Guide to the Allen G. Debus Papers 1848-1998

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Guide to the Allen G. Debus Papers 1848-1998 University of Chicago Library Guide to the Allen G. Debus Papers 1848-1998 © 2012 University of Chicago Library Table of Contents Descriptive Summary 3 Information on Use 3 Access 3 Citation 3 Biographical Note 3 Scope Note 5 Related Resources 7 Subject Headings 7 INVENTORY 7 Series I: Correspondence 7 Series II: Teaching Materials 88 Subseries 1: Syllabi and Course Materials 88 Subseries 2: Other Universities’ Reading Lists 98 Series III: Presentations and Lectures 100 Series IV: Research Materials 115 Subseries 1: Primary Sources 115 Subseries 2: Secondary Sources 134 Series V: Writings 140 Subseries 1: Book Reviews 140 Subseries 2: Graduate Student Papers 145 Subseries 3: Articles and Miscellaneous Writings 147 Subseries 4: Books and Edited Volumes 154 Sub-subseries 1: The English Paracelsians (1965) 154 Sub-subseries 2: Who’s Who in Science From Antiquity to the Present (1968)156 Sub-subseries 3: Science and Education in the Seventeenth Century (1970) 157 Sub-subseries 4: Science, Medicine, and Society in the Renaissance; Essays in Honor158 of Walter Pagel (1972) Sub-subseries 5: Medicine in 17th Century England; A Symposium Held at UCLA161 in Honor of C.D. O’Malley (1974) Sub-subseries 6: John Dee’s Mathematical Preface (1975) 163 Sub-subseries 7: The Chemical Philosophy (1977) 164 Sub-subseries 9: Robert Fludd and His Philosophical Key (1979) 171 Sub-subseries 10: Hermeticism and the Renaissance (1988) 172 Sub-subseries 11: The French Paracelsians (1991) 173 Sub-subseries 12: Reading the Book of Nature (1998) 176 Series VI: Administrative and Professional Materials 176 Subseries 1: Fishbein Center for the History of Science and Medicine 176 Series VII: Research Grants 192 Series VIII: Restricted 195 Subseries 1: Proposal and Application Reviews (R-30) 195 Subseries 2: Administrative, Budgetary and Personnel Materials (R-50) 196 Subseries 3: Evaluative Student Materials (R-80) 197 Sub-subseries 1: Student Files 197 Sub-subseries 2: Course Grade Reports 209 Descriptive Summary Identifier ICU.SPCL.DEBUSA Title Debus, Allen G. Papers Date 1948-1998 Size 63.5 linear feet (127 boxes) Repository Special Collections Research Center University of Chicago Library 1100 East 57th Street Chicago, Illinois 60637 U.S.A. Abstract Allen G. Debus, (1926-2009) historian of science who served on the faculty of the University of Chicago Department of History from 1961 until his death in 2009. Trained in chemical engineering and history, Debus was best known for his historical work on chemistry and alchemy and their contribution to the scientific revolution. He was instrumental in founding the Morris Fishbein Center for the History of Science and Medicine at the University of Chicago. The Papers contain correspondence, teaching materials, lecture and presentation materials, drafts of various writings, administrative and professional materials, research grant applications and reviews and evaluative student materials. Information on Use Access Material in Series VIII is restricted. Subseries 1 contains grant proposal review, restricted for 30 years. Subseries 2 contains budgetary and personnel documents restricted for 50 years and Subseries 3 contains student evaluative material restricted for 80 years. The remainder of the collection is open for research Citation When quoting material from this collection, the preferred citation is: Debus, Allen G. Papers, [Box #, Folder #], Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library Biographical Note Allen George Debus (1926-2009) was a renowned American historian of science who served on the faculty of the University of Chicago Department of History from 1961 until his retirement in 1996. 