remarkably high. There are easily over a hundred organized teams in the college aloneefigure it out for yourself. There is a niche for everybody, be he a letterman on the basketball team or a nineball hustler in the Reynolds Club. Pressure-free athletics can be fun. You wonjt acquire popularity, success, or good character traits by playing a game here--- nobody will even know, except maybe your friends. You can watch a sports event if you like to occasionallya or if your room- mate or boyfriend is playingenobody cores. The same society that so scornfully opposes organized athletics tends to respect the in- dividuals who play. for that reason: they obviously are doing it. because they like it. There is no counterfeit involvement. Sport- ing life here can satisfy all the interest you have in it without demanding any more from you . I32 x.' Ma'wasa $25893. ., 133 GRAD- UA- T INC STU- DENT S 1967 CHRISTINE H. ABBOTT Arlington, Virginia Psychology STEPHANIE ABESHOUSE New Haven, Connecticut Russian Lang. 81 Lit. JOHN L. ADAMS Sudbury, Massachusetts Biology HERBERT HARDY ADASKD Brooklyn, New York Sociology NEIL WALSH ALLEN Ann Arbor, Michigan Classics DAVID N. ALTSCHUL Highland Park, Illinois History JAY N. AMMERMAN Hagerstown, Indiana BS. Mathematics BRUCE R. ANDIcH Rock Island, Hiinois Biology KRISTIN ANN ARMSTRONG Chicago. Illinois Oriental Lang. ii Civ. GAIL L. ARNOLD Madison, Wisconsin French JUDITH M. ARNOLD Elmwood Park, Illinois Philosophy BERNARD WILLIAM ARONSON Rye, New York General Studies in Hum. EDWARD A. AzorF Chicago, Illinois BS. Mathematics CONSTANCE S. BMLLIE Vernon Center, New York BS. Mathematics CAROL L. BARR Lincoln, Massachusetts Political Science FREDERIC R. EARTH West Lawn, Pennsylvania Philosophy DANIEL J. BAUS Marytown, Wisconsin Spanish ROBERT E. BEATY Portland, Oregon Slavic Lang. 8i Lit. ROBERT L. BEEKMAN KalisPeIl, Montana English MARIANNE BELL Berkeley, Illinois Art History VICTORIA SODERHOLME BENHAM N ew Jersey Education RICHARD A. BERG Spokane, Washingmn BS. Zoology BARBARA BERNSTEIN Chicago, Illinois Humanities CAROL BERNSTEIN Newto n, M assachusens History WILLIAM J. BERRY Ashtabula, Ohio Anthropology JAMES H. BLOCK M ilwaukie, Oregon Economics TERENCE A. BLOCK Youngstown, Ohio Chemistry DARILYN WINIFRED BUCK Chicago, Illinois English 501111105 BONANOS Thessaloniki, Greece Physics ROBERT C. BORNHOLZ Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Social Sciences RUTH ANNA BOUTIN Webster Groves, Missouri Psychology JEFFFERY C. BOWEN Chicago, Illinois Human Development ERIC E. BRODY Montclair, New Jersey Biology F. CARLENE BRYANT Tacoma, Washington Anthropology MARTIN J. BUCHTER Long Beach, New York 3.5. Biochemistry KATHRYN MICHELLE BURCE Oelwein, Iowa, Economics WILLIAM R. BUSH, JR. Canton, Ohio Geophysical Sciences ROSE CADA Chicago, Illinois Mathematics SUSAN J. CAROLLO Iron Mountain, Michigan Linguistics CHRISTINE CASSEL Boston, Massachusetts General Studies in Hum. EMMANUEL G.CASSIMAT15 Athens, Greece Biology RQBERT Gr CHAFFEE Billings, Montana Biology EUGENE CH ARNIAK