3 Debus was born an only child in Chicago, Illinois on August 16, 1926. He was raised in the north-Chicago suburb of Evanston and attended Evanston Township High School from 1940-1944. He studied chemistry and history at Northwestern University earning a B.S. in Chemistry in 1947 with almost enough credits to support a second major in History. He followed this latter path to Indiana University (1947-1949) where he acted as assistant to Professor John J. Murray, who advised him to write his Master’s thesis on chemistry in the English Tudor period. The result was entitled “Robert Boyle and Chemistry in England 1660-1700”. From 1951 to 1956, Debus worked as a research chemist at Abbott Laboratories. In 1956, he returned to graduate work at Harvard University, supervised by I. Bernard Cohen, where he was awarded two Bowdoin Awards in the Natural Sciences. During the same period he conducted research and acted as a teaching assistant at University College, London under the auspices of a joint Fulbright and Social Science Research Council Fellowship and the guidance of Professors Douglas McKie and Walter Pagel. The latter became a long-distance dissertation advisor for Debus’ doctoral dissertation “The English Paracelsians: A Study of Iatrochemistry in England to 1640”, which he completed in 1961. I.B. Cohen introduced Debus to Professor Cyril Smith of the University of Chicago, who facilitated Debus’ appointment as assistant professor in the department of History under the chairmanship of Prof. William McNeill. He was promoted to associate professor in 1965 after the publication of his book “The English Paracelsians”, a revision of his doctoral dissertation. In addition to teaching, advising and mentoring students and other faculty members, Debus was instrumental in developing and promoting undergraduate and graduate programs and curricula on the history of science and medicine. He developed a three quarter sequence in the history of science spanning from ancient science to the beginning of the 20th century, as well as courses on Renaissance medicine and science and historiography. During this period Debus also resisted administrative efforts by the Department of Philosophy to insert itself into existing programs in the history of science. Debus’ administrative efforts reached their pinnacle with the foundation of the Morris Fishbein Center for the History of Science and Medicine at the University of Chicago, for which he acted as the first director for two three year terms (1971-1978). In 1978 he was appointed the Morris Fishbein Professor of the History of Science and Medicine, a named position he held until his retirement in 1996, when he became the Morris Fishbein Professor Emeritus of the History of Science and Medicine. Debus’ research interests included Renaissance and early-Modern science and medicine, alchemy, early medical chemistry and pharmacy, the philosophical groundings of the Scientific Revolution, and Renaissance historiography. He was a very prolific writer, leaving behind a written legacy of over 300 articles and reviews and 20 authored and edited books. His authored and edited volumes include “The English Paracelsians” (1965); “Who’s Who in Science from Antiquity to the Present” (1968); “Science and Education in the 17th Century” (1970); “The Chemical Philosophy: Paracelsian Science and Medicine in the 16th and 17th Centuries” (1977); “Man and Nature in the Renaissance” (1978); “Robert Fludd and his Philosophical Key” (1979); “Science and History: A Chemist’s Appraisal” (1984); “Chemistry, Alchemy and the New Philosophy 1550-1700” (1987); “Hermeticism and the 4 Renaissance” (1988); “The French Paracelsians” (1991); and “Reading the Book of Nature: The Other Side of the Scientific Revolution” (1998). During his distinguished professional career, Allen Debus was the recipient of numerous fellowships and awards. Among his many distinctions, he was elected a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of science and was an overseas fellow at Churchill College, Cambridge. He has held Guggenheim, Fulbright and Social Science Research Council Fellowships as well as National Endowment for the Humanities Research Fellowships at the Newberry and Folger Libraries. He was a visiting member of the Institute for Advanced Studies in Princeton and was elected member of the Academy of Sciences in Lisbon, the International Academy of the History of Science and the International Academy of the History of Medicine. He was also awarded the Edward Kremer’s Award of the American Institute of the History of Pharmacy (1978), the Pfizer Prize (1978), the American Chemical Society’s prestigious Dexter Award (1987) and the History of Science Society’s Sarton Medal for Lifetime Achievement (1991). Debus also had a lifelong interest in antique phonographs and phonograph recordings of which he was an avid collector. He also collected antiquarian volumes. He met his wife Brunilda Lopez- Rodriguez while both attended Indiana University. They subsequently worked together at Abbott Laboratories. They had three sons Allen, Richard (who died in 2007) and Karl. On March 6, 2009, Allen G. Debus died of cardiac arrest at his home in Deerfield, Illinois. Scope Note The Allen Debus Papers contain correspondence, teaching and program materials, lecture and presentation materials, drafts of various writings, administrative and professional materials, research grant applications and reviews and evaluative student materials. Series I: Correspondence, includes Debus’ alphabetically organized correspondence files and some miscellaneous non, correspondence files. Series II: Teaching Materials, is organized into two subseries. Subseries 1: Syllabi and Course Materials, includes syllabi and course materials for Debus’ classes, organized by course number and chronology. The files in this subseries have been purged of
Recommended publications
  • 2000 HSS/PSA Program 1
    HISTORY OF SCIENCE SOCIETY 2000 ANNUAL MEETING PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE ASSOCIATION 2000 BIANNUAL MEETING 2-5 November 2000 Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada Hyatt Regency Vancouver CONTENTS Acknowledgments 3 HSS Officers, Program Chairs, and Council 4 PSA Officers and Program Committee 5 General Information 6 HSS / PSA 2000 Annual Meeting Book Exhibit Layout 7 Floor Plans: Hyatt Regency Vancouver 8-9 Vancouver Points of Interest 10-13 Committees and Interest Groups 14-15 HSS Full Program Schedule 16-20 HSS 2000 Program 21-43 HSS Distinguished Lecture 40 HSS Abstracts 44-187 PSA Full Program Schedule 188-190 PSA 2000 Program 191-202 PSA President’s Address 197 PSA Abstracts 203-245 HSS/PSA Program Index 246-252 Advertisements 253 Cover Illustration: SeaBus riders get the best view of Vancouver from the water. Offering regular service on the busiest routes from 5 a.m. to 2 a.m. and late night owl service on some downtown suburban routes until 4:20 a.m., Greater Vancouver’s transit system--the bus, SkyTrain and SeaBus-- covers more than 1800 square kilometers (695 square miles) of the Lower Mainland. The SkyTrain, a completely automated light rapid transit system, offers direct, efficient service between downtown Vancouver and suburban environs. It follows a scenic elevated 29 kilometer (18 mile) route with 20 stations along the way. All the SkyTrain stations, except Granville, have elevators and each train is wheelchair accessible. The SkyTrain links with buses at most of the 20 stations and connects with the SeaBus in downtown Vancouver. It operates daily, every two to five minutes.
    [Show full text]
  • January2009newsletter ( PDF )
    Vol. 38, No. 1, January 2009 NEWSletter of the History of Science Society I’ve discovered that the TV weather report was invent- ed by discharged military meteorologists during the late 1940s, who combined the narrative form of the pre-fl ight briefi ng with com- ic art to produce a popular and broadly accessible form of public science. Roger Turner with poster at the 2008 HSS Meeting. (Photo courtesy Sage Ross) LAUGHING AT THE WEATHER? THE SERIOUS WORLD OF WEATHER CARTOONS Roger Turner, a Ph.D. candidate in cartooning meteorologists. on images. A history of aeronautical History and Sociology of Science But fi rst, the medium. I hadn’t meteorology in the fi rst half of the at the University of Pennsylvania, touched static visual media since a 20th century, my research tracks a discusses his experiences as part of bitter experience in a high school group of Scandinavian and American the inaugural poster session at the language arts class. I love museums, meteorologists through their writ- 2008 HSS Meeting. though, so I took wall exhibits as ings in operations manuals, research my model. Posters are good for a journals, memos, and textbooks. visual argument, allowing audiences Out of all these, one drawing from a y fi rst thought on reading to linger over several images and to 1943 textbook stuck out. It shows the Mthe call for papers was not compare them. Standing next to a hand of reason pulling back a curtain noble. I’m on the job market, and a poster also lets you have a longer chat marked “Weather Superstitions and poster seemed a reliable route onto with an audience, but the poster’s text Fallacies,” to reveal a winding path the program.