Chicago, Hlinois Physics JONATHAN M. CLIVE River Edge, New Jersey 13.8. Mathematics ROBERT A. Couzm Chicago, Illinois Philosophy DAVID L. CURLEY Spokane, Washington General Studies in Hum. PATRICIA CUTLER Vancouver, Washington, English Literature RONALD A. DANTDN Miam 5, Florida B.S. Numismatics HARRY DAVIDOW Morrisville, Pennsylvania Sociology BEVERLY JEAN DAVIS Louisville, Kentucky 35. Physiology PAUL D. DAVIS Enfield, Illinois BS. Mathematics PEGGY DEITZ New York, New York Anthropology KATHLEEN S. DELAU North Judson, Indiana Human Development DENNIS J. DINGEMANS Albert Lea, Minnesota History PATRICIA A. DOEDE Hamden, Connecticut Sociology JENNIFER ELLEN DOHRN Oak Park, Illinois History MICHAEL H. DURAN C hicago, Illinois N.T. 82 Early Christian Lit. DEANNA J. DRAGUNAS Waukegan, Illinois Economics KAREN L. DRIGOT Chicago, Hanoi; History in the Humanities 1003 M. DUB Chicago, Illinois Political Science JOHN M. DYCKMAN Berkeley, California Psychology KENNETH DYGDON Chicago, Hh'nois Fine Arts MARK S. EDELMAN New York, New York Political Science STEVEN H. EISINGER West Lafayette, Indiana Biology MARTHA J. ELWELL Portland, Oregon. Art History RICHARD DAVID E-No New York, New York English MARK B. EPSTEIN Chicago, Illinois Political Science KAREN A. EVANS Tacoma, Washington History PAUL A. EVENSDN Springjgefd, HEROES BS. Physics ROBERT M. FACTOR Chicago: Illinois Biology ANDREA FARKAS 11fapiewooa', New Jersey Psychology MARSHALL FIELDS Lincolnu'ood Illinois 3.5. Physiology PEGGY A.F1NSTON I'rzh'ey Stream. New York Biology MELvm M. FIRESTONE Cleveland Heights. Ohio History KEITH D. FLACHSBART Peoria. Illinois BS. Mi'.':r0biologyr PAUL R. FLEISCHMAN Newark, New Jersey Psychology KEVIN PATRICK FOLEY Chicago, Illinois Biology IRA FORMAN New York, New York Economics DAVID N. FREDERICK Canton, Ohio Economics BRYAN N. FREEMAN Chicago, Illinois Economics JULIA P. FREMGN Princeton, New Jersey General Studies in Hum. JAMES P. FREUND Highland Park, Illinois Biology DIANE R. FRIEDMAN Newark, New Jersey Psychology GORDON J. FULKS Chicago, Illinois Physics EDRENE FURMAN Cicero, Illinois Sociology MICHAEL P. FURSTENBERC Baltimore, Maryland Political Science LOUIS M. GALIE Marlton, New Jersey BS. Chemistry Cosns J. GEKAS Chicago, Illinois Political Science SARA ANN GERLING Wichita, Kansas 3.5. Zoology JUDITH GINSBURG Chicago, Hh'nais General Studies in Hum. JAMES A. GOEKEN Audubon, Iowa Biology EUGENE L. GOLDBERG Lebanon, Pennsylvan in Mathematics JONATHAN GOLDBERG Brooklyn, New York Economics JACOB GOLDGRABER Jerusalem, Israel Psychology DAVID J. COODENOUGH Norwich, Connecticut BS. Physics BRUCE M. GORDON Chicago, HHnois BS. Physics DAVID J. GORDON Chicago, Illinois BS. Chemistry RICHARD G. GORDON Chicago, IHinois Political Science JANE C. GRADY Shelby, Ilffonrana Sociologyr EDWARD W. GRAY Chicago, Hfinois Sociology MAXINE B. GREEN Pirrsburgh, Pennsyr'rania Sociology STANLEY GREENBAUM Hempstemf. New Yorlr General Studies in Soc. Sci. MARK GREENBERG Plu'ladriphia, Penna Ivanfa General Studies in Hum. HOWARD P. CREEMHLD New York. New York General Studies in Soc. Sci. ROBERT L. GRIESS. JR. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania BS. Mathematics LAURA M. GRUEN Chicago, Illinois English JOHN T. GUARDALABENE Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Near Eastern Archaeology PATRICK M. HANLON C uyahoga Falls, Ohio Political Science ANDREW B. HARRIS Foresl Hills, New York THOMAS C. HEAGY Fresno, California Physics THEODORE HEALD Cedar Rapids, Iowa History THOMAS A. HEBERLEIN Portage, Wisconsin Sociology ELEANOR HEXTER Stanford, California History PETER H. HILDEBRAND Chicago, Illinois Geophysics J OHN HINDs Portland, Oregon Linguistics DALY C. HINRICHSEN San Francisco, California Psychology JOHN H. HIX, JR. Marion, Ohio Sociology MARY C. HOFFMAN Dwight, Illinois Philosophy PAULA L. HOFFMAN Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Biology KENNETH B. HOGANSON Dearbom, Michigan B.S. Biochemistry NIARY KATHERINE Honwnz St. Lauis, Missouri Biology STEPHEN J. HUDGENS Billings, Montana BS. Physics PHYLLIS S. HYMOWITZ New York, New York Political Science RACHEL E. JACOBS Chicago, Illinois English R. F. N. JAFFE Great Neck, New York Miiitary History WALTER D. JAMES Sepulpa, Oklahoma MBA. Def. Mgt. ALLAN E. JOHNSON Prentice, Wisconsin Mathematics JANET H. JOHNSON Denver, Colorado Oriental Lang. 8; Civ. LLOYD E. JOHNSON Otiey, Iowa BS. Physics ERIC D. JOSEPH Cleveland, Ohio Political Science MATT JOSEPH Norrh Benna'ngmm Vermont Political Science KAREN J USTIN r'lrfamaroneck. New York Historyr CHARLES T. KAIIANE Ir'rbana, Illinois 13.5. Mathematics VICTORIA D. KAPLAN Leonid. New Jersey Anthropology DONALD L. Kass Keu' Gardens, New YmA BKS. Botany MARC A. KASTNER Park Forest, Illinois Chemistry BRUCE H. an Chicago, Illinois 8.5. Mathematics JOEL LEONARD KATZ Mt. Vernon, New York Anthropology BONITA E. KAWECKI Chicago, Illinois SANDRA J. KELLEY Barton, Vermont, Humanities ANITA KIERAS Chicago, Illinois Political Science MARY ELLEN KIPPLEY Worthington, Minnesota Sociology JEREMY S. KLEIN St. Petersburg, Florida English MICHAEL L. KLOWDEN Chicago, Illinois Sociology PATRICIA ANN KNAPICK Chicago, Illinois Political Science C. JAMES KNEREM North Madison, Ohio Political Science LESLIE E. KOLMAN Baltimore, Maryland Psychology KAREN K. KONDRAD Merrick, New York English Literature DIANE Koasowzn Chicago, Illinois Russian Civilization BRENT H. KRAMER River Edge, New Jersey Psychology NANCY KBASHEN Chicago, Illinois Biology DANIEL M. KROLL Chicago, Illinois Physics EDWARD RICHARD KUNCE Omaha, Nebraska Economics ROBERT J. KURZEJA Elmhurst, Illinois Geophysics PHILIP M. LANKFORD Jennings, Missouri Geography ROBERT L. LAROQUE Kalispeb', Montana Biochemistry WILLIAM D. LARSON Crookston, Minnesota BS. Physics PAUL B. LAZAROW 5:. Paul, Minnesota Biochemistry RICHARD LEAVITT Chicago, Ilfinois 3.5. Chemistry TIMOTHY W. LEAYITT Denver, Colomdo Chemistry MARC LEHRER Brooklyn, New York Psychology NICHOLAS LEMBARES Chicago, Illinois Physics NORA DAWN LESSER Los Angeles, California Biochemistry ELLIS B. 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