    [Show full text]
  • Structuring American Solid State Physics, 1939–1993 A
    Solid Foundations: Structuring American Solid State Physics, 1939–1993 A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA BY Joseph Daniel Martin IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Michel Janssen, Co-Advisor Sally Gregory Kohlstedt, Co-Advisor May 2013 © Joseph Daniel Martin 2013 Acknowledgements A dissertation is ostensibly an exercise in independent research. I nevertheless struggle to imagine completing one without incurring a litany of debts—intellectual, professional, and personal—similar to those described below. This might be a single-author project, but authorship is just one of many elements that brought it into being. Regrettably, this space is too small to convey full appreciation for all of them, but I offer my best attempt. I am foremost indebted to my advisors, Michel Janssen and Sally Gregory Kohlstedt, for consistent encouragement and keen commentary. Michel is one of the most incisive critics it has been my pleasure to know. If the arguments herein exhibit any subtlety, clarity, or grace it is in no small part because they steeped in Michel’s witty and weighty marginalia. I am grateful to Sally for the priceless gift of perspective. She has never let my highs carry me too high, or my lows lay me too low, and her selfless largess, bestowed in time and wisdom, has challenged me to become a humbler learner and a more conscientious colleague. My committee has enriched my scholarly life in ways that will shape my thinking for the rest of my career. Bill Wimsatt, a true intellectual force multiplier, lent me his peerless ability to distill insight from scholarship in any field.
    [Show full text]
  • History Ofsoence .~.~--~-~-~.7 ..N·Um · ·Be·R·3
    JSSN 0739-4934 NEWSLETTER HISTORY OFSOENCE .~.~--~-~-~.7 ..N·UM · ·BE·R·3.......... ~ ________ S<::>CIET~ VISIT HAMBURG AND MUNICH HSS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE D. J. KEVLES -. Chair, U.S. Delegation ICHS PRESIDENT MARY JO NYE, University of Oklahoma BY NOW American scholars are no doubt aware of the International Congress of VICE-PRESIDENT the History of Science to be held in Hamburg and Munich during the summer of STEPHEN G. BRUSH, University of 1989. Most veterans of previous international congresses will look forward to Maryland the event with relish. However, many junior scholars may be daunted by the EXECunTVESECRETARY prospect, thinking that they may find a cold welcome because they are not yet MICHAEL M. SOKAL, Worcester Polytechnic Institute professionally well known or connected. TREASURER Don't be misled. If the German Congress is like its predecessors, there will be MARY LOUISE GLEASON, New York City several wonderful social events as well as numerous scholarly sessions. There EDITDR .-.._will also be some sort of central reception area where at most hours of the day CHARLES ROSENBERG, University of cholars like yourselves will be milling about, eager to make your acquaintance Pennsylvania and learn about your work. Additional opportunities for convivial learned dis­ course await you in the rathskellers, restaurants, and cafes of Hamburg and Munich. Even if you know few people to begin with, by the end of the Congress you The Newsletter of the History of Science Society is published in January, April, July, and will know a good many more, including some who will turn into good friends as October.
    [Show full text]
  • September 2020 DAVID A. HOLLINGER Preston Hotchkis
    September 2020 DAVID A. HOLLINGER Preston Hotchkis Professor of American History, Emeritus Department of History University of California, Berkeley Berkeley CA 94720 [email protected] BOOKS: [Complete list of publications farther down] Morris R. Cohen and the Scientific Ideal (MIT Press, 1975; paperback edition, MIT Press, 1978). In the American Province: Studies in the History and Historiography of Ideas (Indiana University Press, 1985; paperback edition, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989). Postethnic America: Beyond Multiculturalism (Basic Books, 1995; fifth anniversary edition with new “Postscript 2000: Culture, Color, and Solidarity,” Basic Books, 2000; Tenth Anniversary Edition with new “Postscript 2005: Ethnoracial Mixture and Economic Segregation,” Basic Books, 2006. Science, Jews, and Secular Culture: Studies in Mid-Twentieth Century American Intellectual History (Princeton University Press, 1996. Reappraising Oppenheimer: Centennial Studies and Reflections (Berkeley, 2005) [co-edited with Cathryn Carson] Cosmopolitanism and Solidarity: Studies in Ethnoracial, Religious and Professional Affiliation in the United States (U. of Wisconsin Press, 2006) The Humanities and the Dynamics of Inclusion After World War II (Baltimore, 2006) [Edited volume of 14 commissioned papers sponsored by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences] The American Intellectual Tradition: A Sourcebook (Oxford University Press, 1989; 2nd ed., 1993; 3rd. ed., 1997; 4th ed., 2001; 5th ed., 2006; 6th ed., 2011; 7th edition, 2017. ). [co-edited with Charles Capper] After Cloven Tongues of Fire: Protestant Liberalism in Modern American History (Princeton University Press, 2013). 1 Protestants Abroad: How Missionaries Tried to Change the World but Changed America (Princeton University Press, 2017). When This Mask of Flesh is Broken: The Story of an American Protestant Family (Outskirts Press, 2019).
    [Show full text]
  • History of Science Society
    ISSN 0739-4934 NEWSLETTER HISTORY OF SCIENCE VOLUME 27 NUMBER 1 January 1998 SOCIETY HSS Announces Reorganization of Executive Office: a Permanent Office and an Executive Director As the HistoryofScienceSocietyapproachesitsseventy-fifth anniversary{1999), its administrative structure is changing. Over the past several decades, we have grown steadily, and our day-to-day operation has become increasingly complex: success has its price. Thanks to the efforts of Gerald Holton, the Society raised an endowment (currently valued at over $2,000 ,000), the income from which allowed us to expand the office of Secretary to that of Executive Secretary. In 1987 Michael Sokal became the Society's first Executive Secretary, and under his leadership the office began providing much-needed services to the members; the HSS Newsletter is one example. Keith Benson assumed the office in 1993 and has further expanded its services; for instance, the annual meetings are now planned several years in advance and are organized by the Executive Secretary's office. The second major step came in the early 1990s when, in order to make the income stream from the publication ofIsis and Osiris more predictable, we entered into an agreement with the University of Chicago Press to publish and promote these periodicals and to take over our membership billing system. That arrangement has worked well, and we can now make income projections for budgets several years in the future. As a result of these changes, the Society's finances are now predictable and the day-to-day operations are running very smoothly. The cost ofthese increased services to the membership has not been great: in constant dollars, membership dues are now just 16 percent higher than they were in 1970.
    [Show full text]
  • January, April, July, and Tinued Indefinitely
    ISSN 0739-4934 NEWSLETTER ...... !STORY OF SCIENCE J-~~-~-~-~-~ --~_SOOETY NEWS OF THE SOCIETY COUNCIL ACTIONS AT RALEIGH MEETING HSS EXECUTIVE Vice-President Mary Jo Nye presided over the meeting in the absence of Presi­ COMMITTEE dent William Coleman. She expressed the group's sense of regret at the neces­ sity of his resignation, effective 1 November. She also thanked the various PRESIDENT retiring Council members, officers, and committee chairs. MARY JO NYE, University of Oklahoma It was decided to maintain the dues at $34 for regular individual memberships SECRETARY and $19 for students for 1989, to raise the institutional subscription rate for Isis MICHAEL M. SOKAL, Worcester from $90 to $97, effective in 1989, and to raise the individual subscription to Polytechnic Institute Osiris from $15 to $17 .SO and the institutional rate from $25 to $36, also effec­ TREASURER tive for 1989. The Publications and Executive Committees were authorized to MARY LOUISE GLEASON, New York City consider the possibility of a reduced combined subscription rate for those indi­ EDITOR 'Jiduals who subscribe to both Isis and Osiris. CHARLES ROSENBERG, University of The Treasurer was authorized to spend up to $2,000 in the next fiscal year on Pennsylvania expenses of her office, this amount to be subtracted from the sum budgeted for outside bookkeeping, which she expects to need only quarterly rather than monthly as in the past. The lieasurer pointed out that there are potential budget difficulties in the future, since we are currently using Reserve Funds to Tbe Newsletter of tbe History of Science make up the difference between income and expenses, and this cannot be con­ Society is published in January, April, July, and tinued indefinitely.
    [Show full text]
  • April, July, and Will Be Special Interest at the 1989 Congress in the Newest Volume of Osiris, October
    ISSN 0739-4934 NEWSLETTER I IISTORY OFSOENCE .~.o.hlL.M.~E.gs.~g-NUM-·B·ER-2------L--__SQCJETY LETTER FROM HSS EXECUTIVE THE PRESIDENT COMMITI'EE PRESIDENT MARYJONYE MARY JO NYE, University of Oklahoma VICE-PRESIDENT STEPHEN G. BRUSH, University of Maryland EXEClnlVESECRETARY MICHAEL M. SOKAL, Worcester The year 1989 marks an important transition for the History of Science Society Polytechnic Institute as we celebrate the 65th anniversary of the Society's founding. One aspect of TREASURER this transition is the appearance of the March issue of Isis under the editorship MARY WUISE GLEASON, New York City of Ronald L. Numbers. He succeeds Charles Rosenberg, who has given splendid EDITOR leadership to our flagship journal during the past three years. RONALD L. NUMBERS, University of This also is a year in which the fifth volume of the new Osiris will be pub- Wisconsin-Madison ""-"'lished, just in time for sale or subscription at the International Congress in Hamburg and Munich. It was at the last International Congress, in Berkeley, that the first volume of the new Osiris was launched under the editorship of Arnold Thackray, and since then institutional and individual subscriptions have The Newsletter of the History of Science reached approximately 1,800, an excellent start for a new scholarly serial. There Society is published in January, April, July, and will be special interest at the 1989 Congress in the newest volume of Osiris, October. Regular issues are sent to those indi­ vidual members of the Society residing in since its theme is Science in Germany: The Intersection of Institutional and Nonh America.
    [Show full text]
  • 02005Aprilnewsletterr ( PDF )
    ISSN 0739-4934 Newsletter HISTORY OF SCIENCE VOLUME 34 NUMBER 2 April 2005 SOCIETY Serving the Discipline and the Profession: HSS Programs and the “Spirit of Volunteerism” Michael M. Sokal, HSS President or “Catching Up with the Vision” – the 1999 the President,” published in January 2004 with the The revised classification scheme and new indices Fprize-winning special issue of Isis conceived and subtitle “Recent Successes and Exciting New Cha- first introduced in the 2003 CB represent only the edited by Margaret W. Rossiter that celebrated the llenges,” briefly outlined later changes in some of first in a series of innovative features that will Society’s 75th anniversary – I wrote an article trac- these programs, and sketching emerge both in the printed CB and ing the Society’s history from 1970 with the subtitle, the further evolution of others The revised classification scheme in the on-line HSTM Research “From Subscription Agency to Professional Society.” now seems appropriate. and new indices first introduced in Database during the next few years. The article followed the Society’s evolution through The Society’s primary pro- the 2003 CB represent only the In the meantime, the HSS a punctuated series of adaptations to changes (and grams of course remain its publi- first in a series of innovative fea- Newsletter itself, in its past several at times catastrophes) in its academic and social cations, including Isis, Osiris, the tures that will emerge both in the issues, has grown to reflect the environments. Through this development, the Isis Current Bibliography, and printed CB and in the on-line careful design attention and experi- Society grew from one serving its members largely the HSS Newsletter.
    [Show full text]
  • I IISTORY of SCIENCE -~-O-~-~-9~.9-Ts-N·U·M·B·E·R·3______S00ETY
    ISSN 0739-4934 NEWSLETTER I IISTORY OF SCIENCE -~-o-~-~-9~.9-ts-N·u·M·B·E·R·3__________ S00ETY GOOD NEWS ON OSIRIS HSS EXECUTIVE RECENT GIFTS AND GRANTS lOP $100,000 COMMITTEE PRESIDENT Within a few short weeks early this spring, the History of Science Society re­ MARY JO NYE, University of Oklahoma ceived gifts and grants totaling $105,000 in support of Osiris, its annual review VICE-PRESIDENT of recent scholarship in selected areas of the history of science. The first gift, of STEPHEN G. BRUSH, University of $50,000, was announced on 24 April by Charles Scribner, Jr., who established Maryland the Society's Osiris Fund in the early 1980s with a contribution of $30,000. Mr. EXECLnTVESECRETARY Scribner is best known to HSS members as the publisher of the magisterial Dic­ MICHAEL M . SOKAL, Worcester Polytechnic Institute tionary of Scientific Biography and has for many years been one of the Society's major benefactors. TREASURER MARY LOUISE GLEASON, New York City Soon thereafter, on 2 May, the Joseph H. Hazen Foundation paid tribute to EDITOR ~SS past president Gerald Holton by awarding $25,000 to the Osiris Fund in his RONALD L. NUMBERS, University of 10nor. Just last spring Mr. Hazen endowed the History of Science Society Dis­ Wisconsin-Madison tinguished Lectureship with a grant of $30,000, and just before Christmas 1988 he donated over $13,000 to the Society to support the programs and activities of the Committee on Education. He too has been among the Society's major bene­ factors for many years.
    [Show full text]